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Posted by seahunt on October 01, 2006 at 21:36:19:

Capt. Roach had taken the Peace all of the way up to the west end of San Nicolas Island. For San Nicolas it was not really a rough day, though there was some wave action. The water was blue and it looked pretty divable. I was the first one into the water and had pole spear with me, even though it was lobster season. When I got down I saw that it was an area with truck sized boulders. You may have been there. It's an awesome dive area. We were near the edge of it. I went down and saw that the vis was about 8 feet or so with a strong surge. As I got above the first rock I saw a nice rockfish and took a bead on it. It was gone, the surge whipped it away. Then it whipped me after it. Wow! I flew at least 30 feet or so, but when I got to the end of it, as expected, there was the fish again. I poked it and put it in the bag. I decided to get into the rocks where it was more protected. It was not to be. The current spun me head over heels. I got to the bottom of the rocks and stayed long enough to wonder if there was anything under a shelf I saw. Then I was flying again. It was the most powerful surge I had ever been in and I've been in a few.
I went back to the boat, perhaps the only time I have ever called a dive once I was in the water. The crew was a bit shocked with what I told them, but they had to wait and see a bit. They knew me, but... Then a few more divers came up and told the same story. Absolutely radical down there. We moved a bit down the front side and it was a good day of bug diving, but that first was a wash out... literally.
Enjoy the diving, seahunt

******
The rules are that a post must be dive related. Well, I've wanted to post less than dive related stuff before, but haven't because of the rules. I thought of a way around it, but never tried it. Lets see if Chris lets this by... It isn't at all partisan. It's American and you and our *&%%#$ politicialns should know about it... By the way, I am subject to the rules too and have been deleted before. So after a dive story, here's another tidbit even if it's not my favorite pundit.

I believe America comes first. This is not about George or Hillary, it is the for ultimate politicians, We The People. I knew somthing was wrong.
*****

Opinion

Pat Buchanan
NEW DEAL FOR U.S. MANUFACTURERS
Fri Sep 29, 12:36 AM ET

China's trade surplus with us was $19.6 billion for July alone, moving toward an all-time record of $235 billion for 2006 -- the largest trade deficit one country has ever run with another. Our deficit with Mexico is running at an annual rate of $60 billion. With Canada, it is $70 billion. So much for NAFTA. With the European Union, it is running at $160 billion.
America as the most self-sufficient republic in history is history. For decades, U.S. factories have been closing. Three million manufacturing jobs have disappeared since Bush arrived. Ford and GM are fighting for their lives.
Bushites boast of all the new jobs created, but Business Week tells the inconvenient truth: "Since 2001, 1.7 million new jobs have been created in the health care sector. ... Meanwhile, the number of private sector jobs outside of health care is no higher than it was five years ago."
"Perhaps most surprising," writes BW, "information technology, the great electronic promise of the 1990s, has turned into one of the biggest job-growth disappointments of all time. ... (B)usinesses at the core of the information economy -- software, semiconductors, telecom and the whole gamut of Web companies -- have lost more than 1.1 million jobs in the past five years. Those business employ fewer Americans than they did in 1998, when the Internet economy kicked into high gear." Where did the high-tech go? China. Beijing's No. 1 export to the United States in 2005, $50 billion worth, was computers and electronics.
If Americans are the most efficient workers on earth and work longer hours than almost any other advanced nation, why are we getting our clocks cleaned? Answer: While American workers are world-class, our elites are mentally challenged. So rhapsodic are they about the Global Economy they have forgotten their own country. Europeans, Japanese, Canadians and Chinese sell us so much more than they buy from us, because they have rigged the rules of world trade.
While the United States has a corporate income tax, our trade rivals use a value-added tax. At each level of production, a tax is imposed on the value added to the product. Under the rules of global trade, nations may rebate VAT levies on exports, and impose the equivalent of a VAT on imports.
Assume a VAT that adds up to 15 percent of the cost of a new car in Japan. If Toyota ships 1 million cars to the United States valued at $20,000 each, $20 billion worth of Toyotas, they can claim a rebate of the VAT of $3,000 on each car, or $3 billion -- a powerful incentive to export. But each U.S. car arriving at the Yokohama docks will have 15 percent added to its sticker price to make up for Japan's VAT.
This amounts to a foreign subsidy on exports to the United States and a foreign tax on imports from America. Uncle Sam gets hit coming and going. It is as though, after firing a round of 66 in the Masters, Tiger Woods has five strokes added to his score for a 71, and five strokes are subtracted from the scores of his rivals. Even Tiger would bring home few trophies with those kind of ground rules.
The total tax disadvantage to U.S. producers -- of VAT rebates and VAT equivalents imposed on U.S. products -- is estimated at $294 billion. Exported U.S services face the same double whammy. A VAT equivalent is imposed on them, while the exported services of foreign providers get the VAT rebate. Disadvantage to U.S. services: $85 billion annually.
Why do our politicians not level the playing field for U.S. companies?
First, ignorance of how world trade works. Second, ideology. These robotic free-traders recoil from any suggestion that they aid U.S. producers against unfair foreign tactics as interfering with Adam Smith's "invisible hand," which they equate with the hand of the Almighty.
Third, they are hauling water for transnational companies that want to move production overseas and shed their U.S. workers.
How could we level the playing field? Simple. Impose an "equalizing fee" on imports equal to the rebates. Take the billions raised, and cut taxes on U.S. companies, especially in production. Create a level playing field for U.S. goods and services in foreign markets, and increase the competitiveness of U.S. companies in our own home market by reducing their tax load.
U.S. trade deficits would shrivel overnight. And jobs and factories lately sent abroad would start coming home. Isn't it time we put America first -- even ahead of China?




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