ATHOL DICKSON

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Lies and the Lying Liars Who Publish Them

January 27, 2017 By Athol Dickson

Did Donald Trump really lie?
Journalism’s code of ethics, apparently.

These days my first assumption when I see a report in the news media is that it’s a lie unless I can prove otherwise. Why would I make such a whacky assumption, you may ask? Well, we’re talking about an industry that promotes lying liars to the pinnacle of their profession, like Katie Couric, Brian Williams, and Dan Rather. (If you don’t already know why I say they’re liars, please do click the links.) And that’s just the tip of the iceberg, lying journalist-wise, so when they accuse someone of lying, I always assume the person is telling the truth. It’s a Bizarro World way of looking at the news, I know, but usually it works out because they’re almost always truly lying.

For example, take the dust-up over Trump’s claim in a speech to the CIA that the crowd at his inauguration was “yuuge!” The news media says he lied, so I decided to check out his speech for myself. You can see it too, by following this link to the Mirror, which posted a video of the whole thing. If you start watching at the 12:00 minute mark, you’ll hear Trump’s own words about the crowd size at his inauguration, instead of the Bizarro World version the media has been publishing. What he actually said was this:

“It looked like a million and a half people. Whatever it was, it was, but it went all the way back to the Washington monument.”

Was that a lie?

Everyone in the mainstream media from CNN to The New York Times has piously proclaimed it was. To support their accusation they’ve been plastering a photo all over the place, which the photographer claims was shot at 12:01, while Trump was taking the oath of office. (I found a copy of the photo here, at the Daily Mail.) The photo shows a lot of empty space in the mall around the monument. But here’s the question you have to ask if you think most of these people are liars who are lying:

Was the photo really taken when they say it was, during the oath of office?

To believe that, you would have to believe the liars are not lying, which I don’t. But even if the photo really was taken during Trump’s oath, does that really mean Trump lied?

Umm… no.

Of course, nobody can get inside Trump’s head to know what he truly thought…

When you read the news media accounts of Trump’s CIA speech, most of them make it sound like he claimed there were a million and a half people at his inauguration. But look at Trump’s actual words again:

“It looked like a million and a half people. Whatever it was, it was, but it went all the way back to the Washington monument.”

Notice what he actually said. “…it looked like a million and a half people…all the way to the Washington monument.” Get that? He didn’t say there were a million and a half people. He said it looked that way to him.

Of course, nobody can get inside Trump’s head to know what he truly thought about what he saw. So are the lying liars in the media willing to claim he’s lying about what it looked like to him? Probably, because you know, liars gonna lie. But here’s a photo which was also taken during the oath of office, not from the top of the Washington monument, but from behind Donald Trump, looking out toward the monument:

Lies about Donald Trump lying
What Trump saw.

Now, I ask you, from Trump’s point of view, doesn’t it look like the crowd “went all the way to the Washington monument?” It sure does to me. Whether that’s what a million and a half people looks like, I don’t know, because I’ve never seen that many people. And neither has Donald Trump. most likely.  Up to that day the biggest crowd he had ever addressed was probably at one of his many heavily attended campaign stops. Even the Quicken Loans Arena, where he addressed the Republican National Convention, only holds 20,562 people. So if Trump was mistaken in his estimate, it’s an understandable mistake because, holy cow, look at all those people!

And out here in the real world, a mistake is not a lie.

 

Design Is Like Riding a Bike

January 25, 2017 By Athol Dickson

Sante Fe Modern House
Design is like riding a bike.

Apparently doing architecture is like riding a bike. It’s been more than a decade since I retired from the practice of architecture. Sometimes I wonder if I can still do it, so recently when the opportunity to design a house in Santa Fe came along, I decided to give it a go. I was certainly rusty at first, but after a while things started coming together pretty nicely. At least I like to think so. Maybe I’m fooling myself. Check out the rendered elevations below and let me know what you think…

Here’s the front. Stone and stucco. A “Dutch” door recessed three feet into the facade and surrounded by porcelain and glass tiles.

Santa Fe Modern House Design
Front Elevation

Next, the right side. Not much to say about this except the garage doors are wood with an antiqued finish to match the front door, and the low wall in the middle screens the air conditioning compressors.

Santa Fe Modern House Design
Right Elevation

Now the rear. A deep covered porch, with a barbeque bar on the right and a stone fireplace on the left. The fireplace is “ventless” gas, which is why the chimney doesn’t extend above the roof. There are two other fireplaces which do have chimneys, one in the master bedroom on the left, and the other in the living room. That pedestal looking thing in front of the covered porch is a fountain standing in a concrete planter, with two more planters flanking steps on the left and right.

Santa Fe Modern House Design
Rear Elevation

Finally, the left side. The windows in the stone section on the left are 10 feet above the floor inside and they face north, because that room is an artist’s studio and high north light is best for painting.

Santa Fe Modern House Design
Left Elevation

So that’s what I’ve been doing lately. Any suggestions?

 

Right of Way

January 22, 2017 By Athol Dickson

Right of Way, a Poem
Made of plastic, surely.
Probably not skin.
Probably not bone.

I hated writing this. When you read it, you’ll see why.

But if you’re a writer and you’re serious about it, sometimes ideas come that must be written, whether you like it or not. They will rattle around inside your skull like tinnitus, driving you crazy until you get them out. Where they come from, I don’t know. Why they’re so insistent on their birthright, I don’t know. Still, a serious writer has no choice; you must write some things, even though you hate it.

And I did hate that these words must be written. But in one form or another this idea has been inside my head for years. Clearly, it had to get out. Thank God now it has, at last.

 


Right of Way

Someone warned me not to take the shortcut.
Go the longer way, they said.
That’s a bad luck road.
But I was late,
And it would cost nine months of labor
If I didn’t make it there on time.
So I took the shortcut anyway.
A one lane mountain road.
A thrilling drive,
High and narrow.
Then something lying in the rut ahead,
Where my wheels would have to roll.
A doll?
A baby?
Could I be that unlucky?
I can’t drive around it;
Can’t get out to inspect it,
Hemmed in as I am,
Solid rock on one side
Thin air on the other.
So I watch.
And it moves a little.
I could back up;
A long reverse,
Then go the other way.
But I’d be late,
And that would cost me months of labor.
And they make dolls that move a little,
Don’t they?
And besides,
It isn’t fair.
I have a right to drive this road
Without things lying in my way,
With tiny fingers and a little button nose,
Made of plastic, surely.
Probably not skin.
Probably not bone.
Because I can’t be late.
And besides,
It isn’t fair.
I have a right to drive this road.
So I roll on.
There’s just the smallest bump,
And then it’s in the past.
I don’t look back.
I’ll be on time,
No labor lost.
That’s what matters, surely.
And besides,
It was probably a doll.

Give Like a Smarty

December 20, 2016 By Athol Dickson

How to give taxes to charity.
Give your taxes to charity!

How would you like to pay your taxes to the charity of your choice instead of to the government? Sound too good to be true? It’s not. Read on.

The IRS does not apply capital gains taxes to a charitable contribution of stock if it’s transferred directly from a donor’s account to a registered not-for-profit organisation such as a church. Also the IRS does not tax any gains when a not-for-profit sells stock and transfers the cash to its bank account. This can result in a sizable windfall for both you and for the charity of your choice. For example, compare these two scenarios:

Say you want to donate about $5,600 to charity this year, but your Christmas shopping has depleted your ready cash so you decide to sell some stock. You own 100 shares of Microsoft which you (after consulting your crystal ball) bought at the very bottom of the great recession for $15.50. Now those shares are worth $63.40. So those shares are now valued at your original investment plus a long term capital gain of $4,790. Most of us would have to pay a 15% long term capital gains tax on that amount, meaning Uncle Sam’s cut would be $718.50 ($4,790 x 15%). That leaves you with $5,621.50 to give to your favorite charity.

But what if your charity has a brokerage account? In that case you can transfer the 100 shares directly from your account to theirs. The capital gains are not taxed, neither when you transfer the stock to the charity, nor when the charity cashes out on their end. So instead of giving them $5,621.50, they get the full $6,340.

Cool deal, right?

It gets better.

In the first scenario you only get to deduct $5,621.50 from your taxable income this year. In scenario two, you can deduct the full $6,340. If your average tax rate ends up being in the 20% range, that could save you as much as $143.70 in taxes. Or, since your original goal was to give $5,600 anyway, instead of transferring the full 100 shares you could transfer just enough meet that goal and keep the rest, or give it to an additional charity.

If you’d like to do a little year end giving this way but don’t have any thoughts on who should get the dough, kindly allow me to suggest three excellent possibilities.

I like to use this strategy to support charities with stock I would otherwise sell anyway for other reasons, especially when rebalancing. The IRS doesn’t allow this strategy in a tax deferred account like an IRA or 401(k) until you’re 70.5 years old. After that you can transfer stock from deferred accounts and it counts toward your Required Minimum Distributions, which could be a very handy tax planning tool for those who give to charity during retirement. And yes. this strategy does apply to mutual funds and exchange traded funds.

If you’d like to do a little year end giving this way but don’t have any thoughts on who should get the dough, kindly allow me to suggest three excellent possibilities. All three of these outfits have brokerage accounts, and they are all familiar with this process. My wife and I have supported their work for some time now. We like them because we know for a fact that a large percentage of our donation is used in direct support of people who really need our help and we know people in the leadership teams personally, so we’re sure their hearts truly are in the right place.

Youth Believing In Change – an organisation that tutors and feeds underprivileged children after school and during the summer break. Email Vincent Gaddis – YBC at sbcglobal dot net

Morning Star News Service – a team of reporters focused on the horrific persecution of Christians that’s happening in some of the world’s most dangerous countries. Email Jeff Sellers – editor at morningstarnews dot org

The Salvation Army – we have personally witnessed the miraculous results they achieved in a homeless alcoholic family member’s life.  Email Bruce Branstine – bruce dot branstine at usw dot salvationarmy dot org

You probably noticed I’ve spelled out those email addresses to avoid subjecting these charities to robotic spam. When you type the addresses in your email, simply substitute the @ sign for the word “at” and use a period (.) where I wrote “dot” and do not include any spaces. For example, “me at myaddress dot com” would be: [email protected]. Tell them Athol sent you!

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With regard to what I’ve written here, I know a little about a lot, a lot about a little, more than some when it comes to some things, less than others about others, and everything there is to know except for what I don’t.

Older Posts

  • Letter to a Disappointed Friend
  • American Success Story
  • Slave Labor Here and Now
  • When Motives Don’t Matter
  • Lies and the Lying Liars Who Publish Them
  • Design Is Like Riding a Bike
  • Right of Way
  • Give Like a Smarty
  • How to Conduct Due Diligence For A Crowdfunded Hard Money Loan
  • Why It’s Good We’re Not a Democracy

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