Maggie's FarmWe are a commune of inquiring, skeptical, politically centrist, capitalist, anglophile, traditionalist New England Yankee humans, humanoids, and animals with many interests beyond and above politics. Each of us has had a high-school education (or GED), but all had ADD so didn't pay attention very well, especially the dogs. Each one of us does "try my best to be just like I am," and none of us enjoys working for others, including for Maggie, from whom we receive neither a nickel nor a dime. Freedom from nags, cranks, government, do-gooders, control-freaks and idiots is all that we ask for. |
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Tuesday, January 24. 2006Logical Fallacy of the Week: "Accident"The Fallacy of Accident was one of Aristotle's orginal Fourteen. It is a simple fallacy: Confusing a generalization, or "rule of thumb", with a universal generality. The term "accident" refers to the formal logic definition of the term: "A circumstance or attribute that is not essential to the nature of something, " like the color of a cow. That is, an irrelevant or incidental detail. All the cows around here seem to be brown. This animal is brown. This animal must be a cow. These might seem easy to identify and to deal with, but sometimes they are subtle, and sometimes people get hung up on the words, instead of the sense of the thing. We live by Rules of Thumb, and they serve us well. That's the problem, on rare occasions. Sometimes, keeping the generalization unspoken (when many might object to the generalization if it were overt) adds to the effect: "Katrina proved Bush wants to kill blacks." This is a near-psychotic generalization in which an implied (hostile, and a total lie) generalization - "Bush hates Blacks" - is put to partisan use to exploit bad weather, employing the Accident Fallacy to alienate black voters in the future. "Books are meant to be read." True statement but an obnoxious, obesssional type might object to the fallacy in it. Art books are to be looked at, not read. In this simple case, the exceptions are overlooked. We call that "poetic license." "This murder case has all of the earmarks of the Boston Strangler, so we must redouble our efforts to find this evil demon." More complex here, because the rule of thumb breaks down in the face of "copycat" criminals, a common phenomenon amongst the non-creative bad guys who no doubt were not permitted enough time to finger-paint in nursery school. "Moslems seem sensitive to the cause of the Jihadists, because their silence communicates support." Here we have a generalizing assertion with a non-trivial fallacy embedded in it. What if a majority of Brit and US Moslems feel intimidated by the Mullahs? They may be cowardly, but not supportive, like many Germans during the Nazi era. Or they may be quietly supportive. Who knows? Thus there are more subtle forms in which Accident can insinuate itself into writing, and into our brains, without alerting itself with a sign. Our own brains must provide the signs before we are lead down the primrose path to illogicality. Therefore always watch out for the unstated generalizations, or assumptions, which are concealed in an assertion. Tuesday Morning LinksIs Ahmadinejad truly nuts? This immanent 12th Imam stuff sounds wierd. On the other hand, our Second Coming probably sounds wierd too. Condi said yesterday that the time for discussion is past. What next? The Plague of Athens led to the end of the Golden Age around 430 BC. Strong new evidence that it was typhoid fever. McCain-Feingold cannot be constitutional. I see no way it can be, despite the Court's 2003 ruling. The Court returned this Michigan case back to a three-judge panel yesterday, but it may come back to the Court. As far as I can tell, without being a lawyer, this case represents simple infringement of political speech.
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QQQIdeas are more powerful than guns. We do not allow our enemies to have guns, so why should we allow them to have ideas? Joseph Stalin (quoted in response to Michelle's Amazon book piece yesterday) Monday, January 23. 2006Monday Evening LinksCanada's elections: We will know late tonight. It should be interesting to see whether Harper can eke out a majority govt. Strange that there is so little interest in the US MSM. Michelle has a summary, and of course Captain Ed is master of the ship. We ignore Canada, but should not. It seems that lots of Americans view Canadians as the stereotypic nice, irrelevant, harmless Lefty wackos, lacking in testosterone and cultural confidence, and oppressed by a corrupt Nanny State that won't leave them alone to work and achieve (very different from our view of the Aussies). And they do not seem to like us Americans too much, but they should. We do not match any unflattering stereotype they hold of us, either. We are all warm and cuddly, when we aren't busy hunting ducks and deer and fascists and terrorists, and rescuing civilization from barbarians. US Govt borrowing: It is huge, claims Dem watchdog group. Regardless of their partisanship, there should have been a temporary war tax - on ice cream or something. Or imported beer. Or tea? But Bush Jr. didn't want to mess with taxes. It destroyed his Dad: remember "Read my hips"? Satanic drivers in Afghanistan. Amazing. Mrs. Clinton was pandering to her plantation. P'line The American Left is on a Death Trip - literally. So opines American Thinker. The quest for the perfect Don Giovanni. Marginal Rev. H/T, YARGB. My opinion - a live performance beats all that plastic. Lots of work for him to post his Alito Vote Watch. Calif. Yank. That high school kid who went to Iraq - the real story finally appears. BareKnuckle
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Opie's BrudderThat's my New Orleans big brother, in Hazelhurst, Mississippi. Date: Dec. 30, 2005. Time: 8:45 AM. Rifle: Browning A-bolt with Leupold 3.5X10 scope. Caliber: 30.06. Bullet: Federal Premium with Nosler ballistic tip 165 grains. Shot: 125 yards from a ground blind. He would prefer to kill a terrorist, but a freezer-full of White-Tailed Deer will suffice. A good ol' boy. Nice buck.
Britain's self-inflicted woesDaily Pundit on "The coming catastrophe in Britain:"
Read his entire piece. Monday Morning LinksA 25th anniversary review of Reaganomics in the Opinion Journal, with this quote:
USA to Bin Ladin: "Nuts." NYSun Blogger in the news: Zany and irreverent lawyer David Lat (now blogging at Wonkette), and his blogging problems with his boss. Funny piece. NYT Fuming about the no-smoking laws in Spain. NYT US Navy catches Somali pirates. Cool.
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A Love-Letter to our European Cousins - Wake Up!Culturally, religiously, genetically, and economically, we Americans feel most connected to Europe, and to the Anglosphere. It's only natural, but it isn't necessarily for the best. In the US, our interest and attention has quickly moved to India, China, and to the east in general. You are being left behind by the movement of history, but there is no-one to blame but yourselves that India is more friendly to business growth, innovation, jobs and creativity. More friendly to the future and more committed to the Work Ethic. But at Maggie's Farm, we are deeply concerned about the direction being taken by our European cousins. And not because of any self-interest - it is purely an emotional and nostalgic family matter to us. When one watches a close family member heading for disaster, it is impossible to be indifferent or to remain silent. All we can do is to talk to you with love and concern. We are concerned with your judgement and prudence: You have taken sanctimonious, pseudo-neo-Maoist Political Correctness to a self-satirical and suicidal extent. You have regulated your businesses to the point of suffocation. You have taken moral equivalency to the point of endorsing moral nihilism. Your loony do-gooders are destroying your noble and historic culture and traditions. You are abandoning the idea of "family" by letting "the State" become the surrogate parent, and getting comfortable with people becoming children, as in feudalism. You don't have three or four children because you cannot afford them, or because you have no confidence in your future, or because you are self-obsessed - and your native population is declining. Your antiquated, dusty socialist and "third-way" Nanny State notions destroy entrepreneurialism, growth, energy, and a can-do attitude, and reward sloth, lethargy, discouragement, "working the system", dependency, excuse-based values, and hedonism. Your taxes tax the human spirit, discourage effort, defeat invention, and drive business, and work, away to more friendly climates. Your tax-supported subsidies support long-dead industries and businesses and their parastic unions, like brain-dead bodies on life-support - and thus drain capital from new vibrant enterprises. You welcome too many immigrants from alien cultures because you have no confidence or pride in your own. Sure, permit limited immigration, but not invasion or you won't have your country anymore. You reward the sociopathic and weak, and seem to resent and punish your achievers. You deprive your people of arms, and welcome murderous invaders. Can it be true that you are not allowed to shoot intruders in your home? That is nuts. Why not simply castrate your men at birth, if you don't want your men to protect and preserve their families. Call a copper? Please! Your antipathy for religion (unless it's the religion of others) has left you with a spiritual and moral emptiness - a vacuum - to be filled with...what? What sacred values? Is there nothing you believe worth dying for? You are better than that! Your losses of your Empires has left you with no easy source of national pride and seemingly with no avenue for adventure and energy and heroism, and with multiple avenues for exhaustion and defeat and dependency - and ultimately moral, economic, cultural, and spiritual poverty. And you don't listen to enough Country Music. This is the definition of cultural decadence. You are heading in a direction which will lead you to becoming a minor backwater of the world - self-preoccupied, comfort-obsessed, culture-less, childless, economically pathetic and, ultimately, a Disney-type travel destination into past history (like a San Gimignano run by Moslems) living on long-past glory like beggars, instead of a growing, energetic, inspiring and vital part of the planet which is grounded in a profoundly important heritage of freedom and thought and energy and pride. You chose a false security over vitality, and that will never work out in the long run. You have given up too much, and replaced it with a big nothing. Or with an illusion of comfort and ease, like spoiled children. That is not what man was made for, and it is not mature and not manly and not noble. And what is this EU nonsense? An endless source of rules produced by a million un-elected bureacrats who only want you to be "better"? What? You need that? You want that? The EU is nothing but a multi-billion-dollar bitch of a Kindergarten teacher, and not one of them has more sense than the average Brit tradesman or French artichoke farmer or German banker. Less - or those over-educated bureaucrats would have real productive jobs in the real world. It is painful to the millions of Americans of European heritage to watch this happening before our eyes. It feels, to us in the US, like having a suicidal child - or even worse - a suicidal parent. Well, it's your life and these are your countries, and you will do what you want, even if it is destruction of spirit and history and future. But we have to, at least, speak out about it. This is a battle of spirit and soul and heart and cultural confidence - a battle without armies, from which the USA cannot and will not rescue you, because the damage is self-inflicted. The rest of this big world is going to "eat your lunch" culturally, economically, and in every other way - without a single shot being fired (deGaulle, Churchill, and Eisenhower are weeping in their graves), unless you pull up your socks and get with reality - fast. Your friends and relatives in the US pray that you will. (Yes, that is Winchester Cathedral.) QQQGovernment is the Entertainment Division of the military-industrial complex. Frank Zappa Sunday, January 22. 2006Sunday Morning LinksGary's Crush of the Week: Lisa Schue. Yikes. A Harvard gal, too. Ex-Donk. Maggie's Farm does Dogs of the Week and Birds of the Week, etc., but we probably should do a Soft Porn Babe of the Week to really improve our numbers...but, thinking further on this, why bother with Soft? And, for the gals and the gays, we could do a Hunk of the Week too. But Bird Dog would not stand for that: we are supposed to be a dignified blog. Maybe I need my own blog. Canadian Libs made a campaign error by talking anti-American? Cap'n Ed. I guess the US and Israel are the world's main scapegoats these days for desperate politicians. How many times must America rescue large chunks of the planet from Fascism? And will we ever be appreciated for it? Maybe not. But in the US we are still grateful to France for their necessary assistance in our war against the Brit Empire. We know gratitude. And George lll wasn't a bad guy: Parliament was stupid and greedy. Is it possible to flirt without cigarettes? "Got a light?" - WaPo Rushdie gets psychological with Moslems - fear of female sexuality: Tel Chai. I don't buy it. A tattle-tale parrot leads to divorce. Classical Values. Moral of the story: Own no talking birds or dogs. More on Europe's decline: John at Powerline. Regulation and socialism destroy the economy, and in my opinion undermine the historically vigorous character and heart of the people. The effect of moonbats like Belafonte and Sheehan is to make other moonbats appear less insane. Christians should get their hands dirty by venturing into pagan worlds. Giles at Town Hall. Good piece. A quote:
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Simplifying the Confusing Messages about IraqFrom VDH's "Making Sense of Nonsense," in which he attempts to resolve all of the contradictory conversation about Iraq and the Middle East: "So how do we make sense of what seems so nonsensical? Rather easily — just keep in mind four general talking points about America’s recent role in the world and most things gradually become clearer.
Sometimes in these crazy times, that is all you need to know." Read entire. Fra AngelicoSaw this painting at the Saturday, January 21. 2006Video of the Day: The Runaway CabSaturday Noon LinksAdvertising out of context might work. Hmmm. A VC Australia's bad reputation? Huh? Tim Blair. Oh, because they aren't weeny defeatist Lefties? I can say that the Aussies' reputation around Maggie's Farm is very good - excellent. The growing unrest in China. Am. Thinker Where does John Kerry blog? Guess. Not at YARGB Does Canada want conservatives, or just non-Liberals? Chequerboard What does "INRI" stand for? Mexican military continues to cross the border. BareKnuckle Kelo comes home to NH for Souter. Yes, silly. But it dramatizes the main point: states and localities need to address Kelo. Light in the Piazza: Guest Review by NSLight in the Piazza, at the Vivian Beaumont (playing hookey from Aliyah In NY) Leonard Bernstein in his Harvard Lectures on music, gave six criteria for judging good music: five were technical (beat, harmony and such); the sixth was does it hit directly to the heart. Light in the Piazza hits the heart, multiple times --despite its music and lyrics, because of its story of hope and its actors. Continue reading "Light in the Piazza: Guest Review by NS" Saturday Morning LinksSundance Film Festival: Selections from short films here. Is Bin Ladin working for Rove? Ex-Donk Or is he planning to run in the Dem primaries? I thought Dems wanted a "living constitution." Now they want a precedent-respecting constitution. Principle-less opportunism. Pardon My English Can a liberal be a friend? Bill Quick doubts it. I don't. In three days, companies traded on the Tokyo exchange have shed roughly $300 billion in shareholder value -- more than the gross domestic product of Norway. Livedoor alone has lost $1.8 billion in market capitalization. Scandal Panics Tokyo Market Need some good belly-laughs? The Free Photo Booth thing from the Leno Show.
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CNN and Iraq, from the groundLTC Mark H. Salas Coalition Forces Land Component Here's more from my friend Rick in Iraq ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Things are going real well over here. We had a fantastic turnout for the elections a couple of days ago. I should preface that by telling a story of a couple of nights ago. On the night of the 13th, I was up at one of our satellite bases on the Syrian border in the city of Husaybah. The Company Commander for the area was having a sit down with some tribal sheiks that evening and he asked me to go along. Our entire area is Sunni for the most part. We have had very little participation in this area during previous elections and the area was largely anti- Coalition Forces. The Company Commander wanted to have a sit down with this sheiks to talk to them about the upcoming election and to urge them to talk to their followers about voting on election day. We went to the house of the sheik around 7:30 at night. We rolled up with armored humvees and 2 dozen Marines who cordoned off the house. It was a real big, stone house with a walled off yard in front, which is common for many of the homes in this area. We went inside the house, took off our shoes and were ushered into the dining room. They do not eat at tables or use chairs here. Instead, they lay down a blanket on the floor and sit cross legged. Also, all meals are communal and family style, rather than having individual plates and meals. In the middle of this room, there was a giant metal dish, approximately 3 feet in diameter. The plate was piled with rice, nuts, dates and grilled mutton. They have large circular flat bread, looks like a cross between an Indian Nan and a giant wheat tortilla, that are about one foot and a half across. You sit cross legged around the metal dish and tear the bread into pieces. Then, no forks or utensils, you use the bread as a tool to pick up the food off the plate and eat it. It was really good and a very interesting experience. Of course, being that America is everywhere, we washed it all down with an RC Cola. Read the "rest of the story" below, including how CNN manufactures their news: Continue reading "CNN and Iraq, from the ground" A Child's Christmas in Wales
Forgot to post this during Christmas Season; Dylan Thomas reading his splendidly poignant, nostalgic and warmly funny very short story. Sorry to be late with it. Next year, I won't forget. Listen anyway, and make it part of your life as it is part of mine, here.
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Friday, January 20. 2006"Why Repubs can't cut spending"
Two issues seem to have the Repub base madder than hornets: Immigration and Spending. Of course, cutting spending is about as easy as taking a lollipop out of a kid's mouth, but if conservatives are the party of a smaller federal government, what's the problem? From a piece by Rauch:
Bush is no Reagan, nor did he ever have the kind of mandate for change that Reagan enjoyed. After all, Clinton did hold to - or was held to -meaningful fiscal discipline, which is part of why he was popular among financial types. Read entire. Friday Noon LinksA double standard? Religion in politics, left and right. Protein Kennedy should go for impeachment of Alito, or be totally inconsistent. The Prof. Will Michigan be the next haven for trial lawyers? Opinion Journal The latest charter school injustices. Education Wonks Believing in the unbelievable. Evangelical Outpost. Iran wraps CNN around their finger, just like Saddam did. Disgusting. Instap. NYT praises Tel Aviv suicide bomber. LGF
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The End Times must be near: Wierd Fysshes in the ThamesWilson Pickett
Dead of a heart attack at 64. Damn. You expect people that matter to you, and add something to your life, to live forever. Loved the guy's music. This was my favorite album: The Exciting Wilson Pickett
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Friday Morning LinksKondracke: Give Bush the data-mining authority. Why not do it now? Let's have a vote. Double-dare anyone to vote against. The stench of corruption. Hillary and the Barrett Report. Very bad sh-t. Gateway "You can get away with it with the Christians." Christians in Palestine. Dhimmi Watch Old hymns vs. praise songs. Ten Napel Liberals in Canada go berserk about the blogs. SDA. Yeah, can't let the ignorant voters know too much. Facts might confuse the voters, right? American college grads lack basic skills. Duh. Dems want to have it both ways: now the administration is relying too much on the UN and international efforts. Huh? Gimme a break. GOPBloggers. Eritrea and Ethiopia. This could get really ugly. Where's the UN? Open Democracy/ Elsewhere in Africa, the Ivory Coast heats up with promises of mass slaughter, mayhem, and horrible tragedy. The UN ran away. Wretchard. Beeb wants to raise the telly tax. How do Brits tolerate a government tax-supported information source? It's the Brits' Pravda, and it's nuts. Right for Scotland What's all this about Sudoku? The game's interesting history (it's not Japanese), how it works, and why it's fun. The Week How you are supporting the ACLU, without writing them a check. Like a tapeworm, they feed off scams, legal threats, and settlements against local and state governments, on our nickel. Trial lawyers in drag. Want to feel depressed? Read this: Cao GM's death spiral. Am Spectator
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QQQAlways acknowledge a fault. This will throw those in authority off their guard and give you an opportunity to commit more. Mark Twain Thursday, January 19. 2006Thursday Dylan Lyrics (and download of course)"I'll remember you "I'll Remember You," from Empire Burlesque. Download a live version of this song here.
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