T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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88.1 | | HAAG::HAAG | Rode hard. Put up wet. | Mon Nov 21 1994 19:31 | 4 |
| re .0
one could argue these "loses" are simply natural selection,
politically.
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88.2 | Them's the breaks... | SOLVIT::KRAWIECKI | Less government, stupid! | Tue Nov 22 1994 08:33 | 2 |
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Who covered the "human tradgedy" of the massive job losses at Digital?
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88.3 | Anyone except an elevator operator could see | MIMS::WILBUR_D | | Tue Nov 22 1994 08:51 | 11 |
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NPR great station.
Jobs being recycled on the hill. One nice thing about the election.
Like removing the Elevator operator that runs an automatic elevator.
What a waste of money.
Do these people just like to play Piccard "Make it so number 1"
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88.4 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Tue Nov 22 1994 09:40 | 1 |
| MacNeil Lehrer is on NPR?
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88.5 | | CALDEC::RAH | the truth is out there. | Tue Nov 22 1994 10:50 | 2 |
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It airs on the local NPR affiliate at 15.00 PST here in SF Bay area.
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88.6 | | HAAG::HAAG | Rode hard. Put up wet. | Fri Dec 16 1994 13:57 | 86 |
|
Note 14.492 by SX4GTO::OLSON
>why are we chasing a sub in international waters, anyway? dropping
>sonobuoys is considered as agressive as locking a targeting radar on
>a jet.
wrong dougo. your lack of understanding about US Naval tactics and position
on such matters is obviously lacking - tho understandable. i'm in a generous
mood today so listen up (whatever happened to listenup? but i digress). the
US Navy has a long standing position that it reserves the right to indentify
any/all objects detected in its "area of operations". the US Navy interprets
its area of operations to include ALL international waters and ALL
international airspace. the Navy also reserves the right to use any/all
methods
short of actual attack to indentify said objects.
that "short of actual attack" is the sticky point. the ruskies, and i presume
the chinese and a host of others, consider tracking of subs with sonobouys to
be an aggressive offensive attack. the Navy considers those kinds of operations
as prudent defensive measures. as an example:
in the very early 70's i was the lead controller for anti-submarine exercises
about 600 nautical miles NW of pearl harbour. i had a couple of helo's and
we were practicing "dips" on a remote controlled sub. one of the helo's (S2F's
i believe - memory ain't as good as it used to be) reported a warning
light on for his MAD gear. this was unusual since we weren't using MAD gear
in the exercises. i vectored the helo a few miles off in the distance and
instructed him to go ahead and light up his gear and run tests. in less than
5 seconds he radioed back "MADMAN, MADMAN". his gear was reporting a large,
underwater piece of metal directly below him.
i asked the pilot if the MADMAN was related to his warning light and he said
he doubted it very much. i ordered that helo onto a new vector to come around
for another pass over the area. i also ordered the other helo back to the
enterprise to load up on sonobouys. just in case. the first helo made another
pass and sure enough "MADMAN, MADMAN". we now got excited. i asked the TAO to
request P3's, or better yet, S2's from Pearl. I requested they be loaded
with sonobouys and Mark 48 torpedoes. just in case.
after about 20 minutes the sonar pukes (we didn't run sonar during ASW ops
for lots of dumb technical reasons) were positive it was a sub. it was
MOVING at about 3 knots. we tracked him for nearly two hours with the two
helos until the P3's arrived. I had the P3's lay down several sonobouy
patterns as we were taught. by this time the old man and the effing XO were
in combat watching the show. about 4 hours after the initial discovery (which
i admit was plain dumb luck) i had a P3 drop an bouy right on top of the sub
and go active with it. PIIIIIIIIINNNGG!!!!
i would have given a months pay to see the skipper of that subs face. i had almost
50 passive bouys set up to detect which way he would bolt. i also had more P3s
and a relatively new S2 on the way from Pearl. this was the find of the year
and the brass in Pearl had taken an active interest in the proceedings. the
Navy had bitched for years about ruskies spying on our ops, especially close
to US territory. the ruskies, of course, denied it all. now we had one by the
balls and i was ordered to NOT lose him. i basically had a 3 star admiral give
me permission to use ANYTHING at his disposal to positively identify the target.
at first the finding had been fun. now i was wondering which brig i'd be thrown
in if i lost him.
when we went active i thought the sub would bolt. text book said that's what
would happen. he didn't. he immediately went DIW. there is an underwater ridge
that runs for several hundred miles in that part of the pacific. the water is
relatively shallow. i think the sub just floated to the bottom and shut every
thing down. tho i've no proof of that. in the next 30 hours or so i blanketed
him with everything we had. passive, active bouys. at two hour intervals i
dropped depth charges whose explosions were international "surface and
indentify" requests. nothing. the sub just sat. after almost 36 hours the sub
went active and bolted. he started a lot of figure 8's at high speed. i didn't
understand at first, but when the bouys started giving inconclusive and
misleading info i got worried. then all quiet again.
i thought we lost him. it took about 45 minutes (the longest of my life) to
reacquire the target. he set down in EXACTLY the place he took off from. the
waiting game started again. after about 48 hours he started moving again. this
time at about 3 knots heading N by NW. more bouys. more depth charges. at
hour 71 he stopped and surfaced. i didn't sleep a wink the whole time. what
a rush. we had his ass COLD!! i vectored a P3 with camera's over the sub for
piks and a little "in your face" stuff. and much to our surprise it was the
only whiskey class russian sub in the pacific. a new nuke that we thought
the ruskies to have only 2 of.
after the appropriate number of piks and fly bys we backed off and the sub
moved on at 3 knots. he was probably quite embarassed and mad. but like i
said. we reserve the right to identify ANY/ALL objects in our area of
operations. period!
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88.7 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, SDSC West, Palo Alto | Fri Dec 16 1994 14:02 | 7 |
| Gene, Robert made much the same point to me in discussion last night.
I acknowledge the operational requirement to id everything. I maintain
that if the Chinese were able to scramble planes that this had to be
pretty close to their coastline, which changes the nature of the
incident somewhat.
DougO
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88.8 | | SOLVIT::KRAWIECKI | Zebras should be seen and not herd | Fri Dec 16 1994 14:04 | 5 |
|
If the persist in their "shoot to kill" threats, they'll never see the
Tomcats that nail them...
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88.9 | | HAAG::HAAG | Rode hard. Put up wet. | Fri Dec 16 1994 14:20 | 10 |
| >Gene, Robert made much the same point to me in discussion last night.
>I acknowledge the operational requirement to id everything. I maintain
>that if the Chinese were able to scramble planes that this had to be
>pretty close to their coastline, which changes the nature of the
>incident somewhat.
the US recognizes everything outside of 2 nautical miles from land as
international waters. 2 miles and 1 foot and we have the right to
respond. the chinese are just "testing" us. happens all the time. our
repsonse has, and always will be, predictable.
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88.10 | | CALDEC::RAH | Make strangeness work for you! | Fri Dec 16 1994 15:44 | 3 |
|
its a time-honored cold warrior way for captains of subs and of
surface combatants to show mynhood without anyone getting hurt.
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88.11 | | SOLVIT::KRAWIECKI | Zebras should be seen and not herd | Fri Dec 16 1994 15:55 | 7 |
|
<-----
I agree... it's good exercise too... as close as "real" gets...
It's when the politicians get involved that causes problems...
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88.12 | | DECWET::LOWE | Bruce Lowe, DECwest Eng., DTN 548-8910 | Fri Dec 16 1994 16:20 | 4 |
| So does this mean that a Chinese vessel has the right to follow/harass a US
sub 2 miles offshore US somewhere?
Rights aside, what do you suppose would happen if one did?
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88.13 | | CALDEC::RAH | Make strangeness work for you! | Fri Dec 16 1994 16:36 | 4 |
|
the sub captain would surface and hail the carrier:
"Would you have any Grey Poupon?"
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88.14 | | HAAG::HAAG | Rode hard. Put up wet. | Fri Dec 16 1994 19:06 | 24 |
| Note 88.12 by DECWET::LOWE
>So does this mean that a Chinese vessel has the right to follow/harass a US
>sub 2 miles offshore US somewhere?
bruce,
as RAH said, its a game. one that is controlled mostly by the
technologically superior side. a chinese naval vessel has ZERO chance
of finding a modern US sub, let alone "harass" one. the chinese could
even stumbled on a US sub and not maintain contact for very long.
"rights", as you say, have nothing to do with it. with the former USSR
disvoling into chaos, there really isn't a technological challenge for
the US Navy in the air or under the water.
>Rights aside, what do you suppose would happen if one did?
IF a chinese vessel tried to harass a US sub or other naval vessel,
they would be quickly disabled - technologically speaking. if the got
hostile, they would be dead - lickety spilt.
like i said, it ain't a military contest. just a political one. it
wouldn't even be a political issue if it weren't for the lightwieghts
in DC.
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88.15 | | DECWET::LOWE | Bruce Lowe, DECwest Eng., DTN 548-8910 | Fri Dec 16 1994 19:40 | 3 |
|
I'll buy that. "If I'm bigger than you, I can do what I want". Fact of life.
I DO like the Grey Poupon bit !
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88.16 | | SCAPAS::GUINEO::MOORE | I'll have the rat-on-a-stick | Sat Dec 17 1994 01:02 | 3 |
| .14
Now a Chinese Typhoon class might be a different story.
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88.17 | | HAAG::HAAG | Rode hard. Put up wet. | Sat Dec 17 1994 14:18 | 2 |
| the chinese do not possess anything we couldn't hunt down and eliminate
quickly should we choose to do so. neither do the ruskies anymore.
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88.18 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, SDSC West, Palo Alto | Wed Dec 21 1994 13:54 | 44 |
| Sesame Street Forever
RARELY DO CITIZENS reap the immediate and tangible benefits from their
tax dollars that public broadcasting allows.
It costs about a dollar per person to support the Corporation for
Public Broadcasting, a tiny amount that pays off a thousandfold, but
once again Republicans are talking about cutting off taxpayer funding.
Unfortunately, this time they have the numbers to do it.
Speaker-to-be Newt Gingrich has said he plans to ``zero out'' the $300
million a year financing for the nation's 1,000 public television and
radio stations.
They can pay their own freight, Gingrich says. While some stations
might survive, others would not. And if history is a guide, commercial
stations would not fill the breach. Verbal promises of quality
programming would quickly be abandoned in favor of whatever makes the
most money. Consider the commercial-free programs so taken for granted
that they have become part of the culture:
Sesame Street. The MacNeil-Lehrer NewsHour. All Things Considered.
Firing Line. Barney and Friends. Masterpiece Theater. Car Talk.
Washington Week in Review. This Week in Northern California. The Civil
War. Baseball. Mystery! Wall Street Week with Louis Rukeyser. Nature.
Nova. Frontline.
Compare such programming with Wheel of Fortune, Beavis and Butthead,
Inside Edition, Melrose Place, Beverly Hills 90210, Married . . . With
Children and Mighty Morphin Power Rangers.
When Gingrich and others complain that CPB is too biased, they are way
off base. GOP Senator Larry Pressler of South Dakota cited Mario
Cuomo's frequent presence in Ken Burns' series, ``Baseball,'' as an
example of liberal slant in public broadcasting programming. He forgot
to mention that conservative George Will also was a star of the
series.
Over 27 years, public broadcasting has proved itself a national
treasure. It would be a crime for the federal government to desert
such a gem.
[Editorial from the SF Chronicle online edition of 21 Dec 94]
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88.19 | Spare the violins... | GAAS::BRAUCHER | | Wed Dec 21 1994 14:32 | 9 |
|
Bah ! Discontinue it. I don't care if it's biased or not.
I don't care if it's quality or not. You owe trillions and you
still think you're Santa. The government has no business running
any kind of TV stations. Or doing half (or more) of what it's
doing. Pick a department, any department. Start handing out
pink slips. This evyl empire must go...
bb
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88.20 | | SEAPIG::PERCIVAL | I'm the NRA,USPSA/IPSC,NROI-RO | Wed Dec 21 1994 14:42 | 17 |
| <<< Note 88.18 by SX4GTO::OLSON "Doug Olson, SDSC West, Palo Alto" >>>
> Compare such programming with Wheel of Fortune, Beavis and Butthead,
> Inside Edition, Melrose Place, Beverly Hills 90210, Married . . . With
> Children and Mighty Morphin Power Rangers.
They neglect to mention such shows as National Geographic, Biography,
The Civil War, and a host of worthwhile programming available on
COMMERCIAL cable channels. True, the major networks offer generally
poor material, but there is quality programming out there that is
not dependent on government funding.
As was mentioned, it might feel "nice" to fund CPB, but the fact is
that we cannot afford to keep funding all the "nice" little porkers
that the government has been keeping afloat for all these years.
Jim
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88.21 | Nouveau riche entitlement: kill it! | STAR::OKELLEY | Kevin O'Kelley, OpenVMS DCE Security | Wed Dec 21 1994 15:01 | 11 |
| I agree with last couple of replies: eliminate the funding for PBS, NPR,
National Endowment for the Arts. I don't care about the bias. I object
because Government has no business funding this pretentious nonsense.
Great. Just great...
The Media wants to promote a national debate to save $300m in funding for
public television stations, but when the Clinton Administration eliminates
the funding for food banks (which I believe was $245m), most Middle-class
Americans don't even know it was done. The Federal Government needs to
have a clear set of priorities.
|
88.22 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Plucky kind of a kid | Wed Dec 21 1994 15:14 | 20 |
| It's curious that Sesame Street is always listed first in these
kinds of articles/editorials. Why Sesame Street first? For
shock value? Cuddly teddy bear sympathy?
Sesame Street will prevail even if all PBS stations are shut
down. It will be snatched up by commercial TV through a
celebrated bidding war, and the victor will be hailed as
earning a major coup. Why will there be such a bidding war?
Because the market interest is there for it. Same thing for
many other shows that are currently at risk of losing government
funding.
Yes. Some will evaporate without such funding. Why? Because
there isn't enough interest to support it without government
funding.
Why should government fund television in which few people have
interest? Especially with federal deficit dollars?
It shouldn't.
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88.23 | | AIMHI::JMARTIN | Barney IS NOT a nerd!! | Wed Dec 21 1994 15:18 | 7 |
| Article 1 - Section 8 - The government shall have the right to promote
the progeress of science and USEFUL art...
Boy will I rejoice when the National Endowment for the Arts gets
scrapped!!! They are Baaaad people!
-Jack
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88.24 | | ISLNDS::MCWILLIAMS | | Wed Dec 21 1994 15:21 | 8 |
| Just remember that it is Forbes' estimate that last year the Lyons
Group which owns Barney grossed $400M, and Children's Television
Workshop which owns Sesame Street grossed near $1B.
Government funding of public broadcasting comprises only 8-10% of the
total budget. It would be missed but not a killer.
/jim
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88.25 | Make that "or have it shut off" | DECLNE::REESE | ToreDown,I'mAlmostLevelW/theGround | Wed Dec 21 1994 15:43 | 13 |
| If ya'll are so worried about PBS funding, why don't you do what
I do......send them a check when they have fund-raising drives!
I especially enjoy the Mystery series; I'll continue to send money
to my local PBS channel to support them. Those of you who are
interested in children's programs that you feel are important can
do the same.
Most of us have squandered money on foolishness; PBS is not fool-
ishness so those of us who enjoy its programming will have to put up
and have it shut off.
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88.26 | Not inconsistent. | GAAS::BRAUCHER | | Wed Dec 21 1994 15:50 | 7 |
|
Actually, I also have sent PBS a check on occassion.
I'd still defund them ! Charity is one thing, taxes are another.
bb
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88.27 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Dec 21 1994 16:19 | 3 |
| > I'd still defund them ! Charity is one thing, taxes are another.
Would you make your donations non-deductable?
|
88.28 | Simplification begets simplification | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Plucky kind of a kid | Wed Dec 21 1994 16:28 | 2 |
| Moot point if we have a flat-rate fed tax or a national sales
tax.
|
88.29 | I think we're in agreement | DECLNE::REESE | ToreDown,I'mAlmostLevelW/theGround | Wed Dec 21 1994 16:51 | 7 |
| I wouldn't object if I couldn't deduct my donations (I'm not exactly
in the philanthropist category anyway) :-)
I'm hoping the programs people really want will survive because
the individuals are willing to support them, not the government.
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88.30 | | CSOA1::LEECH | annuit coeptis novus ordo seclorum | Wed Dec 21 1994 17:37 | 1 |
| Yup...can it!
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88.31 | | REFINE::KOMAR | Patsies no longer. Go Pats! | Wed Dec 28 1994 08:52 | 7 |
| The PBS programs that would survive are the ones that people watch.
Let the market rule!
ME
PS - What do we define as useful television?
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88.32 | :-} | TIS::HAMBURGER | let's finish the job in '96 | Wed Dec 28 1994 12:23 | 12 |
| > <<< Note 88.31 by REFINE::KOMAR "Patsies no longer. Go Pats!" >>>
> PS - What do we define as useful television?
One that is used as kindling to start a campfire.
One that is used to anchor a small boat.
One that is thrown at (and squashes)a particularly noisey cat.
One that can be tuned loud enough to drown-out your M-I-L's constant yammer.
One that contains a stick of dynamite at a schuetzenfest
Amos
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88.33 | But not this weekend | REFINE::KOMAR | Patsies no longer. Go Pats! | Thu Dec 29 1994 21:33 | 3 |
| There are times I agree. :-)
ME
|