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Thursday, April 30, 2020

Jack Was Not Seen On Radar For 20 Hours

Good Morning Every One:
       I was out of sight for almost a day. Perhaps some of you noticed. My level of stress reached an overload. I was suffering from complete mental and physical exhaustion. I went to a friend's house here in Pacifica. He graciously let me use his granny flat to get away from it all. When I got into the flat, I crashed and slept for 16 hours. I needed the rest. Now I'm back home.
      This coronavirus epidemic can be described with that old saying:
        "These are the times that try men's (and women's) souls."
         If you are fortunate enough to be employed (As I am ) you have to work twice as hard for far less money.  The probability of a huge financial loss always haunts you as you work. Your mind is always on friends and loved ones. Will they get infected? Will they die an agonizing death? Will they lose their job and lose all?
      Fortunately in this group we have had two readers who caught coronavirus. Both survived without a trip to the hospital. People have suffered economic hardships. Fortunately they have had good banks and good landlords who showed understanding and kindness at this bad moment.
     What so disturbs me is that the United States has roughly 4% of the world's population and 33% of the coronavirus cases. How could this happen????
   I will leave you to reflect on that.


Wednesday, April 29, 2020

China And The Coronavirus

CHINA

Advance, Parry, Thrust

How did the coronavirus pandemic start in China? It’s hard to answer that question.
The Chinese government recently increased the total number of infections to more than 80,000 and the number of deaths from the virus to more than 4,600, according to a University of Maryland press release.
Those numbers would suggest that Chinese efforts to contain the virus in the populous, authoritarian country worked extremely well.
But Hong Kong researchers writing in the respected British medical journal, The Lancet, recently found that the number of infections could be almost four times higher because Chinese officials changed the definition of the virus as their epidemic progressed.
Additionally, an increasing number of asymptomatic people who contracted the virus in Wuhan, where the pandemic originated, appear to be testing positive again, Reuters reported. Doctors can’t or won’t explain whether these folks were incorrectly tested in the first place, if they re-contracted the virus or whether something else is happening.
Knowing what exactly happened, and when, helps researchers everywhere learn more about the virus, and how to combat it.
Complicating the free flow of information, China has launched an extraordinary propaganda campaign to counteract the negative attention it has received since the pandemic began.
While seeking to suppress journalists who describe “despair, misery and everyday life” in Wuhan and elsewhere, Chinese state-supported news outlets have played up stories about supply shortages among American and British medical workers and described overwhelmed hospitals in Italy and Spain with terms like “purgatory” and “apocalypse,” the New York Times reported. Similar experiences in Chinese hospitals have been labeled as rumors.
Russia and Iran have joined China in the campaign. In March, the New York Post wrote, the three countries were behind fake news reports that the US government was planning to deploy troops in the streets to maintain public order as the coronavirus crisis escalated.
The propaganda isn’t necessarily working. Instead, the backlash is growing.
The state of Missouri has sued China for spreading the coronavirus, a complaint China claims is absurd. Developing countries have been leery of Chinese outreach, Foreign Policy magazine wrote. Europe is looking into diversifying away from Chinese supply chains, noted Bloomberg.
What’s more, the environment has given rise to theories about what else Chinese leaders might be hiding, like whether the coronavirus was created in the government’s Wuhan Institute of Virology, the local equivalent to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Axios detailed how one of those theories was highly unlikely – that the coronavirus was a biological weapon under development – while another – that researchers were studying it when an employee accidentally took it out of the facility – was plausible.
Regardless, anger at China has been growing worldwide over the past two months, mostly due to its numbers game and its lack of transparency regarding information on the virus. What’s adding fuel to that blaze is its quickness to capitalize financially on others’ misfortune – with exports of sometimes faulty medical equipment and its circling of foreign companies for takeovers – when it’s the source of it, say analysts. Then throw its propaganda gamesmanship into the mix.
All powers traditionally move quick to press their advantages. The problem, some note, is China’s clumsiness in its zeal to get ahead.
In fencing, an “Esquive” is a deflective maneuver to evade an attack before going on the offensive. But for it to be effective, it must be artfully executed.

Friday, April 24, 2020

Suffering


         I want to talk about suffering today. Most of us have a few books that touched our heart and stayed with us for the rest of our lives. One such book for me is Once An Eagle (1968) by Anton Myrer. Here is the summary of the book:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Once_an_Eagle
        Let us talk about the author first. When World War II came, he was a Harvard student. He could have become an officer and got some sort of safe desk job. Instead, he enlisted in the US Marine Corps as a private. He survived several island campaigns in the Pacific. He wrote a couple of brilliant books and, as they say in the Old West, "rode off into the sunset."
     The main character in the book is Sam Damon. He is a humble young man from a small Nebraska town. When World War I came, he was already in the US Army. He ends up in France. On the battlefield he shows himself to be a natural leader. He gets a battlefield commission as a lieutenant. He wins the Medal of Honor. He decides to stay in the US Army. In World War II he is promoted to general. He is a man who leads from the front. He gets severely wounded in World War II. He is always a man of honesty, decency, and compassion despite being a fierce warrior. At the end of the book, it appears that he is killed to keep him from reporting on the madness of being in Vietnam.
     Myrer had one underlying theme throughout the book:
Suffering can deaden the soul or enrich it. To say this another way:
What does not kill us makes us stronger.
   Right now, many of us are being pushed to our limits. It is so painful. Please reflect on Once An Eagle.


Thursday, April 23, 2020

NASA Develops A Ventilator In 37 Days

Where We Are Headed Now

NEED TO KNOW

WORLD

Into the Great Unknown

Will the coronavirus pandemic spell the end of the global economy as we know it?
Many seem to think so. At a time when social distancing and lockdowns have changed everyone’s lives, leaders around the world will likely seek to restructure their technology sectors, manufacturing capacity and supply chains to reduce dependence on faraway countries, wrote the New York Times.
The transition between the old and new worlds could be painful, however.
The International Monetary Fund is predicting that the Great Lockdown might be worse than the Great Recession that started in 2008 and the Great Depression of the 1930s, Bloomberg reported. Global gross domestic product is on track to shrink 3 percent this year. In January, fund analysts predicted a 3.3 percent expansion. They estimated that the world would lose around $9 trillion in economic activity – an amount equal to the economies of Japan and Germany.
“It’s as if we’ve fallen off a cliff or fallen into a black hole,” said economist Kathy Bostjancic in an interview with the BBC.
Governments around the world are almost certainly going to spend more than the $7 trillion that CNN identified last month as they struggle to prevent global economic meltdown.
The American government appropriated $2.2 trillion, around a tenth of US gross domestic product, to address the shortfall. The Federal Reserve additionally unleashed $2.3 trillion to keep the economy moving. Most observers believe that’s just the beginning.
Germany’s stimulus package, for example, increased federal spending by 50 percent, abandoning the frugality that marked German reluctance to bail out Greece a decade ago. Its package broke the strongest taboo in Germany politics – deficit spending that is equivalent to a quarter of German GDP, the most aggressive action of any country anywhere, Politico reported.
Many analysts worry about countries like Brazil, South Africa, India and the Middle East, where massive populations of impoverished people are vulnerable to the health and economic consequences of the pandemic. Those and other countries have already requested $2.5 trillion from the International Monetary Fund to shore up their economies. Otherwise, the world can expect another, bigger migration crisis that might further spread the virus.
“Trouble travels. It doesn’t stay in one place,” International Monetary Fund Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva told the Washington Post. “This pandemic will not be over until it’s over everywhere.”
Under pressure from the US, Saudi Arabia and Russia ended their oil price war, a move designed to prevent a freefall in prices that would cause damage throughout the world economy, the Financial Times explained. But it failed. On Monday, there was a historic crash in oil prices, with the price of crude trading in double-digit negative numbers, Marketplace reported. Producers, with a collapse in demand due to the worldwide economic standstill of the lockdowns, are literally drowning in oil.
What’s coming next is anyone’s guess – there is no precedent or playbook for what is happening right now. The lessons of the past are only somewhat useful, stamping out small fires but not the blaze.
And while economists’ predictions vary, most agree on this: An entirely new approach to the global economy will be needed when the pandemic is over.
When that is, and what the transformation will look like are the great unknowns today.

Wednesday, April 22, 2020

Texas Independence Day


Today is Texas Independence Day. On this day in 1836, Texas seceded from Mexico and became the Republic of Texas. It's a funny story how it happened. General Santa Anna was commander of the Mexican forces fighting to keep Texas part of Mexico. He had an army that was numerically superior and technologically more advanced than the Texas army led by General Sam Houston.
    The rebels didn't appear to have chance of winning. General Sam Houston refused to engage General Santa Anna in combat. He went on the run all over Texas. He was called a coward and all sorts of bad names. While on the run, General Houston's scouts watched Santa Anna from a distance and got to know his habits and movements well.
      General Santa Anna adhered to the Mexican custom of a siesta during the day. General Santa Anna lived in a huge tent stocked with gourmet food, alcohol, and several female companions. The whole army had a siesta. They had no fear of General Sam Houston; so no guards were awake. In the village of San Jacinto not far from what is now the city of Houston, General Sam Houston and two of his officers boldly walked up to General Santa Anna's tent. They pulled back the tent flap and entered the tent. General Houston drew his single-shot pistol, pointed it at General Santa Anna. He put him under arrest. He won the war without firing a shot.
        General Sam Houston went on to be a great statesman. When John F. Kennedy wrote Profiles in Courage, General Sam Houston was included in the book. General Santa Anna did get his revenge in 1847 after US forces invaded Mexico and defeated the Mexican Army in 1845. He came to Wall Street in New York City. He floated an IPO for a fraudulent company. He collected millions of dollars. He vanished into Mexico and was never heard from again.

Thursday, April 16, 2020

Arctic Ghost Planes

Discovery Channel Wings F 8 Crusader & Grumman Avenger

Discovery Channel Wings F 8 Crusader & Grumman Avenger

Discovery Channel Great Planes Douglas A 1 Skyraider

Rocket Kamikazes!

B-29 Superfortress Operation Against Germany

Abandoned and Forgotten Submarines and Bases

Japanese B-17 Squadron

An F-35 Pilot Explains Why Russia and China’s Counterstealth Can’t Stop Him

German Kamikazes - The Leonidas Squadron

China: The Folly Of Deception

CHINA

The Folly of Deception

The CIA wants to know how many people really suffered from the novel coronavirus in China.
It’s not like American intelligence agencies were blindsided when the pandemic started. The CIA had been tracking coronavirus outbreaks since November, according to CNN.
But American intelligence analysts believe that local leaders in Chinese cities like Wuhan have been lying about how many infections occurred to avoid running afoul of their communist overseers, the New York Times reported.
Thousands of urns containing the ashes of the dead have been stacked outside funeral parlors in Hubei province, where Wuhan is located, suggesting death rates that cast doubts on Chinese statistics. Some estimates based on urn demand and crematorium working hours suggest that the death toll in Wuhan is more than 40,000, according to the Washington Post. China’s official toll for the entire country is just over 3,345.
“Their numbers seem to be a little bit on the light side, and I’m being nice when I say that,” President Donald Trump said at a press briefing covered by Bloomberg.
Knowing how fast the virus spread in China, how many people acquired it, how they fared and the answers to other questions would greatly help the US and other countries’ responses to the pandemic.
China recently released information on asymptomatic coronavirus patients, for example, providing researchers around the world with important information, NBC reported.
Chinese epidemiologists said asymptomatic transmissions accounted for less than 5 percent of the cases in China. Most transmissions came from folks who seemed sick, they added. But a test from Singapore found that 10 percent of the cases in that smaller country were the result of infections from asymptomatic carriers.
Getting to the bottom of those numbers would help explain why the trajectory of the virus can seem random, why some people fall ill while others who were exposed do not and other vexing challenges.
Writing in the Los Angeles Times, Cornell University professors Jeremy Wallace and Jessica Chen Weiss agreed that China was underestimating its toll. But they warned that Chinese stats shouldn’t be a scapegoat for any country’s slow response to the virus.
Regardless, it’s no surprise that Chinese data would be suspect. “Bad numbers in China are always underreported, especially when the national image is at stake, and China is now keen to play up its victory against the virus in contrast with the West’s failures,” wrote Foreign Policy magazine.
Meanwhile, China moved to impose restrictions on the publication of academic research on the origins of the novel coronavirus, CNN reported Monday.
“I think it is a coordinated effort from (the) Chinese government to control (the) narrative, and paint it as if the outbreak did not originate in China,” a Chinese researcher told CNN. “And I don’t think they will really tolerate any objective study to investigate the origination of this disease.”
Regardless, the Hill noted that the world would be watching Wuhan closely in the coming weeks as the city emerges from its lockdown.
As anger in the US and elsewhere grow over China’s lack of transparency and its attempts at disinformation, the city could become a showcase of Chinese resilience or a symbol of the folly of deception.

Wednesday, April 15, 2020

Making People Happy In Hard Times

Madame President:
        Your morning briefing...this morning this briefing is dedicated to Janet Ivey and Chris Carberry who do a wonderful job of making people laugh and feel happy in these bad times.
          But first we have a story. I had the most incredible grandmother in the world. Her name was Sarah Elizabeth. She was born in rural Kentucky before births were recorded officially. In those days births were recorded in family Bibles. One Bible says that my grandmother lived to be 101 years of age. Another Bible says that she lived to be 103 years of age. She raised 10 kids. She inspired me to be an international man with these words: "Son don't let the grass grow under your feet."
    I told you that during the Great Depression, she moved the kids out of their rooms. She rented out the rooms. She cooked meals for the tenants and even did their washing and ironing. When World War II came, all the young men in the family went to the US Army,US Navy, and US Marine Corps. She changed her home into a place where a young military person in transit could come to find a nice room with clean sheets, home-cooked meals, and the feeling of being back home with loved ones. I cannot guess at how many hundreds of homesick and frightened young men were touched by my grandmother.
     Janet and Chris hold a weekly get together on Zoom. It is like we are all together having happy hour drinks. It is full of laughter, friendship, some pearls of wisdom, and just plain fun. It takes one's mind off the sad situation that is unfolding.

Be careful out there!
Amo-a,


-JackW

Tuesday, April 14, 2020

Gotha Attack! The First London Blitz 1917

The Human Face Of The Coronavirus Fatality Statistics

And Finally …

Rosary Celaya Castro-OlegaFamily image
We’re continuing with our remembrances of those lost in the pandemic. (If you’d like to share memories of a Californian who has died, please email us at CAtoday@nytimes.com.)
Today’s piece, about Rosary Celaya Castro-Olega, was written by Annette Choi:
It was hard to miss Rosary Celaya Castro-Olega when she made her nursing rounds on the eighth floor of Cedars-Sinai Medical Center’s south tower in Los Angeles.
Decked out in purple scrubs, her personality was on full display.
“Even after 12-hour shifts, she made it to birthdays and anniversaries,” her daughter, Tiffany Olega, said. “And she was always on the dance floor.”
Mrs. Castro-Olega worked as a registered nurse for 37 years before retiring in 2017. She continued to volunteer at short-staffed hospitals in Los Angeles County. And when the pandemic hit, she showed up without hesitation.
Her daughter said it was not known if her mother was infected through contact with patients. But in mid-March, Mrs. Castro-Olega went to the emergency room with a bad cough and fever and tested positive for Covid-19. She spent her final days on a ventilator in intensive care at the Panorama City Medical Center and died on March 29. She was 63.
“I just can’t believe she’s gone,” her best friend, Annie Neal, said. “I have the urge to text her, but I can’t.”
Mrs. Castro-Olega was always ready for fun, whether it was riding roller coasters at Disneyland or cheering at Kobe Bryant’s last N.B.A. game — dressed in purple gear, naturally.
“She’d do anything for anybody,” Ms. Neal said. “She’s our purple angel.”
California Today goes live at 6:30 a.m. Pacific time weekdays. Tell us what you want to see: CAtoday@nytimes.com. Were you forwarded this email? Sign up for California Today here and read every edition online here.
Jill Cowan grew up in Orange County, graduated from U.C. Berkeley and has reported all over the state, including the Bay Area, Bakersfield and Los Angeles — but she always wants to see more. Follow along here or on Twitter.
California Today is edited by Julie Bloom, who grew up in Los Angeles and graduated from U.C. Berkeley.
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Zeppelin Attack! The Battle to Destroy L-33

German 'Giant' Over London: The Zeppelin-Staaken R.VI, 1917-18

South Korea Prepares For A Parliamentary Election In The Age Of Coronavirus

SOUTH KOREA

Curve Down, Polling Up

The first country swept up in the pandemic after the Chinese outbreak, South Korea has been a leader in combating the coronavirus.
Now, the East Asian country is preparing for voters to go to the polls in a parliamentary election on April 15. It’s a rare exception in the world these days – allowing a vote to go on.
The vote is crucial – it is expected to be the first hint as to who might replace President Moon Jae-in, whose term ends in two years. Presently, Moon’s liberal Democratic Party of Korea is ahead of the conservative United Future Party.
The Democrats adopted “winning the COVID-19 war” as its campaign slogan, Quartz reported. At first, they appeared to fumble their crisis response as the pandemic worsened, the National Interest wrote. Then they managed to flatten the curve – the pace of the increase in new cases – demonstrating competence.
“We were terrified several weeks ago, but thanks to the government’s handling of the coronavirus, we think we will do much better than we had previously thought,” an unnamed senior ruling party honcho said in an interview with Reuters.
The conservatives, moreover, have been on the ropes since their former standard-bearer, ex-President Park Geun-hye, was impeached four years ago, the Diplomat added.
But the president shouldn’t start counting chickens. Almost one-third of South Korean voters are politically independent and don’t necessarily vote along party lines.
“Good management of the coronavirus is good for the president and the government,” Gallup Korea Director Jeong Ji-yeon told Nikkei Asian Review. “But that does not necessarily mean that the governing party will win.”
The logistics of the election are expected to be a challenge.
Politicians haven’t been able to hold the big rallies and get-out-the-vote efforts that are a mainstay of South Korean elections, Voice of America wrote. Online efforts have taken over.
Election officials have made masks and gloves mandatory and pledged to regularly disinfect more than 14,000 polling stations and check voters’ temperatures before allowing them to cast ballots, National Public Radio reported. Anyone with a fever would vote in special booths. Others will be allowed to vote from hospitals.
The safeguards will allow individual’s stories of inspiration to emerge, like how a North Korean diplomat in London defected to the south and is the first former official from the north to run for a seat in parliament. If elected, Agence France-Presse pointed out, Thae Yong Ho would ironically represent Gangnam, the wealth Seoul neighborhood made famous by rapper Psy’s song “Gangnam Style.”
Public health emergencies need not stifle democracy. South Korea shows how a little determination and care – instead of authoritarian or partisan impulses – can go a long way.