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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Monday, November 23. 2009Kids: The New Normal?Should you financially support my mother-in-law or sister-in-law, if they legally immigrated to the Under pressure of both common-sense, elevated unemployment in the US that is likely to last, and increased opposition to amnesty schemes, the Obama administration speaks a good game about improving enforcement of illegal immigration laws, and with due credit has actually taken some positive steps. But, one of its other goals is to increase what is called “family unification,” or letting in near and extended family members of those legally here and those millions to be made legal if the Obamites have their way. At the same time, laws to require those who bring them in to be responsible for supporting them are eliminated or opposed. Today’s editorial in my local newspaper speaks of “The New Normal,” where increasing numbers of Americans are looking for jobs abroad, “[A]nd those who are willing to move to a new city – or even a new country – for their next opportunity are the ones who will be the most likely to succeed. It has always been thus. And in a global economy, this is how it will remain for many years to come. It’s the new normal. The sooner Americans accept that, the better off they’ll be.” It’s not just increased numbers of American citizens looking for jobs abroad. Increased numbers of Indian and Chinese scientists who gained their advanced education in the A regular fairly liberal columnist in my local newspaper rightfully bemoans, "One of the sorrows of contemporary life is the broad failure to create paying jobs for preteens and teenagers. We scold children (and childish adults) for being financially illiterate, oblivious to the virtues of thrift. But what do we expect of those forced to live exclusively off the parental dole?... But the idle rate for children — 80 percent? 90 percent? — also signals a sort of cultural distress. Imagine children by the millions, holed up with video games on a sunny day. Or trooping off to soccer practice in the minivan, oblivious that the uniform costs real money. In high school, the closest many come to real labor is community service, light work for the college application. One of the most important jobs of a parent is to be a child’s employment counselor, starting with essential chores around the house. Help them find honest work that hurts so good.” The new normal needs to be emphasis on raising our children to honor and do honest labor and jobs. Before that, our emphasis – our own new normal -- needs to be on us growing up ourselves and facing up to the impossibility of fewer taxpayers paying more to support the lazy and irresponsible. Enterprise-stifling government expansion and more meddling bureaucrats is not the answer. It’s the problem.
Posted by Bruce Kesler
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11:39
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Monday morning links Add to the climate list: Climate change causes Filipinos to become prostitutes. Of course it does. Everybody knows that. Older fellow eats hottest pepper in the world Burn the witch! Martha Stewart agrees. But who cares what she thinks? How much oil do we have? Almost endless, it seems. Utterly incoherent on Jihadist trials. Dino Simon: Congress: Gov’t healthcare for thee but not for me Phi Beta Cons: Why I'll Never Be A University President. Related: Whiny Spoiled Brats NeW women on campus: Anchoress Obama inspires; Palin connects - The Globe and Mail Did you read our Cui Bono yesterday? Captures most of the ObamaCare issues.
Reason: Treating Wall Street Like the Mafia Imagine the uproar if Bush had done this Barack Obama: the politics of hypocrisy and cynicism:
Here's the quote I had been looking for:
Michelle has the ObamaCare bribe list. Also, now it gets difficult in the Senate Related: Poll: Most See No Upside to Health Care Reforms
The Englishman takes a look at tree rings in England. Related, LA Times says the science doesn't really matter. That's via Driscoll's All The News That’s Fit To Bury Related: The AP agrees that the facts don't matter. Related: The NYT decides their readers don't need to be confused by the truth. What Capitalism can do, via Carpe Diem:
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09:51
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Advice from BenBenjamin Franklin's Advice to a Young Man on the Choice of a Mistress (1745).
Posted by Bird Dog
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08:10
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No job, no respect
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07:25
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Sunday, November 22. 2009The Large Hadron Collider
How it works. Speeding protons. Very cool video.
Late Sunday "This country is going to hell" linksDr. Bob: It's all the Christians' fault. Darn those pesky Christians. Get ready for the Turkey Flu! We're all gonna die! Two Teens. h/t, Lucianne How the Dem minimum wage bill killed jobs for teens and college kids John at P'line: Alarmists do "science" Yes, neoneo: Beginning Saturday, at a Senate far from you: health care disaster in the making? Am Thinker: Let's all overwhelm the prisons with insurance-refusers Related: Religious Leaders Call for Civil Disobedience if Laws Don’t Respect Faith
Married Couples Face Extra Tax in Healthcare Bill. Related: Dems refused to inflation-index the medical care rich tax.The joke is on us. Related: Aromatherapy too? Reid Health Bill Has Hidden Perks for Chiropractors. I was always told they were quacks, but I hear they can do a good massage. Goldberg: Palinophobes Hate First, Ask Questions Later Canadian Lefties coming to the US for medical care. Bolton via Q&O:
NYS is broke.
A believable threat: Breitbart to AG Holder: Investigate ACORN or We’ll Release More Tapes Just Before 2010 Election Hot Air: Shock poll - Rubio within 10 points of Crist in Florida Imagine the uproar if Bush had done this The pheenom has twice the O's TV viewership. Inhofe to Boxer: Get a life (video)
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17:37
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Kalifornistan
Not PC. Trailer here.
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16:04
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Holiday Family Car or Table Game, #1This is an annual re-post: You go around the table or car until someone gets stuck. Then they are "out," just like the great game of dodge-ball. You will be surprised by how long it can continue. It goes like this: My first job was in an orange juice factory, but I couldn't concentrate. I worked as a lumberjack but I couldn't hack it, so they gave me the ax. (a 3 pointer) After that, I tried to be a tailor, but I just wasn't suited for it. Next I tried working in a muffler factory, but this was exhausting. Then I tried to be a chef, but didn't have the thyme. I attempted to be a deli worker but any way I sliced it, I just couldn't cut the mustard. My best job was as a musician, but eventually I found I wasn't noteworthy. I studied a long time to be a doctor, but I didn't have any patience. I became a fisherman, but couldn't live on my net income. I managed to find work with a pool company, but the work was too draining. So then I got a job with a health club, but they said I wasn't fit for the job. My last job was at Starbucks, but it was the same old grind. Eventually, I got a job as a historian, but there was no future in it. I tried being a house painter, but it didn't stick. So I tried to be a urologist, but I couldn't get the hang of it. Then I tried being a cosmologist, but it was all too much for me.
Posted by Bird Dog
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12:23
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Best gun
A pity I prefer my antique 20 ga double-triggered s/s for comfort and feel, but the dang thing don't shoot straight at wacky birds! Can you name my gun? It has beautiful oiled walnut to which my snap does not do justice:
Posted by The Barrister
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11:47
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Government medical care: Cui bono?Among numerous problems, I think the biggest problem with the Dem medical care bill is that there is no national consensus for this. It is unwise to do things this large without a national consensus, but the Left is intoxicated with their (temporary, cocaine-like) power. With Medicare - for better or worse - there was a consensus. With Medicaid for the very poor, there was too. As it stands now, the Dems are proposing a solution without a problem. Or, a government solution seeking a problem... It's a manufactured "crisis." There are easy, simple, cheap, non-governmental solutions to medical insurance unfairnesses which do not increase Federal power. (Yes, we have already noted that Federal employees are the only ones exempt from the bill.) Cui bono? Well, the Dems think they will benefit with their names on an historic take-over of 1/6th of the American economy by being rewarded with the gratitude and eternal dependency of the voters. Secondarily, the government will benefit by accruing more money and bureaucracies (111 of them by the last count I read, for our enjoyment) - which means jobs to distribute and more power over our lives. Third, unions will benefit - or so they believe. (Just wait until your doc is a de facto government employee treating you the cost-benefit-analyzed-by-experts government way - and his or her nurse is a member of SEIU.) The 81% of Americans who are satisfied with their medical care will not. Nor will those increasingly-few who actually pay the Federal income and capital gains taxes to pay the bills. I did get a kick out of Harry Reid's statement yesterday:
Yes, we already knew that Government is the Church for the Left. It ain't my religion. And I don't want to work on Maggie's Farm No More.
Posted by Bird Dog
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07:14
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Not from today's Lectionary: A joyful noise of thanks
Psalm 100
Make a joyful noise unto the LORD, all ye lands. Serve the LORD with gladness: come before his presence with singing. Know ye that the LORD he is God: it is he that hath made us, and not we ourselves; we are his people, and the sheep of his pasture. Enter into his gates with thanksgiving, and into his courts with praise: be thankful unto him, and bless his name. For the LORD is good; his mercy is everlasting; and his truth endureth to all generations. The East Haddam, CT, Congregational Church
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05:26
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Saturday, November 21. 2009Cookin? Try Dylan Radio (fixed link)Dylan Radio. You can request, too. We like it. Just push "Tune in" and let it play. You do not need to log in. The Great American Songbook. Guy has great taste in folk/pop music, whether his own stuff or that of his betters (?). Jeanne-ClaudeJeanne-Claude died - Christo's remarkable wife. One of the first posts on this site, back when we had around 20 visits per day and had no idea what we were doing (not that we do now), was our visit to Christo's Gates on a frigid day in Central Park:
Posted by Opie
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15:35
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Christ NotesYou can have these sent to you daily via email. Here's today's: Keep your lives free from the love of money and be content with what you have, because God has said, "Never will I leave you; never will I forsake you."This is the season for gratitude.
Saturday morning linksEighty One percent say the quality of their own, personal health care is Good or Excellent. No wonder there is no popular support for the Dems' plans to throw the baby out with the bathwater. Who wants their doc working for the government? I want them working for me. Princeton and Columbia cancel free speech What makes nations rich or poor? With world poverty map. McCain gets sane on climate bill. Meanwhile, EU president wants Copenhagen to give us “global management”. What a great idea! Related, Aussie skeptics run TV ad Related, from Powerline: The global warming bombshell Related via Vanderleun: The truth about global warming will not stop the fraud of global warming. Too much money and power at stake. Same thing with government medical care. San Franciscan likes Palin's book, but calls Alaska "weird." Enuf said. Related: SF bookstores refuse to carry Palin's "gross" book. OK, I'll say it: They are weird in SF, but don't know it. It is the Alaskans who are normal. Bad news for the O: Polls dropping like a rock. All Presidents fall below 50%, he notes. People are fickle, and invest too much in Presidents. It's because they do not trust themselves to be the President of their own lives. The good news: Booze is good for men's hearts. Employment looking worse for 2010
Photo: That is my Christmas Mincemeat, ready now for the brandy and aging. The venison in it provided by my bow-hunting buddy. Too bad our smellovision isn't working today. Allspice, clove, cinnamon, nutmeg, cider, vinegar, molasses, apples, raisins, currants, cranberry, meat. Friday, November 20. 2009The Manhattan Declaration Via FOX News:
More details on the warming conspiracy
Piltdown Man, move over. Sample:
From: Phil JonesIs this what they call "research"? These science frauds need to be fired - and/or indicted. They are government employees. SniperWarming scientists caught in flagrante delictoMany Reasons Thanksgiving Is SpecialI always celebrate my birthday on Thanksgiving. Selfishly, at least I’m guaranteed a turkey and good bottle of Aside from the 4th of July, there is no other holiday in Thanksgiving, also, says much about the American character, that we early on officially enshrined a national holiday for giving thanks. In 1789, George Washington issued the first national Thanksgiving proclamation with these words: “Now, therefore, I do recommend and assign Thursday, the 26th day of November next, to be devoted by the people of these States to the service of that great and glorious Being who is the beneficent author of all the good that was, that is, or that will be….” (Read the whole proclamation.)
As you make your plans for Thanksgiving, this early post is to remind you of why we celebrate and dedicate ourselves, in gratitude for all we’re given, achieve, and share, thanks to G-d and each other in America.
Posted by Bruce Kesler
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13:44
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And Another Thing...Part Whatever of The Hitchhiker's Guide is out, this one written by Eoin Colfer, author of Artemis Fowl. If you live in a cave and missed Douglas Adams' series, it's an amusing science fiction spoof. It's called And Another Thing...
Posted by Bird Dog
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10:15
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Friday links
Toon via Lucianne. The Moonbats want to get rid of "Fighting Sioux." The Indians want it kept. How does "The Fighting Sue" sound instead? Or "The Pacifist Sue"? Beat us, please. Somebody read Sarah Palin's book Via Gateway on the weekend healthcare voting:
At Am Thinker:
According to a recent paper by Drs. June and Dave O'Neill of Baruch College, the City University of New York, two national studies--the National Health Interview Survey and the Current Population Survey--put the number of folks who don't have health insurance because they can't afford it at 21.6 million. That's almost exactly the number that Dr. Reid's big spending plan would leave uninsured. Maybe it won't insure anybody, but it will achieve control of us. That's the point. Pethokoukis does the odds on the heath care takeover. Next on the Dem agenda: Legalizing illegals. Pete DuPont says Congress is hard of hearing, but they are not. They have a small window of opportunity to ram through their wish list before they are voted out next November. These are not issues that there is a national consensus about. Bad politics, bad news, bad everything. Seven trees? Isn't the hockey stick graph dead already? Will Osama need to be read his Miranda rights? Before some SEAL shoots him? How times have changed. The CA students once protested for free speech. Now they protest about Gimme gimme. What pathetic, whining, entitled children this country has raised. Yes, I worked my way through UMass, and I am the better man for it. The young benefit from challenges. I did. Big, Bigger, Biggest: Three Examples of Government-Induced Failure
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08:00
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More Real Connecticut: The East Haddam Parsonage
They don't build 'em like this anymore. My lousy photo does not do justice to this house, which I assume to have been the parsonage of the First Congregational Church of East Haddam, right across the street. In the old days, the minister was given a house to use and land to farm as part of his compensation. In the real old days, he was paid via town taxes too: The Congregational Church was the established church of CT. Not that that meant all that much: Congo churches did, and still, vote on everything - including their doctrine and their choice of pastor - within their own congregation. Zero hierarchy, for better or worse. Every person was/is considered to have his own hotline to God. The wife typically ran the farming business: it paid the bills and kept her out of the pool halls.
Update: I think our reader is right - the addition is the part on the left. The congregation must have felt prosperous at the time.
Posted by Bird Dog
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05:50
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