We had Ice Out on the lake just a little under two weeks ago. More boats are appearing on the lake and boat slips. I see other boats being “de-winterized” in preparation for being put back in the water. (Mine is one of those boats.) One of my favorite seasonal restaurants has opened again, though only on weekends and only the ice cream stand is open for now. Our local Dairy Queen has also reopened. We have also seen road repair/reconstruction starting up again, with one of those roads affected being one I take to get to and from work. More yard work is being done, cleaning up the detritus of the past fall and winter. (I still haven’t started on yard work here at The Gulch…yet.)
We’re slowly shaking off the last reminders of winter.
Heck, I might even run the trusty RAM 1500 through the car wash later this week.
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As I was driving to and from my Sunday morning pre-church shopping at Wal-Mart, I saw the electronic billboard for our local concert venue advertising another act that will be appearing this summer. The act?
Bob Dylan.
Yet another member of the Before I Get Too Old Or Die Tour making an appearance.
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It has become more apparent that there is no one party “running the show” in Iran. That certainly explains the conflicting messages everyone is getting from Iran. It also points to the possibility that Trump is playing 4-D chess while the various Iranian ‘government’ factions are playing checkers. (Ironic considering chess was likely a Persian invention and the term “checkmate” comes from the Persian Shah Maht which translates as “The King is dead”.)
As Roger Kimball notes, “Trump isn’t negotiating with Iran—he’s dismantling its regime piece by piece, leaving a hollow state with nothing left but bluster and collapse.”
I wonder if the thugs and theocrats who have been plundering Iran for the last 47 years have read Chekhov. If so, I conclude that they are slow learners. In January, the Iranian authorities slaughtered more than 40,000 protesters—Iranian citizens, mind you, who were fed up with the oppressive death cult that has been oppressing Iran since the dour clown Ayatollah Khomeini waddled off that plane from Paris in Tehran in 1979. Over the course of about a month this past winter, the US assembled a huge military presence in the waters around Iran: two aircraft carrier strike groups and innumerable air assets.An update: There are now three aircraft carrier strike groups in the waters around Iran. The US military has sunk every ship in the Iranian navy, is using A-10 Warthogs to take out Iranian gunboats firing on ships or laying mines the Straits of Hormuz. They have blockaded Iranian ports to prevent ships from entering or leaving those ports. Iran has no income, cannot ship oil anywhere, and can’t receive aid in the form of military arms from the likes of China or Russia. They are in a weak negotiation position.
And then there’s this:
The Iranians have been engaged in a Persian version of the Lobster Quadrille, blustering, pretending to negotiate, then walking off in a huff. As I write, Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner are en route to Islamabad, Pakistan. They were supposed to be going in order to negotiate with the Iranians. But, as usual, the Iranians, once negotiations were announced, are playing hard—not hardball, mind you, but their coquettish version of hard to get. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi is in Pakistan. For talks? Yes. Wait, make that No. Witkoff and Kushner were supposed to go to negotiate. But Iran’s semi-official Tasnim news agency says that no talks are slated to take place. Vice President JD Vance was “standing by,” just in case the negotiations turn out to be serious for once. In the event, they didn’t. At the last moment, Kushner and Witkoff got out of their 17-hour plane ride and JD got to go to the White House Correspondents Dinner.My question about this is just who we would be negotiating with? The nominal civilian government, of which there seem to be more than one faction? The IRGC which seems to have factions within that organization? Who would we be negotiating with, and if we did would they have the power to honor the terms of any agreements reached?
If previous performance is any indicator, then I doubt it.
More of those in power in Iran need to be removed one way or another before that will happen.
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From the “Just When I Thought They Couldn’t Get Any Stupider” Department comes this gem:
British Internet Providers May Have To Ration Access Due To High Energy Prices
Really? Something sounds fishy.
Mobile network operators have warned they could be forced to ration phone signal access to combat soaring energy prices triggered by the war in Iran.Is this really due to higher energy prices? Or is the UK government using this as an excuse to start limiting access to the Internet under the guise of saving energy? I think it might be both, though the bigger portion of that is rising energy prices. While they have been laying much of the blame for this on the Iran War, much of it must be laid at the feet of the UK government and their push of their Net Zero policies.
In a stark warning to the Government, telecoms giants including VodafoneThree, Virgin Media O2 and BT-owned EE said they were drawing up emergency contingency plans after being excluded from Rachel Reeves’s energy support scheme.
These include rationing access to their networks or slowing down speeds to help reduce energy use. Another option is surge pricing, which would charge customers an additional fee at peak times.
The British government appears disconnected from the reality of energy expenses and seems unwilling to address the economic distress affecting what remains of Britain’s industrial base. Their repeated promises that affordable renewable energy solutions are imminent, or that their grid-ready nuclear fusion facility in Nottinghamshire will be operational by 2040, primarily resonate with those already committed to climate-focused policies rather than convincing skeptics or addressing immediate business concerns.What good does a nuclear fusion facility do today when it might be ready 14 years from now? They need energy now. They know how get the energy they need, but are ignoring them in favor of renewable energy sources that are too variable and not readily dispatchable. I have three words for the Brits when it comes to this:
Small Modular Reactors.
‘Nuff said…
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And that’s the news from Lake Winnipesaukee, where were seeing more amenable spring weather, the trees are starting to bud (and some already have leaves showing), and Monday is rolling around again to bring an end to another weekend.