Saturday, October 01, 2011

Friday Crab Blogging (late)

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A contribution from across the pond. Cute, but no cigar.


I am not sure that crabs are into minnows for bait, but could be.

Madi constructed a story. Not sure what it is, but knowing Madi, its got to be interesting.


I like this one because of the nose. Sort of Venice Carnival spirit. (By Emma)







This is Dr. C. reacting to the Republican politicians running for President.





A while back we discussed how to tell male and female crabs apart. It has to do with their apron being either the Capitol or the Washington Monument. The males are, as Michalea has indicated (and did so last year), "Jimmeys," and the females are "Sooks." (though the word "sook" apparently means "baby" in Southwest England.).



We are into crabs.

Saturday, September 10, 2011

Friday Crab Blogging (late)

 A little like a crab-spider but I'll take it.


 If Miss Piggy were a crab...



A rare example of the bat-wing poly pedic crab found only in Transylvanian habitats


Some interesting contributions from those who don't want to draw crabs (and lose points in the process)
How could I resist this one


A Wolf


A School Bus

Sunday, August 28, 2011

The Day After

Things slowing down in Crabland. For inexplicable reasons (we've been good but not that good) little damage. Unfortunately, lots of flooding and crabs will be seen in places where crabs have never gone before! There were tornadoes, too. So, we had a HuriQuakeNado week.

Life is like a game of Angry Birds. What do the Birds Gods have in store for us next?

Monday, August 15, 2011

Getting the Beatles Back Together


This from my nephew, a musician.

Saturday, August 13, 2011

Taking a Hostage


The use of other human beings in armed conflict, as well as taking humans as hostage in, say, a hijacking or other type of terrorist attack, goes to the very core of what it is to be civilized. While the use of civilians as hostages is probably as old human conflict, it was the practice of Khrash by the Mongol hoards that may be the most odious:
A commonly used tactic was the use of what was called the "kharash". During a siege the Mongols would gather a crowd of local residents or soldiers surrendered from previous battles, and would drive them forward in sieges and battles. These "alive boards" or "human shields" would often take the brunt of enemy arrows and crossbow bolts, thus leaving the Mongol warriors safer. The kharash were also often forced ahead to breach walls.
It is likely that this was used in the siege and destruction of Baghdad in 1258. For students of irony, one should perhaps compare this to the "Shock and Awe" attack on Baghdad by "allied" (i.e. American) forces in 2003. Lost in the glorification of that massive bombardment was that fact that innocent civilians lived there. Baghdad just can't cut a break.

There is no doubt about it, Boehner, Cantor and friends took the American people hostage in the recent Debt Limit debacle. There are still politicians, nay, presidential candidates, who feel America should have been let to default on their debt. That these supposedly intelligent candidates are still flourishing, nay, are considered lead contenders, speaks volumes to the level of political discourse in this country.

The basic idea is that when there is a conflict between the leaders of two groups, threatening members of the opposing groups with harm (the leaders, e.g. Saddam Hussein, Boehner, Cantor remain unscathed) has become, if not acceptable, then a common means of attaining one's end. Using the above examples, it is an observation that this method is used either when one of opposing forces is either overwhelmingly powerful with respect to the other (Baghdad then and now) or the attacker is basically powerless (terrorism). Perhaps one should lump both of these together under the rubric "terrorism" and simply say that "Shock and Awe" was a form of State Terrorism. Israel's invasion of Gaza with the subsequent loss of civilian life could be discussed in these terms.

One alternative is compromise. Since 1938, the word "compromise" has come to signify cowardice. If it is one thing that most humans fear. It is being labelled a coward or an appeaser:
The term appeasement is commonly understood to refer to a diplomatic policy aimed at avoiding war by making concessions to another power. It has been described as "...the policy of settling international quarrels by admitting and satisfying grievances through rational negotiation and compromise, thereby avoiding the resort to an armed conflict which would be expensive, bloody, and possibly dangerous."
Alpha males don't compromise. To make their point, they sometimes even march across the fields of Gettysburg  and get slaughtered. John Boehner and Eric Cantor view themselves as alpha males. They view Obama, as one who seeks compromise and is therefore weak. Thus, Boehner after using the American economic welfare as hostage in the recent Debt Limit debacle, felt that he had gotten 98% of what he wanted. That was not a compromise, it was an appeasement. The long term effect on politics will be to, as they wanted, severely weaken the American's view and conception of Obama. Though probably unintended, it reinforces the stereotype of the black male being subservient to the white male, with that relationship somehow natural and acceptable. Racism runs deep in our Country.

Thankfully, there is a glimmer of hope. The recent plunge in the polls of Boehner's approval may mean that Americans have seen through the hostage ploy. I do know that none of us ever want to see it used again.

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Fail

Part of the Grand Capitulation, i.e. the "deal" that Obama negotiated with Boehner and McConnell, was setting up a committee of six Democrats and six Republicans to come up with a plan to slash the Debt by $1.5 Trillion. Today, McConnell and Boehner named the six Republicans. Each of these six have:
"signed a pledge to Grover Norquist's Americans for Tax Reform that they will not vote to raise taxes."
Why even have a committee that is doomed to failure from the start? How can we possibly get out of this mess without raising taxes on the wealthiest Americans, or at least rescinding those tax cuts put in place by George W. Bush?

We have become an illogical country.

Tuesday, August 09, 2011

Just a little Error


Apparently, behind one of these windows, there is someone with a calculator. That someone made a mistake. A two trillion dollar mistake. To paraphrase Everett Dirksen:

A trillion here, a trillion there, and pretty soon you're talking about real money.
I thought it ironic that a commentator named Emily on one of my favorite blogs (JSBlog), linked to an advertisement for that calculator:


Sunday, August 07, 2011

Friday Crab Blogging (late)

Note that there is both sunshine and rain. BIG drops.




Hailey told me this was a "Christmas Crab." ??????



Whose behind those Foster Grants?



Don't ask.


James has hidden the body well.


Trice has been watching the Ravens too much.




Local talent. Very nice young lady. Working her way through college. I wish I had this enthusiasm.

Tuesday, August 02, 2011

What Iceberg?

After legislative extortion of an unparalleled magnitude, the House has finally passed a bill that would raise the Debt ceiling. It will also do a number of other things that many of us predict, will not help the country at all. Lost in the shuffle was the whole question of jobs. No matter how much one cuts from the Federal Budget, unless there are increased revenues (from taxes, from those who have jobs), we will never even come close to that fiscal Nirvana of a balanced budget (which, we had, by the way, under Clinton only to be destroyed by Bush II and his two tax cuts. Tax cuts that were supposed to help the "job creators" but simply transferred a large amount of wealth into the pockets of the obscenely rich. But you knew that.)

The Senate has yet to vote on this bill but it is said that it is a foregone conclusion that it will pass. Mitch McConnell is already gloating and talking about the members of the "super committee." Excuse me, Mr. McConnell, since when were YOU Majority Leader of the Senate? Was this simply a vote or, as many of us suspected, a coup d’etat.

We used to think of bailing out to Vancouver or Ireland. Those options have had their own problems recently. Why leave in any case since the theater is so good and the second half promises to be full of surprises.

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Meanwhile, on another part of the Ranch.....

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (Reuters) Apr 28 - Florida lawmakers on Thursday sent Republican Governor Rick Scott a pair of National Rifle Association-backed measures, including one that would bar physicians from asking most patients if they have guns in their homes.

With supermajorities in both chambers, the Republican-dominated legislature also sent Scott a gun bill that would punish local officials who consciously enact ordinances stricter than statewide standards.
Somehow, when the suicide mood grips Republicans, it has a way of snowballing. Where I work, a rural area, everybody has guns. Thankfully, most are hunting rifles. So, I don't ask about guns. I simply tell people to make sure they are locked up. Unfortunately, north of here, in Baltimore, most of the guns are hand guns. Every night one or more people acquire a few more holes in their bodies.  People often make the quip that "Well, its just like the Wild West." Well, there were a few bad players there but I think that the number of actual gun fights is exaggerated.

In any case, it is sheer insanity not to try and control the proliferation of hand guns. Should one not point out that hand guns are probably of little use to the supposed Constitutional justification for owning guns of a "well regulated militia?"

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Fretting

I guess I should be blase and accept the high-jinks going one in Washington as just another political silly season. But, it is really hard to see our Country undergo such an onslaught of craziness. One thing that few have addressed is what any scenario will mean for the remainder of the Obama administration, about 17 months. It has been clear from the start that the Republicans want to bury the man. (Many of us believe this has definite racial overtones). From what has happened in the last week, it is clear that they have no respect for Obama as president, Obama as a man, and, most dangerously, Obama as a leader. They should remember that for the next 17 months he is Commander in Chief of the most powerful Army and atomic arsenal in the world. Yet, they treat him as some kind of cabin boy. Actually, the next event on their calendar will be impeachment. For what sin, I don't know. They will probably invent one.

No matter what happens with the debt ceiling fiasco, there is no chance of getting any kind of needed legislation through the current Congress after it finishes. If, for some reason, Boehner has to eat crow (now that would be a lovely sight), he is spiteful enough to stall any initiative that might come out of the Obama White House. Of course, I am cynical enough to think that this has been Boehner and his cronies plan from the beginning.

There are an awful lot of angry people in the Country right now. There are few, if any, new jobs and people are frustrated. We could be in for a precarious 17 months. As for keeping Obama from being re-elected, I think that Boehner has probably succeeded. However, the Bronze Devil may go down with him.

Sunday, July 24, 2011

The Debt Ceiling

There is an enormous amount of verbiage out there about the difficulty the United States Congress is having getting the debt ceiling increased. I'm about to become a contributor. It seems to many of us that, at the current time, the process is totally out of the realm of rationality and into that of fantasy.

(if you don't want the background skip down to the divider line -------)

There are several important facts to keep in mind:
At the end of Bill Clinton's Presidency in January, 2001, the U.S. had a balanced budget and, indeed, was even recording a surplus. While our National Debt was about $7 Trillion and was clearly way too much, we had the opportunity of beginning to begin to pay down that debt. Interest on that debt (about $360 Billion in 2001; offset by interest revenues to $220 Billion) was eating up a sizable chunk of tax revenues (about $3,600 Billion in 2001).

However, as is well known, first off in the spring of 2001, we had the Bush tax cuts. Then we had two wars without extra taxes to pay for them. Then we had the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression.

In 2011 the gross Federal Debt is up to $14 Trillion.

That $14 Trillion was borrowed from many places, but principally China and other central banks. (What this does for National Security is another discussion).

When Barack Obama was elected in 2008, we were heading into the aforementioned economic down slide. Many of the programs sponsored by our Federal Government cannot be closed down. Indeed, in an economic downturn, the last thing you want to do is to throw people out of a job. (Republicans think that their famous (rich) "job creators" are going to just set up factories to produce tons of new widgets. Unfortunately, you have to have consumers to buy them. No money, no consumers, continued economic downturn). To keep programs open (like Medicare and Medicaid; forget Social Security) you need money. If the tax revenue is not there, you have to borrow it until the Country is solvent again and, hopefully, back to having a budget surplus. The United States has borrowed and now is time to pay the interest and to borrow more.

Unfortunately, there is a ceiling on what the Federal Government can borrow and that ceiling has to be lifted by a Congressional law. About 60 Republicans in Congress are dead set against raising that ceiling under any circumstances. The rest of the House and Senate Republicans are holding this debt ceiling hostage to their demand to begin to dismantle the social problems like Medicare and, particularly Medicaid.

The negotiations on this process have had a nightmare course. It has been clear in the last few weeks that the Republicans are much more interested in casting blame on Obama, and having him "lose" then they are in solving the problem. I think this is despicable, but we are dealing with despicable children.

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All that is preamble, what I really wanted to explore is the result of "cutting entitlements" in the real world. I know this because it directly affects my medical practice.

To substantially cut Medicaid (an easy target because many Medicaid recipients are children and children don't vote or contribute to congressional war chests) would cut the amount of "matching" funds that the Federal Government gives the States for medical services for children (whose families are often well above the poverty line but who don't have private insurance), the elderly in nursing homes, and the disabled. I think that it is admirable that we, as a country, spread out the responsibility of care for these groups.

Actually, it is not really "matching" funds. Some States, like Maryland, get over $60 for every $40 they spend on Medicaid. What does that money go for, you might ask? Well, of course a lot goes to nursing homes (families that hold three jobs aren't able to take care of granny when she can't take care of herself) and hospitals for inpatient care. You just can't cut the reimbursements to nursing homes. I can't predict how they would act, but I think that it would not be very nice. The people who operate nursing homes are frequently in it for a profit. Hospital inpatient expenses also can't be cut because their rates are determined in advance by a State Commission.

This leaves everything else to take the brunt, particularly health care providers, i.e. doctors. Now I can tell you now that the current reimbursement from Medicaid sponsored programs (i.e. State Children's Health Insurance Program, SCHIP) is dismal. Because of laudable efforts on the part of the State Government to get every child insured, there has been a big rise in SCHIP enrollment recently. There was even talk, before the current fiasco, of increasing reimbursement to compete with private insurers. Now, who knows. However, if sizable "savings" from Medicaid are voted through, it will wind up on my doorstep. It will put the onus of paying for Mr. Boehner's actions squarely on my shoulders.

What might happen? Well, I can see immediate cuts in reimbursement to SCHIP providers. I run a business, a medical practice. I don't have the luxury of passing on a decrease in reimbursement. The rent stays the same (or goes up). Electricity and telephone stay the same (or go up). And, of course, employee salaries cannot be cut (known as business suicide).

We'll just have to see.

Saturday, July 23, 2011

Friday Crab Blogging (late)






Mitchell didn't want to draw a crab; so he drew and elephant:

Friday, June 17, 2011

Awaiting the Crabs




A Strange Case of Disoxia

Sunday, June 05, 2011

New Camera

New cameras are fun; even if one doesn't know how to use them.


Friday Crab Blogging (late)

Once again we are privileged to start the day with a guest crab from across the pond:

Said to be a "Sandy Bay Crab," but we will cast a jaundiced eye upon such claims.


I am not sure what this crab is actually doing. Possibly hatching an egg.


Notice how finely detailed the crab is?



Damian was insistent that this was not a crab. It was a spider. I think it is a spider crab.


Bryan is majoring in anatomy. His project is the stem cell replication of appendages. It is showing some success.


Mamma crabs read stories about this to their youngsters at night. Scary.


Buzz Lightcrab.


Kody likes his bugs. Oops, one is a crab! (Crawled out of a mattress in New York City.)


You are right. This is not a crab. But Riley absolutely, positively refused to draw a crab, even though she lives on Tilghman Island. Go figure.

Saturday, May 14, 2011

Friday Crab Blogging (late)

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First, a guest crab courtesy of  frequent contributor:

Please note the cyanotic lips. Must be a scarcity of oxygen

Then, if you so wish, you can visit the results of the Third Annual Big Crab Drawing Contest here.
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Saturday, March 12, 2011

Friday Crab Blogging (late)

I have been reminded by the Growlery by his sending me the first of the day's catch below, that I haven't been very faithful to the Crab community. Herewith I promise to be more attendant to my duties:

(This from the Secret Gourmet by way of JSBlog and the Growlery)