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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Wednesday, January 14. 2009The 75th Annual Maggie's Farm Blog Awards, #s 13-21Photo: The Maggie's Farm Team presenting the coveted imitation-parchment Maggie's Farm Blog Award to a fortunate winner. (Surely you can pick out our specific contributors in the pic.) NB: There will be no awards to major sites (ie those with ginormous traffic), in keeping with our envy-filled, redistributionist, Commie, Eat-The-Rich-And-Overly-Successful-and-Overly-Compentent-and Unfairly-Life-Skilled ideology to which we cling here at Maggie's (along with our Bibles, beer, guns, and our Pilgrim heritage). Additional winners will be announced through the end of the week. Here's today's batch: Wryest and Driest: IowaHawk Most Similar to Us: It's a tie between American Digest and David Thompson Always Thinks When He Writes: AVI Best New Shrink Blog We Found This Year: Ars Psychiatrica Best Toons: Theo Best Reportage: Michael Yon Most Likeable Social Worker: neoneoneoneo Best Skeptics: Another tie, between Watt's Up and Junk Science. We think skepticism is a virtue. Winners can see a close-up of their award, and award money transfer details, via one of our previous 2008 awards posts here. The Wake-up CallI checked with Snopes and found that this story from 2005 was true. The piece at Snopes also includes the gracious and embarassed reply by the guy who had complained about the fly-by noise.
Posted by Gwynnie
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QQQ, with a thought about George Bush"When I get out of here, I am getting off the stage. I have had my time in the Klieg lights." George Bush. God bless him. I still don't think he ever really wanted or enjoyed the job and the power and visibility all that much. I think he took it on as a duty while his personal core lay elsewhere - with God, family and pals, and his ranch - which I think is entirely to his credit. No grandiosity or narcissism at all in him, as befits his Yankee heritage, which is why he's always been a half-hearted pol: he is a man, not a political pimp. A kind, caring, self-deprecating man with a great sense of humor, plenty of humility and plenty of balls - and plenty of good AA under his belt. Some of us have met the guy, and agree. But go ahead and argue with that if you want to. New England Real Estate: The Bridge HouseJohn Johansen's "Bridge House" in New Canaan, CT, is for sale. New Canaan is famous for its collection of modern residential architecture. The prosperous town changed from farmland to suburbia during the height of the modernist craze. John Johansen is the only living member of "The Harvard Five," of whom Philip Johnson is probably the best-known. I like to look at these houses, but would not want to live in them. For life, I prefer rambling, drafty, random, cozy structures with plenty of fireplaces, and which were never really designed, but just kinda grew over time, like Topsy. They are asking $5 million for this small but striking house. I am told it needs some "repairs." I like it, but I do not want it. You can read about the Bridge House here.
Posted by Bird Dog
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09:00
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Weds. morning linksIn the new surveillance societies, why can't we watch back at the watchers? Glenn Reynolds Wrong, Megan. As with his taxes, it's a question of whether Geitner, certainly an impressive fellow, is interested on obeying the law. He forgot. State pension losses approach a trillion Science is rational: scientists are not. Gene Expression For a mere $495, the spiritual vibes of your water can be improved Obama cult update. What if they did this with Pres. Bush? h/t, Ace Why stimulus spending doesn't work Good traders had high pre-natal testosterone. China's web users approach 300 million. And not one of them reads Maggie's Farm. Did you realize that McCain won 29 states and Obama 19? Plus map and other stats. Staid, cautious John at Powerline:
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05:46
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Tuesday, January 13. 2009The Cult of ReaganQuoted from The Limits of Reaganism at Debatable Land (we need to add this site to our Anglosphere category)
Read the whole thoughtful thing. You can get the other side of the argument from an emotional Michelle today. Debate is good. Certainty is never good. Related: Could Obama's centrism drive the GOP out of business?
Are You Content?Fallacies of the Week: "Perfect Solution" and "False Dilemma"It's a twofer from Humbug: Name That Fallacy! I have always been a fan of False Dilemma. It works like a dream on the naive. Perfect Solution is for children and utopians. Tuesday linksPhoto: Not far from Palm Beach, yesterday. (Theo) Eating lettuce is selfish? All eating is selfish, isn't it? More on Carol Browner's socialism. 2.5 million pounds for this Woman's Studies student's virginity. Watch some Sheikh from Dubai buy it. Embracing the Sacred: Orthodox Catholic From AVI: Did Steven Pinker lie? Part 1 and Part 2 College affordability: A wolf in sheep's clothing More on the voluntary human extinction movement. Why don't they set an example? Back so soon? Chrysler wants more $. So do I. They ain't stupid - Chrysler is owned by a hedge fund. Related: GM CEO must be out of his mind. From Wizbang, who has some good historical market graphs:
Department of Government Stupidity: You have to recycle paper but burn biomass. What's the difference? Also, When government runs something... eg High-Def. Not your ancestors' England. Gateway. Good grief. They have a civil war now. A new circus comes to town. PJ O'Rourke. h/t, Jules Hillary intervened at least 6 times to protect husband's donors. Am I surprised? I am only surprised they only found 6 thus far. Dem sleaze = Dog bites man. No front page story there. How do you know when you're in San Francisco? Photo via the Pro-Hamas Victory rally in SF:
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11:23
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QQQSoap and education are not as sudden as a massacre, but they are more deadly in the long run. Mark Twain (via LGF) FrostbitingSome people just can't get enough sailing. These folks were frostbiting last weekend in 23 degrees on a breezy Long Island Sound. Yes, there is a rescue boat in case you fall overboard or capsize - which sometimes happens.
Posted by Gwynnie
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09:16
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75th Annual Maggie's Farm Blog Awards, #s 5-12NB: There will be no awards to Major Blogs and Sites (ie ginormous traffic), mostly, in keeping with our redistributionist commie, eat-the-rich ideology. Additional winners will be announced through the end of this week. Here's today's batch: Most Soulful Site: Sippican Cottage Best Princeton Alum Blogger: A tie between TigerHawk and Coyote Best New Personal Mom Blog: The Retriever Most Consistently Serious and Somber (and smart): Dinocrat Best Vintage Photos At a Site With Which We Often Politically Disagree: Dr X Favorite Aussie Blog: Tim Blair Favorite Canadian Blog: A tie between Dust My Broom and Small Dead Pangolins Attention Winners! See continuation page below the fold for your imitation parchment suitable-for-framing award, along with your prize money transfer details - Continue reading "75th Annual Maggie's Farm Blog Awards, #s 5-12" Not just for kidsDemocracy vs. Republic: The Video. This is as simple and clear a discussion of forms of government as anything could be. It's around 5 minutes. (h/t, No Pasaran) Monday, January 12. 2009Some Monday evening linksPhoto on right from Denver. Denver? Jonah with the New Deal Re-revisited, plus a nifty video: NRO Climate Change Warning: 30 below (F). Going to be cold as hell in the Northeast this week, and I am planning to be skiing in VT this weekend now that hunting is like totally over. I'm gonna try to nullify my life. It's about addictions. Supremes to hear reverse discrimination case The Extinction Theory of Scientific Progress. Relativism: Paving the Road to Radicalism. Like we always say. Cool blog: Language Log. Found via Volokh A new flight from California? One for the record book. Feds admit error after destroying a guy's life for years - David Stockman. Usually they can at least find that you picked your nose in public in 1997, and send you up the river for a few years. Besides private jets, money can also get you effective lawyers - and justice. Russell Kirk, quoted at Bainbridge on utopianism:
I think any version of utopianism is psychotically delusional, but I'd love to give life a try with gummint's boot off my neck. At the least, I'd like to be able to light up a Cuban in a pub, and I'd be willing to let them pick my pocket a little bit for their vote-buying schemes.
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How Sippican makes new furniture oldThere are two ways. One is just to leave it in my house for a few months. The other is the professional way, like Sipp does it. Article with video here. It's very distressing. Or you can just watch Sipp on TV here:
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Free ad for Bob, a few days early: "Name me someone that's not a parasite..."From Dylan's masterpiece Visions of Johanna:
Our post on the letter to students about business careers and the thoughts about parasitism brought the tune to mind. Here's the original recording of the astonishing tune. He's so clear you don't need the lyrics:
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"From fiction to fact..."Moore in the WSJ, From Fiction to Fact in 52 Years. One quote:
Read the whole thing. Link above. The 75th Annual Maggie's Farm Blog Awards, #s 2, 3 and 4NB: There will be no awards to Major Blogs and Sites, mostly, in keeping with our redistributionist ideology. Additional winners will be announced through the end of this week. Here's today's batch: Closest Cousins Across the Pond: A tie between Mr. Free Market and The Englishman Best Armchair Warrior: Jules Cutest Shtick: Don Surber's "Just Ask Me" In addition to the tax-free $1 million, and the distinguished and official-looking medal which is appropriate for wear at any formal occasion such as White House White Tie dinners, winners also receive the suitable-for-framing imitation parchment diploma-thingy below.
Money transfer info below the fold - Continue reading "The 75th Annual Maggie's Farm Blog Awards, #s 2, 3 and 4" A bubble that we missed
It's good to know we missed at least one bubble. The Art Market Bubble: On the folly of investing in modern art. Kimball
Quote of the DayStolen from Driscoll: "Our friends on the left have put their faith and hope in President-elect Barack Obama. Those of us still on the fence about him hope that he is at least half as great as they say. That is more than the Bush-haters ever offered Bush, so perhaps it is a place to start." Boeing 777Watch it assembled, in hyperspeed:
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Monday morning linksHow did we miss this story? Prize farmer run over by dog tractor driver. We let our dogs drive all of our vee-hickles, and this sort of thing hardly ever happens. CO2 Fairytales. Am Thinker Failcare in MA. Surber. More from Rick Moran. Story with a moral: The pirates Fr. Neuhaus' study:
To heck with yourself and your family. Sacrifice for the greater good. Further thoughts on our Open Letter re business careers, from Tiger. Joe the Plumber's new career Campaigning isn't governing. Pajamas. Related: From each group that supported Obama, an agenda Dump Dodd? Fine, but it's not possible to elect a Conservative in CT. Or is it? WSJ: Palestinian demographics and the fighting culture:
Golda Meir famously said something like "We will have peace when the Palestinians care more about their kids than they do about killing Jews."
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Name that birdIn the interest of improving the bird interest among our readers, a reader took this photo this week of these hardy shorebirds on the CT coast, not yet in their breeding plumage. Can you name it?
Sunday, January 11. 2009The 75th Annual Maggie's Farm Blog Awards, #1We will post the daily winners as the votes from our staff, contributors, friends and family come in for each category and as the erroneous and uncountable votes are eliminated by our Editor in Chief. Here's the first: Required Daily Read: American Thinker. It keeps getting better. Note: All 2008 75th Annual MFBA winners will receive a tax-free, tax-exempt wire transfer of $1,000,000 US to their personal accounts in Grand Cayman from our new friend Hugh Katanga-Smythe, Esq., Asst. Deputy Commissioner of Virtual Funds in Nigeria. Hugh has some money he wants me to help him get rid of. It's the least we can do to help him out. Winners - check your Cayman accounts daily - or just go out and spend the money in advance on some guns and trips and wide-screen flat TVs and Gucci bags and stuff. Spending the money immediately will help the world economy, and help Obama become successful. If we do not have your Grand Cayman account number, password, and security code on file, please email the required information to our Cayman office to Carmella.Giambone@blogprofitscayman.com. Why I wouldn't want to be Obama, plus Mother-in-LawFrom our guest poster Bruce Kesler: If conditions and challenges weren’t ominous enough for the new Obama administration, his strong-willed mother-in-law is moving into the White House. If that alone isn’t enough for most, imagine yourself facing a relocation to very difficult new job, almost every one with power affecting you having differing wants and confronting you with demands often at odds with your own, literally not enough money in the world to satisfy everyone’s desires and the demands increasingly undercutting even necessities, and gangs of lethal thugs roaming the streets around you. Even your formerly most staunch supporters begin to report that most of your previous smooth talk is empty that got you the job and that you’re in over your head. Like vultures expecting a fat carcass but facing a rotting pigeon of a meal, they squabble and fight each other. Almost all your mentors expose they haven’t really much clue what to do. Well, here’s a piece of advice: Don’t just do something, stand there. Most of the challenging conditions will sort themselves out. Running around like a chicken without a head, or doing for the sake of doing, will not only likely have little positive effect but will probably have worse consequences. Let’s go through a brief list: The Economy: Not every one, but in aggregate, individuals are better deciders of what is worth working for and spending on than any Delphic group in Washington. Money is the motivation to work and risk. The only economic measure by Washington with a track-record of supporting and increasing this motivation is low taxes. Federal spending, on anything, is inefficient and tends to favor means and ends that reduce individual incentives. Further, in excess -- and multi-trillion dollar printing of dollars is certainly excess, it has been proven, sadly repeatedly, to lead to lasting inflation that is even more impoverishing and destructive of incentives. Healthcare: As we’ve become wealthier, compared to any other nation, the portion of our personal and national incomes that need be devoted to food, clothing and shelter has declined. That has unleashed the means for medical technologies and treatments that, although often overused, we decide we can afford and deem worthwhile to our better living. Every scheme for “reforming” healthcare is based on forcing us, against our better judgment and self-caring, to have less healthcare, through reduced access and innovation. Bureaucrats’ choices of what they think “cost-effective” for spending our own earnings and taxes are not our choices. The only ones to benefit are government-employment and government-employee unions. Education: Surely, a well-educated workforce, allowed incentives to be productive, enriches most. Major portions of our enormous spending on education, however, are wasted or siphoned off to non-enriching ends. In higher education, we have lavish campuses failing to serve quality or practical degrees. In primary education, we have multiplying programs that shortchange the basics, while teacher unions expend their huge political war chests to battle reforms. Allowing the influx of uneducated illegal immigrants has diverted a large percentage of education spending to their remedial teaching, reducing standards and programs for excellence among the rest. Border and employer enforcement in motion has and will reduce illegal immigration. Budget restraints are directed by those in power to punish the customers. With the necessity of budget restraints evident, those ideologic and self-serving pedagogues will lose some of their influence to undermine core, productive education. National Defense: From the pains of combat, we’ve learned that a larger professional armed forces is critical. At the same time, sophisticated, expensive major weapons systems cannot be avoided if we are to have deterring diplomacy with major adversaries, or soundly defeat them if diplomacy fails. The ‘90’s, Clinton path of virtually ignoring the emergence of such threats only leads to larger, more dangerous crises. Cutting defense spending to fuel wasteful domestic spending by Washington is proven suicidal behavior. An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. Cutting the ounce is deceptively self-destructive. Middle East: Our avoidance of domestic sources of energy and of transmission has increased our dependence upon and hefty self-impoverishing buying of oil from hostile and trouble-making countries. Take that US financial underpinning out from under them and they are less of a global or regional threat, less capable of attacking Israel as well. A regional conflict is less of a threat to itself or the world. Having, thus, freed up Obama from otherwise counter-productive activities outside the White House, he personally will benefit not only from things sorting themselves out better but will have more time to deal with his mother-in-law.
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