Friday, December 8, 2017

The Budget and Waste


The political games associated with the federal budget are afoot yet again.

The ball has been kicked down the road yet again, although for only two more weeks.

It is a sad statement about the state of our government that our elected representatives cannot, do not, and apparently will not understand the waste and danger to our common defense that is generated by their now almost continual ineptitude at passing a comprehensive budget to fund the government. 

According to Federal News Radio, The Department of the Navy estimates that continuing resolutions have led to the waste of $4 billion since 2011.

That is $4 billion taxpayer dollars because the Congress cannot execute one of its fundamental and most important Constitutional duties.

Given the speed of commerce and communications, our government's approach to the budget is increasingly archaic, wasteful, and dangerous. 

It has also become far too political.

The Washington Examiner has an article about how the continuing resolutions negatively impact the defense of the country and readiness. 

From that article, here is an example of the impact:

For example, America’s long-running wars have depleted the stockpiles of bombs and missiles used to battle the Islamic State and other terrorist groups.
The new budget includes money to ramp up production of high-demand weapons to replenish the inventory, but as long as spending is frozen at last year’s levels, that initiative cannot begin.

We could run out of critical weapons to defend the nation because the Congress cannot pass a fully funded budget.

The continuing resolution situation cannot continue. 

There ought to be a law! 

But wait, there is! Congress just ignores it.

-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD


Thursday, December 7, 2017

The Decline and Fall of the NFL, part 2


I received some interesting comments on my blog from yesterday. I felt the need to continue the exploration into the Decline and Fall of the NFL.


Today is written from a personal and family perspective.

My family used to be huge NFL Sunday football fans. We would gather every weekend to watch the games. We routinely cheer for and support four teams: Steelers, Redskins, Cowboys, and Ravens. 


The NFL, in its effort to saturate the market has made gathering together on a Sunday afternoon to barbecue and enjoy the games almost impossible.

This season the Steelers have been playing in primetime almost every game--especially the latter part of the season. The Redskins and the Ravens have been moving around the dial as well.

Primetime games are terrible for East Coast residents. They do not end until well after 11:00 PM and many of us, myself included have to get up early in the morning. I almost never see the end of a primetime game. Perhaps that is why the recent Monday Night Football game in Baltimore saw low attendance. The games end too late.

Through the magic of selling its soul to television, the NFL is actually reducing our opportunity to watch the teams we care about. Even with Fantasy Football, the product being presented is not compelling enough to watch unless our favorite is playing.


Empty Seats in Seattle
Seriously, who wants to see New England crush some hapless AFC East team again? Or Watch the Panthers and the Titans unless they live i the home cities? I admit, I like to watch the Packers when Aaron Rogers is playing, but he is hurt.

Because of the jumbled television schedule, including too many primetime games, our family does not routinely gather anymore for the Sunday games. I am sure we are not the only ones. 

The NFL just isn't fun and when watching with young, impressionable pre-teens, all too often there has to be an explanation about sportsmanship and the caution "don't do this on the playground."

The NFL is at a crossroads, it can change and rework its image and interpretation of the game of football, or it will die within a decade after the over-generous TV contracts expire.

-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD

Wednesday, December 6, 2017

The Decline and Fall of the NFL


The demise of the biggest sports league on the planet may be upon us.

The fall from supreme status has begun. The Chicago Tribune is carrying an article about the demise of the NFL. 

Stadiums are not full, TV ratings are down and the fan base seems to be eroding.

I am told that tickets to the Sunday Ravens gam could be had for $15. I think the face value of the tickets were $85. And the Ravens are in the playoff hunt.

Why?

The answer may be that the play on the field no longer reflects the norms of society. Or, in short, the NFL has ruined the game of football by allowing it to grow into a sport where the violence and lack of sportsmanship shock the fans and cause them to turn elsewhere.

Add to this that the ticket prices to attend the games in person are out of sight expensive and the fan experience is less than enjoyable and you have a recipe for failure.

The NFL has to do many things to recover from the death spiral.

First, focus on the game. Stop catering to television which often interrupts the flow of the game with unnecessary timeouts. Return the game to its roots.

Second, stop the wanton and unnecessary violence. This weekend's games are an example of violence run amok. Wanton hits designed to hurt opponents. While one game suspensions are a start, why weren't the perpetrators of the violence immediately ejected? They were not ejected because fundamentally the NFL sees the violence as improving ratings, I believe.

Third, improve the in stadium fan experience. Do not tolerate violence in the stand and taunting of opposing team's fans. 

Fourth, remove the "thuggishness" from the game. That is an example of poor sportsmanship and should not be tolerated. 

Fifth, make the game safer so that parents will let their boys play it again. I played high school football, and I was injured. Injuries happen, but fundamentally the game is not safe and needs to be reworked. 

Sixth, get rid of Thursday football, except on Thanksgiving. there is too much of a poor product.

Seventh, focus on product improvement. Improve the pace of play. Right now there is about 10 minutes of action in a 60 minute game that takes 3 1/2 hours to play. What is wrong with this picture?

Eighth, enforce a no tolerance policy for PEDs. The current policy almost encourages players to use PEDs because of the slap on the had for the first offenses. Implement a season long suspension and that will stop the abuse of PEDs and may ultimately make the game safer by reducing the bulk and strength of the players. 

These, however are just my thoughts.

I feel that the NFL has lost its fan base and may not recover.

-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD

Tuesday, December 5, 2017

National Monument or Park?


What is in a name? 

Quite a bit it turns out. 

I learned something this morning that I didn't fully understand before. National Parks are established by Congress. National Monuments are established by the President.

This was not so clear before the current concern about Bears Ears National Monument.

The discussion about reducing the size of a National Monument really is a decision left to the President. There are a lot of issues involved. 

In terms of background, The New York Times reports that: 

President Obama created Bears Ears National Monument in December 2016, after years of lobbying by five tribes in the region: the Navajo, the Hopi, the Ute Mountain Ute, the Ute Indian Tribe of the Uintah and Ouray Reservation, and the Zuni. It is named for a pair of towering buttes — the Bears Ears — that dominate much of the landscape.

There are a lot of issues surrounding this relatively new National Monument. The good that will come from the current discussion, and through the judicial process, is to determine how far a President can go in determining the relative size of a National Monument. In this case, there apparently are five Native American Tribes also involved in the planning and definition of the monument.

Do not misunderstand me here, I am not against National Monuments and land preservation, but some of the writers have suggested that President Obama may have been a bit too generous when establishing the monument using the Antiquities Act.

It should make for another interesting day in court.

-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD

Monday, December 4, 2017

Monday Musings - December 4, 2017


1. The first Monday of December has arrived. There are only three Mondays left this year. 

Riordin under the Tree Skirt
2. There are 21 shopping days until Christmas. 

3. I think we finally have all of the seasonal decorations out of their storage boxes and on display to brighten the otherwise dark season.

4. Riordin, the cat, uses the tree skirt as a means to hide from and then attack Finnegan, our Yorkie. They play very well together.

5. Beautiful December weather has been evident the past few days, however, the impending weather report is full of cold and even ac mention of snow. And so it begins . . . 

6. We have been doing a lot of shopping on line again this year. We have been driven to it because the "brick and mortar" stores seem to be out of everything we are looking for.

7. We did get ourselves and early Christmas present. We are not the proud owners of a GE Sol. We are still unlocking its features, but we like it.

8. I am way behind in my racquetball league--I think I have to play three games this week to get back on schedule.

Headlines


What happened when North Carolina cut taxes like the GOP plans to for the country - The Washington Post
G.O.P. Pushes to Avoid Government Shutdown, but the Path Is Tricky - The New York Times

The Lure of a Better Life, Amid Cold and Darkness - The New York Times

Ravens, NFL scramble as fans stay home - The Baltimore Sun


Ronald Reagan Quote for the Week


"Let's not go back. Our choice must be to keep our nation strong, free, and full of hope. America is a great and generous nation. We are the beacon of liberty and freedom to all the world. Together you and I, with the help of the Republican team, can finish the job. We can realize the dreams our critics said were not possible."
Address to the Nation on the Congressional and Gubernatorial Elections, November 2, 1986

-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD

Sunday, December 3, 2017

December Musings


The season continues to race by. 

Finnegan Admiring the Tree
Chris and I have finally, mostly, completed decorating the house for the season. The second tree was completed yesterday and the boxes of decorations are now empty. 

Although it should be time to relax and enjoy the season, the buying and gifting is now ramping up to a fevered pitch. And then there is the issue of the Christmas cards, or are we sending New Year's cards this year. I guess we still haven't decided. 

Moon over Elkridge
December 2, 2017
In the exciting news department at least we have a new tax plan. Sadly, I expect to pay more. I firmly believe that I am in the group targeted to pay more in order that the truly rich can get a tax break. Perhaps people who actually pay taxes should write the tax laws. Now if Congress can pass a Continuing Resolution, or a budget, to keep the government running past next Friday it will be the best Christmas gift.

Finally, I admired the moon last evening as Chris and I walked the dogs. It was hanging there in the sky peeking out between the bare branches of the trees. I guess it was supposed to be a supermoon or something. It looked like the moon that I have been viewing for the past 62 years. Actually, the supermoon is tonight and that is when it is at perigee. Wow. Weirdly, the next supermoon occurs on New Year's Day.

And so, December is off and running.

-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD

Saturday, December 2, 2017

Enjoying the Season


And so it is December. 

Lakefront Columbia, MD
December 1, 2017
That, of course, means events and activities. Last evening we were part of two events. We attended a Craft Cocktail Crawl on the waterfront in Columbia and then went into Ellicott City for Midnight Madness.

On the Street Corner - Midnight Madness
Ellicott City, MD
December 1, 2017
It was a beautiful and unseasonably warm evening on the lake. We enjoyed some revelry with our friends and started the weekend off with some unique and creative cocktails. 

Following the enjoyment on the waterfront, it was off to Ellicott City for the Midnight Madness shopping experience. I personally love Midnight Madness because it reminds me of life before shopping malls when people went out into the town to shop. 

The added benefit for Midnight Madness is that many of the stores offer light munchies and beverages. It helps to "make the season bright!"

The shopping can also be fun. I always find interesting things. For instance, the coaster above carrying the witty, and true, statement.

-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD

Friday, December 1, 2017

December Arrives


Overnight, the last month of the year arrived.

In the heads of most children it is the best month of the year, but for many adults it falls well below that.

I look forward to the holiday parties and revelry. 

I remember that when I was a kid, December was divided into shopping days left until Christmas. I'm not sure that applies anymore. Shopping days until Christmas excluded Sundays, but now with the magic of computers and the stores being open seven days a week, the number of shopping days is really the same as the number of days remaining until Christmas. That number is 24 today.

Does anything other than Christmas happened during December?

USS Arizona Memorial
Pearl Harbor, Hawai'i
Certainly. Our family has birthdays to celebrate and then there is New Year's Eve (which is a December event). 

There is also Pearl Harbor Day on December 7th.

Don't forget the Solstice. Winter begins at 11:28 AM EST on December 21st. Brrrrr.

A busy month is fully underway!

Let's try to keep our heads about us!

-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD

Thursday, November 30, 2017

The Petulant Child (er Dog)


Finn with Shoe
I am not sure whether it is an excessive amount of energy, but the new puppy, Finnegan, who is not new anymore, had a rough ending to the night. 

That meant sleep ended at 4AM because we confined him to his cage and he cried for 45 minutes. Ugh.


Finn with Shoe Part 2 
It is hard to sleep with a petulant dog howling, barking, racing around and generally being a problem child.

It is part of the "growing" pains, but it surely is a pain.

Right now he is busy eating a shoe. It is not my shoe. At least he is quiet. Given that he is not creating a nuisance by barking or harassing Makayla, I am going to let him enjoy Chris' shoe. 

Tomorrow will be better!

Promise?

-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD

Wednesday, November 29, 2017

Winter Around the Corner


As autumn slides into winter, I found an unsettling prediction in this morning's The Washington Post. 

Washington, DC, Regional Snow Forecast
The winter snow forecast is in. The coming winter is predicted to be more normal--which means a lot more snow than last year's mild winter. I added a star to the map to indicate the approximate area where I am located in relation to the rest of the region.

Snow, or the threat of snow, tends to shut down the entire region. It is a a bit comical, coming as I do from a place where snow is just one of the seasons and they are equipped to deal with it. Here are the seasons in Upstate NY: Snow, Spring, Rain, Harvest.
I do write that a bit tongue-in-cheek, but it is not far from the truth.

Well, since the forecast is in I need to be ready for the coming season. I wonder how much snow we will actually receive. At least the season is beginning mildly. Temperatures today are expected to be in the 60's. 

I wish I could play hooky and go golfing.

-- Bob Doan, Elkridge, MD

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