Sunday, December 27, 2009

Failure in Copenhagen on global warming

I was at first disappointed that the meeting on global warming in Copenhagen did not produce any tangible results. Possibly, though, it is for the better. The Kyoto agreement did not do much, and I suspect an agreement in Copenhagen would have led to committments that would not be followed.

Instead, the ravenous appetite of China and India for energy as they develop will drive energy prices so high, that there will be very high incentive to develop more energy efficient ways to live.

I am looking forward to ten dollars a gallon gas prices! May seem strange that I like the prospect, but it will be most effective in getting people to stop driving gas guzzlers, and I can certainly afford it myself.

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Loss to Alabama

Losing the SEC Championship game in Atlanta on Saturday dashed also the prospect of another national championship. However, with 22 consecutive wins and last year's championship, the UF football team is certainly storied. It is good that they leave room for future team to outshine them at least in one possible target: Winning the SEC championship without a single loss in a season.

Friday, November 20, 2009

Having a cold

I had bronchitis a couple of weeks ago, and I had to stop exercising for more than a week, and now it is going to take me a month or so to get back in shape. Normally, without colds and iterruptions, I would experience only the gradual loss of fitness that comes with age. This way, I spend long periods improving my fitness after illnesses and even long trips. This is much more enjoyable.

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Fort Hood Massacre

The loss of life and the trauma is terrible. I hope that this incident will help show our leaders the terrible cost of the hopeless campaign in Afghanistan and will hasten our withdrawal. As such it may save American lives in the future.

Friday, October 30, 2009

IEDs

It is too bad that our soldiers are getting killed with ingenious cheap devices in places like Afghanistan. Some possible consolation is that it is good to have methods that weak nations can use to defend themselves against powerful ones. We may enjoy the benefits one day when the Afghans use it against the Chinese.

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

health care legislation

We spend on healthcare about twice as other developed countries without much to show for it. We could save one trillion dollars a year if we brought down our spending to the French level, the country with the best healthcare system in the world according to the World Health Organization. So I am a bit sad that the current round of health care reform may fail or accomplish very little.

Silver lining: The system we have in place subsidizes handsomely old folks like me (I am 65) who have good health insurance. So I will be able to hang on to these generous subsidies.