gowlerk

Members
  • Content

    14,078
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    108
  • Feedback

    0%
  • Country

    Canada

Everything posted by gowlerk

  1. Why would a strong right wing capitalist supporter consider taking an unpaid position such as this? It would involve serving his fellow man for free and smacks of the worst excesses of socialism. Only an unrepentant woke lefty like you would make such a suggestion. The man is hardly likely to waste his superior intellect and business education babysitting the likes of you and I. We are going to have to make do with mere rocket scientists and advanced engineers I'm afraid.
  2. Now it goes to SCOTUS. Which will almost certainly override it. But if they uphold it Trump will be finished.
  3. Yes, 100 amps is standard here as well. If you don't have an electric furnace. Urban areas here use NG for heating. Those who live where that is not available need a 200 amp service. The climate where you live is somewhat different than Winnipeg's.
  4. This is why both Trump and the right in general all over the world keep hammering away at the societal fear of the large amount of migration going on out of "shit hole countries" to more prosperous places. It is a winner and it will probably get worse as climate change forces more people to move.
  5. It's hard to see how. They weren't enough last time and he or they haven't aged well. I know Biden is also unpopular but last time around the anti-Trump vote won, and it will probably be even larger this time. Of course third party candidates could affect the outcome in unpredictable ways.
  6. That will backfire on them biggly. They will lose seats in the state houses. People are pissed.
  7. Did that a few years ago. He is kind of a borderline case for me.
  8. Turtle pops up from nowhere and doesn't even know the proper slander term for the POTUS. It is now "The Biden Crime Family". Get with the R program.
  9. In the fall she spoke in favour of covid vaccines and had the nerve to endorse a D candidate for the US senate. When you are that big it doesn't take much.
  10. It opened for me up here in the far reaches of the North. So here you go. How did 28 people die while skydiving near Lodi? Here’s what we know happened BY STEPHEN HOBBS AND MICHAEL MCGOUGH UPDATED DECEMBER 15, 2023 1:25 PM Newspaper clippings featuring tragedies from the Parachute Center skydiving facility at the Lodi Airport. Rachel Handley [email protected] As part of an investigation into the Parachute Center near Lodi, The Sacramento Bee determined that at least 28 people have died while skydiving there since 1985. While the circumstances of each are unique, there are common throughlines. Here are the details of what happened: APRIL 17, 2021 The main and reserve parachutes for Sabrina Call, 57, tangled and both “down planed,” or pointed toward the ground, according to a San Joaquin County death investigation and FAA incident report. William Dause, the Parachute Center’s founder, said Call, who lived in Watsonville, had jumped about 2,000 times, according to a Bee story from the time. SEPT. 26, 2019 Maria Robledo Vallejo, 28, was attempting to land when the wind apparently blew her parachute over Highway 99, which runs near the Parachute Center, where she was struck by a semi-truck, according to a San Joaquin County death investigation. The Colombia native had been living at the skydiving center for a couple of weeks prior. OCT. 14, 2018 The main parachute for Nena Mason, 62, malfunctioned, according to a San Joaquin County death investigation. Mason was skydiving with her husband, who said Mason was unable to deploy her backup parachute in time. Mason, who lived in Colorado, had jumped more than 2,500 times, the husband told an investigator. SEPT. 14, 2017 Brett Hawton, 54, was hospitalized after his parachute appeared to not have deployed correctly, according to an FAA incident report. Hawton was wearing a jumpsuit with webbing, called a wingsuit, the report said. The Alamo resident later died at a hospital. MAY 24, 2017 Matthew Ciancio, 42, was jumping in a wingsuit, The Bee reported at the time. Dause said Ciancio’s parachute failed to deploy correctly and that he “waited too long to get rid of the bad parachute.” Ciancio, who was from June Lake, was an experienced skydiver and had used a wingsuit hundreds of times before, according to a San Joaquin County death investigation. AUG. 6, 2016 Tyler Turner, 18, and instructor Yong Kwon, 25, were on a tandem jump. During it, Kwon had issues with the main and reserve parachutes, according to an FAA incident report. Kwon, who was born in South Korea, had completed more than 670 jumps, according to the report and a San Joaquin County death investigation. Turner, who lived in Los Banos, was skydiving for the first time. FEB. 13, 2016 Ramiro Sainz, 49, had trouble while deploying his main parachute, according to an FAA incident report. Sainz, from Concord, was recording other skydivers before he released the main chute, the report said. Witnesses said the parachute deployed but seemed to be out of control. APRIL 29, 2014 Timothy Dutton, a 27-year-old professional skier and veteran skydiver, collided with another jumper, according to a Bee article at the time and an FAA incident report. The FAA report said Dutton hit his head on the other skydiver’s leg, appeared to lose consciousness and did not deploy his main or backup parachutes. APRIL 5, 2012 Witnesses said when William Calhoun III, 71, deployed his parachute, it appeared to do so fully. But the veteran jumper, from Novato, began to spiral out of control and he was unable to steady himself, according to a San Joaquin County death investigation. An FAA investigation found no evidence that Calhoun deployed his reserve parachute, the county’s report said. JUNE 17, 2010 Lieve DeMeyer, 25, became separated from her parachute equipment during free fall, according to an FAA incident report. DeMeyer had completed more than 500 jumps, the report said. The Lodi News-Sentinel reported Meyer was from Belgium. SEPT. 13, 2009 Parachutes used by Barbara Cuddy, 48, and Robert Bigley, 32, became entangled. The experienced skydivers were part of a group practicing a diamond-like formation in the air, according to a San Joaquin County death investigation. Their chutes deflated as they fell to the earth. Cuddy lived in Nevada and Bigley lived in Redwood City. AUG. 21, 2004 Marvell Strawn, 31, crashed into another skydiver after having trouble opening his parachute, the Associated Press reported at the time. Strawn died at the scene, and the other skydiver was critically injured, the AP reported. OCT. 4, 2003 Paul Cousins, 21, crashed onto Highway 99 while attempting a 270-degree turn, according to an FAA incident report and the North Shore News of Canada, where he was from. It was Cousins’ 44th jump, the FAA said. He later died at a hospital, the North Shore News reported. JUNE 24, 2001 Torsten Pohlschneider’s parachute malfunctioned, according to an FAA incident report. The (Stockton) Record reported that Pohlschneider’s parachute was automatically deployed by a line connected to a plane, but that it did not fully open. Dause was piloting the plane, the newspaper said. Pohlschneider tried to use his reserve parachute, Dause said, but did so too late. The 27-year-old was a tourist from Germany, according to the News-Sentinel, and was attending a jump school at the center. MAY 26, 2001 Daniel Skarry, a 52-year-old from Oakland, apparently lost consciousness while skydiving, The Bee reported at the time. The News-Sentinel reported Skarry suffered a heart attack during the jump. MARCH 31, 2001 The main and reserve parachutes for Janice Davis, 49, became entangled in a camera mounted on her helmet, according to an FAA incident report and a Bee story from the time. Davis had made more than 2,000 jumps, the FAA report said. AUG. 19, 2000 Wind ripped Nicole Cadiz’s harness off during free fall, The Bee reported at the time. Cadiz, 25, was an experienced jumper, according to a San Joaquin County death investigation. OCT. 29, 1999 James Fullerton’s main and reserve parachutes were not deployed during his 256th jump, according to an FAA incident report. The 23-year-old man’s death was ruled a suicide, according to a San Joaquin County death investigation. SEPT. 16, 1994 George Post, 53, apparently had trouble with his main parachute and did not have time to deploy his reserve one. Post’s brother told The Record that Dause had required Post to give up his own parachute and use Dause’s gear. Dause told the paper he didn’t allow Post to use his own parachute because it was old and archaic. 1994 Sometime in 1994 — The Bee could not verify a specific date — a 28-year-old Sacramento resident, James O’Conner, did not attempt to open either his main or reserve parachutes. The Record said the death was ruled a suicide and that the man had walked away from an inpatient psychiatric facility a few days before the jump. 1994 Sometime in 1994 — The Bee could not verify a specific date —Albert Rodriguez, 58 and of San Jose, died. Rodriguez had more than 600 jumps but apparently failed to pull either his main or reserve parachutes, according to The Record. APRIL 7, 1993 Deven Whittaker, 15, died after his main parachute deployed improperly and became entangled with a backup chute, according to an FAA incident report. Whittaker, who had made about 20 jumps, was skydiving with his mother, an experienced jumper, and was practicing maneuvers before he crashed, The Press-Tribune of Roseville reported at the time. NOV. 24, 1990 Darrin Hansen, 25, collided with the parachute canopy of another person during a jump about 30 feet above the ground, according to an FAA incident report and the San Joaquin County Medical Examiner’s Office. AUG. 26, 1990 William Russi Jr., 20, experienced an issue after opening his main parachute, according to an FAA incident report. A story from The Bee at the time said Russi began to spin and apparently tried to deploy his reserve parachute, but it tangled with the main chute. MARCH 11, 1989 Witnesses said Kirk Braden, 28, showed no action to deploy either one of his parachutes during a descent, according to an FAA incident report and the San Joaquin County Medical Examiner’s Office. JAN. 27, 1985 Witnesses did not see a skydiver attempt to open his reserve parachute after the main chute fouled, according to an FAA incident report. The Bee was not able to identify the jumper. This story was originally published December 14, 2023, 5:00 AM. BEHIND OUR REPORTING How we reported these stories Why did we report this story? Following the $40 million civil court ruling in March 2021 against William Dause and the Parachute Center’s 28th reported death in April 2021, Sacramento Bee journalists endeavored to find out how the high-profile Northern California business has managed to stay open – with Dause still the public face of the operation while owing tens of millions of dollars to the family of a jumper who died there in 2016, at age 18. How did we report this story? Reporters Michael McGough and Stephen Hobbs spent months combing through court filings, depositions and a federal indictment; Federal Aviation Administration and National Transportation Safety Board records and citations; airplane registration databases; county business records; California business license and tax information; archived stories from multiple news publications spanning four decades; and anonymized data provided by the U.S. Parachute Center. The reporting led to a complicated conclusion: while it is all but impossible – largely due to lax government oversight and loose recordkeeping practices within the industry – to determine whether the Parachute Center’s 28 deaths represent a statistical outlier, it is clear Dause has continued to play an active role at the drop zone more than two years after a judge ruled him and the business responsible for an eight-figure sum. As of the beginning of December 2023, Dause had not paid a cent to the Turner family, even as he flies planes for and works the front desk at the Parachute Center. Who did we talk to? The Bee sat down this year with Dause at the Parachute Center and victim Tyler Turner’s mother Francine Turner at her Los Banos home, each for nearly two-hour interviews. Those interviews were focused on the deaths of Tyler and his tandem instructor Yong Kwon but also delved into the appeal of skydiving, a recreational activity that is adrenaline-pumping but inherently dangerous. The Bee also interviewed a range of experts, stakeholders, skydivers, attorneys and government officials, as well as loved ones of victim Tyler, who died while trying to celebrate a friend’s 18th birthday. RELATED STORIES FROM SACRAMENTO BEE INVESTIGATIONS 28 people died skydiving near Lodi. How does the Parachute Center stay in business? DECEMBER 14, 2023 5:00 AM
  11. Not everyone can afford a trial. They took a deal that would not leave the child with a record. There is a different set of rules for people with no money.
  12. The whole family could have ended up in Parchman.
  13. I did not think there was any room for shaded thinking in this arena anymore. You know, like one POTUS said. You are either with us or agin us. The next thing you know waffling sets in!
  14. These are the words you used and I responded to.
  15. I was not joking. I truly believe you are taking this place too seriously. It can’t be what you seem to be asking for and remain open to all.
  16. In Biden's case there IS NO EVIDENCE TO THE CONTRARY. NONE. I have no idea why you brought the Dotard into here. The two of them do not compare. Not at all.
  17. It is not the beliefs or the positions taken that cause me to turn away. It is the redundant daily new topics, the style, and the ridicule of others that I won't tolerate. The frequent time outs come for a good reason.
  18. SC is entertainment and sometimes mentally stimulating. At least that is what I find it to be. That's why I ignore those who are not entertaining me. Trolls are quite droll, boring, and uninteresting. They are entertaining themselves at your expense without contributing much of value. When a poster becomes intellectually dishonest and predictable they go onto my "special list".
  19. Your child can only be murdered once. But the pain they could bring to you by not conforming may last years.
  20. Energy is everywhere. Transitioning from stored mined energy to tapping and using all the various forms of radiation streaming from the giant fusion machine a mere 1 AU away is only an engineering problem to be solved. That will take some time and a lot of political will. But is within easier grasp than pie in the sky stuff like colonies on Mars.
  21. I will interpret that as you are admitting you have no real basis to accuse Joe Biden of corruption. You are just another right winger expressing your "feels".
  22. A few people do use those here. But only as a supplement. The cost/benefit ratio is not that good when you factor in the need for backup.
  23. Maybe being in San Diego you just don't understand a Winnipeg winter. Heating a 2000 sq ft home with an electric furnace and powering all of life's other niceties requires a 200 amp service. Most homes here do fine with a 100 amp service because almost all of us heat with NG. We use about 2400 watts on winter nights just plugging in the block heaters for our two ICE cars. Some people use more because they also run interior warmers. We need to be able to cope with temps of -30C sometimes for weeks at a time. Those can be daytime highs. We only get 8 hours of daylight at this time of year. Solar power is a marginal thing in this season. Edit to add......We are currently really enjoying the El Nino winter. But we know it won't last. The last shot of "arctic air" only lasted a could days and it was pretty mild. Christmas season is usually a time of heavy parkas and ice fog. So far we barely have snow.
  24. Just like Joe, you only read and considered part of my comment.