Photography: Hidden Features

satelliteview-aAs always, click on any image to see it full-sized. CTRL-click will open the image in a separate browser tab.

I drew on today’s satellite image. The ellipse at the top is an area I wanted to see on the ground and it turned out nothing more than just a few shallow, broad washouts running down all sides from a peak.01cattails The only real oddity here was the unexpected patch of dessicated cattails growing in a bowl near the peak of this ridge. They didn’t have a chance to gain full height, but some of them do have small puff tails. It was just one of those unexpected delights, and I’m pretty sure not many people know they are there. It shows up on the satellite image as a sort of football shape near the middle left edge of the ellipse.

02canyonHaving gotten into that spot from the roadbed along the northern edge, I came back out and rode south on the road to the cut for the high tension lines. This was terribly thick grass mixed with oak shrubs and spindly long blackberry vines. Yeah, I got scratched up. I had to drag my bike through this about 100 meters to find a place to hide it. Then it was a long trek eastward and downhill. I drew a dot with a lavender outline to show where I stood to take this picture. The dashed line east of my position was the bottom of a canyon. The perspective is a little off; just to my left in the foreground is a two or three meter drop. I thought I might be able to clamber down on this side, but I had doubts about climbing the far side. I’ll probably come back to this by starting back up in the area where I drew the ellipse and try to come southeast a bit through the overgrown trail visible on the image. That will bring me out on the high side across from where I stood today.

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Oklahoma Heart Hospital Is Grossly Incompetent

Let me make this clear: You may well receive very good medical care from Oklahoma Heart Hospital. However, their accounting and billing operation is so pitifully incompetent it borders on criminal negligence in my opinion.

Let me explain. We all know that American medical care has become outrageously expensive, and Obamacare has made it worse. In light of this, one of the few real benefits for Veterans is the free health care that exempts us from Obamacare. It works really nicely for us disabled veterans. Not long ago Congress added something to the pie, called the Veterans Choice Act. In essence, if you aren’t close to a VA clinic/hospital or your facility can’t perform certain services, or can’t do them in a medically timely manner, the VA can refer you out to a contract insurance agency and you get that missing care from a civilian supplier. The VA pays for it through the contracted insurer.

The day of my appointment for an echo cardiogram, I showed them the card I had received from the Veterans Choice offices. They didn’t perform due diligence; they didn’t check to see what was involved. They simply billed the wrong agency. They naturally got a rejection and sent me the bill for about $300. That sounds about right, but they billed the wrong person. So I called the good folks at Veterans Choice and was patched through to TriWest; these are the folks contracted for handling claims. I was put on hold while the lady called Oklahoma Heart Hospital and she told them the right information. You would reasonably think that was the end of the matter.

No. Oklahoma Heart Hospital persists in ignoring this information and has sent me another bill. This time it was $1495.90. Do you suppose that sounds like bill-padding? Yeah; it’s also called criminal fraud. Once again, I went through the drill of calling and being passed around until someone called OK Heart again and gave them the correct information. I won’t bet on them doing the right thing.

Here we see how a major health care facility treats disabled veterans, most of whom are financially vulnerable. At this point, I have zero confidence in Oklahoma Heart Hospital. Further, jacking up the bill that way indicates some kind of criminal intent. So all I can say at this point is that if you find yourself hooked up with Oklahoma Heart Hospital, watch out. You’ll find your credit ruined and yourself out on the street homeless before these bloodthirsty vampires are through you.

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Globalist Google

While there’s nothing new, I wanted to refer you to an article that nicely sums up what I already knew about Google: Julian Assange — “Google is Not What it Seems” — They “Do Things the CIA Cannot”.

Everything Google touches is used to promote the globalist agenda. All the data they collect, including what’s leaked back to them through their Android OS, Chromebooks, their browser and the various services they sponsor, is used to promote that agenda. They eagerly share with various agencies of the US government (and others) what they learn about people through their services. I say that, not to provoke fear and loathing of Google and their stuff, but to ensure you are making an informed choice. Use Google; don’t trust Google.

It also bears watching whether any kind of backlash will bite into their profits. Google is huge, but vulnerable because of their politics.

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Photography: Another Draper Trail

Source: Google Earth

Source: Google Earth

As always, click on any image to see it full-sized. CTRL-click will open the image in a separate browser tab.

01trailI’ve got nothing better to do right now but poke around Draper Lake’s hidden treasures. Today I wanted to examine the trail at the far NE corner of the lake area up near Post Road and Interstate 240. I came in off Post Road (eastern edge of the satellite view). It’s a climb up from the road, but the trail is pretty clear — except where Parks and Recreation cut down some trees to fall across the trail.02washout It makes sense because this is one of the most remote areas and people were still riding motorbikes out there long after it was closed for that purpose. So I parked my bike up in the trees and climbed over the barrier and started walking. 03creekbottomThis was a very clear trail as that picture above left shows. There was a major washout at one point (above right), and I had to walk atop one of the ridges to get past it.

The satellite image shows a white spot about halfway along; that’s where someone dumped a huge pile of roofing shingles sometime in the past. That’s another good reason for the felled trees across the head of the path. It was just one long slope down toward a flat creek bottom (above left). 04lakeoverviewAt that point there was no easy path to go any farther. So I trudged back up the hill to my bike and came around on the new road, but followed the old road bed to a high spot I wanted to check out. That’s where I shot this wide image across the a narrow arm of the lake. Near there the construction crew had finished paving one of the numerous end points that runs out on a spit of land. Here the trail was obviously heavily used; it was the first time I saw the shoe prints of other humans.05shoretrail At the shore I saw the trace of the old lake shore trail, mostly exposed bedrock here. It’s not passable on every part of the lake.

The crews are still ripping some of the old asphalt but at least this time my way was clear all the way around to the bike trail up on the NW corner. My bike’s disc brakes were squeaking and dragging, so I stopped at Dick’s Sporting Goods where I got the bike and the technician was there. He tuned it up for me and adjusted the brakes, pointing out which fitting to turn to center them over the disc. All covered by the warranty, of course. It worked a lot better the last two miles home.

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Photography: Super Moon

01supermoonThis was just a practice run. The camera did well enough considering the awful conditions shooting from an urban setting with street lights and such. I’d have to drive quite a ways to get out of that.

02supermoonIt actually peaks in the morning, so I may try again tomorrow evening and take a walk to a slightly better area. What I cannot do is explain how it feels like the moon reaches out to grab you when it’s like this. You can sense it pulling on you.

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Psalm 119: Cheth 57-64

This octet of verses is the Song of Loyalty. The psalmist is fully committed, wholly owned by his Sovereign, a loyal servant who shares in the inheritance as a son. That’s the meaning of the first line, and he as offered the ritual of covenant binding, giving his word to live by the Law of his Lord. He held back nothing in secret, but cast his whole being on the favor of Jehovah. He knows there is no master among men who would be so merciful because the Lord for His part gave His word on it.

Upon this commitment, he gave long consideration to his own ways and determined to bend his path to following the ancient markers of God’s eternal road of truth. There was no hesitation at all.

The wicked pay no attention to revelation as they devise a system that favors their comfort, and they have tried to hold the psalmist accountable to their man-made laws. But he simply cannot absorb their false ways as the truth of God echoes down from Heaven into his heart.

It was considered normal in ancient times for adults to awaken at least once in the night and stay up for a while, often doing things that are difficult to do in daytime. It’s a quiet time of private matters, and our psalmist finds his first impulse is to give thanks to God. This is not something you can fake. He finds his mind drawn back to all the amazing things God has revealed in His judgments of what is morally good and bad.

His loyalty is overwhelming, so wherever he encounters someone who lives by a heart-led commitment to Jehovah, the psalmist is that person’s friend and ally without question. When he witnesses someone acting consistent with God’s Laws, he wants to share in their burden of work. Everywhere he turns, there is a vision or song marking God’s mercy; the earth itself trembles and hums to the divine glory. He asks that God use those echoes of mercy to goad him into a life that God outlined long ago.

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Of Goats and Chamber Pots

Don’t follow the folly of this world.

Matthew 26:52 is often misquoted. It’s a peculiar Western concept that one could “live by the sword.” It almost sounds poetic — live by the sword; die by the sword. But this places a false emphasis and takes the thoughts in the wrong direction. The Greek translation of His words is more nuanced: If you take the sword, it will take you. Choose your tools carefully, because they will restrict your choices later. Don’t be fooled into thinking it’s all you have; there are lots of tools, so don’t let any one thing become a false god. Notice that He didn’t tell Peter to throw that big knife away (for that’s all it was) or surrender it, but to save it for a better time. Jesus was not coming to assert political authority, which is what swords are for, but to assert a moral authority that outlives this world. Let the dead bury their own dead, for we celebrate eternal life as spiritual beings who outlive these bodies.

But we do understand that there is place for goats to lead the sheep of His pasture. That’s another parable from the previous chapter of Matthew (25:31-46). Goats are placed in a herd of sheep because they are more likely to notice predators and take defensive action. Sheep are “stupid” in the sense of being too focused on other things, but the sheep are far more valuable. Goats have their place; they represent those who take up the sword in this life. The Covenant of Noah most certainly gives place to the sword, and the goats are the primary audience for Noah’s Law. God calls His sheep to submit to the leadership of goats in this world to make those awful decisions that His people should not have to make.

This is the hardest things for Western Christians to grasp. A part of the reason God doesn’t call every soul to redemption is because redemption makes us unfit to rule in a fallen world. It makes us very fit for a lot of other very critical tasks in the wider process of redemption, a process that includes the whole of Creation as we encounter it, but the secular task of ruling is for the unredeemed. That’s a general observation of how God does things, not a hard and fast rule. It reflects the nature of God’s moral character, and thus, our expectations of how things will go in this world.

We pray to Him regarding our rulers and seek their best interests according to His wisdom in our hearts. We know that George Soros represents a very pernicious intent to overturn everything God has done up to now in this world. His agenda is well established and easily discerned as poking God in the eye. In the long run, Soros and his allies will fail. We could oppose him, but we have to choose the tools of that opposition carefully. Whatever we use will take part in laying the path available to us in our redemptive mission. We have to spread the Word against his lies. The Sword of the Spirit is not the same as the swords wielded by the goats of this world. Keep your swords and guns, because they have their place, but not every problem requires slicing and shooting. Opposing Soros is more subtle than that.

But we should understand up front that when the goats respond to the predatory approach of Soros and his allies, it will be messy. Our Sword of the Spirit cuts precisely enough to separate between matters of the hands and matters of the heart (Hebrews 4:12). The sword of the flesh is less discerning and cuts what stands in the way, whether the impediment blocks by intent or by mere happenstance. In order for our secular rulers to defend against Soros and his hired revolutionaries, a lot of innocent blood will be shed. There’s no avoiding it. When you have to use troops and policemen to shut down rioting, eventually it leads to bloodshed. That this is part of what Soros hopes to provoke has no bearing on the results. He’s paying fools to do his dirty work and they are cannon fodder. He’s hoping for a propaganda coup, a mass of sentiment against those he forces to use violence when he paid for violence in the first place.

When we consider decrying violence, we have to consider carefully what our message will say in the ears of the world. We have to stand with Jesus, who never was anything like the propaganda Jesus of the American Left. But He is also no part of the American Right, either. So-called “conservative Christians” are not really following Christ. The Right imagines that we can and should make liberal use of enforcement, but with a properly certified professional standard, of course. It won’t happen like that because it cannot. The only professionalism involving swords is mere expertise in slicing. Tying troops up with rules about when to shoot or don’t shoot ends up making very little difference during riots. This I know because I took very specific training in shoot/don’t shoot. It does not improve moral subtlety. It’s just about as sensible as a blanket condemnation of all violence versus Noah’s Law, which specifically requires violence against crime.

Say it bluntly, to yourself if no one else: Human life is not precious. Of course, that’s soundbite against the false soundbite of our perverted society. By the same token, human life is not trash, either. That is, human life is in itself a neutral element. Human life is the canvas upon which we hope to paint a living personal image of God. Our time in this world is a means to an end. It’s value in God’s eyes is the degree to which it reflects His glory. There are whole vast herds of goats to whom He will eventually say, “You don’t know Me and I don’t know you.” It’s not that we gladly discard their lives under some presumption that we can know their value to Him, but we should never forget that He is the sovereign who decides. He flatly says that some are born for the most obscene purposes in a much larger plan we’ll never understand (2 Timothy 2:20-21). Some humans are nothing more than chamber pots in God’s plans, a highly disposable commodity. Others are precious gold to Him.

He does give us some broad hints about how He finds some humans more precious than others, but we can rest assured that anyone burdened with Western Christian values isn’t going to understand, whether they be liberal or conservative in their religious expression. We can be sure that outward religious expression itself has nothing to do with God’s evaluation. Ritual is not truth; it’s just an expression of truth, or it could be lies. Just getting a mere inkling of what God thinks requires ditching human reason and sentiment in favor of heart-led conviction. And even then, all we can really hope to guess is the value of someone in our own calling and mission. This is what we stand up for when we prophetically address the world.

We don’t address it with the sword of the flesh. We might use one now and then, and we know well it’s probably all some of those goats will see and understand. But we don’t confine ourselves to their level of understanding. We might be aware of their limited perspective, but we don’t expect to meet their standards of reason. That in itself is a critical element in challenging their dullness. Our opposition to the likes of Soros should leave a few folks befuddled so the Lord can work in those moments of wonder and doubt. We can be sure that Jesus’ open rebuke of Peter, followed by a miraculous healing of the victim, left a lot of questions in the minds of goats who might become sheep, or chamber pots that might be re-molded into some grander purpose: “break me, melt me; mold me, fill me.”

God is moving in our world now, adjusting reality in ways we cannot comprehend. Some elements of reality will never change because they are fundamental manifestations of His divine character. But there is a lot of contextual change and we are blessed to see it clearly and share in the task. Prepare your mind to see a shocking explosion of violent crack-down as globalism takes a major hit. If not here in the US, then surely in other places of the world. Don’t get lost in the mechanics of these events. Don’t get trapped in the goats’ viewpoint. These are things we cannot influence. What we can do is pull back the moral blindness that keeps folks from understanding just how natural it is. Let His glory shine through your efforts to respond morally.

We are His sheep.

Addenda: According to some observers, this business of rioting could well turn into violent revolt rather like the various “color revolutions” sponsored in other countries.

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Photography: More Terrain Analysis

02gashAs always, click on any image to see it full-sized. CTRL-click will open the image in a separate browser tab.

Today I returned to yesterday’s little canyon but approached from a different direction. Thus, I was on the opposite side of the dry creek bed and discovered I hadn’t seen half of what was there.01canyon-a Our first image is that gash from the other direction. The rest are just various angles of this redrock canyon.03canyon-b I decided to approach from a closed road that you can see in yesterday’s satellite photo where it runs at an angle north of the canyon carved as much by water as by motocross wheels. The last image didn’t turn out as I had hoped; somehow the grass and other foliage tends to obscure the scale of things.04canyon-c However, this time I used my big camera, so I’m not going to get much better than this. It’s rare to see this much exposed sandstone underlayer in any one place in this part of the country.

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Just Speculation

So you probably have already seen a lot of speculative press on what to expect from a Trump presidency. I wouldn’t bet on much of it, particularly the policy stuff. It will change some, but it remains to be seen whether Trump is able to press ahead with even half of what he promised, or half of the ideas promoted by starry-eyed supporters. But we’ll see.

I suppose there are a few things I will bet on, consistent with my cynicism. For example, the crybaby SJWs will take a major whipping in the coming months. I suppose there will be a measure of patience with the riots we read about in the mainstream news, and it will vary with how liberal the local governments are. Some are downright sympathetic to the riots. However, most of them will eventually get tired and the crackdown will be violent. The social trend of hating police will quickly lose its luster as a Trump presidency emboldens those who revere police and military. This is the right-wing backlash I saw coming a long time ago. Meanwhile, prepare for major scolding from the mainstream press.

There will be some breakage in commercial media, though. Their time is past, but they won’t die quietly. Keep in mind that their single hook is entertainment value. If they don’t entertain, they can’t push their agenda. The audience willing to pay for extravagant entertainment value is going broke, not to mention aging and dying. So there will be a tiny die-hard group who will cling to it with nostalgia, but the big budget stuff will crumble into poverty while the computer-generated stuff will get better and take over the market. The day of the independent (“indie”) producer has come, and the centralized conglomeration is dying. Yes, all of this is tied into how the mainstream media will come apart: they have lost their audience and their income. Their liberal social mythology, written into everything they produce, will fade away. We’ll still have great entertainment, but the underlying value system will shift.

I suspect it will hit the academic industry in the same way. The entire system of certification will be shaken. I cannot guess how much will disappear, nor what the replacement will look like to us, but too many of the sacred institutions of higher learning will not adapt and will not survive.

That’s enough commentary from me. I think my regular readers can pick up their own thoughts from here. We are in for a rough ride, because this kind of mass breakage is not easily contained. It’s not so much what Trump will do, but that he dropped into a tumultuous time and found a good place to stand. He’s not really a good guy, just very different from his predecessors.

Addenda: In response to an offline query — If Trump manages to leverage his power to go after the biggest globalist liberals in Washington, and tear apart their institutions and money, he might actually change things a great deal. It would require he start early and rather quietly, announcing only those measures that would appeal to the masses who voted for him. This means riding the backlash that already exists, mining it for popularity, with a nuanced balance between efficient brutality and magnanimous mercy. It’s not that he doesn’t have it in him, but I don’t know if he and his position are strong enough to actually dominate that way.

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Photography: Lesson in Terrain Analysis

Source: Google Earth

Source: Google Earth

As always, click on any image to see it full-sized. CTRL-click will open the image in a separate browser tab.

When using a mapping service with satellite view, you often can’t really get a good image, even when the service tries enhancements to make it more 3D. This image from Google Earth shows a patch of ground from several years ago near the NW corner of Draper Lake. 02roughground-aIt should be obvious that this was pretty popular with motocross riders at one time. However, not all the exposed red clay is their handiwork. It became a popular spot because it was already quite rough and featured a lot of exposed rosy sandstone formation. 03roughground-bAccess for me was hardly so easy as the image suggests, since there has been a heavy regrowth of the native grass and shrubs, and there are more trees now. I pulled off the main road under the power lines, pushed my bike through the first head-high screen of grass and parked it there. The rest of it was tromping through more of that high grass and over several deep washouts (we call them gullies).

04roughground-cThe first image I shot at ground level is on the southern edge out from under the power lines. Heading back to the north I encountered a washout that ran down into a very deep bottom, but in the second image (above right) it’s partly obscured by the tall grass. It’s a steep climb over sandstone ledges up the other side. I could not have walked through that. In the satellite view this is represented as a darkly shadowed, black gash running SW-NE in the center of the image and right under the power lines. Looking eastward from the high side of this gash I shot the third image facing up the steep slope that isn’t so obvious on the satellite image.

01pastureIn this final shot I was heading back out by way of the bike trail west of the lake and looked back south over the gullies running across this pasture land. I’m told the lake level obscures some lovely canyons and gullies just like this, and when they finally build the West Elm Creek Reservoir, it will be a similar story.

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