Posts
Post
January 18, 2013

- Congress cannot restrict your religion or how you practice it, what you choose to say, your ability to meet with others, nor can they prohibit you from asking the Government to change their ways if you don’t like what they are doing or have done;
- You can have firearms and you can carry them with you;
- The government cannot house troops in your home unless you agree;
- Lacking a warrant or probable cause, you, your house, papers and other effects can be kept as private as you wish;
- Without an indictment from a Grand Jury, you are presumed innocent, cannot be tried a second time for one crime, nor required give testimony against yourself, nor be imprisoned without due process, nor have your property be taken without just compensation;
- You are entitled to a speedy and public trial by a jury in the district where the alleged crime took place, and you must be informed of the accusations, confronted by witnesses against you, and have the right to demand (and get) witnesses in your favor as well as the help of an attorney;
- For common law (not criminal) suits where the sum at issue exceeds twenty bucks, you may have a trial by jury that cannot be overruled by the court other than according to the rules of common law;
- No excessive bail, fines nor cruel and unusual punishments are allowed;
- This list of rights is incomplete – you have other rights not herein stated [that’s why the title of this essay includes the words “more than”]; and
- Powers not specifically delegated to the federal government nor prohibited by the States, are delegated to the States or, if the States do not enumerate or restrict them, to you.
The Bill of Rights is the work of intelligent, experienced and thoughtful individuals who worked, compromised and agonized over each word and phrase to best convey their intentions.
Post
January 17, 2013
Post
January 16, 2013
Post
January 15, 2013

The tip of the soldering iron I tried to use is too big - it bridges all five wires at once. I should’ve stopped and bought a smaller tip but, no, I had to go ahead and try. So now the right-most two of the bottom five are soldered permanently together. Copper braid and solder suckers have failed to clear the bridge.
Post
January 14, 2013

The several pink and clear baggies hold the several dozen parts. If you click on the image for a bigger version, look in the lower pink baggie in its lower left corner. You may be able to see a tiny black square. That’s an integrated circuit with 10 separate connections, each of which must be carefully soldered to the circuit board, and without “bridging” any of the pins to another.
Post
January 13, 2013
Post
January 11, 2013
Post
January 9, 2013
Two beliefs:
- We must do something to prevent mass killings; and
- The government, that is, politicians, cannot be completely trusted.
Taken together, the problem cannot be solved. But what if they are taken separately?
Post
January 7, 2013

Always.
The commercial news services including television, radio and newspapers do not serve the public. They serve themselves, their employees, their board of directors and most especially their stockholders. And as the dwindling page count in my morning printed newspaper clearly demonstrates, survivors must deliver what the public will pay for and, lacking that, they go away.
Post
January 6, 2013