Hour 1:BZ spoke to ERIC RIGARD, Republican candidate for California Assembly, District 9. The primary is March 3rd and, for all of you in District 9, make sure you vote for ERIC RIGARD!
If you wish to donate to, volunteer for or in any way help or endorse ERIC RIGARD, please to go his website: RIGARDFORASSEMBLY.COM!
I already donated $100! You can donate too! This could be the perfect time to stop the California ship from capsizing! Listen to the show and see what ERIC RIGARD has to say!
As President Trump said, “what have you got to lose?”
You see how California is now. Let’s let ERIC RIGARD try to make it better!
Hour 2:BZ hailed the final speech of Nigel Farage in the European Union chambers because BREXIT took place on FRIDAY, JANUARY 31st!
And more! Listen to find out!
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Join me, the Bloviating Zeppelin every Tuesday and Thursday night on the SHR Media Network from 11 PM to 1 AM Eastern and 8 PM to 10 PM Pacific, at the Berserk Bobcat Saloon — where the speech is free but the booze is not.
As ever, thank you so kindly for listening, commenting, and interacting in the chat room or listening later via podcast. Thanks to all the American truckers who listen live or in podcast! You keep America moving!
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Hour 1:BZ spoke to the founder and CEO of NCX Group, MIKE FITZPATRICK, a cyber-security expert with close to 40 years experience! Tonight MIKE talked about the CCPA, California’s Consumer Privacy Act, and how an original good idea has been ripped, torn, mashed and amended so many times — originally penned by a real estate broker — that it’s allowed California AG Xavier Becerra to become the de rigeur yet unappointed Digital Czar of the United States.
Plus: rotten corporate security, how it puts YOU in jeopardy, and how even in 2020 altogether too many corporations are ignorant of the cyber-security field and how to protect themselves — translating to: the cash and information risk exposure for these companies is massive.
And oh yes: CALIFORNIA GOVERNMENT AGENCIES are EXEMPT from the CCPA.
Hour 2:BZ kicked off with silly Leftist stuff, Don Lemon’s faux apology, Happy Stories and more. Come listen!
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If you care to watch the show on the SHR Media YouTube channel, click on the red arrow below. We kindly ask you to SUBSCRIBE to the SHR Media channel.
Please like SHR Media and follow us on Facebook! The show can be watched here.
Join me, the Bloviating Zeppelin every Tuesday and Thursday night on the SHR Media Network from 11 PM to 1 AM Eastern and 8 PM to 10 PM Pacific, at the Berserk Bobcat Saloon — where the speech is free but the booze is not.
As ever, thank you so kindly for listening, commenting, and interacting in the chat room or listening later via podcast. Thanks to all the American truckers who listen live or in podcast! You keep America moving!
Please remember we only monitor the chat room at SHRMEDIA.COM — though there is chat available on both Facebook and YouTube. Come on over to the SHR chat room where you’ll meet great friends!
Want to listen to all the Berserk Bobcat Saloon archives on Spreaker? Go here.
Want to listen to the Saloon on iHeart radio? Click here.
The Air Force’s fleet of Cold War bombers will fly longer than most people will live, allowing B-52 crews to work on planes their great-grandfathers flew.
A series of upgrades to the B-52 Stratofortress bomber could keep the remaining fleet of Cold War bombers going until 2050. The planes, built during the Kennedy Administration, are expected to receive new engines, electronics, and bomb bay upgrades to keep them viable in nuclear and conventional roles.
The B-52 strategic heavy bomber is a true survivor. It was designed to fly high over the Soviet Union carrying atomic bombs if necessary. But the B-52 is the do-it-all tool of strike warfare, taking on whatever mission is popular at the time.
Get a load of this:
B-52s were modified to drop conventional bombs during the Vietnam War, where they proved they could fly low to penetrate enemy defenses, gained the ability to drop precision-guided bombs, and swapped their nuclear bomb loads for nuclear-tipped cruise missiles. The B-52s also can carry Harpoon anti-ship missiles, lay minefields at sea, and provide close air support to troops on the ground. B-52s have even flirted with air-to-air warfare, with their tail gunners reportedly shooting down two MiG-21 fighters over Vietnam.
Tail gunners. Actual tail gunners. We’re talking primeval WWII aircraft having tail gunners.
So why keep an ancient relic like the Boeing B-52?
How would the B-52 use all of this new equipment to stay relevant on the battlefield? As a large aircraft with the radar signature of a barn door, adversaries can see a B-52 coming from miles away. That said, a B-52 can fire missiles like JASSM from beyond radar detection range. In wartime, a B-52 could work with a stealthy aircraft like the F-35 to launch missiles against time-sensitive targets. A F-35, while flying stealthy, can carry a limited amount of weapons, but it could spot targets at sea or on the ground and relay targeting data to a B-52 hundreds of miles away.
In the world of heavy bombers, none has prevailed as long as the B-52 Stratofortress. The Cold Warrior joined the U.S. arsenal in 1954, eventually becoming part of a nuclear triad that, along with strategic missiles and submarines, was aimed at giving the Soviet Union pause. After the Berlin Wall fell, it slowly became an aerial jack-of-all-trades. With its long range, minimal operating cost and ability to handle a wider array of weapons than any other aircraft, it just didn’t make sense to get rid of it.
Under the Air Force’s current bomber plans, the B-52 will fly until 2050 — just shy of its 100th birthday. While this prospective centenary has been cause for some breathless coverage, little has been said about how a complex piece of machinery built during the Korean War is still useful in 2018, let alone 2050. What is the B-52’s secret?
That secret is flexibility. Boeing Co. produced more than 740 B-52s since the first one rolled out. It’s had many nicknames — the most apt at this moment being “Stratosaurus.” Like any other well-regarded employee who manages to survive, and even thrive, in a constantly changing organization, the B-52 has always found an important role.
But what’s next? Right. The Northrop Grumman B-21 Raider. But it ain’t no B-52.
At the pricier end of the spectrum, the Pentagon is budgeting almost $17 billion over the next five years to develop the new B-21 Raider from Northrop Grumman Corp., which will replace the current fleet of B-1B Lancer and B-2 Spirit bombers. The B-21, which may fly as a “crew-optional” aircraft, is expected to join the Air Force fleet in the mid-2020s. The Pentagon plans to buy at least 100 B-21s, spending about $97 billion.
That spells the end of the B-52. Right?
Backing it up will be the Stratosaurus.
The decisions were detailed this week as part of the Trump administration’s budget request to Congress. The 1980s-era supersonic B-1 and the radar-evading B-2 fielded a decade later will be phased out gradually as new B-21s enter service, Air Force Secretary Heather Wilson said.
Wait for it.
The B-21 will offer the U.S. the ability to strike with speed and stealth, “but once we own the skies, the B-52 can drop ordnance better than most others,” Ferguson said. “And hey,” she added, “it’s paid for.”
It looks like the analog era of geeky white males with thick glasses, protractors, slide rules, pocket protectors and short-sleeved white shirts with thin ties may have been ahead of their time.