Message Forum

Welcome to the Watterson High School Message Forum.

The message forum is an ongoing dialogue between classmates. There are no items, topics, subtopics, etc.

Forums work when people participate - so don't be bashful! Click the "Post Message" button to add your entry to the forum.


 
go to bottom 
  Post Message
  
    Prior Page
 Page  
Next Page      

12/24/22 05:49 PM #11995    

 

Michael McLeod

I'll second or rather third Jack and Jim's holiday wishes.

On Christmas Eve, my backyard looks like a homeless encampment.

I've got tarps and sheets of plywood everywhere, most of it covering up my eight-foot-tall, 20-foot long stretch of mostly magenta-blooming bougainvilla bushes beyond the pool and then others covering up various plants and bushes elsewhere. All my potted plants have been invited to spend the night on the back porch.

We'll have freezing temps again tonight, worse than last night, so I'm hoping to keep everybody safe from frostbite - otherwise it will look like somebody dumped agent orange on the backyard when I wake up tomorrow as all these tropical plants just wilt up and even die off when freezes hit.

I am not complaining as I know lots of you have it lots worse so leave cookies and hot chocolate out for santa and stay under the covers.

Merry Christmas to all and to all a safe, cozy night!


12/25/22 12:33 AM #11996    

 

David Mitchell

"It is Well"

Hope you enjoy this timely video.

(yes, that's Hugh Bonneville - "Earl of Grantham" - from Downton Abbey with the Morman Tabernacle Choir)

Reminds me of the power in each of us to bring light into the darkness we find in our broken world - like our own Iberian classmate. Each of us can do something, no matter how small.

 I hope it is well with each of you old '66ers.




12/25/22 03:40 PM #11997    

 

David Mitchell

I Love this!  I probably posted it before. (deal with it.)

(Note the list of local choir groups who participated - scrolled at the end)




12/26/22 12:09 PM #11998    

 

Monica Haban (Brown)


12/26/22 12:49 PM #11999    

 

David Mitchell

Amen Monica.


12/26/22 01:48 PM #12000    

 

David Mitchell

I know I am repeating this but should still be a fun video for our generation. 

On this day in 1968, I was at my new base in Vinh Long airfield (next to the city of Vinh Long) for only my second fulll day, when someone stuck their head into my cubicle and said, "Hey, we got a Huey goin' down the river to Dong Tam to see the Bob Hope show. Wanna come along?"

 I didn't know most of these guys yet. I wasn't yet on flight status, I had not started my malaria pills. I barely knew where the mess hall and latrine were. And I had no idea what or where Dong Tam was. But I jumped at the chance and got into a jeep with about 4 guys and off we went down to the flightline, where we met a few other guys and jumed on board for the 20 minute flight to Dong Tam (not a Vietnamesee town, but a purpose built US Army airfiled about half way between Vinh Long and My Tho ("mee toe") - on the northern most split of the Mekong River).  

We arriived and parked on the runway and walked into an amphitheater with a stage and bandstand shell behind, and telephone poles laid down in perfect rows to seat about 1,500 people. This was home to the 9th Infantry division and it was a permanet (though rough) setup - they hosted regualr touring traveling shows and it had a movie screen.

We learned the hard way that for security reason his shows rarely began on sccheddule, so we sat for maybe 2 hours getting antsy. Bob had rotating casts for various trips and this one included Ann Margaret (who drove us crazy in a black, frilly bathing suit and high heels), Johnny Bench (Reds catcher), Rosey Greer (Giants football),  and one other American blonde actress whom I cannot recall by name. And one young lady who was Miss Australia. She is in the skit I will refer to.

I hope you will enjoy the whole video, but note at about 6:05 on the timer (just after a Phyllis Diller segment) he is onstage with Miss Australia. He's in a wig and burlap bag dress, doing some silly skit, whe they stop for the sound of explosions. They could not see directly behind theselves because of the partial cover behind the stage. But we were back in the audience and could clearly see all that was above and behind them. To our right, about 1/8 mile away and out above the river, was an old "B-model" Huey gunship, just diving on a target and fireing rockets, while taking .50 caliber machine gun fire from a tiny Mekong Island behind the base. 

If you look at the bottom of the screen, I beleive it even says "Dong Tam 1968" in white letters. I had told this story for over 40 yrars and wondered if people even beleived me. Then one night about 10 years ago, I stumbled onto this video on YouTube and almost jumped off the couch! 

Enjoy the whole video. It should bring back some memories for our childhood days and Bob's old Christmas Specials on TV.



 

 

 


12/27/22 06:23 PM #12001    

 

David Mitchell

I'm trying my darndest to be good for the Holiday season.

But IRS Director Charles Rettig and no mandatory IRS audits?

And now we learn of Rettig's investment in Donald's Hawiian rental property! This ought to be causing a nuclear bomb explosion in the news! Bigger even than his tax fraud schemes themselves.  

(Bigger than Sean Hannity's damning testimony last week). 

 

At least the baseball cards were funny.


12/27/22 10:32 PM #12002    

 

Michael McLeod

Damn, Dave. You were a small part of one crazy ass chunk of American history. The crazy thing about big events like that are that the small stories about them are in many ways more vivid than the larger picture. I know that's not logical but it's the way stories work: in history, at least in historical storytelling, the parts say more than the whole.

Which is my way of saying thanks for sharing the moment. I can feel it. Merry Christmas, two days late.

 


12/28/22 01:36 PM #12003    

 

David Mitchell

   this just in..........

 

Maveric's Luca Doncic is ridiculous!

60 points - 21 rebounds - 10 assists and wild comeback from 9 down with less than 50 seconds to play.


12/29/22 02:47 PM #12004    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

A Different Species of Deer

This is not a mule deer that is usually seen in our backyard.

My guess it is a whitetail deer, a 6 (?maybe 8) point young male with smaller antlers.

Here is your quiz: 

Where did I take this photo?

   1. Garden of the Gods Park

   2. Hayden Falls Park

   3. Walhalla Ravine

   4. Old Man's Cave 

   5. Near Pikes Peak Toll Road

   6. Overbrook Ravine

 

Jim


12/29/22 09:16 PM #12005    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

Jim, I will guess that the photo was taken in the Wahalla Ravine...mostly because I happen to live across the street from the ravine and over the past several years the deer have been seen all over Clintonville. 

On another topic, I read the following FB post today and decided to share as perhaps some of our classmates or their family members were caught up in the thousands of flight cancellations and delays over the holiday weekend due to the snowstorms and frigid weather. This Southwest airline pilot really nailed the problems of corporate America (including our healthcare system).

This is worth a read—from a 35 year pilot with Southwest Airlines.
What happened to Southwest Airlines?
I’ve been a pilot for Southwest Airlines for over 35 years. I’ve given my heart and soul to Southwest Airlines during those years. And quite honestly Southwest Airlines has given its heart and soul to me and my family.
Many of you have asked what caused this epic meltdown. Unfortunately, the frontline employees have been watching this meltdown coming like a slow motion train wreck for sometime. And we’ve been begging our leadership to make much needed changes in order to avoid it. What happened yesterday started two decades ago.
Herb Kelleher was the brilliant CEO of SWA until 2004. He was a very operationally oriented leader. Herb spent lots of time on the front line. He always had his pulse on the day to day operation and the people who ran it. That philosophy flowed down through the ranks of leadership to the front line managers. We were a tight operation from top to bottom. We had tools, leadership and employee buy in. Everything that was needed to run a first class operation. When Herb retired in 2004 Gary Kelly became the new CEO.
Gary was an accountant by education and his style leading Southwest Airlines became more focused on finances and less on operations. He did not spend much time on the front lines. He didn’t engage front line employees much. When the CEO doesn’t get out in the trenches the neither do the lower levels of leadership.
Gary named another accountant to be Chief Operating Officer (the person responsible for day to day operations). The new COO had little or no operational background. This trickled down through the lower levels of leadership, as well.
They all disengaged the operation, disengaged the employees and focused more on Return on Investment, stock buybacks and Wall Street. This approach worked for Gary’s first 8 years because we were still riding the strong wave that Herb had built.
But as time went on the operation began to deteriorate. There was little investment in upgrading technology (after all, how do you measure the return on investing in infrastructure?) or the tools we needed to operate efficiently and consistently. As the frontline employees began to see the deterioration in our operation we began to warn our leadership. We educated them, we informed them and we made suggestions to them. But to no avail. The focus was on finances not operations. As we saw more and more deterioration in our operation our asks turned to pleas. Our pleas turned to dire warnings. But they went unheeded. After all, the stock price was up so what could be wrong?
We were a motivated, willing and proud employee group wanting to serve our customers and uphold the tradition of our beloved airline, the airline we built and the airline that the traveling public grew to cheer for and luv. But we were watching in frustration and disbelief as our once amazing airline was becoming a house of cards.
A half dozen small scale meltdowns occurred during the mid to late 2010’s. With each mini meltdown Leadership continued to ignore the pleas and warnings of the employees in the trenches. We were still operating with 1990’s technology. We didn’t have the tools we needed on the line to operate the sophisticated and large airline we had become. We could see that the wheels were about ready to fall off the bus. But no one in leadership would heed our pleas.
When COVID happened SWA scaled back considerably (as did all of the airlines) for about two years. This helped conceal the serious problems in technology, infrastructure and staffing that were occurring and being ignored. But as we ramped back up the lack of attention to the operation was waiting to show its ugly head.
Gary Kelly retired as CEO in early 2022. Bob Jordan was named CEO. He was a more operationally oriented leader. He replaced our Chief Operating Officer with a very smart man and they announced their priority would be to upgrade our airline’s technology and provide the frontline employees the operational tools we needed to care for our customers and employees. Finally, someone acknowledged the elephant in the room.
But two decades of neglect takes several years to overcome. And, unfortunately to our horror, our house of cards came tumbling down this week as a routine winter storm broke our 1990’s operating system.
The frontline employees were ready and on station. We were properly staffed. We were at the airports. Hell, we were ON the airplanes. But our antiquated software systems failed coupled with a decades old system of having to manage 20,000 frontline employees by phone calls. No automation had been developed to run this sophisticated machine.
We had a routine winter storm across the Midwest last Thursday. A larger than normal number flights were cancelled as a result. But what should have been one minor inconvenient day of travel turned into this nightmare. After all, American, United, Delta and the other airlines operated with only minor flight disruptions.
The two decades of neglect by SWA leadership caused the airline to lose track of all its crews. ALL of us. We were there. With our customers. At the jet. Ready to go. But there was no way to assign us. To confirm us. To release us to fly the flight. And we watched as our customers got stranded without their luggage missing their Christmas holiday.
I believe that our new CEO Bob Jordan inherited a MESS. This meltdown was not his failure but the failure of those before him. I believe he has the right priorities. But it will take time to right this ship. A few years at a minimum. Old leaders need to be replaced. Operationally oriented managers need to be brought in. I hope and pray Bob can execute on his promises to fix our once proud airline. Time will tell.
It’s been a punch in the gut for us frontline employees. We care for the traveling public. We have spent our entire careers serving you. Safely. Efficiently. With luv and pride. We are horrified. We are sorry. We are sorry for the chaos, inconvenience and frustration our airline caused you. We are angry. We are embarrassed. We are sad. Like you, the traveling public, we have been let down by our own leaders.
Herb once said the the biggest threat to Southwest Airlines will come from within. Not from other airlines. What a visionary he was. I miss Herb now more than ever.

12/30/22 10:20 AM #12006    

 

Michael McLeod

Thanks for posting that, MM

The penultimate paragraph said it all -- actually the last sentence in that paragraph spelled it out quite clearly and came as no surprise after reading between the lines of all the news reports. So absolutely tragic in so many organizations that without proper leadership a dedicated rank and file can be undermined by rot that starts at the top and works its way down.

 

 

 

 

 

 


12/30/22 11:19 AM #12007    

 

Mark Schweickart

MM -- very enlightening post. Thanks for sharing that. Southwest Airlines has generally been my first choice when traveling. I'm glad Covid fears kept us grounded this holiday season. What a mess. 


12/30/22 11:40 PM #12008    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

I just read this post on C.J. Stroud's FB page....if you are a Buckeye fan, it is a must read. (Sorry for the length).  

A Letter From Paris Johnson To The Buckeye Nation
"Dear Buckeyes,
In my journalism classes, they always tell us that the truth comes first. So before I explain to you how much this place means to me, I really have to come clean.
Originally, this was not the plan. Growing up, I never saw myself as a Buckeye. Being from Cincinnati, people assume that it had always been my dream to play at The Shoe. And I really wish I could tell you that I had my little Troy Smith jersey and my Ohio State franchise on NCAA Football and everything. But honestly, I didn’t even really watch college football like that. If anything, we were a Miami (Ohio) family. My dad played in the NFL, and he was still in my life at the time, so my only mission since I was five years old was to play in the league like him.
I’ll never forget, my mom took me to the ESPN Wide World of Sports camp when I was eight or nine, and I thought I was literally at the Youth NFL Combine. That was the first time I’d ever seen cucumber water, and I was telling my mom for months afterward, “Listen, I can’t be drinking normal water anymore. I need it with the little cucumber slices, like the pros.”
At the end of the camp, they gave us the free ESPN T-shirt and I was like, “I’m so elite, man. I really made it.” I didn’t realize until I was looking at the pictures years later that I was just at Disney World with a bunch of regular kids. I’m looking at this dude in the picture like, “Dang, he’s 85 pounds???” I really thought he was Little Peyton Manning. He was just some kid on vacation and I was out there trying to take his soul. Hahahah.
When I got to middle school, we had a family friend who was a walk-on at Alabama, and I got invited to go down to Tuscaloosa to play in Bama's summer camp every year. I just remember being so hyped when I made the ALL-SABAN team in sixth and seventh grade. I thought I was official. Then eighth grade rolls around, and my mom is like, “Hey listen, we can’t make it work this year. We have to stay close to home. You’re gonna have to go to the Ohio State camp.”
I was like, “Mom??? Ohio State??? Really???” I almost took it as punishment. And the funniest part was that this was 2015, when they were coming off the national championship, so I don’t even have a good excuse. Literally, the first thing they had all the campers do was go and take a picture with Urban Meyer next to the trophy. I swear to you, I had no idea who this man was. He could’ve been a camp counselor or the AD or something — I had no clue. I shook his hand and put my hand on the trophy and smiled for the photo. Then they had all of us gathered around in a circle, and I guess they were trying to hype us up on the history of the program, because they were asking all these trivia questions. Coach Hinton, who’s still an assistant at OSU to this day, was the one running it. He said, “How many national championships have we won? Who knows?” There’s hundreds of campers. For some reason, one of the coaches hands me the mic. I have no clue. But I’m looking around, and I see all these banners hanging up — commemorating all the Orange Bowls, Rose Bowls and Big Ten titles over the last 70, 80 years. I’m counting the banners, thinking I’m slick.
Finally, I’m like, “42.”
Everybody starts laughing — I mean the whole camp. I was so embarrassed, but I was playing it off. I was still holding the microphone, and I just got all defensive, like, “Man, whatever! I usually go to Alabama every year anyway! I don’t even care!!!” (Whenever you hear somebody say, “I don’t even care!!!” that’s when you know they’re suppressing that single tear coming out of the corner of their eye.)
That whole week, I was in my 13-year-old pride. I think I was literally telling people, “Bro, I’m never coming here! I’m going to Bama!” Hahahaha.
It’s funny looking back on it now, because Coach Meyer became one of my biggest mentors. And as far as Columbus goes?
Columbus became my favorite place on earth.
I can tell you the exact moment I knew I wanted to be a Buckeye.
I was sitting on the couch in Coach Meyer’s office with him and my mom. I was on my first official visit, right before my junior year of high school. That summer, me and my mom must’ve visited 25 schools. I’ve been to every college campus from Stanford to Penn State on down to Georgia, and, honestly, they all have something special about them. But I’ll never forget, we’re sitting there with Coach Meyer, and he’s like, “I want you to watch something.”
And then he put it on. The single greatest hype video of all time, in my opinion. The Brotherhood video. Every Buckeye in the world knows what I’m talking about. The YouTube video they put together after the Penn State comeback game in 2017. If you’re a real Buckeye, you know every frame of that video. You might just think about it and get goose bumps.
Coach turns off all the lights, and he’s sitting right next to me on the couch, and I’m not kidding you, every single time Penn State scored, whenever the score popped up in the lower left corner of the screen, he’d tap my knee. And he’d point at the screen, like, You seein’ this?
Saquon runs the opening kick back.
PSU 7
OSU 0
*Tap*
You seein’ this, kid?
PSU 14
OSU 0
*Tap*
Can you believe this?
This goes on for the next five minutes, to the point where I’m preemptively looking at him after every score like, Coach I can’t believe this.
Finally, it gets to the moment everybody knows — the “possession” catch from Penn State in the end zone, the overturned call, the stunned crowd, and then that overhead Goodyear blimp shot way above The Shoe.
PSU 35
OSU 20
*Tap*
Coach got a big grin on his face, like, This is about to blow your mind.
“AND IT’S BLOCKED!!! LOOSE!!! BOOKER!!! HAS IT!!!!!!”
You know the rest. Literally, every time Coach hit me on the knee, I wanted to run down into the locker room and put some shoulder pads on and just block somebody into the dirt. At the end of the video, you see the guys on the sidelines crying tears of joy, hugging one another, and the fans running onto the field, and he’s just looking at me like….
See? That’s FAMILY.
There’s a lot of great programs, and a lot of great cultures in college football. But there’s college football, and then there’s Ohio State. It’s two different things.
I knew that day I was going to be a Buckeye. I told my mom, “That’s it. I think it’s time for me to commit.”
She was looking at me crazy, like, “We just started! I got a whole itinerary!”
Whatever mom says goes, so we hit the road again. But then finally, after we visited some more schools, she could tell that I wasn’t going to change my mind. I was meant to be a Buckeye. She let me commit. But the trick was that she made me promise to call every single coach who gave me an offer and thank them personally. It was a cool moment, because me and my mom were going through all my letters, and it brought back a lot of memories. I even had one from the University of West Georgia, from way back. In the end, I had to call 48 coaches. No matter how small the school, they gave me an opportunity, so I called.
I remember I started at eight o’clock in the morning and I finally called Coach Meyer at nine o’clock at night and told him I wanted to be a Buckeye. I was so tired that all I can remember him saying was, “Well, son, we’re ready to have you.”
Obviously, Coach Meyer had to leave not long after that, and Coach Day took over for him, but there was never a doubt in my mind about where I wanted to be. I remember my senior year of high school, right before the Penn State game, they invited all the recruits to come to the facility and actually watch the hype video with the team. We’re just in the back of the room, observing everything. Coach Day gives this amazing speech, and then they play the video, and when Coach Franklin came up on the screen, Coach Day grabbed a water bottle and just spiked it and started screaming.
The whole team was going crazy. I’m in the back of the room, not supposed to be saying a peep, and I’m losing my mind. I’m like, “Woooooo! Woooooo!!! Let’s go, Coach!!!! Let’s gooooooo!!!!!”
I was ready to run through a brick wall for the man, and I was still in high school.
There are a lot of great programs, and a lot of great cultures in college football. But there’s college football, and then there’s Ohio State. It’s two different things.
There aren’t a lot of times that come around in life when you feel like you just entered a secret cheat code and you get a second chance to take down the boss. I remember walking off the field with Donovan Jackson after the loss to The Team Up North a few weeks ago, and it was almost like a funeral type of feeling. We just said how appreciative we were of being by each other’s side in the trenches all season. We knew our fate wasn’t in our hands, and we weren’t sure what was going to happen next. You’re looking at the seniors and guys who might not be coming back next year, and it’s such a weird, bittersweet moment. You can’t help thinking about all the work you put in, and all the memories….
You think about the good times, the bad times, the mat drills, the Friday night team dinners, the pecan rolls with the ice cream, the walk-throughs, the Xbox, all the awesome hype videos, the first time you got a Buckeye leaf on your helmet, the time in the freshman dorms when the dishwasher was stinking so crazy that somebody called the fire department thinking it was a gas leak, the time you embarrassed yourself the first day of classes asking the professor if you had permission to go to the bathroom. (“You don’t have to ask in college, Paris. You just go.”)
You think of all that stuff, and it’s like: It can’t really have gone by this fast. It was a really emotional moment. We thought we were done. But somehow, some way … God gave us a second lease on life.
We’re going down to Georgia with unfinished business.
I was watching that USC game just like everybody else. I was chilling on the couch, wondering if we had a chance. It’s the hope that really kills you! So I was just trying to chill and remain calm the whole time. But then I saw Utah establishing the run in the first quarter, and I was like … Hmm. Interesting.
Then I saw their defense really pressing the USC pocket and I was like … Interesting. Very, very interesting.
The funny part was that my girlfriend was watching with me, and she was extremely hype. But she’s new to football, and she got a little confused about the colors at one point, and when USC ripped off a 15-yard run, she’s yelling, “Go!!!! Go!!!!!”
And I’m yelling, “No!!!! No!!!!!!”
Everybody in the group text was going crazy, but I was trying not to say a word until the clock hit zero. When it finally did, and USC had been knocked off, I was just so thankful to have a second chance at this, with all my brothers. We don’t take that opportunity for granted. We’re going down to Georgia with unfinished business.
I want to win a national championship so badly. Not just for myself, not just for my teammates, not just for my classmates and professors and coaches and trainers. But really for this entire community. I didn’t grow up with the posters on my wall. I didn’t have an appreciation for big-time college football as a kid, and what this place really means. I literally thought we’d won 42 natties. (To this day, Coach Hinton likes to remind me, “Paris, 42? Really?”)
This was not supposed to happen. But I thank God that my path led me to Columbus, because this university and this community is about a lot more than wins and losses and banners on the wall. It’s really a feeling. It’s a brotherhood and an unbreakable bond, and I’m not just talking about football.
No matter what happens down in Georgia, just know that we’ll be ready to run through that wall for you one more time.
This is FAMILY. Forever.
Thank God that I’m a Buckeye."
Sincerely,
Paris
May be an image of 1 person, playing football and text that says 'THEPLAYERS TRIBUNE B1G B DEAR BUCKEYES BY PARIS JOHNSON JR.'
 
 
 
 

12/31/22 02:50 PM #12009    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

MM et. al.,

Indeed, that buck in my post #12004 was in Walhalla Ravine. We were back in Ohio for a few days around Christmas and one of my brothers-in-law had never seen any of the ravines in Clintonville so my other brother-in-law and I drove him through a couple of them.

We came across about 7 or 8 deer in Walhalla, a few yearling does but mostly individual bucks. With the recent snows covering the ground we watched them pawing through the snowy landscape in search of vegetation for food.

He was amazed that such ravines existed literally just a few feet off of North High Street and Indianola Avenue. I guess those of us raised in Clintonville should feel fortunate that these short but scenic and historic areas still are pristine enough to support some urban wildlife.

A HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ALL OF OUR CLASSMATES AND THEIR LOVED ONES!

 

Jim 

 


12/31/22 04:47 PM #12010    

 

Michael McLeod

interesting pope, benedict.

he'll go into the books as both an inspiration and a failure. 


01/02/23 09:06 AM #12011    

 

Michael McLeod

I want to highly recommend a website program called poetry unbound.

Even if you think poetry is boring, or beyond you.

It's where I first heard a poem I recently posted here.

I'm using the site for a class I teach that is for a general population of students and what I love about it is how unpretentious and accessible and entertaining it is.

The format is simple but ingenious. A poem is read, and read beautifully, then explained, then read again.

The whole thing is just so soothing and enlightening. 

I don't always understand the subtleties of poetry but this format is so engaging that doesn't matter.

The website is onbeing.org

 

 

 


01/02/23 12:55 PM #12012    

 

David Mitchell

Funny, I turned on my TV a couple nights ago to watch a Georgia Department of Demolition exhibition and a C.J. Stroud clinic broke out. 

           but ohhhh, so close

 

(stil not sure how you get C.J. out of Coleridge Cornelius?)


01/02/23 06:59 PM #12013    

 

Jodelle Sims

David, that is an easy one.  His father's name is Coleridge, so he is Coleridge Junior (C J )


01/02/23 11:07 PM #12014    

 

David Mitchell

Ahh, yes.

Thank you Jodelle


01/03/23 09:54 AM #12015    

 

Michael McLeod

That was a heartbreaker indeed. 

I remember my mom once saying to me: " If you love somebody, you're gonna get hurt." 

She was speaking of relationships, of course.

But it applies to fandom.

That was the best I saw out of that osu football team all season. I'll remember that for as long as I'll remember the hurt.

Same same for the people in my life I have loved and lost.

Call it a requirement, a life skill. Comes with the turf.

 


01/04/23 05:54 PM #12016    

 

David Mitchell

(today) Reminds me of those days when we were kids and we played "tug-o-war".

 

The real question before (this) "House" - and one that may decide the most important "issues" for future generations is,,,,,,,,,,,,,

Which make and model of air frier (out of literaly hundreds of makes and models on Amazon) should I buy?

You are "free to caucus" among yourselves and report back to me. Your advice will be taken under consideration.


01/05/23 07:57 PM #12017    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Folks,

O. K., this is the year in which most, if not all, of us will turn 75.

I just crawled down in our crawl space under a couple of furnace ducts to change a furnace filter. With my dust mask and knee pads this has become more difficult in the last few years.

So, I was wondering what houshold and outside tasks are becoming too difficult/impossible/dangerous for us to be performing at our age? Take into account all that goes along with being seniors including reflex time, visual problems, ballance, strength, etc.

Jim


01/05/23 08:13 PM #12018    

 

David Mitchell

Jim,

Getting out of bed in the morning (er, I mean early afteroon)

 

---------------

 

Meanwhile I was going to make a joke today about the 6th vote on the "floor", but when I got to my laptop it was the 8th vote. So I went out to run a few errands and its now 11 failed votes. How long does this have to go on? 

In a news letter today (or yesterday) John Kasich proposed an idea floating around the back hallways of Congress about naming a modrate Democrat who would form a colalition of "centrists" to  actually move forward and get something done (a strange concept in and of itself). This has gone way past ridiculous!


01/05/23 09:00 PM #12019    

 

David Mitchell

Hertz Criminal behavior 

I got behind in my reading over the holidays and was going to add a story to Mary Margaret's piece about Southwest Airlines.I have been hearing the same story (third hand) from a younger buddy who flies for Delta (abaout 18 years since flying an Air Force tanker in the first gulf war). And I get the impresson tha Delta is a much better managed company.

But I have a different story that just broke in th news in early December. Some of you will have heard it but those who have not, I will summarize.

During the initial crazy rush to travel coming out of the first Covid shutdwon, you will recal that most of the rental car companies were caught short, having sold off some of their car inventory to cover debt service. And the entire car rental busines became it's own little nighmare. As my job has me standing in a driver waiting area at Savannah Airport, we are right near the rental car desks - about 8 or 10 companies. And we are closest to the Hertz desk, so we saw the huge lines - sometimes 60 to 80 people waiting. 

Hertz's behavior during this mess was incredibly incompetent. They were giving out reervations for ars that they did not even have, leaving many people to wait hours, try another company, or even rent U-Haul trucks. And of course they all jacked their fees up to approximately triple their normal rates. And most noticeably, they stopped paying their staff to stay on duty for the normal late hours. People were arriving with reservations and no one was at the desk to give them their reserved car.

In one occaison, I had a young Black lady (about 25) with a small baby in a baby carriage and a huge suitcase, approach me asking "Sir, is their a USO desk here?" I said "yes but they are closed this time of night". She began to cry right there in front of me. She was soldier at nearby Ft. Stewart and could not get her car to drive home, and her husand was also a soldier but was deployed and not able to drive the hour from Ft. Stewart to pick her up. She was going to have to get a hotel room (many near the airport) for the night and come back in the morning for a car. I was so mad, I paced around for a few minutes and walked back over to her and handed her a wad of $20s and said, "This is your miitary discount for your hotel room."

I actualy saw worse incidents (a famiy of 8 stranded at the empty desk at midnight) but I want to gt on to my main story.

In early December, Hertz was found guilty and ordered to pay about $160 million to about 350 people for one of the most ridiculous screw-ups I have ever heard of. Hertz had been listing some of their legitimately rented cars as "stolen" (why, I do not know), and police were stopping and arresting these drivers as car thiefs. I watched sevrala videos, one of three police officers surrounding a car with guns drawn and the driver was an innocent young mother with little children in the car. There is one case where a guy went to jail for 30 days before he could convince someone of the mistake.

There was actually a public denial by Hertz executives at one point - claiming no knowledge of the situation. But the very next day, someone inside the compnay leaked a spreadsheet showing each and every such car and full details of the cars and the arrests!

I have been telling this to everyone I know and hoping people will stop doing business with this criminal operation.


go to top 
  Post Message
  
    Prior Page
 Page  
Next Page