Saturday, July 12, 2014

Friday, July 11, 2014

Keeping the Story Straight

Then She said:



Now She says:

Could make you wonder which one is true, doesn't it?

Liberals must be very proud of Nancy.

Wednesday, July 9, 2014

Cover Up Galore

The members of the House Committee on Ways and Means continue to ask all the wrong questions and press the wrong issues. They seem bent on "discovering" who knew what and when. We already know that.

What they should be asking is: Did the IRS backed up their emails as required by law? If so, where were they backed up? Did all of the hard drives on all of the backup locations fail as well? If not, who is going to be held criminally liable for breaking the law?

The IRS sends emails to one of three local servers. Is it the case that the hard drives of one or more of those servers crashed during the same period of time as the crash of Lois Learner's hard drive? If so, an awful lot more than just emails was lost. Were other documents stored on those servers lost, too?

Did Lois Learner personally send and/or answer all of those emails, or did her staff do so? If her staff sent and/or answered them, did their hard drives crash as well?

Exactly how many hard drives crashed during the time period of this investigation?

There are two ways a hard drive can crash. It can physically break (either part of the drive motor, or the read arm), or it can be influenced by an outside source, such as corrupted files, viruses, and other malware. Any hard drive either breaks or is deliberately instructed to delete data. It does not do so of its own accord. Which of those events did Lois Learner's (et. al.) suffer?

If the hard drive physically broke, was it taken to the Geek Squad  at Best Buy to have its data recovered? If it was overwritten, corrupted or suffered a virus, the Geek Squad at Best Buy could fix that, too. If not the Geek Squad at Best Buy, does the IRS have no one at least as well trained as the Geek Squad at Best Buy?

Emails don't just exist on hard drives. In fact, they don't live there at all. So if Lois Learner's hard drive crashed, it did not affect her emails at all. With this in mind, did the IRS contact the companies/locations on whose servers the emails do reside requesting copies of those emails?

Did the servers in those other companies/locations all crash at during the same time period? If so, a lot more people than the IRS are in trouble. Of course we know that did not happen.

What about the people to whom the emails were sent? Did their hard drives crash during the same time period, too? If not, did you require all of those who received emails from Lois Learner to forward them back to IRS computers?

Are there any technical people at the IRS who have at least the ability to follow up on those questions? Were they instructed to do so? (If there were no such technical people available, the IRS can call me. I'll show them how to get those emails).

Members of the House Committee on Ways and Means are either are too dumb to ask those questions, and thus need my help, or they are in some sort of collusion in the whole scandal. There are no other options.

Tuesday, July 8, 2014

Really?


Carl Paladino's photo.

Monday, July 7, 2014

Hard Drive Crash?

Comodore Amiga500 system 1
The IRS scandal is one massive cover up after another. Lie upon lie has been told about what the IRS was doing where targeting conservative groups is concerned.

First they were not targeting conservative groups at all. Then they were targeting conservative groups and the president was enraged about it. Then they were targeting conservative groups, but targeting just as many liberal groups. Then they were not really targeting as many liberal groups. Then, just when they were needed the most, Lois Learner's emails were lost when her hard drive crashed.

What?

I write and receive emails every day. Not as many as Lois Learner, I am certain, but quite a number for a run of the mill American. I have had a hard drive crash and not one single email was lost. I simply logged onto my email account at another computer, and there they were.

"But Joe, you stupid conservative. Don't you know that the IRS stores its computers on a server, and it was the server's hard drive that served those particular emails that crashed?"

I know that's what they said...after they said it was Lois Learner's hard drive that crashed.

Emails don't reside on a local server, they reside on major company servers in a place called cyberspace...the cloud...up in the computersphere.

I keep my emails neatly organized by topic in my Juno folders. Now, Juno is one of the most ancient, simplistic email accounts ever invented (and it's free). Nevertheless, my emails are kept in those folders I created, not on my hard drive, but on Juno servers in a town somewhere either in the US or elsewhere. When I got my new computer, complete with Windows 8.1, I simply typed "Juno.com" in the address bar, logged on to my Juno account with my user name and password and there they were, folders and all.

At work we use Microsoft Outlook. Microsoft Outlook is a combination of the most versatile and most unintuitive email systems in existence.  Yet I can log on to my inter-office account from any computer in our company and I can log on to it from home.

Not only that, but on both my archaic Juno account and my Outlook account my sent email are kept for a period of time determined by me so that I can simply click on "sent emails," and my computer reaches out into the computersphere and there they are.

So, maybe the IRS, for some alien reason, keeps their emails on a local server. They don't go anywhere without first entering cyberspace...the cloud...the computersphere. If they didn't first enter cyberspace, the intended recipient would never get the email.

Now, I'm not the most sophisticated computer whiz who ever lived, but I know more than the majority of 72 year old geezers. I have been using computers since early 1977, when you had to know a computer language called "BASIC" (Commodore BASIC, to be exact).  I trained on Windows 3.1, that cumbersome but wonderful Microsoft development that forced you to compute via Microsoft software and products made exclusively for Microsoft. I have built my own computer (yes...the one whose hard drive crashed after 7 years). I even know how to communicate to others about how to operate computers in real honest-to-goodness common English, instead of technichicese. Still, there are more who know more than I about computers than there are who know less.

Nevertheless, I know beyond any shadow of a doubt that Lois Learner's emails are not lost. They may well be misplaced or hidden somewhere in the computersphere, but they are not lost. They are imminently recoverable and anyone who says otherwise is trying to hide something.

Furthermore, unless she is not as smart as I am (which all liberals know is impossible), she makes regular backups of her data, either on her alleged servers or in the cloud (can you say "Carbonite?").

I don't know whether members of Congress are just too stupid to know any better or whether they are in some sort of warped collusion with the IRS that they don't want us to know about. But if they are brighter than a lightning bug, they need to get with it and assist the IRS with finding those unlost missing emails.