If Not Now, When?

First thing first.  The loss of 14 lives in NOLA on 1/1 and the loss of an unknown number of LA lives, animals, and property damage a week later are devastating tragedies.

Second thing second.  Realistically, perhaps the only thing harder to prevent than a determined radicalized terrorist from driving a truck through a crowd is stopping a high wind raging wildfire.

But.

Third thing third.  Prevention might be out of reach at times.  But, anticipation, preparation, prevention, and planned reaction can at least minimize the carnage.

Priority one for elected city officials and their hired teams is public safety. In both cities(and states) their leadership failed them.  And, this isn’t the first time for either.

In NOLA long, long ago broken bollards were recently sent out for repair leaving the city vulnerable.  Forty million dollars worth of mobile archers that could have prevented an approach onto the sidewalks lay unused.  The NOLA police chief publically stated, ” I didn’t know these existed.”

The city has purchased some new bollards to replace those that are not repairable.  A city spokesperson said, “The new bollards are made to stop only lighter vehicles traveling at speeds under 10 miles per hour.”

The state told NO repeatedly that the French Quarter was a high-risk target.  The “City That Care Forgot” didn’t care enough to heed all the warning signs.

In Cali high winds over dry areas are very predictable.  Tens of thousands of wind turbines capture some of that wind and harness its energy.

The southern half of the state has had a water supply problem for half a century.  Millions of gallons of water from the north are diverted into the Pacific Ocean that could be used to fill reservoirs and/or saturate the land itself.

An environmental study said the life of a fish called a Smelt could be jeopardized by an overabundance of fresh water flowing south.

How about cleaning out the underbrush?

The Water Quality, Supply, and Infrastructure Improvement Act of 2014 (Proposition 1) authorized $7.545 billion in general obligation bonds to fund ecosystems and watershed protection and restoration, water supply infrastructure projects, including surface and groundwater storage, and drinking water protection.  It sounded good.

The LA Fire Department is 300 firefighters short of its needed number.  Its current DEI hiring policies and termination of any firefighter who refused the COVID-19 jab didn’t help with recruiting.

All of the above screams out that our government takes our money, spends it foolishly, or reroutes it, forces dumb law to contradict original intents, and fails to come close to achieving its clear number one goal.  To label it as incompetence is being kind.

That goal is YOUR safety.

Is it too soon to point fingers, assign blame, and demand real change?  It’s never too soon.

Politicians don’t fire politicians.  Citizens do, but only at the ballot box and not nearly often enough.

In NOLA if the mayor or the police chief had any shame they’d be gone already.  In CALI when the smoke clears the governor, the LA mayor, and the police chief should step down.  They won’t.

It’s time to ask for resignations.   And, it’s time to be loud about it.

What would that do?  It would serve notice that we the people run the government.  We own it.  The government doesn’t run the people.

Big picture the swing from lunacy to objectivity feels like it has already begun.

If not now, when?

 

 

Ten Piece Nuggets

Spring is in the air.  It reminds us of spring chickens.  Spring chickens remind us of nuggets.  Ten are waiting for you below.

  1.  Socialist Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez calls for regulating conservative news.   She opined on Sunday’s MSNBC, “When you look at what Tucker Carlson and some of these other folks on Fox do, it is very, very clearly incitement of violence. Very clearly.”  Free speech and the First Amendment say otherwise.
  2. Say what you want about Ted Cruz, but every January when the new Senate convenes he puts forth a bill calling for strict term limits.  And every January it finds the round file in the corner of the room.  AOC on one end and Mitch McConnell on the other are two prime examples of why term limits would help us all.
  3. It won’t happen until the American public demands it though.  You can’t get 60% of Congress to agree on anything much less eliminate their job(cash cow).
  4. A poll revealed on NBC”s Meet the Depressed that voters are depressed having Uncle Joe in the White House four days a week and in Delaware three.  53% of Biden’s 2020 voters say he shouldn’t run again in 2024, and a whopping 75% of Biden voters under 35 think likewise. Will Joe Biden be the weakest incumbent president running for re-election in any of our lives?
  5. “Stunning he didn’t get a major primary challenger,” says Clay Travis.  Or, is it?  “Stunning that he got 81 million votes” is more like it.  Not stunning is that he and his handlers will do anything to minimize his exposure to questions, debates, news conferences, etc.  The basement awaits.  Time to order up another pandemic if you are a conspiracy theorist.
  6. Travis was on a roll on the weekend.  Another tweet,  “DC public schools are requiring all students and staff to provide a negative covid test in order to return to school after spring break. These people are batshit insane. Covid broke whatever functional brains they had.”
  7. That tweet reminded us of watching Morning Joe about three years ago.  They interviewed visionary Bill DeBlasio in the middle of the covid paranoia.  He suggested that we all wear two masks. He really did.  Maybe he was educated at the aforementioned DC public schools?
  8. “Today proves yet again that you can’t buy class but you can buy a blue check mark,” said Dan Rather.  We wonder if Dan knows that his salary was paid by those watching him by watching ads every five minutes.  Multiple sites believe that Rather’s net worth is north of 70 million.  You’d think he could afford the $8 bucks a month.  Or maybe he could just stop complaining while you’re still tweeting without it.
  9. Alyssa Milano wonders with the blue check removal, “Does that mean Twitter and @elonmusk are liable for defamation or identity theft or fraud?”  The DC public schools must have been very crowded.
  10. Exxon Mobil isn’t going all in on green just yet.  Near the Gulf Coast just east of Texas’ oil-rich Permian Basin, nearly 2,000 ExxonMobil contractors are making sure the company’s latest project – which includes 26 miles of piping, 35 miles of electrical wiring, and 875 tons of steel is pumping oil at full capacity.  Fill er up.

And we hope that you are filled up after the nuggets.