Tuesday, January 26, 2016

Ban, With Local Impact

So last week the newspaper reported that the county supervisors and sheriff Royal (whom I know), got an outdoor pot ban which took effect immediately. No delay, no denial, no screwing around with permits. If its outside, its an arrest. This should hopefully stop most of the illegal grows and get most of the illegal growers to flee this county. Neighboring counties did similar things already, which is why they were coming here. One of the pot heads claimed (hilariously) "But pot growers create $350 million a year in this county!". Hahahahahahahha. No. They're dirt poor and shop at the same grocery as the welfare moms. Combined there's probably a million to three million for the whole county. Pot prices have been dropping like a stone since it was partially legalized, and the murder rate has gone way up. Worse, when the season ends the trimmers, a pot growers season staff that wander in like bums, start robbing houses or getting into bar fights or attacking the locals. We don't like that. And we give our law enforcement permission to shoot them, beat them, and throw the book at them. They get harsh prison terms because we're a consevative community by the time it gets to jury selection and the local hippies, most of them with felony records, can't serve on juries. Whoops! So if you break the law here, you are getting a bad prison experience. Or dead.

I am glad to see this and want them to come down on the growers like a hammer. I want those "hydroponic supplies" people to vanish. I want the potheads staggering out of the brush and attacking old ladies shot. I'd also like the welfare moms to leave but we can't have everything. Its socialism that created them, and they're everybody's problem thanks to the local schools being full of communists. Until you fire those "social justice" clowns you won't solve the problem.

Friday, January 22, 2016

The 1950's and Manufacturing Jobs

Following WW2, reconstruction using the Marshall Plan meant that the US factories were operating at full capacity, meaning there was full employment for the whole population. Wages were relatively high, housing was cheap as suburbs expanded outside the rotten city cores, the loan payments coming back from the Marshall Plan could fund construction projects and redevelopment at home. This period of time was the greatest wealth and happiness my country has ever seen. But eventually the payments ceased as the loans were paid off and by 1970 most of the money was gone, as was the oil. The nation had to start spending its money on oil to pay for the commutes from the suburbs to the city centers which still, tragically, held the jobs, of which there were now many fewer thanks to all the factories in Europe competing with us. Our economy tanked, and it has never recovered properly, merely shifted into a series of Bubbles. Bubble economies are temporary by nature and rely on popularity and self-delusion rather than firm financial foundations. Every bubble eventually bursts, and the victims of the bubble lose their shirts. If you ever wanted to know where rebels and crime families come from it is people who had wealth but lost it and are desperate to get it back and will do whatever it takes, and shed lots of other people's blood, to get it.

I have worked several manufacturing jobs. In the old days, manufacturing was about repetitive motion and being the machine. In modern manufacturing it is more about documentation, filling hoppers, and babysitting robots. Successful manufacturers try to get their costs down and their prices to all the market will bear, often by claiming higher quality than then can actually do, and paying the lowest wages they can get away with, using the most abusive management they can train. That's how things actually work in modern factories. Turnover rates don't matter much provided the equipment is relatively easy to operate. It is better to spend money on maintenance than pay high wages to the staff that can make it perform when its out of kilter. Of course, in the real world, the manager pockets half the maintenance budget and makes the staff do the maintenance, badly, and then blames them when the product is bad, since firing staff for your own mistakes is a time honored tradition. I have worked in that kind of manufacturing too. Any company which claims to have "high standards" or one of those greasy acronyms like 5S? Avoid them like the plague they actually are. They are miserable to work for.

The big problem with bringing manufacturing back to the USA from China is that most of the work will be done by robots and much of which can be made here isn't of particular demand in this country. You can only make so many spatulas before everybody has one. Then what? The US car industry shifted out of badly made economy cars, ignoring all the ways the Europeans made them faster, more efficient, cheaper to manufacture, better handling, and fun to drive, and instead we got SUVs, which are heavy and inefficient like a battle tank, but not actually safe. Most rifles shoot right through an SUV, even the structural steel barely slows down the bullets. All those housewives feeling empowered and vicious on the road with a big SUV? Its just a fantasy. People bought them after the Dot.com crash, and drove up the price of suburban homes while nesting with whatever they held onto from their Dot.com investment winnings, paying too much for a house with an Adjustable Rate Mortgage. And then time passed and the adjustment came through, often doubling or tripling the mortgage payment, causing the owner to foreclose or go bankrupt. They lost everything, including the SUV and the money to buy another one. So the auto industry in the USA collapsed, along with their parts makers. This caused Detroit to turn into a ghost town. The pictures of homes being overgrown by vines and streets abandoned and disappearing under grass and shrubs is pretty amazing, but a number of cities will lose various parts that way. The 1950's and the big car culture just don't hold up in the long term.

There's a fantasy that everybody will have a Tesla or equivalent electric car to keep the suburbs relevant but that's a lie too. It requires more lithium than actually exists, and the Tesla is $100K with all the toys. A Nissan Leaf is $45K to manufacture, the price of three hot hatchbacks or fifteen high end motor scooters with working fuel injection and replacement parts to keep them on the road. Electric cars are a fantasy by rich 1%er snobs. They also advertise the owner is someone worth kidnapping for ransom, which is something that will happen here if the next president can't get more jobs created for our countrymen.

I do think there are things we could make here better than the Chinese. China makes low-quality engines because they use cheap CNC and pay the lowest possible wages, up to and including the use of actual slaves operating them. Everybody knows this. To be fair, we pay a tiny wage to slaves in prisons making license plates, and ex-convicts get parole jobs making street signs. So we're not ethically perfect either. We don't expect convicts to make engine parts, however. And the Chinese do, which is why their engines lack power or won't run or break down. You need careful tolerances and heat treating and the correct alloys to make a good engine. You can contract for that in Chinese factories, but then you have to pay someone else to try and catch them cheating, and that person might be bribed or threatened by the factory owner, who can always bribe the local commissar to order the army or secret police to lean on your inspector. So you still get crappy engines from China. We could build them here, using all those auto parts workers, and sell things like good reliable gas or diesel generators to Africans and Central Americans for a price they can afford. We don't have to go there to sell them. We just make them and put them in a shipping container, sold to the ship or his company and off it goes. We're good at water pumps and public works, and most of the Americas could use those, right down to individual farms and neighborhoods. These are ideal locations for co-generation plants, wells, power, and cellphone towers. And possibly this would bootstrap them into stable economies that don't result in gunmen invaders or crooked police. Populations get sick of that, and even a 90 year old 8mm Mauser can kill a corrupt police captain or thug. We don't need that 1970's endless cycles of communist coups and military juntas anymore. Poor people want clean water, and Americans know how to do that. Why aren't we exporting that?

Right now there's efficient solar panel designs that use domestic materials that aren't being made anywhere. Not in China, not in the USA, not in Europe. Why is that? They're also cheaper, but do have one important requirement to run properly, which is cooling. You might get them to work with aluminum heat sinks on the back to spread the heat around, but the preferred system is liquid cooling pumped by some of the power generated by the panel, and then drawn off for cogeneration purposes (heating, power generation, whatever). The Cheap Chinese solar panels require rare earths, are expensive, and mostly get installed for looks rather than effective power generation to any real degree. They are like electric cars. They are for green snobs. The efficient panels nobody is making would actually power a building with those on the roof. Not just light a few low power bulbs, but the actual power needs. In the African boonies, or remote villages in Central and South America, where there's no hydroelectric power or long distance power lines like in the USA? That would enable all sorts of critical industry and infrastructure. We should be making these modular setups and selling them, at a profit. Not giving away junk but selling stuff that works. They will pay for things that work.

We should also take what has been learned in Europe with their cars and use that here. Buckboard leaf springs and straight axles on modern trucks? Really? Yes, that's stupid. Why do Subaru's and jeeps have cast iron transfer cases when aluminum will do the job for half the weight? We do we still use cast iron engine blocks when we know how to make the blocks in aluminum? Duh! The more weight you remove from a car, the smaller the engine can be for the same acceleration, resulting in better fuel economy. Duh! We also know that you can make a silica based fiber that is 4% the cost of carbon fiber to manufacture, uses the same kinds of resins, and is tougher in accidents, resisting shattering. Rather than invest millions in aluminum body panels, why not use this fiber for car body parts? Why not make a hot hatch body tub out of this, so you get a baby-MacLaren running a 1.0 L turbo that gets 70 mpg because it only weighs 1200 pounds and seats your kids in the back for the school run? This is a DUH! answer. Ford imported their 3-cylinder diesel, the one they've been using in Europe for several years, and if the weight of their hot hatch were reduced using silica fiber tub and body panels it would perform like the Honda it is meant to compete with but get double the corporate average fuel economy, actually meeting the requirement of the law and allowing them to sell more of those big work trucks. These are things American manufacturing can actually do with existing technology and would put us ahead of China and at least tie with Europe, while employing Americans. We should be doing this. Trump says he wants this sort of thing, but I think Trump is a blowhard. Hillary doesn't say anything positive about capitalism.

America needs jobs. Any jobs like hopper filler and robot operator isn't going to employ many people, and we need as many people employed as possible. Employed people buy houses and consumer goods, and if the houses are reasonably priced they can spend more of their wages on goods that employ more people. The Housing Bubble was a terrible tragedy, caused by ARM greed in the financial sector, and the people who did it avoided jail. They are still out there, waiting for the next financial con game. We should be wary of them. In the meantime, think hard about new technologies and ask yourself if your current career and skillset have value to a local manufacturer, or if you know of a product that would make a good business. Manufacturing may end up a bubble, but like Amazon, it may be a persistent one with a future even if the money is nearly translucent.

Monday, January 18, 2016

Rains Update

This month we've gotten 1-2 inches of rain per day. This is pretty typical for an El Nino year. The drought is ended. Note that the local weather station on Wunderground.com only picked up 18% of the real rain total. They show .58 inches. Wrong!

Last night it stormed hard and gave us 3 inches of rain in 10 hours. That's a lot. There were flash flood warnings down in the valley relating to this storm. It is snowing up on Donner Pass right now. A big storm. I just checked the live webcams on I-80 and there's around 6 inches of new snow at Soda Springs, which is near the top of the pass. It is dawn so its pretty, but I'm sure glad I'm not trying to drive through that.

It stopped raining a few hours ago so I'm heading out for a walk while I can. You need your exercise when you can get it when the weather is like this, and my walks are very healthy. I've got The Fifth Elephant on my ears (nothing like the Fifth Element).
Here's a review by some guy on YouTube. Its a good book.

Saturday, January 16, 2016

China, Collapsing Yuan, and US Manufacturing


The ongoing collapse of China's currency and economy which started last week, crashing the DOW Jones Industrial Average and world's stock markets, and the closing of over 200 Walmart stores in the USA, means there's room for American manufacturing to take over all the stuff we won't be getting from China.

Trump, if he wins the Republican party nomination, says a lot of things that aren't true but make headlines. He's either nuts or manipulating the media. He's certainly tapped into the mainstream public outrage. 37% of Democrats have said they'll vote for him because "Hillary is a lyin' B17ch", to paraphrase the most common man on the street responses. Mothers especially hate Hillary. I'd rather see a saner person in office, but if its a choice between Hillary the Traitor (violating the Official Secrets act is the definition of Treason) or Trump the Blowhard, it will be Trump. He's the lesser evil, and doesn't hate America like Hillary clearly does. At least he wants to create jobs, which Hillary denies is a problem with the current administration. 94 million unemployed is a huge problem. I'm one of them. Hillary is going to jail. Sanders holds more of the remaining Democrat vote than she does. Communism has failed everywhere it was tried, and Norway paid for its communism with oil money, which ran out a few years ago and resulted in mass shootings and unemployment. Their benefits are ending and racism and hate crimes are on the rise in that nation. This is the true end of Communism. The money runs out, the party is over, and killing starts. Not very nice. We can't afford that here. We are a huge and diverse nation, and our prior concentration into cities built around cars was stupid. Long commutes are stupid. Low wages only works if you have low expenses, and over priced houses with long commutes means high expenses, requiring high wages. If you can't get the wages, the rest doesn't make sense.

Trump has talked about a 45% trade tariff on Chinese Goods, which is fine by me. I like manufacturing. Manufacturing is a great employer. The jobs are easy to learn, they pay a living wage, and employed people are too busy working to be drug addicts and welfare moms. They stay married because they have to money to stay together. Full Employment after WW2 was the best thing that every happened to America, and made us very stable and healthy as a nation. It was the hippies that screwed everything up. All those spoiled children on drugs, breaking families and refusing to work. We're still trying to recover from all their greedy mistakes.

I would love to be in a position to create Ready Reference sheets for libraries where I work such that Design and Manufacturing students can find a bunch of resources without having to do the same research twice, or a hundred times. Tell them about 3D CAD, not waste time on useless plastic 3D printers. Most parts need CNC for injection molds and specialized machines to make the load-bearing parts in a manufacturing process. General purpose 3D printers only make mock-ups of the approximate size, no actual strength, and not smooth enough to make a finished good of any value. 3D printers are toys.

Students are young. They have ambitions. They need information and tools to take their ideas and make them reality. Direct them to articles and books on design philosophy and how-to so they can build stuff we need, get a business around their gizmo, and get it made and profitable in stores. We can't do that so long as China has slave labor. The Foxconn suicides should never be forgotten. Things are so bad in China factory workers kill themselves.

So this currency crash in China is a good thing. It will make factories in the USA think hard about location, profitability, and wages, and they can't win in cities. They want employees, not drug addicts. That means they can't hire in cities. Cities are rotten, and full of welfare and junkies and murderers. They have to move out of the rotten cores and into the boonies. People will move to the jobs. And if the job sucks, they'll move to a better one. Mobility is obvious for the Millenials. It is better than living at home after graduating college.

If we built more funny little cars like the Opel Cadet or the Datsun 510, cheap and simple and not that fast, but reliable with a manual transmission, that's got a future in the America I can see we're approaching whether we want it or not. We're better off with jobs and homes than welfare mothers and communism.
Well, better than those cars anyway. But still simple, and trade speed for cost and slower means it takes less metal to be safe, lowering weight and costs. Young people could be doing this in little towns rather than suffering despair in the big city.

Bad Movies, Great Effects

I am old enough to remember great movies like the original Star Wars, on opening day, when Han Shot First. Movies today have much better special effects than vasoline smeared on the lens to hide the wheels on the anti-gravity land speeder. Nowadays you can CGI most anything you can think of, however the problem is that the dialogue and ideas are largely gone because the people who used to come up with them, called professional script writers and novellists, don't exist anymore. There used to be a union for writers in Hollywood, but they went on strike and Hollywood broke the union back in the 1990's. They kept the money and spent it on cocaine and hookers and movies have gotten worse ever since. If you want your faith in humanity stripped, watch a bunch of this year's movie trailers on YouTube. This is what Hollywood is producing, and its just.... awful. Beyond words awful. I feel my connection to other people evaporating when I see what they call professional entertainment. The Masses seem to want blood and circuses. No thank you.

To restore my sense of humanity I watched deleted scenes from Top Gear instead. They may be very silly, but at least they have a sense of humor rather than slick production values. When Richard Hammond crossed Botswana in a 32 horsepower 1950's car and named the little Opel Cadet "Oliver" he liked it so much he shipped it back to England and paid to have it restored. Still has it in his garage. When you're a multimillionaire you can afford to do that. Drive the little tan car that has a horn which goes "meep meep" very quietly. We need more cars like this in modern America. We need to slow down and not strives so very hard for so very little. We were better off when we were manufacturing stuff for a modest wage and living in modest houses with reasonable mortgages. Not pretending to be rich in mansions crammed up against each other in rotten suburbs close to the freeway offramp. Who needs that?

Its the desire for Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous which is probably behind the coke-dreams that call themselves major motion pictures today. I miss witty dialogue and clever ideas instead of a selection of special effects which have become the movie. You get most of the best scenes of a film in the trailer these days. Just watch the trailer, you don't need the film. Easy.

Wednesday, January 6, 2016

North Korea Nuclear Test Faked?

North Korea claims they successfully detonated a hydrogen bomb. This turns out to be a lie. They probably tested an atom bomb since the yield was far too small for a hydrogen bomb, but there's a catch with this one too. The USGS says that the quake at the site had an epicenter of 6 miles, far deeper than North Korea can drill or dig. You need special technology for that. And they don't have it. This is also the depth that earthquakes happen. Most quakes in California and Japan are around 6 miles deep. Japan is close to Korea. South Korea claims the epicenter of the quake is nearer the surface than the USGS detected. This may be true, but details are still emerging.

The international stock markets have crashed, HARD, over the threat of a North Korea with working nukes, though so far the evidence is they're still dealing with Atom Bombs. An Atom bomb can ignite the deuterium and tritium to make a nuke, why they are sometimes called "nuclear triggers". The technology involved is complicated, and has issues of decay so you need a serious support system to make them work consistently, and they have an expiration date of a couple years, at which point you need to replace several parts to refresh them. This is the upside of nukes. They don't last. This is also the downside. They are a use them or lose them tech, if you get them through unofficial channels... such as ISIS or one of those other terror organizations bent on murder and self destruction. ISIS is heading for suicide in eastern Syria. That's their whole game plan. Kill everybody, then get smited by God in eastern Syria. Its entirely a suicide cult. Thanks to Obama, they're armed with American weapons and hardware. Funny how that is. And he keeps insisting that ISIS is strictly JV team, and there's no islamic extremism since Climate Change is the real threat. Sigh.

In other news we are getting lots of rain in California, and lots of snow in the middle and high Sierras, above 4500 feet. No snow here where I live, but plenty or drizzle and rain and wind. Its nice.

This is Climate Same.

Saturday, January 2, 2016

ANIME: SNAFU Review Again

I re-watched SNAFU again. And once again, I am struck by how uncharacteristically honest it is. My Teenage Love Romantic Comedy is Wrong, As I Expected (aka SNAFU) is a master work on independence in a culture where people pretend to fit in. This is really important to understand Japan's hive-mind mentality. Refusing to fit in, and making a show about characters that refuse, is a big deal. It's an even bigger deal because it won anime of the year for each season it ran, and remains popular and talked about. Its a lot of pressure on the author since he was only just finishing the novels as they were turned into anime in the second season. He has to write a lot more for there to be a third season, particularly when considering where its been left at this point.

And where its been left is rather important. In traditional teenage boy anime, a guy chooses from several girls and they all fawn over him and their love triangle (or bigger mess) provides drama. In American drama, the boy will sleep with each of them under various circumstances, but they don't even kiss in Anime. They'll see her boobs, but they won't kiss, because public displays of affection are largely taboo. Meanwhile, hourly rental hookup hotels, literally called Love Hotels, allow couples a private place to get it on, often in the middle of town. You pay cash or use a credit card, the machine drops the key. No interaction with other people. No witnesses. That's very different from here. In a traditional anime, he'd pick one of the girls and she'd be his, it fades to black, that's the end of the show. Done.

In SNAFU? I like to think that the bad end is in the title and that this story is a memoir from the future reflecting on his high school years rather than a developing romance. I think his commentaries reveal this in a subtle way.
I hate nice girls. Just exchanging pleasantries with them makes me curious,and texting each other makes me feel restless. If I get a call, for the rest of the day, I’ll keep checking my call history with a stupid grin on my face. But I know the truth. They’re just being nice. Anyone nice to me is nice to others too. But I always find myself on the verge of forgetting that. If the truth is a cruel mistress, then a lie must be a nice girl. And so, niceness is a lie. I would always hold expectation. I would always misunderstand. At some point, I stopped hoping. An experienced loner never falls for the same trap twice. A lone warrior, surviving hundreds of battles. When it comes to losing, I’m the strongest. That’s why, no matter what happens, I will always hate nice girls.
Hachiman Hikigaya (My Teen Romantic Comedy SNAFU)
He's not going to get either girl. Its always been about him learning to fail, and to accept that failure, and even with him opening up to them a little during the latter parts of the second season, I still think he'll get stomped anyway. This is about how he learns and justifies his dead eyes, frequently mocked during the entire course of the story. This is not a story where he'll succeed. It's never been about success. That's a very unusual situation for a show for teenagers. He isn't supposed to succeed. There's no happy ending. In this way, it's a more Asian story than we typically see with love comedies. In Asia, all stories are tragic, merely reminding you how awful life is, and the moments of beauty always cursed by pain.