Friday, January 22, 2016

Progressivism = Socialism = Entitlement

Recently on a popular form of social media, I saw a meme going around about Bernie Sanders.  It went so far as to proclaim "#feelthebern"!

Now, I have spent some time this winter watching both the Republican and more recently the Democratic debates.  As I watched the last debate, Bernie Sanders had the opportunity to speak on the rising cost of college tuition, and how the government should make college free for all who desire it.  He also touted "Income Equity", but didn't detail how he would accomplish this.  Maybe by taxing the 1%ers or the corporations sheltering money in offshore accounts in the Caribbean -- not sure.

My first and enduring impression:  "This guy is a SOCIALIST"!

No earth-shattering news there.  He calls himself a "Democratic Socialist" or prefers "Progressivism". 

Because what's in a label, right?

Some thoughts on socialism from historical figures that have dealt with it personally and directly:

"Socialism is a philosophy of failure, the creed of ignorance, and the gospel of envy, its inherent virtue is the equal sharing of misery".  -Winston Churchill

"The problem with socialism is that you eventually run out of other peoples' money".  -Margaret Thatcher

"The goal of socialism is communism".  -Vladimir Lenin
 
"Socialism has no moral justification whatsoever; poor people are not morally superior to rich people, nor are they owed anything by rich people simply because of their lack of success. Charity is not a socialist concept - it is a religious one, an acknowledgment of God's sovereignty over property, a sovereignty the Left utterly rejects".  -Ben Shapiro

Charity is not a socialist concept - it is a religious one.  I like that.

Many politicians recently have countered with:

"You can always count on Americans to do the right thing - after they've tried everything else". -Winston Churchill.  Which by the way, according to snopes.com -- he never actually said, but was attributed to him, because it "sounds" like something Churchill would say...
 
I think we can ALL agree that Americans did the right thing from the very beginning when they created the U.S. Constitution (after they tried British Colonial rule)...
Under a Constitutional government, the power of the government is limited. Limited government allows the citizens to rule their country.

Under the Socialist brand of government, sometimes called an "Administrative state", citizens do not rule their country, bureaucrats do, and with them the elite intellectuals. At least THEY think they are elite!
 
Socialism is like a cancer.  It creeps up on you and pretty soon after being given everything by the government, you begin to expect it.  You feel ENTITLED to it.

Entitlement is the scourge of our generation.  Thank you Obama.
 
What ever happened to the "American Dream" -- where if you worked hard you could buy a house and provide for your family and possibly have enough saved up to send your children to college?

Bernie Sanders says he's going to get it from the "Billionaires" and the other 1%er's and then he's going to tax Wall Street and change banking laws to prevent offshore tax shelters used by big corporations...  Of course! 

But here's the catch:  Middle-out economics with a progressive tax is an interesting idea, as long as it can encourage entrepreneurs and create jobs... but can it???  In trickle-down economics, at least the free market in and of itself decides the outcome.  In a Middle-Out system, bureaucrats and the intellectual elite decide.  Now the outcome is decided by a human factor that most likely is influenced by special interest and entitlement.
 
Some random somewhat thoughts regarding separation of church and state: 

Separation of Church and State was intended to prevent the government to from dictating a religion to us (ref. Great Britan).  The catch was, much of the constitution was based on Christian morals.  So yes-- there is a separation of church and state in our version of democracy, but it also relies heavily on Christian values as a moral compass.

Important to note, that Hitler promoted a brand of "National Socialist Populism", and that is significantly different than the brand of populism we are experiencing today in the United States.


 

 

Wednesday, December 30, 2015

Snowboarding on the Decline?

Is Snowboarding Declining?

The real issue is that snowboarding is A LOT harder to learn than skiing. The addage "Skiing is easy to learn but hard to get good at -- Snowboarding is hard to learn but easy to get good at" is true. I was a life-long skier that learned to snowboard a few years ago. Learning to snowboard means accepting those 100 falls before you can even begin to move with some control. And those are those extremely hard and painful caught-an-edge-slammed-to-the-ground-and-couldn't-catch-myself type falls, that most -- except for some teenagers -- just won't put up with. Eventually, I found that once I could control those edges, it was just a matter of repetition. The more reps, the faster I progressed. I boarded 60+ times last season, and now I look forward to screaming down those black diamond runs and launching gap jumps. Still, it ends up being much easier on skis -- but I just happen to enjoy the surf-like floating feeling you get from riding a snowboard...

Tuesday, December 1, 2015

The REAL Rules of the Mountain

Here's the REAL rules of the mountain:
1. Yield to the hosers downhill from you. Yes, everyone going slower than you is an idiot and everyone going faster a maniac, but all you have to do is not run over anyone in front of you.
2. Don't stand on my f*ing snowboard (or skis as the case may be) in the lift line. If you do you're going to get thumped.
3. If you drink or 420 and ski you're not only risking your neck but mine. Save it for the après ski.
4. Help some one that's learning (find the chalet, pick up their yard sale or stand up after falling). If you don't you're a loser.
5. Ski racers are mostly dicks and will do everything to cut in front of you in the lift line to get one more lap.  Accept it with a Danny Davis smirk and palms up WTF and say "nice tights"...
6. Powder stashes are way more fun with friends.
7. You can have just as much fun with skis from the fall swap and a Carhart jacket as you can with a Descente gold lamay jumpsuit. this aint Chamonix people, act accordingly.
8. Remember the bumper sticker "Keep Skiing Weird"? Moral:  Who ever has the most fun wins...  ;-)

Friday, February 20, 2015

14er

14er's

A few years back, my wife and I had the chance (while we were out in Colorado for a graduation), to climb a bonafide Colorado "Fourteener".  Wikipedia defines a fourteener:  "In local mountaineering parlance in the western United States, a fourteener (or "14er") is a mountain peak that exceeds 14,000 feet (4267.2 meters) elevation".

There are actually 53 of them in Colorado.  We started on our bucket list by climbing just one.  Longs Peak, in Rocky Mountain National Park -- located in the northern Front Range of the Rocky Mountains of North America.

And so, early one morning in late May, my wife Terri, my nephew John and I set out to test our resolve and endurance against the vaunted Longs...

8 years later...

On the trail from the 4wd trailhead to lower South Colony Lakes, about one more hour to reach our 11,500 ft. base camp.  4 hours of hiking with a 46 lb. backpack.  We set up camp in the dark, headlamps glowing.  Dinner is boiling in a pot.  The small backpacking stove hissing in the twilight.  Too exhausted to care much about the 40 mph wind gusts that are trying to flatten my tent.

Backpacking is like giving birth to a baby.  The joy of the end result makes you forget the pain of the journey.



Thursday, February 12, 2015

The Transformation

As I mentioned, I'm a skier.  My daughter is as well (since she was 4 yrs. old).  I'm not afraid to say I've always had a disdain for snowboarders.  Okay disdain is a strong word.  Not out-right hate.  Not pathological dislike.  More of a skeptical uneasiness.  I just didn't get them.  Always sitting at the top of the hill, fixing their bindings. 

I don't know why.  I just didn't think they had much skill.  And, they always seemed to be cutting in front of me with their side-to-side goofy traversing.  Oh yah, and as everyone already knows:  They scrape ALL of the snow off the hill.

Well, let me go on record as saying:  "I was ALL wrong".

A couple of years ago, my daughter's friends goaded her into trying snowboarding.  It was one of those cold January ice-covered days at Welch.  She rented a board, fell a couple of hundred times, got back up, and never looked back.  She was hooked.

So naturally, as a father I was curious.  It's probably just youthful attraction toward all things different and unusual, I thought.  Then I thought:  Why not give it a try?  I'll take 3 lessons to ensure I give it a real chance, then I'll decide.  I bought a board (a 164 cm Ride No.4 mountain screamer).  By the third lesson I had fell a couple of hundred times.  Bought some knee pads.  Ditched the mountain screaming edge-catching suicide plank.  Got a sweet 158.5cm Burton Rippey (circa 2000) and never looked back.  I was hooked.

Now I'm shredding the DBD Back Bowls at Welch on my Burton Custom Flying-V with new Burton Custom bindings.  We recently made a spring break / college road trip out west and BOARDED Park City UT and Steamboat CO.  Didn't even bring the skis.  Ain't life grand.

Now I'm learning to Telemark.  So who knew the weird places this journey would take me?





Monday, February 9, 2015

Welch Village Back Bowls

Steep and deep.  Well okay -- relatively steep (for MN) and just enough snow to make them shreddable.  Boarded for two-and-a-half hours straight on Welch's backside on Saturday.  Yah, that's right, the Welch Village Back Bowls.  Black gold.  Texas Tea.  I digress.

These are pretty awesome ski runs for these parts.  Adam's Abyss has a couple of nice drops.  Lauren's Ledge is quarter-pipe-bowl-like and super fun to shred from edge to edge...  Just let the back of your board slide over the side edge and cut back -- a rush for sure.

And it's fun to stand at the bottom, waiting for the chair lift, watching people come down the Carter's Cliff headwall at the bottom of the back bowl access run.  The ski patrol likes to stand at the bottom of Carter's Cliff and pick up the "Yard Sale" items left by gapers and gorbys as they fly, out of control, into the side woods above...

Friday, January 30, 2015

It's the Journey

It's not the destination, it's the journey... A while back, a friend of mine said that, and it really stuck with me.

I'm a lifelong skier (40+ years).  I've skied all over the Midwest and West as a teenager with my family, then with my own family as an adult.  Back in my younger days, I learned to ski at Buck Hill, since it was close to home.  In the mid-70's, my sister and I received a Christmas gift of 5 ski lessons from our parents.  We we're skaters; my Sister a figure skater and I a hockey player -- having learned on second-hand double-runners when we were just 4 years old at the rink across from my Grandmothers' house in St. Peter, MN.

Ahhhhhhhh, the smell of wet wool mittens on a cast iron warming house stove in the morning...

You know, it was a big deal back then to ski, and not everyone got the chance.  In retrospect, lift tickets were only $10-15, but that was a lot of money in that day and age.  This was after Stein Eriksen and leather Henkel ski boots -- the dawn of when Wayne Wong and "Hotdog" skiing were the rage.  If you remember Jet Turns, Ballet Skiing, orange Olin Mark IV's and Lange Boots famous poster proclaiming "Keep Those Tips Up", then you're getting warmer.

Well, our first ski lesson was in mid-January, and as I recall, the temperature was approaching zero with a wind chill nearing -50°F below zero.  No matter.  We bundled up and were ready and raring to go.  The ski instructor, surprisingly, was not deterred by the weather, perhaps being infected with our googley, wild-eyed enthusiasm. 

After that first lesson, I knew I wanted to be a skier.