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Tuesday, December 10, 2019

Pressurizing?

It's been a while since I called out any of the news readers and commentators on NPR on matters of language or use of a questionable word form   So here's my seasonal contribution.
Driving home today I had the BBC's OS program (Outside Sources, for the uninitiated). They were reporting on today's press announcement that the Democratic House intends to write and approve two articles of Impeachment. In describing the first article involving Trump's effort to get Ukraine's president to damage Biden's campaign with charges of corruption in Ukraine. In explaining this the BBC reporter said that Trump will be charged with "PRESSURIZING" the government of Ukraine to announce such an investigation.  Why would the Brits believe that word was interchangeable with "PRESSURING". I had always assumed PRESSURIZING more accurately applied to situations where pressure such as air or gas was injected into a finite space to be eventually used and/or released at a later time. A tire is pressurized  A driver might be pressured to apply pressurized brakes to slow a vehicle.  But how could Trump pressurize Zelenski to take a desired action?

Tuesday, September 3, 2019

Inadequately researched, distracting TV commercials

I'm nor sure why the culprits are always the writers and directors of commercials for pharmaceuticals. Probably a coincidence. Months ago a commercial for Myrbetric pulled this faux pas.This time it's Jardiance. The main character in their vignette is a female band director who looks like she's trying to fly rather than direct. She uses even, symmetrical arm flapping movements to "lead" her band. I have no idea if the medicine is causative or not. But I do know that virtually every instrumental musician has to wince every time the commercial is aired. No conductor or director would want to be portrayed this way. 

Sunday, July 28, 2019


ITALIAN TOILETS

Thoughts and observations concerning public bathrooms in Italy:

(We were told some towns and tourist sites in Europe would charge for access to a public bathroom. In some cases it would be advisable to use the facilities of cafes and restaurants where we ate. These observations include both “pay toilets” and free ones in cafes.) My observations are offered for those like my wife and I who travel infrequently.

  1. Our tour bus had an onboard john, but it was never made available to us. Guess none of our bus excursions were deemed long enough to meet any real needs. And later the facilities onboard the excursion boat were inoperable or closed.
  2. Our first opportunity was a “pay” facility in Cinque Terre. Sitting at a card table outside the entryway was a lady collecting one Euro (about $1.30) per person. Facilities were not terrible, but forgettable.
  3. The convenience store in Pisa which was our meetup point allowed use of facilities with proof of purchase from the store. A guard sat at the entryway punching store receipts to prevent unqualified use.
  4. The only other “pay” facility I accessed was in Venice on St Mark’s square. It had two coin operated gates (1.5 Euros) and a live person to facilitate use of the automated equipment and/or prevent bypassing. Like many of the restaurant baths this one was up one flight of stairs.
  5. Several of the restaurant baths were laid out strangely, at least unusual by American standards. They had a group sink/mirrors/towel (or air dryer) area serving both males and females. The private toilet stalls were marked for either Male or Female and had the expected door lock.
  6. Some of the washup sinks had hot and cold faucets controlled by foot pedals rather than handles.
  7. I don’t know about the ladies’ facilities, but several of the toilets in the men’s stalls possessed no toilet seat as we know and expect it. There was just the porcelain toilet bowl.
  8. Bathrooms in hotels typically contained two odd features.
    * In addition to a standard toilet there is a free standing bidet.
    * Limited shower curtains. One end of shower stall often left open, uncovered.

Wednesday, June 12, 2019

"Some people say"

If President Trump were really as honestly pleased as he claims with the compliments "some people" pay him for things like the DDay speech that was written for him to deliver he would identify, name those "some people" plus the speech writer. Just sayin'.

Thursday, May 23, 2019

Trump tax returns

Random thoughts on Donald Trump. The Congressional Democrats, and the mainstream media:
Who prior to 2017 could have imagined a scenario in which any politician, much less the President of the United States, would feel compelled or emboldened to declare on national that he was a “stable genius”?
Since some time in 2015 or 2016 Donald Trump has claimed that he couldn’t or wouldn’t release his federal income tax returns apparently for any year because he was in an ongoing status of being “under audit”. Never mind that there is apparently no law, no legal justification for this claim. Nowhere does anything assert that being under audit represents a valid justification for wrapping his data in a cloke of secrecy. A few tepid justifications have been offered by him and his lawyers and supporters claiming that the great unwashed public would simply not be equipped to understand his returns without jumping to erroneous conclusions. The questions raised by this situation are many. Is EVERY year involved in an unresolved audit? Has IRS not been able to wrap up any of the specific audits? If some specific years have had their audits concluded and closed out, why can’t the returns for those years and the audit findings be revealed? How does the fact that each year an audit is opened relate to prior years? Why doesn’t the media press the president on the public’s right to know what public officials’ finances looks like? How is concealing this in the best interests of the nation?
And this week Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin has bought into the administration’s claim that Congress cannot compel release of this information absent a clear “legislative purpose” to Congress’s demand. I do predict this defense will eventually crumble before the third equal branch of the federal government, the Judiciary. But this three years+ of “running out the clock” is at a minimum frustrating. And the claim by Trump and his supporters that the entire question was rendered moot by the 2016 elections is insulting and one that the media and the Congressional Democrats should not let stand unchallenged.