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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Sunday, February 4. 2007Sunday Bonhoeffer
Dietrich Bonhoeffer (h/t, Dr. Bob) I didn't know that Bonhoeffer's dad was a shrink, and that the family expected him to be one too. The final paragraph from Bonhoeffer's Wikipedia entry:
Posted by Bird Dog
in Quotidian Quotable Quote (QQQ), Religion
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05:12
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Saturday, February 3. 2007Eating game: The selenium factorI always knew eating game made a person feel good, but I always figured it was the wine. Or the memories. Or both. Maybe not. Telegraph. When I see pheasants hanging like this, I remember that the French way is to age them until the body falls from the head. That's when they're ready to clean and cook. Saturday night/Sunday morning linksPut down the duckie and other Sesame Street favorites from the good old days. Anchoress Climate change? Live with it. I agree with this piece entirely, at Blue Crab Brainwashing the kiddie-poos in the UK. I knew Gore had thousands of copies of his DVD he couldn't get rid of. Guess he dumped them on the Brits. The End of the World is at hand! Blair Another Texas Deputy in trouble for defending himself against illegals. Message: leave the illegals alone. Moonbattery The Goldilocks Economy continues, even better. Not a peep about it in the news. Glenn thanks Nancy for the great economy Culver City introduces government-censored internet service. Creepy. Coyote France decrees more siesta time for workers. Tammy. Now that is a country that is going places. Imam's opening prayer at DNC meeting. Hot Air. Are Dems comfortable with that prayer? Hamas promises hands-off Dem candidates. What does that tell you? Classical Values. Are Jewish voters comfortable with this? A triumph for "choice." School vouchers in Utah.
Posted by The News Junkie
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects
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17:44
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Bomb Fatigue and Battle FatigueBaghdad bombing update. Who is the enemy? Once a month I feel like saying "screw them all." Won't be ready for civilization for 200 years. And this will not help very much: Gateway. But how dare I feel "fatigue"? This war hasn't changed my life one bit. Candidate for Best Essay of the Year. Crichton: Fear, Complexity, and Environmental Management in the 21st CenturyREAD THIS SPEECH, if you do nothing else today. Fascinating, and full of examples and images. I won't quote from it because it the link contains all sorts of frightening copyright warnings. It is from 2005. In my opinion, getting speeches like this distributed and read is the best thing blogs can do: it's the magic of the link, which we already take for granted. (Thanks, reader, for letting us know about this speech.)
Posted by Bird Dog
in Best Essays of the Year, Natural History and Conservation, Politics
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13:50
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"I want to take those profits..."Did Hillary actually say that? Yes, I heard it. And I think she means it. Not only is it creepy - it is even creepier that the MSN is not reporting it. This is Chavez-type stuff. If she truly believes that she can "take" those profits, whose profits can she not "take"? And, by the way - is she forgetting who gets those profits? Regular Americans, in their IRAs. And is she forgetting who earns them? Lots of people who work far harder than she does, and are far smarter too. Exxon is one of the best-run businesses in the world, dealing with the most volatile of markets, and contending with endless governmental constrictions of what they want to do (eg, building refineries, or obtaining product). Those restrictions, of course, drive the price of oil upwards. Transsexuals and all thatMy casual post on transsexuals attracted more attention than it deserved, including attention from Laura's Playground. Still, I suspect most interest is plain old morbid curiosity, like slowing down to watch as you pass an accident. "Rubbernecking," as they term it in NYC. It can seem like Coney Island side-show stuff, but so can many medical curiosities and strange ailments. As a fairly effective and smart shrink, I feel for these people, and yet being a physician isn't all about feeling. My opinion? I dunno what to think. A reader produced this video at YouTube: Made by Nature. Nothing nasty in it at all. We report; you decide. Mind your own business
A new documentary about the effects of environmentalism around the world. The Guardian
A few Saturday Morning LinksEveryone has been posting the Herouxville Manifesto. Sleeper cells in the US and Canada. Am Thinker A question for the MSM: Do Hillary and Bill live together? Just curious. Iowahawk debates the Arkin Controversy John Leo summarizes a year of speech police on campuses. City Journal (H/T, Viking) We like to beat up on George Soros. So does Shulman of A Moderate Voice, at Am. Future. He calls him a Nazi sympathizer. Brit anti-bias laws will damage gay-only tourism. Gee, isn't government smart? Two new Bach books. Quote from the review at Bookforum:
Posted by The News Junkie
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects
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06:46
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Friday, February 2. 2007Candidate for Best Essay of the Year: A Convenient Apocalypse?Dunn's piece in Am. Thinker. He points out that warming is just the latest in a long series of environmental apocalyptic visions - none of which have panned out. One quote:
Dunn really nails the mindset. Wish I had written this piece. Whole thing here. Black History MonthWe must confess that we take this notion about as seriously as we take MLK's Birthday. Not racist at all: just aware that such things are sops thrown to loyal constituents of the Dem party. Party favors that cost them nothing. Note that there is no Asian History month, and no Hispanic History Month (although the story of the Spanish invading Central America, stealing the gold, and killing all the natives, would be an exciting and inspiring story for the kiddy-poos). No Swedish History month either - and no Indian History month (for either kind of Indian). There is no Arabic History Month, but coming soon, no doubt, to a government school near you. Gimme your vote and we'll give you a month. No vote - no month. LaShawn has the best post on the subject, here and especially here. Fun to kick such people aroundDon't eat the orange snowFriday Morning LinksDaylight Savings Time comes early this year. Grievance Training at ASU. One student complains, and gets into trouble. LGF. His grievance doesn't work! The irony is just too much. I bet he's one of those sub-human white heterosexuals whose grievances don't count, because he has the wrong skin color. Imam: Italy will be a Moslem state. Gateway They call this a college education. Durham in Wonderland Shrinkwrapped looks at Samuelson's piece on Universal Health Care How come nobody talks about the sun. Well, they do, but it's the wrong "narrative". Classical Values. The correct narrative is "Western Civilization is evil." The importance of amateurs. American.com. Heck, at Maggie's Farm, Amateurs Is Us. The Moslems will be watching this party: Clinton and Edwards vye for pro-Israel money Immigration Fees, from the WaPo:
Image: Stop clicking that thing - you might hurt your finger. You know we don't do p*rn here. QQQ"There is only one antidote to racism: the philosophy of individualism and its politico-economic corollary, laissez-faire capitalism. Individualism regards man—every man—as an independent, sovereign entity who possesses an inalienable right to his own life, a right derived from his nature as a rational being. Individualism holds that a civilized society, or any form of association, cooperation or peaceful co-existence among men, can be achieved only on the basis of the recognition of individual rights-and that a group, as such, has no rights other than the individual rights of its members." Ayn Rand (h/t, reader). Here's an Ayn Rand website. Thursday, February 1. 2007Birds knowAs a low moves up from the south into New England this afternoon, promising to bring a bit of snow and ice with it, the birds out my window are getting ready before darkness falls. I have rarely seen so much activity. A small flock of around 10 robins are hitting the holly berries and the rose hips hard, and tossing leaves in a leaf pile around like crazy, looking for bugs. Juncos all around, and white-throated sparrows are scratching little pits in the garden mulch. A fat and handsome flicker came within two feet of my window, trying to get his beak into the half-frozen garden soil next to the foundation. Best of all, a Hermit Thrush. He was eating some of the holly berries, and generally poking around. Except for robins, the Hermit is our hardiest thrush. His rusty tail diagnoses him and, in summer, his song. Read about the Hermit Thrush here, (CLO) from which the image is borrowed.
Posted by Bird Dog
in Natural History and Conservation, Our Essays
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16:21
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"Janet"A Bristol, Rhode Island lawyer built Janet in 1903. This 50' yawl was designed by Fred Lawley and built by George Lawley and Sons. She won the NYC Mayor's Cup in 2000. Yes, she is for sale. We post the photo to please Chris, who has worked overtime for Maggie's Farm this past week, and who finally subdued - or outlasted - the Botnet beast. Chris loves sailboats and hates stinkpots - even old wooden ones.
Posted by Bird Dog
in The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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12:08
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Climate FolliesRe that thing about California changing its lightbulbs, Althouse has a better idea: ban air conditioning. Naw, they'd never do that. Tokenism is the thing. Plus a/c cools things off, right? Meanwhile, SDA notes that no-one in Canada really believes in the man-made global In other weather-related news, Joe Malchow illustrates the high intellectual and factual level on which global climate debates occur. (h/t, Viking). Blue Crab unveils the newest weather and climate predicting supercomputer. And those nice folks at the UN have decided that, if they can't scare the adults, maybe they can give the kiddy-poos nightmares. Since the UN totally sucks at preventing war and creating peace, maybe they are switching their marketing plan for world governance to the climate angle. Image: Scientists' consensus of the appearance of a Nome, Alaska, beachside resort in 2010. Make your reservations now, and save!
Posted by The News Junkie
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects, Our Essays
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11:35
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Do No Evil My Ass
You know, if I was the dumbest person in the world, I'd offer a service where all the people in the world who have some sort of effect on the opinions of others can broadcast their thoughts and feelings all over this great globe of ours, and then I'd piss those people off as profoundly as possible by wrecking their webpages and holing up behind a help page with no contact information, and no help on the page. The two smartest people in the world are that dumb. Think how dumb dumb people are.
Posted by Roger de Hauteville
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects
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10:16
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The road to sefdom in VenezuelaChavez is becoming an embarassment to the Left, as he follows the usual Leftist path to tyranny. Tupy at TCS. Meanwhile, thousands are fleeing the country. QQQAnyone who isn't confused really doesn't understand the situation. Edward R. Murrow Affirmative Action: Dead but still breathing in California"Elites to anti-Affirmative Action Voters: Drop Dead." That's the title of Heather McDonald's exhaustive review of all the of tricks that California has been using to sneak around Prop 209, which forbids race-quota based admissions and hiring. One thing that struck me about this piece is how the state universities believe themselves to be above the law, and that they are somehow entitled to operate illegally, with impunity.
Read the whole thing. It's a remarkable story - and a disturbing story -about people who believe that the ends justify the means. And it's a story about academia's entirely unwholesome obsession with race. And, finally, it's a story with a sub-theme about a large black subculture in America which rejects the dominant culture's value of disciplined self-improvement. If you want to blame the schools, you are probably missing the point - although it is their challenge to counter the influence of self-defeating attitudes. In the end, race quotas will always be rejected by voters. And the voters pay the bills. Quotas are obviously unfair, they discriminate against other skin colors - and nobody wants an affirmative action pilot or doctor.
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