Monday, December 17, 2018

Junk And Dangerous Plant Grand Gulf Is Restarting?

Update Dec 24

98% power

Once they got past the three day delay at low power, then not a bad startup. We still could have a Christmas scram? A host of agencies and news sources are closely watching these guys over poor power operation, I hope they don't take chances to "look good" for their audiences.      

Update Dec 21

That is more like it. 78% power

Update Dec 20

Check out this new LER? These guys have what we call a ground detector monitor. They can measure any ground on the plant whether large or small in the control room. Many junk plants have many grounds that just show up. They have so many, they just ignore the grounds. Did Grand Gulf have any abnormal indications on the ground meter?  

Basically stuck in the low twenties percent power for three days. Like I said, a very non professional startup. Most plants can get to the high 90% percent in two or three days. I guess they are changing a flat while the plant is up at power. I am convinced it is the condensate and feed system or turbine control that is sticking point. In my days, per NRC approved procedures, you had a long list of systems and components on a official paperwork. All these systems needed to be tested and found fully functional. If you put any checkmark on the list indication problems on any component or systems, it was illegal to startup the plant. In the old days, plant management would startup a plant with a host of equipment broken, degraded or undergoing maintenance. They were intending to repair the equipment at power. The plants went crazy with this unsafe and non conservative. You know, only a few outlier bad plants with malicious practices ruin it for the rest of the good plants. That is how we got that list forcing us to startup with a clean plant. Tons of over regulation occur because these few bad operators.           


Update 19

See what I am saying? Stuck at 18%. It looks like they knowingly started up the plant with components of condensate and feed system broken. Hoping they would fix it at power.

And one plant in ANO tripped. 

Power Reactor Event Number: 53793
Facility: ARKANSAS NUCLEAR
Region: 4     State: AR
Unit: [1] [] []
RX Type: [1] B&W-L-LP,[2] CE
NRC Notified By: SEAN DAVIS
HQ OPS Officer: DONG HWA PARK
Notification Date: 12/18/2018
Notification Time: 15:40 [ET]
Event Date: 12/18/2018
Event Time: 00:00 [CST]
Last Update Date: 12/18/2018
Emergency Class: NON EMERGENCY
10 CFR Section:
50.72(b)(2)(iv)(B) - RPS ACTUATION - CRITICAL
50.72(b)(3)(iv)(A) - VALID SPECIF SYS ACTUATION
Person (Organization):
RYAN ALEXANDER (R4DO)

Unit SCRAM Code RX Crit Initial PWR Initial RX Mode Current PWR Current RX Mode
1 A/R Y 100 Power Operation 0 Hot Standby

Event Text

AUTOMATIC REACTOR TRIP - LOSS OF NON-VITAL BUS

"On December 18, 2018 at 1126 CST, Arkansas Nuclear One, Unit 1 (ANO-1) reactor automatically tripped due to a loss of the A-1, non-vital 4160V bus. All control rods fully inserted. Loss of the A-1 bus resulted in de-energizing A-3 vital 4160V bus. Emergency Diesel Generator #1, K-4A, started automatically and is currently powering A-3 vital bus. Non-vital buses A-2, H-1, and H-2 and vital bus A-4 transferred power automatically to the Startup Transformer #1. Off-site power remains energized and available for ANO-1. The reason for loss of A-1 bus is unknown at this time. Currently, ANO-1 has stabilized in Mode 3, Hot Standby."

Decay heat is being removed by the main condenser using the turbine bypass valves. The loss of the A-1, non-vital bus, is under investigation. The licensee has notified the NRC Resident Inspector and the state. 
Update Dec 18

Sorry Pathetic pace at 18% in one 24 hours. Pathetic pace at 4% yesterday, 18% today...  It reminds me of a newly licensed car driver who drives ridiculously showed in order for him to compensate for his poor driving skills.

Brand new problem identification inspection report. The NRC system is fundimentally a bureaucratic absolution system. The plant does a sin, everyone does a ton of paperwork including the NRC, but no fundamental change. They are dinging these guys with harmless papercuts...
The inspectors observed meetings of the station’s Plant Health Committee (PHC) on  October 22 and November 5, 2018.  According to the licensee’s governing  Procedure EN-DC-336, “The primary mission of the PHC is to identify, prioritize, and drive resolution of issues challenging unit reliability,” by focusing on things such as, “safety system health and “organizational alignment . . . to resolve equipment reliability issues.”  The procedure further provides that the PHC meetings should be, “action oriented and results driven, rather than weighted more to status / update / discussion.”  While this PHC process is not a safety-related or quality process as is the CAP, it serves an important oversight function of problem identification and resolution processes, particularly for ensuring appropriate attention and resources are focused on broad challenges that are evidenced by a series of more discrete issues that may be documented and addressed in the CAP.  The inspectors observed that contrary to PHC goals and procedural direction, discussions at the meetings were focused almost entirely on what actions had been complete, rather than proactive discussions of strategies for issue resolution.
***I doubt this will be a professional startup...

4% power today???

Thursday, December 13, 2018

The NRA Is A Russian Front Organization and Work For The KBG For Decades

Has the NRA received any unexplained monies other than from the gun corporations and their members.

This would explain how the NRA sowed so much public controversy and killed so many people? Disrupted our society with their gun ideology.

Are the NRA and it's members really anti American at its core?

Think of the positivity of NRA being defined as a Russian front. It would lead to the complete dissolution of the NRA. The red blooded NRA members were played by the Russians.

Wednesday, December 12, 2018

Junk Plant Watts Bar: 4.2 Earthquake Right Under Plant

What about the lessens learned from Fukushima? So its design is 6.0, with a safety margin of lets say 10%. Basically this is Trumpian truth. See how all these officials learned this from Trump. 
"Here in East Tennessee you have to go all the way back to the 1800s to get to the most significant earthquake, which was above a 6.0," TVA spokesperson Jim Hopson said. "So today's 4.4 is not even close to what we're designed to withstand, which is above a 6.0 earthquake." 
 Tennessee Earthquake, Strongest in Decades, Jolts Homes in the Region and Atlanta
Dec. 12, 2018
A 4.4-magnitude earthquake struck on Wednesday morning in rural Eastern Tennessee, rattling homes as far away as Atlanta in the region’s most powerful jolt in more than 45 years.
The earth shook around 4:14 a.m. local time just outside Decatur, Tenn., a city of about 1,600 people near the Great Smoky Mountains, according to the United States Geological Survey. The earthquake was shallow, about five and a half miles below the surface, sending ripples throughout the area and into neighboring states.
It was the strongest earthquake in Eastern Tennessee since a 4.7-magnitude earthquake struck near Maryville, Tenn., in 1973, the National Weather Service said.
About 150 miles to the south, people in Atlanta said they woke up on Wednesday to their houses shaking. There were no reports of injuries or serious damage.
Advertisement
Karen Webb, a dispatcher at the Meigs County Sheriff’s Department in Decatur, said a few residents called to report that small items had shifted in their houses during the earthquake.
“A picture turned over,” Ms. Webb said. “Maybe a lamp.”
The earthquake struck about two miles east of the Watts Bar Nuclear Plant, one of the largest nuclear power stations in the United States. But the Tennessee Valley Authority, which operates the plant, said Watts Bar suffered no damage.

Friday, December 07, 2018

Is The Election Losing Washington Republicans Going To Pull A Wisconsin Power Grab or Neutering

Update Dec 18

No question, Flynn lied to him admitting he lied about Pence. A good soldier falls on his sword to save the higher up. So Pence was in on everything illegal Flynn did. Everyone is lying about Pence because they know he is going to be the next president.   

Update Dec 15

I am think now Pence is going to resign. Do us a favor...

Update Dec 12

See, what I am saying.  Pence is not presidential timber. Honestly, it looks like he is on some good pot. Do you for a minute think this was unintentional. Are they playing this, Pence is such a goof, won't you rather have Trump staying as president. That is my outlier thought. But the idea he looks so much like a goof, his body was so out of control in the oval office with congressional leaders on TV...should he ever be president.  

***
"In Michigan and Wisconsin, Republicans who control the state legislatures are trying to use year-end "lame duck" sessions to rein in the governors' power now that Democrats have won those seats.
Basically, are the losing US House Republicans, the Senate and Trump going to conspire to take over the the US government in the closing days of this political cycle. Effectively a limited coup?  So, towards the end of Jan 2019, maybe within minutes before the new guys getting sworn in...will Trump and both the House and Senate republicans pardon their asses off and pass new law's, such that all the big players associated with Trump get a free pass on all their illegalities for the good of the nation. 

Everyone knows the post Trump era, much like the impeachment of Nixon...you can expect the republicans to get a absolute election beating next presidential election. This election cycle coming up is small potatoes compared to the next one, with a president stepping down in a deal or impeachment. We are going to be talking trump crimes and impeachment for the next two years.  Nixon teaches us in impeachment, you got to take the long view. Take your lumps in the beginning, maybe a little pardon here and there, probably lose the next few election cycles, purge all the bad stuff out in the beginning...but after the next two or so cycles, the republics will regain the presidency and congress pretty quickly. Maybe just before trump resigns in disgrace, he gives all his illegal buddies a pardon. Then Pence pardons Trump. Actually I don't think Pence will be the president. He is too much damaged goods. He would just keep this trump crisis going into his presidency. Maybe it would be the end of the Republican party or something much worst. I think Gerald Ford is going mysteriously show up. If it goes through impeachment and the court system, the damage would go on for a decade or more, with the republicans never regaining the house, senate and presidency. That is when Spiro Agnew will show up. We are going to need a reason to take out Pence. So who would be the next fumbling Gerald Ford. Right, it would effectively be a global settlement between the Democrats, Republicans and the over powering Deep State. You know, stability is in their interest. The coup d'état will be kind of a soft type...not a all encompassing total national collapse. It will be for the good of the country. We will wipe out Trump, Pence and lots of lower level high officials from the system, install a brand new set of hapless figureheads as head of state, Trump and his top band of crooks will effectively get a free pass or pardon. We will have to put a bunch of lower lever officials in jail. On the long view, these lower level officials will occur no or little damage. But the public would have to be sated with lots of insignificant officials going to jail.

new(That would be Pence's obstruction of justice if he gives trump a free ride. I think lots of congressman in the House and Senate should be charge with a conspiracy and obstruction of justice with Trump's campaign and presidency.) 

They really wouldn't take over the government,they already got the control, but they would subvert all our institutions and constitution for control the world. The republicans would really take a big early hit, but they would subvert our constitution to limit the long term political damage to the republicans. The democrats would just be happy with a stay of a death sentence.





Thursday, December 06, 2018

Downtime At 'Aging' Grand Gulf Attracts Increased Scrutiny

I thought they just throw enough money at the nukes to never make them an a aging plant? I think we are basically talking about a form of a Republican conservative ideology...how republicans do nuclear power. Entergy has a particular republican ideology.

Remember, this company is owned and controlled by some 90% of institutional investors...  

Downtime at 'aging' Grand Gulf attracts increased scrutiny

Tucked near Mississippi's border with Louisiana, deep in Entergy Corp.'s territory, rests the largest single-unit U.S. nuclear power station.
It's called Grand Gulf, and it boasts a 1,443-megawatt capacity.
But it hasn't been acting like a dependable backbone of the power grid.
An E&E News review of federal daily reactor status reports from 2013 through last month found Grand Gulf listed at full power roughly 52.5 percent of the time. It was at zero percent power almost 21 percent of the days studied. On other days, it was at various reduced levels.
Does that sound like a baseload plant?
"No," said Ted Thomas, chairman of the Arkansas Public Service Commission.
New Orleans-based Entergy has a 90 percent stake in the plant through an entity called System Energy Resources Inc. Cooperative Energy in Mississippi has the other 10 percent.
Utilities in Arkansas, Mississippi and Louisiana get a chunk of electricity from Grand Gulf, so regulators notice when it's offline. The Midcontinent Independent System Operator (MISO) manages the grid in the region, but outages at Grand Gulf can have implications for customers' bills and utilities' carbon footprint. That's because tapping other generators can be more expensive and increase the use of fossil fuels.
"I'm aware they're having issues with an aging plant, and we probably need to look at that further," Thomas said recently...

Wednesday, November 28, 2018

A submarine and aircraft carrier metaphor…USS Hampton, Enterprise and Midway….

Why didn't the fleet's tempo and their well know resource troubles kill this guy? Hmm, they are talking about shutting down the government?
Navy’s top 5th Fleet commander found dead in his home

The commander of the Navy’s 5th Fleet was found dead in his home Saturday in Bahrain, Chief of Naval Operations Adm. John Richardson said on Twitter.

Vice Adm. Scott A. Stearney had assumed command of 5th Fleet and Naval Forces Central Command in May, a job that oversees U.S. naval operations in the Middle East.

Richardson said Bahraini authorities and the Naval Criminal Investigative Service are coordinating but that “at this time, no foul play is expected" in the death of the 58-year-old man.

“This is devastating news for the Stearney family, for the team at 5th Fleet and the entire Navy,” Richardson said. “He was a good friend to all of us.”
Update Dec 3 

So a tremendous amount of submarine resources are sidelined based on inadequate budgets and the Russians are dangling submarines in the Atlantic? 

I remember being up there in the North Atlantic near the artic circle in a experimental submarine. We were at about 400 feet and we were riding smooth a silk. Then we had a circuit card go bad in the nuclear protections system. The nuclear plant tripped. It basically was a insignificant failure but we find it. On the surface we had a ragging north Atlantic storm. It was towards the end of my enlistment, I thought I'd seen everything a ocean could throw at us. We went to periscope level and started up diesel generator with the snorkel. The wave height was absolutely astonishing. Our sub design wasn't adequate for this one off submarine. We were a lot long submarine than normal. The waves we so bad, our front kept coming out of the water, This tripped the DG over and over again. We couldn't find the short, it was take a lot more time than expected. Our battery was running out of juice. We surfaced and put men on the sail. We were hoping this would prevent the DG from tripping. Our length and electric motor propulsion made it difficult to put the sub heading into the waves. One of the waves was so high, the bow and sail went underwater with the men in the sail. For some reason both sail hatches were open. We had thousands of gallons of seawater flood into the sub and we almost lost the men on the sail. We were almost out of battery power. The captain said get the men off the sail, close the hatches and go done to 400 feet. That is when we used the "battleshort switch". This switch saved our lives.  This switch overrides all nuclear protection functions. We emediately started up the reactor, after about 10 minutes, we discover were the bad card was and replaced it.  And then bam, we were back to smooth as silk operation.  

Update Nov 28

***I wish I could blame this wholly on the Navy. But the public is really not interested in our military. The news media is worst.   

So how we are beginning to see how weak our Navy is coming out of our recent set of ship collusions and aircraft crashes in the last few weeks. In the same period, we see how secretly degraded our submarine fleet is. The idea they are yanking and cementing ships to a pier, has me wondering how bad the degradation was seen out to see. They must of have some really scary events out to sea and somebody realized how publicized a big event out to sea would be. As shown in the past, we have no idea what is going on Navy right now. So they played it safe by cementing ships to the piers. You will never see how ill prepared we are for the next war, until we can't operated our ship out to sea and a lot of our ships get sunk by the Russians.

The true warfighting condition of our military are being kept from the public's eye. It facilitates all the corruptions from defense contractors and the politicians. They are selling the public a defense readiness and durability way higher than actual. Remember our enemies got sophisticated satellites, amazing technical means and Russian spies and civilians. They can watch our floating submarines all over the world including where docked and it shipyards. They have been watching us for years. They clearly can put two and two together...they broadly can analyze the degraded condition of our fleet of submarines. And they can clearly tell when the politicians and defense establishment are putting one over on the public. I find this humiliating as hell. As always, all wars are called to a nation. Our enemies can figure out how weak we are...know they can probably kick our ass or hobbles our world wide interest for the next 50 years.

Here comes our budget war between the democrats and republican. The republicans are going to blackmail us with massive budget gets to our social programs to get their interest and the democrats are going to threaten massive budget cuts to the military to gain their politicals.

I swear, the Russian must have a lot of fun watching the great US show. We must entertain the hell out of the Russians or whatever.   
Watchdog report sounds alarm over military aviation readiness
Navy Says Deadly Ship Collisions Were 'Avoidable,' Faults Lack Of Preparation
November 26, 2018 10:49 AM 
The Los Angeles-class submarine USS Bremerton (SSN 698) transits Puget Sound while returning to Bremerton, Wash., for decommissioning. The 37-year-old Bremerton, commissioned March 28, 1981, is scheduled to begin the inactivation and decommissioning process at the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard in July. U.S. Navy photo.
Chief of Naval Operations Adm. John Richardson said there are “no surprises” in a recent Government Accountability Office report that found the Navy has lost more than $1.5 billion and thousands of operational days over the past decade due to attack submarines caught in maintenance delays or sitting idle while awaiting an availability.
According to the Nov. 19 report, “The Navy has started to address challenges related to workforce shortages and facilities needs at the public shipyards. However, it has not effectively allocated maintenance periods among public shipyards and private shipyards that may also be available to help minimize attack submarine idle time.”

Richardson, in a media call on Thursday during his Thanksgiving visit to USS Harry S. Truman (CVN-75), told USNI News that he found “no surprises in that report. Every bit of information in that is information we’re very, very aware of. We’ve been talking about the maintenance challenges at the public shipyards for some time, so no surprises there.”
The Navy this year released a 20-year, $21-billion plan to optimize and modernize its four public shipyards that work on attack submarines. But in the short term, Richardson said the yard readiness situation is “a very complex and stressed environment.”
The four yards are digging out of maintenance backlogs that built up due to insufficient manpower, unexpected work popping up once a ship got into the yard and other factors. The attack submarine force faced the brunt of the delays, though, because the yards prioritize ballistic-missile submarines (SSBNs) and aircraft carriers above the attack subs (SSNs).
Several instances have occurred where an attack sub idled at the public yard because the workforce was focused on a higher-priority ship, or where an SSN couldn’t even get into the yard because there was no capacity to work on it. Private shipbuilders Newport News Shipbuilding and General Dynamics Electric Boat have asked to help take on some of the SSN repair work the Navy can’t handle, and there has been discussion on how early to award that work to the private sector versus wait and see if the Navy can handle it itself.
These readiness challenges, though, come as operational commanders are asking for more and more attack subs to support their areas of responsibility, and subs are increasingly being requested to support high-end training with carrier strike groups, with P-8A aircraft and with each other for sub-on-sub training. As demand increases and readiness remains a challenge, the inventory may drop into the mid-40s, compared to a requirement for 66, due to planned decommissionings.
“In terms of the impact the attack submarine force has on the strategic environment, that’s also exacerbated by the fact that we’re [facing] a declining force level right now. Even as we build two Virginias a year, we’re taking submarines out of the inventory as they decommission. And so Navy leadership, including the Submarine Force leadership, Adm. [Charles] Richard, Adm. [Tom] Moore at [Naval Sea Systems Command – very, very focused on this, and so we’ll continue to adapt. All of those things you mentioned in terms of schedule adjustments, the back-and-forth in terms of taking advantage of all of the capacity in both the public and the private sector – that’s something that we talk about very very frequently as we try to optimize our way through these challenges,” Richardson told USNI News

Update Nov 28

***I originally published this on Nov 18, 2007?

...A submarine and aircraft carrier metaphor…USS Hampton, Enterprise and Midway….

As we have seen in recent congressional and executive level problems with funding our military…I think funding problems has undermined the ethics of the military in general since 9/11. Everyone is resourced strained…everyone is lying or distorting in order to meet a legitimate national security commitment….everyone wants to make it look good to their superiors. Nobody want’s to tell the president and congress that the “Emperor has no clothes”…that a con man has entered our minds declaring that it’s not as bad as it looks. I believe the military’s ethics is at a historic breaking point…worst than Vietnam.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Emperor's_New_Clothes

Our submarine fleet is the weak link in the chain…it’s the loudest and leading indicator with the ethics and integrity of the whole military system. We have mismanaged this war so badly….it has undermined the ethics of the whole organization and our political system.

I believe our military is near a historic breakdown. Half of it is conscious…and the other half is cultural attributes of human behavior, in stress, and a lack of resources. At the end of the day, we have blinded ourselves from observing the behavior of each other in the name of survival and evolution…it’s a survival tactic.

I believe my Navy aircraft carrier fighter pilot buddy wasn’t talking about an event in the 1960’s and 1970’s… he was talking about the slide into devaluing and dehumanizing life…the sliding into self blindness and distortion….in the name of altruism and national security…that unstoppable decline into taking shortcuts and falsifying documents and events in the name of protection and doing your job with limited resources.

It is an extremely important metaphor for the military today and tomorrow.

"What gem? Several of Mike's emails caused me to rethink a notion I held since my first day observing this august body. That notion was that "can do," "make do," "go the extra mile," "not on my watch" were the necessary and appropriate watchwords of military service during the 60s and 70s, a time when an increasingly unpopular war was being financed very often out of operational, training and maintenance budgets, a time when the insanity of "Mutually Assured Destruction" became understandable, ergo, possible. These ill conceived notions caused us to devalue human life by wagering death and injury against "national security," and "getting the job done." It led us to several deaths, and near loss of Enterprise, to a very preventable fire, essentially caused by the lack of a jet starter hose of sufficient length to keep the starter engine exhaust a safe distance from missile warheads held on an F4's wing. Starter hoses were in short supply, so when the hose developed holes or breaks, it was common practice to simply shorten the hose. It led to my crash one night on the flight deck of USS Midway, killing 5, injuring dozens, destroying 8 aircraft, all for the shortage of operable Multiple Ejector Racks (MERs). The MER's failure caused two 500-lb bombs to be hung up on my starboard wing; normal procedure would have had me jettison both the bombs and the MER, but since MERs($4,000) were in short supply, the decision was made to bring the bombs and attendant MER aboard, a common decision primarily determined by the skill and experience of the pilot. Unfortunately, my starboard axle failed upon touchdown, and I rode the aircraft into the pack of parked aircraft, having lost the arresting cable. We must be constantly reminded of the atmosphere under which Scorpion was operating. I had minimized and discounted this "constantly scrambling and always behind" atmosphere as "Standard Operating Procedure." Mr Mulligan reminded me to not overlook the operating tempo of the time. I accuse no others of requiring this same reminder, but I owe Mike an apology for my discounting of him."


CNO: Stressed fleet can’t sustain op tempo

By Sam Fellman - Staff Writer
Posted : Thursday May 3, 2012 9:54:14 EDT

The past year has seen the fleet straining to respond to successive crises around the world, from air and missile strikes against Libya and aid missions in the wake of Japan’s devastating earthquake last spring to escalating tensions with Iran over the past five months.

The Crews are seeing quicker turnarounds between deployments and longer cruises. In some cases, these have stretched past the normal six to seven months, out to eight months and beyond.

Recent examples abound. In March, the Enterprise Carrier Strike Group headed out on what’s expected to be a 7 1/2-month deployment only eight months after returning from their last cruise. Similarly, the Carl Vinson strike group deployed in late 2011 after 5 ½ months stateside. And then there’s the Bataan Amphibious Ready Group, which returned from an epic 10 1/2-month deployment in February.

Officials are warning this can’t keep up indefinitely.

Asked at an April 16 speech whether these mounting demands were allowing crews enough time at home and giving ships the opportunities for needed maintenance, Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Jon Greenert replied: “If we continue through, if you will, the [future years defense program], the next five years, at the pace we are at today, the answer to your question is no, we can’t run at that rate.

In testimony this spring on the budget, a chorus of Navy officials reiterated the continuing strain on the fleet.

The Navy can surge ships when war beckons and can also support a handful of very extended deployments, like the Bataan ARG’s 10 1/2-mother, one of the longest in decades, said retired Vice Adm. Peter Daly, former deputy commander of Fleet Forces Command, who said carrier deployments may stretch to meet the two-carrier requirement. “But when you wake up one day and find that your deployments, instead of being six to seven months, are 11 months and you’re not able to do the maintenance and the sustainability over the long-term, then you’re going to break things,” he said. “You’re not going to have a whole force.”

“The risk that I see is we maintain this op tempo going forward,” said Vice Adm. David Architzel, head of Naval Air Systems Command, at a March 22 hearing. “We have to ensure we can sustain the funding to allow us to have this in place.”

At that same hearing, Vice Adm. Bill Burke, deputy CNO for warfare systems, testified that “Navy readiness remains under stress as a result of our efforts to push the maximum available force forward.”

Money is the central issue. The current demand for ships, submarines and air wings outstrips the funding for them, Greenert said in testimony a week earlier, on March 15.

Daly, the retired three-star, agrees that there is a “mismatch” between the Navy’s operations and its funding. Each Navy budget is put together with assumptions about the operations pace and how much this will cost. And each year, it seems, this funding is quickly surpassed by the Navy’s real-world operations without adding funds back in later, Daly said.

Referring to Greenert’s remarks at the Navy League conference, Daly said, “I think he’s giving a cautionary note that if you continue to do that, you will get to a hollow force, you will break the force.”

“Ultimately, you’re balancing this on people, and your people pay the price. They work longer hours. They get over-stretched on deployments and family stress,” continued Daly, who is now the chief executive of the U.S. Naval Institute in Annapolis, Md. “And so if you just do more with less over too long a time — and I can’t tell you exactly where that marker is — then you got a problem.”



Monday, November 26, 2018

Russians Tipped Me Off To The Upcoming Ukraine Crisis?


The Russians have been signaling to me they were setting up a world wide crisis beginning last friday. Russians  have been flooding my blog with clicks. It is not the magnitude of the of the Russian new traffic...it is the amount of Russian traffic over average. It is a subtle tip off  to me. I missed out notifying everyone in the last few days indicating I am getting a lot of new Russian traffic, something is up. Generally I get (for me) lot of Russian traffic coming to my site compart to the tiny, tiny traffic I get normally get. And it ebbs and flows big time on a daily bases. And believe me, just because blogger indicates to me the level of daily Russian traffic to my blog, I have no way to know if it is real Russians traffic.    

They didn't indicate to me where and when the crisis was going to erupt...but one was around the corner. It is the Ukraine crisis that erupted just hours ago with marshal law and the Russians "taking" ships from the Ukraine. 

So this is the Russians playing their hand on how they are going to deal with the US post mid terms, the USA civil war emanating in our US House and the upcoming devastating report coming our of Mueller. 

The intent is to destabilizing the USA as much as they can in the next two years...

Hmm, our stock market has been weak lately and there are indications of future market weakness. Are they interested in cratering out stock market along with all the other troubles hitting the USA???