30 percent fewer workers William Lawrence Sr Omnibit 9-30-19

It takes 30 percent fewer workers to build an electric car than one that is powered by gasoline.

30 percent fewer workers William Lawrence Sr Omnibit 9-30-19
30 percent fewer workers William Lawrence Sr Omnibit 9-30-19

Gray ships William Lawrence Sr Omnibit 9-28-19

Gray ships are harder to see at night than all black ships. The Navy found this out during World War II, when it painted some destroyers all black.

Gray ships William Lawrence Sr Omnibit 9-28-19
Gray ships are harder to see at night than all black ships. The Navy found this out  during World War II, when it painted some  destroyers all black.

ADL OK With Hypocrisy

ADL OK With Hypocrisy — The Anti-Defamation League was founded to combat anti-semitism but has progressed into something, well, different.

It has now declared the OK hand sign to be an indication of racism along with bowl hair cuts.

Here’s a principle that can’t be denied: Those who treat the petty seriously will be treated pettily. Hand signs, hair cuts and green frogs are all petty things.

Here’s another principle that can’t be denied: Those who treat the serious stuff as petty will also be treated pettily.

ADL OK With Hypocrisy
Barack and Louie all grins in ’05.

Political figures sucking up to proven anti-semitic bigots — as just about every Democrat candidate did with Al Sharpton and the Congressional Black Caucus (with future President Barack Obama) did with Louis Farrakhan — are serious matters. Granted the ADL consistently condemns Farrakhan but invariably gives a pass to his Democrat enablers.

That sort of defeats the point of the group’s purpose.

The ADL makes petty the serious and the serious petty.

It should not be taken seriously.

OK?

OK

ADL OK With Hypocrisy
ADL OK With Hypocrisy

Dandelion are edible William Lawrence Sr Omnibit 9-27-19

All parts of the dandelion are edible. It’s even cultivated for consumption in many places that are not suburban back yards.

Dandelion are edible William Lawrence Sr Omnibit 9-27-19
All parts of the dandelion are edible. It's even cultivated for consumption in many places that are not suburban back yards.

Tobacco is radioactive William Lawrence Sr Omnibit 9-26-19

Tobacco is radioactive. Just one more reason not to smoke.

Tobacco is radioactive William Lawrence Sr Omnibit 9-26-19
Tobacco is radioactive William Lawrence Sr Omnibit 9-26-19

Brian Fitzpatrick Carbon Tax Bill

Brian Fitzpatrick Carbon Tax Bill — Brian Fitzpatrick, Pennsylvania’s 1st District Republican congressman, will be introducing a “carbon tax bill” today says the Washington Examiner. It will be similar to Market Choice Act introduced in 2018 by Rep. Carlos Curbelo (R-FLA26) which died in committee.

Brian Fitzpatrick Carbon Tax
Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick (R-Pa1)

The Curbelo bill imposed a tax of $24 per metric ton on industrial carbon-dioxide emissions, beginning in 2020 and rising annually at a rate of 2 percent above inflation.

In return, federal taxes on gasoline, diesel and aviation fuel would be repealed. The payers would mostly be operators of coal and natural gas power plants.

This means paying more for lighting, air-conditioning and heat, and maybe less for food and transportation.

And of course, coal plants (and mines and their jobs) would soon disappear as natural gas produces much less CO2.

Which would naturally mean less revenue which means someone is going to pound his fist and say we need to bring back the gasoline tax.

The claim that most of carbon tax money will be used to rebuild infrastructure also deserves a big LOL as that is what the gasoline and diesel tax is supposed to do now and obviously doesn’t.

We can’t jump on Fitzpatrick too much. Our wish is to replace all coal and NG plants with nuclear and hydro-electric ones so we give him credit for trying.

Hey Brian, if you really want to fix infrastructure repeal the Davis-Bacon Act of 1931. Studies show it adds 20 percent to the cost of federal projects. Repealing it means 20 percent more work with same amount of money. Infrastructure problem are solved. It’s almost like magic.

And on the other hand there is Pat Toomey.

Pennsylvania RINOs Roam Unchecked
Sen. Pat Toomey (RINO-Pa)

Pennsylvania’s “Republican” senator joined the Democrats in again futilely voting to repeal President Trump’s court-approved use of emergency funds to build the much-needed wall on the Mexican border.

This wall is not anti-immigration. The wall is anti-drug smuggling and anti-child trafficking. If border crossers are forced to use supervised ports of entry it becomes a whole lot harder to bring children here to be molested.

Cartel coyotes no longer abandon customers to die in the desert.

Senator, a whole lot more Pennsylvanians support this wall than KYW and the Philadelphia Inquirer will lead you to believe. This one is going to burn you.

Brian Fitzpatrick Carbon Tax Bill

Unassisted Triple Plays William Lawrence Sr Omnibit 9-25-19

There have been but 15 unassisted triple plays in the 143 years of Major League Baseball. What is noteworthy is that just four of the 30 franchises performed 60 percent of them. Cleveland Naps/Indians with three; and the Phillies, Braves and Red Sox franchises with two each. It’s also worth noting that two of them occurred within three weeks by teams playing for the same city: the Boston Red Sox on Sept. 14, 1923 against the Indians and the Boston Braves on Oct. 6, 1923 against the Philadelphia Phillies.

Unassisted Triple Plays William Lawrence Sr Omnibit 9-25-19
Unassisted Triple Plays William Lawrence Sr Omnibit 9-25-19

Restore Pa Repeats Mistakes Of Old

Restore Pa Repeats Mistakes Of Old

By Sen. Kristin Phillips-Hill

The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result.

 Restore Pa Sen. Kristin Phillips-Hill

This past summer, the top officials for state agencies were dispatched to all corners of Pennsylvania, including here in York County, to sell the Governor’s plan to bond $4.5 billion to pay for a lengthy wish list of projects.

Long-term borrowing would provide a short-term cash infusion for infrastructure improvements including, but not limited to, blight remediation and improved flood controls, parks and trails, and expanded access to high-speed internet.

On the surface, some may say this sounds reasonable and responsible. As the Chair of the Senate Communications and Technology Committee, I have spent my summer conducting a series of public hearings on the issue of expanding access to high-speed broadband internet for more Pennsylvanians. This is an important issue to many residents throughout York County, where internet may be slow to non-existent.

However, as the lead proponent for this issue in the Senate, I believe it is important that we have clearly defined the size, scope, and magnitude of the problem, identified the steps necessary to address the problem, and have a reasonable cost estimate to resolve it. None of which has been verified by the administration.

Early on in this endeavor, as I looked at how we could close our state’s digital divide, the initial estimates from the Federal Communications Commission indicated we had around 800,000 Pennsylvanians lacking access to high-speed internet. A recent Penn State study shows that number is closer to 11 million.

Now the governor wants to borrow money to address this problem. Yet again, the problem has not been fully defined nor quantified.

Think about it this way: you go to the bank to take out a loan to buy a car. You do not know if you are going to buy a used Ford Focus or a brand new Chevy Corvette. Both good cars, but very different price tags. You would not do that with your own borrowing, but this is exactly what Restore PA pledges to do.

And Restore PA is not an isolated issue. We have found ourselves in this mess before, because a problem was not thoroughly vetted or defined.

During Governor Tom Ridge’s administration, the state entered into a contract to deploy a telecommunications network to be used by the State Police, other law enforcement agencies, and first responders. The goal was to build out a statewide infrastructure that would provide reliable and stable communications, especially during times of emergency.

To date, the state plowed over $800 million— more than four times the original estimated cost—into this program and it still does not work.

Since taking office, Governor Wolf has pursued new taxes on the natural gas industry. While York County has no active drilling, it has been a beneficiary of revenue the state collects from drilling. In fact, York County has received over $3.1 million in impact fee revenues since 2011 and more than $485,000 last year alone.

Pennsylvania’s impact fee raised more money than West Virginia, Ohio, Arkansas and Colorado combined, despite these four states combining to produce more natural gas than the Commonwealth.

To tack on additional energy taxes in Pennsylvania to throw funding toward an undefined problem is irresponsible and repeats the same mistakes of old.

As someone who is working through the issue of getting more Pennsylvanians connected to the internet, we need to go through the process methodically and systematically. Like any state issue, you can throw all of the money in the world at a problem and it will still never be enough.

We need to be efficient, good stewards of taxpayer dollars.

In the Senate, I have had two resolutions receive the support of the entire state Senate that lay out our game plan on addressing this long-standing issue.

First, my Senate Resolution 47 requires a special legislative commission to be formed and made up of key stakeholders – from both the private sector and public sector – to look at the delivery of high-speed broadband services to unserved and underserved areas of the state.

My Senate Resolution 48 requires an investigation and an audit into taxes you and I paid back in the late 1990s and early 2000s through our phone bills that were dedicated to the deployment of high-speed internet. It will ensure those taxes we paid did what we were told they would do – connect more people to the internet.

We have seen the failures of throwing hard-earned tax dollars at a problem without a real strategy. We cannot repeat the mistakes of old and expect a different result.

Kristin Phillips-Hill represents the 28th District in the Pennsylvania Senate.

Beethoven slept here William Lawrence Sr Omnibit 9-24-19

If while in Vienna someone tells you Beethoven slept here, he could be telling the truth. The great composer moved 70 times in the city.

Beethoven slept here William Lawrence Sr Omnibit 9-24-19
Beethoven slept here William Lawrence Sr Omnibit 9-24-19

Design of the Reichstag William Lawrence Sr Omnibit 9-23-19

The design of the Reichstag building in Berlin where Hitler gave speeches and the Soviets raised a flag is based on Philadelphia’s Memorial Hall.

Design of the Reichstag William Lawrence Sr Omnibit 9-23-19
Design of the Reichstag William Lawrence Sr Omnibit