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, July 15. 2007Good Stuff from our ArchivesFlowers, Gospel, and the Ruby-Throated Hummingbird A few fun facts about pre-1900 education in the US The Caduceus of Hermes and the Staff of Asclepius Love in the Age of Neuroscience (about campus nihilism and Wolfe's I am Charlotte Simmons) Moving dayMoving a 100 year-old church on 60 wheels. Borrowed from David Thompson On Fire for God
The sermon at Reader's Corner begins thus:
Well, I doubt that Jesus was talking about Christians (which did not exist), but the sermon convicts me: I always hold back something. Read the whole thing. Saturday, July 14. 2007Is Osama dead?
It's the perennial question. The "new" video seems to be from 2002. Wizbang. Is the video being used as a signal?
What is a painting?You are an artist. You buy the paint, then what? A piece by Daniel Kunitz in the NY Sun about a new show at the MOMA titled "What is Painting?" - a quote:
Read the whole thing. Image: A 1969 painting by William T. Williams in the MOMA's show, from the NY Sun article.
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The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down (The Band, Live, 1976)
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Giant duckies threaten civilizationMany remain blithely unaware, and many remain in denial and therefore unconcerned, despite sightings around the world. Story here. (h/t, Tim Blair). Rumors that Dick Cheney is behind all of this cannot be confirmed as yet, but Congressional hearings will surely be scheduled soon, with a flurry of subpoenas for the White House. But I suspect that this may be the result of an experiment-gone-wild, performed by the crazed biologists at Ducks Unlimited.
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Saturday LinksWho was Winston Churchill? The UK doesn't think kids need to know. Or, more likely, doesn't want kids to know. The 60-Second Climate Skeptic. Excellent summary, at Coyote. Musharraf and Pakistan: He has a tough job. Is is volunteering if they pay you to do it? Latest moonbattism from Massachusetts. No connection at all between Islam and terrorism. Avoiding the M-word. And Theo wants advice, hypothetical at the moment: And no Al Quaida in Iraq, either. Gateway People should be banned. Samizdata Dan Boudreux on Free Trade. Excellent brief summary. The Beast of Basra, identified. Sounds similar to a Wolverine. Update on gun and knife crime in the UK. (h/t, Free Market Fairy Tales) Perhaps it never occurred to them that criminals do not tend to obey laws.
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Friday, July 13. 2007Winning While LosingFrom a piece by Johannes at TCS:
Read the whole thing. QQQIt’s as if pomos use the hammer and nails given them to maintain the lovely house they’ve inherited to, instead, indulge in interior demolition and funky, unlivable re-dos. Pretty soon they’re gonna hit load-bearing walls a little too hard… . An anonymous commenter at Maggie's Farm
Summer PatriotsH/T, Moonbattery. It could say "better men and women," but I know what is meant: combat.
Love and Suicide
A Luis Moro movie, set in Cuba. Love and Suicide. I recommend it.
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Friday LinksDo you believe that stuff you hear about lycopene in tomatos? Is there really any such thing as a "healthy diet"? Probably not. As Junkfood Science says in the above piece:
Education and Hiring: Kim du Toit agrees with us. Quote:
The Bad Science Prize. More on the Dr. William Hurwitz pain pill case. NYT. The case is shameful and never should have been brought against this poor doc. h/t, Junk Science Rick Moran slams the Bushies for politicizing the government. He has a point, but perhaps he isn't recognizing to what extent that always happens. Governance is never separate from politics. Sippican Cottage did not like the link we had earlier, via Insty from Popular Science, about what skills a homeowner needs. He has his own list. Iran to execute more moral degenerates, including gays and those who "insult religious sanctities." Gateway. Where's the outrage? More Where's the Outrage: Syria invades Lebanon. Willisms. Ho-hum. Guess the story doesn't fit the narrative of the poor oppressed Moslems. Protein Wisdom seems to have retired his blog, abruptly. I am sad to see that - he has been a regular read for me. VDH rips apart the NYT surrender, while Crittenden takes a close look at Bush's speech on Iraq yesterday. Are there people out there who secretly hope for more terror attacks, for political reasons? Jon Swift Flopping Aces continues his series about the Shadow Party. World's tallest man. AOL video Owsley update: The Grateful Dead's original sound engineer and LSD manufacturer is still around. (h/t, Driscoll) Photo: The beautiful Olivia de Havilland, sister of Joan Fontaine. Yes, she is still living. Why her today? Because we stole this photo from a Dr. X series on sisters in Hollywood.
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Raspberry WarsA re-post from last year: The big problem around here It really isn't hardly worth the effort, but one perseveres. Life cannot be entirely economics-driven. Especially Catbirds, but Robins too. Nature sure can be annoying sometimes. We grow three varieties. The birds seem to prefer the big fat French dessert variety. They might be stupid, but they aren't stupid. I have heard that it's a good idea to plant some mulberry trees around, to keep the birds busy. I had a couple, but I had to cut them down because they were shading the garden. Ya sometimes can't win. Even the dog doesn't deter them. I'll try the plastic owl, but they'll get used to it in a day or two, and perch on its head. The only thing finer than a handful of sun-hot raspberries is a sun-heated Beefsteak tomato, but we won't have them for another month. That's one thing the birds will leave alone, but in a dry August, the squirrels and chipmunks will bite hunks out of them for liquids. The simple solution is to grow lots of tomatoes, but the simplest solution is to give up. But that is no fun at all. Man vs. Nature. Who killed Homer?A reader directed us to a 1998 essay by Victor Davis Hansen and Joseph Heath, of the above title.
Read the whole thing. VDH and Heath wrote a book of the same title. QQQ“[Liberalism] envisions the natural fraternity of mankind. The liberal view is that man’s nature prepares him to live uncoerced in society. [It] aspires to the transcending of the nation, if only through the union of the nations. Rightly repelled by vain self-love, it is dogmatically blinded to just self-respect and conceitedly captivated by a priggish self-depreciation. Liberalism, which makes a by-word of pluralism and recoils from ‘absolutes’ however misunderstood, should welcome the diversity of nations, and their sovereign security upon which that diversity rests, as a valuable guarantee of the freedom of men to go their separate ways in the quest for justice or for the truth about justice. It must be conceded, however, that the highest good known to liberalism is not truth or even liberty itself, but fraternity and its alter ego, equality. Politically speaking, this has come to mean that the highest good known to liberalism is peace, or self-preservation. “If it is narrower, it is also more human, surely more civil, to love what is near and similar, as such, than what is remote and strange, as such. [Patriotism will necessarily] be extinguished by the doctrine that exhibits it as offensive to peace, as an ignorant expression of ethnocentric bias, the neurosis of aggressive personality types, the posturing of the fatuous for the edification of the gullible, or the delusion of innocents seduced by schemers after wealth and power. “The liberal view is consistent with itself in applying to domestic as well as to foreign affairs the dictum that trust edifies and absolute trust edifies absolutely.” Joseph Cropsey. Borrowed from a piece at No Left Turns. Thursday, July 12. 2007Golf and wildlife sanctuariesWe linked the article at Science Daily about how golf courses can, with a little effort, turn their vast open spaces into wildlife sanctuaries without damaging the golfing. Turns out 70% of a golf course isn't really walked on. Well, it's a movement. The Audubon Cooperative Sanctuary System now includes 78 golf courses worldwide. Maybe it is many more, now. Here's an OSU Extension piece on the subject. Here's an Audubon International piece. The idea is great because it is both modern and old-fashioned: golf evolved on the wild moors of Scotland in harmony with the native scenery, and not in a sterile environment like a glorified version of miniature golf. Image: 16th hole at St. Andrews Gardens of the UK and IrelandThis remarkable site lists 450 gardens (alphabetically and by region) which are open for visiting, with photos of each along with history and design information. Gardens Guide. Below is a garden at Bradenham Hall in Norfolk.
Thursday Free Advt. for Bob: Thunder on the Mountain (2006)Thunder on the mountain and there's fires on the moon Here's a Youtube of the song as recorded on last year's Modern Times, with a photo collage. It seems to be missing some of the verses in this version - I don't know why. What did Shannon Rosmiller do?
From her computer in Montana, she did quite a bit. My Cyber Counter-Jihad. That is some lady.
Who are the uninsured Americans?Thursday Morning LinksRatatouille. Good clean simple fun for any age. Amazing computer graphics or whatever it is. Difficult to believe that no photography was used, but it wasn't. Cramer agrees. Basic Life Skills. Popular Mechanics. h/t, Insty Living from hand to mouth on a good income. Lots of folks in that category. Trying to buy stuff without a Made in China label. Difficult. But why would anyone bother? Just stay away from their food. Golf courses can double as wildlife sanctuaries. I think it's a great concept, and I have heard that it's beginning to catch on. Cattle produce more CO2 than all of the cars and trucks in the world. So why are they picking on cars and gasoline? Classical Values Africa needs trade not aid. Cafe Hayek Don Luskin blows his top about Krugman and socialized medicine. If people have to lie and distort to make their point, then they must have no point to make. Pope Benedict: More Latin, more pilgrims, more money - and no relativism or rock concerts. Times Online Where are all the single ladies? Map at Coyote. Lots of towns with lots of lonely ladies. Fed up with the Log Cabin Repubs. Gay Patriot Sex is private unless you are a Republican. Surber. Fair enough, but there is one difference: the Dems don't seem to care about sexual morality at all, and the Repubs say that they do. Thus the issue is hypocrisy, not morality. Bruce Bartlett retires his column, comments on the future of media. Town Hall The Netherlands re-thinking their liberal identity. Too bad they didn't think first. WaPo. h/t, Dr. Bob Bizarro world, bizarro eminent lawyers. Prof B In Poland, a Jewish Festival without Jews. NYT. Strange.
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Wednesday, July 11. 2007QQQIf any more extremists are still wanting to rise up and start trouble, know this: We’ll rise right back up against you. New York, Madrid, London, Paisley ... we’re all in this together and make no mistake, none of us will hold back from putting the boot in. John Smeaton, the Toast of Glasgow (via Blair). I suspect it's been a few days since John has had to buy his own pints at the local. Three to seven minute sex?Clearly the basic human sex act was designed more for the pleasure of guys than of gals. After all, DNA mixing is what it's all about. I suspect that a pill to help with staying power would be a big hit, equalling Viagra. Regarding the study, though - the visual it evokes is just too much: a gal with a stopwatch would make any red-blooded fellow go as limp as a noodle, I would think. All normal guys are a bit scared of girls, of course, but the Feminists don't get it. Stossel vs. Michael Moore: What will a person sell his freedom for?It's about freedom and compulsion - one of our favorite topics. At RCP, via a piece at Blue Crab. A quote from Stossel:
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