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. |
Our Recent Essays Behind the Front Page
Categories
QuicksearchLinks
Blog Administration |
Wednesday, November 4. 2009Britain recognizes global warming as a religionSurber. Rightly so. It's about time this was officially recognized. Now let's separate church and state. Art and Beauty and "bourgeois ideology"From First Principles, The Treasonous Clerk: Art and Beauty against the Politicized Aesthetic. Part III by James Matthew Wilson - 10/28/09. This is Part III of a five-part essay on "Art and Beauty against the Politicized Aesthetic." You can read Part II here and Part IV here. Part III begins:
Read the whole good, thoughtful thing when you can find the time. It isn't a quick read. Links above. The Astounding World of the Future
If you've got a few years on you, then you probably remember those "documentaries" from the 50's and 60's showing "The Astounding World of the Future!" It was usually the year 2000, that being a nice, round number. And remember all the great predictions? We'd all be flying around in our jet cars, speaking into our Dick Tracy-style TV/radio/telephone wristwatches, and putting a small capsule in the middle of a pan, jamming it in the oven for 10 seconds, then pulling out a steaming roasted turkey complete with all the trimmings. Obviously, it was all gibberish, and that's what makes this video so amazing. As you'll see, the writers took a very realistic view of things and, not surprisingly, nailed a number of them. And they must have dumped a bunch of money into the production because the props and special effects are quite well done for the time and extremely believable. Recognize any of these?
So, without further ado, welcome to...
Posted by Dr. Mercury
in The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
at
11:30
| Comments (9)
| Trackbacks (0)
Prayer is another insanity in ObamaCareAfter my morning prayers, and thanks for Republican victories in yesterday’s elections that may help stop the ObamaCare obomination in its tracks, I picked up my morning newspaper and on page 3 read the article, “Move to put spiritual care in health bill.” (Sorry, my local newspaper’s website is down for overhaul, but here’s the complete wire service dispatch.) This is exactly one of the absurdities that argues against ObamaCare or most further government takeover of healthcare. Special interests intrude their mandates, and costs, on us all, even with little justification outside their mustered political power. One of the battles in Congress is over a provision of the House ObamaCare bill that would require insurers to pay for prayer treatments as for other medical treatments. It was proposed by a Republican congressman, whose district includes There’s some evidence that a patient’s morale affects their recovery. There’s some evidence that prayer can improve a patient’s morale. There’s, also, much more evidence that prayer will not cure most ailments and, indeed, there are sufficient studies that substituting prayer for proven scientific medicine can prolong or worsen serious ailments that otherwise could be alleviated or cured. I, personally, like the saner holistic approach to medicine, to add proper diet, exercise, some vitamins, and yoga to one’s health regimen. And, I pray. But, to require that medical insurance cover these is insane, and costly, crowding out the core scientific medicine that is essential. Many who are uninsured are, thus, priced out of coverage due to the costs of mandates for usually lesser effective treatments, like chiropractry or acupuncture or massage, being added into insurance. Further, adding in very expensive in vitro fertilization, as desirable as it may be for those infertile to enjoy having children, is similarly counterproductive to our main concerns about improving health care. If they want children, pay for it, or accept your fate. There is not a legal nor moral obligation for taxpayers or others who buy insurance to buy children for them. This argument in Congress over whether to include insurance coverage for prayer is an absurd but indicative example of what we can expect when special interest government runs health care.
Addendum: The above are just a few more examples of some of the points that The B made in his Insurance Freedom post this week. It is, indeed, insane. Furthermore, I never heard of paying for prayer. Prayer is one of the few things that remains free and untaxed. Addendum: Christian Science practioners do charge. Other "clergy" may and will, as well, if they can get paid by insurance. BTW, see my comment below about which "mandate" I'd like to have in my insurance!
Posted by Bruce Kesler
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects, Our Essays
at
09:53
| Comments (16)
| Trackback (1)
Weds. morning linksWe are disappointed that Hoffman lost in NY 23. Surprised, too. The "meaning" of these elections will be spun to death. Ace notes that the O managed one big win in Maine. WSJ: Obama and the Liberal Paradigm. "The sheep are quite capable of looking out for themselves. Someone tell the Democrats." We sheep would be even more capable if the gummint would leave us alone. Health Care Bill postponed further. That's good. This bill is antiquated New Deal entitlement: government-heavy baloney. Regressive - not Progressive. Sen Lieberman on the O:
From Sowell on the costs of medical care:
I do not think this is a racial thing. I think it's an effect of urban one-party governmental cultures of corruption. A generation or two ago, it would have been Irish pols - but nobody expected integrity in pols then. Gays protest against free speech. Good grief. The Archbishop has a blog? Cool. Coyote: An ACORN Relief Act Politico terms it an "uncivil war." I think it's just what parties do to figure out what they are about. It's healthy. Parties should debate and contain conflict.
Posted by The News Junkie
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects
at
05:11
| Comments (13)
| Trackbacks (0)
Third Party PayersPowerline: "This video on health care, produced by the Center for Freedom and Prosperity, features Eline van den Broek, founder of the European Independent Institute." She makes the point that it is third party payments for medical care which have permitted the rise in cost of medical care in the US. I think that is part of the story, but the other part of the story is that our higher costs buy us access, choices, abundance, and quality.
Posted by The News Junkie
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects
at
04:40
| Comment (1)
| Trackbacks (0)
Tuesday, November 3. 2009Which is it?Paul Mirengoff poses this one:
The $50,000 markDozens more colleges pass the $50,000 mark this year. Addendum: Greedy college presidents rake in the dough. That's Big Academia for you, and the Academic-Governmental Complex. The NEA
The NEA recomments these books,
A Bob Dylan Christmas?The villeins and the ploughmen: What Cap & Trade and Government Health Care have in commonWhat they have in common is that they are two pieces of a giant puzzle. Put together, they place the government in the position to regulate or control almost every detail of our daily lives. In democratic systems, the taking of freedom is always cloaked in a patronizing, slaveowner-style benevolence. From Steyn's Green Totalitarianism:
And Lindzen:
Same idea applies to government medicine which, it is estimated, would create 111 new bureaucracies. Even an Office of Administrative Simplification (not kidding). As Mike Pence said yesterday: As President Ronald Reagan said: “Since the American founding, we have been a people with a government, not the other way around.” Now comes the Pelosi plan for a government takeover of health care. It is a freight train of runaway spending, bloated bureaucracy, mandates and higher taxes. If the liberals in Washington have their way, they will forever change the relationship between the government and “we the people.” If the Pelosi plan for a government takeover of health care passes, we will each become dependent on the political class in Washington for the provision of services of the most urgent and personal nature. Illness, our own, or more importantly the illness of a parent, or a spouse, or a child, has the capacity to suspend our priorities. What was important before the crisis grows dim in the harsh light of disease affecting a loved one. The Pelosi health care plan targets us when we are most vulnerable. The Pelosi health care plan makes us dependent on the state at the most urgent moment in the life of our family. Their hope: that little by little, we’ll yield our freedoms and our resources to the ever-growing appetite of the federal government. One commenter on Althouse's piece on constitutionality, mandated insurance, and the Commerce Clause observes:
As the Monty Python song goes: Then the villeins and the ploughmen got to have the loooord's consent.
Posted by The Barrister
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects, Our Essays
at
09:07
| Comment (1)
| Trackbacks (0)
Tuesday morning linksMore Dem dirty tricks in NJ. The third party guy is splitting the anti-Corzine vote. Big Con: Gore making millions from "warming" scam, headed for his first billion. Stanley Black and Decker? Sounds like a slip-and-fall law firm. 59% say country on the wrong track Our obsolete US Constitution. Am Thinker Hubris of the incompetent. What's the Dunning-Kruger Effect? Please conceal your shock The American: I’ve taken a look at the data, and, I’m sad to report, the Great Recession has badly damaged the entrepreneurial sector of the U.S. economy. Oh yeah? Well wait til the Dems do what they want to do... Where the white Leftist men live in America. Related: Why are the groovy "Progressive" cities the white cities? Real, interesting cities are full of everybody. Portland is white bread. I'll take NYC. How come we never found this blog before? Black and Right. This one goes straight onto Ye Olde Blogroll. Roy Spencer: AGW is an urban legend Those taxes on the rich aren't inflation-indexed. We know what that means. From Ace, the pithily amusing AP: Even If Republicans Win Tomorrow, They Still Suck Related, from Red State: We hear this all time — conservatives in the GOP have to play nice with the moderates. The Krautman has it right: those "saved" jobs are all gummint jobs. Plenty of SEIU jobs, I am sure. Everything - and more - that you might want to know about Nancy Pelosi Related, in WSJ:
Boeing begins to say Good-bye to Seattle
Posted by The News Junkie
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects
at
05:34
| Comments (10)
| Trackbacks (0)
Monday, November 2. 2009Our friendOur friend Right Wing Prof is now blogging about his cancer diagnosis - and even about where he might want to be buried - at his other site: Central Pennsylvania Orthodox. God bless him for doing that. Insurance freedomRe Bruce's post below, I'd like to point out that the government-designed medical insurance is not really insurance at all. It's just payment for medical services, at government-determined rates. In fact, it's insurance only in the same sense that Social Security is insurance - you are forced to pay into it, and you are forced to take it. I like to have freedom of choice in selecting my coverage, just as with my auto insurance. I have a relatively high-deductible ($10,000 over 2 years - 100% thereafter) Major Medical insurance. What I save in premiums with this comes close to my deductible - plus I have a Medical Savings Plan. It's all quite inexpensive. It does not cover aromatherapy, massage therapy, chiropractors, homeopathy, addiction treatment, experimental treatments, abortions and other elective procedures like sex-change operations, routine check-ups, and tons of other things that politicians, under pressure from interest groups, will squeeze into the government-designed plan. The insurance I have today, which is designed to keep you out of financial catastrophe if you get really sick, would not be permitted under the Baucus plan.
Posted by The Barrister
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects, Our Essays
at
15:07
| Comment (1)
| Trackback (1)
In Defense of Health Insurance Agents, and YouWhy the heck should anyone care about how health insurance agents will fare under ObamaCare? Under the House bill, for example, the Small Business Administration will help businesses and individuals figure out how to obtain affordable coverage. (The bill provision is titled, “Assistance for Small Employers.”) Health insurance agents are not precluded from providing advice. But, the SBA will be allowed to bypass agents. A health insurance agent is required to complete initial and regular formal training courses in the subject (including ethics), pass initial and periodic tests, and are screened by their state and by insurance companies for criminal or personal conduct (including declaring bankruptcy) that may negatively affect their reliability to be licensed to provide agent services. In addition, through professional associations, through insurer education programs, through self-study, and through competitive pressures, health agents stay current on the latest laws and offerings from various insurers. Furthermore, almost all health insurance agents are independent businesses or work for independent agencies, not beholden to the insurers but to their customers. Importantly, individuals, small and larger businesses have priorities more important and pressing than becoming experts in health insurance or its interactions with other laws or aspects of their primary concerns, and heavily depend upon qualified, trusted health insurance agents. Lastly, many health insurance agents have extensive credentials and experience. For example, I attained earned, tested, rigorous certifications – Chartered Financial Consultant (ChFC), Registered Employee Benefits Concultant (REBC), Registered Health Underwriter (RHU), Chartered Life Underwriter (CLU) – that, along with other experiences outside health insurance (I was a senior financial and business operations exec for Fortune 100 and small companies for 15-years before becoming a health insurance agent) and years of experience as a health insurance agent (I’ve been at it for two-decades). This delivers wide-ranging values to my clients and of the interactions of their health insurance with their broader business, regulatory and financial affairs. Does anyone expect the staff hired or created by the SBA to have this independence, experience or training? If so, get real! Surely, there are some health insurance agents who are lesser or incompetent, or who are crooked, or who steer some business toward favored insurers for added volume bonuses. However, the less competent exist in a highly competitive market, where they lose business to the more energetic and competent in delivering value to clients. The crooked or shady are winnowed out similarly plus by stiff regulations and prosecutions. This is just another aspect of the losses that individuals and businesses will suffer under ObamaCare. A leading expert and opponent of Obamacare, Grace-Marie Turner, writes in the New York Post:
Also, read The Worst Bill Ever. For disclosure, I’m nearing retirement, and have shrunk my successful business. I am not going to directly suffer as a health insurance agent or small businessman, although I will as a taxpayer and as someone who cares about quality health care for myself and others if ObamaCare passes.
Posted by Bruce Kesler
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects, Our Essays
at
13:46
| Comments (4)
| Trackbacks (0)
Typical local politics
How Scozzafava got the Repub nomination in the 23rd of NY.
Monday morning linksMy trick or treaters said Thank you. Coleman waders 50-60% off Academic ranking of the world's great universities "Roots" was a bogus book. Well, a work of fiction - with plagiarism. Should alimony be forever? When people get richer, families get smaller. How many dressage horses, ballet lessons, piano lessons, trips to Europe, tuitions, and tutors can a large family afford? Iowahawk considers Caesar's writings, in view of Landesman's claims. One Quote from Julius:
We like Rep. Michelle Bachman, but the Left hates her as much as they hate Palin. From her bio (my bold):
Repubs try to protect us from Cap & Trade nonsense Now it's time to worry about what the Dems are doing to Death Taxes Chavez cannot bring power to the people Byron York: It's OK to criticize the O now Natural Food Fight: Obamacare vs. Mackeycare. On the video, the white Lefty essentially terms the happy black female Whole Foods employee "ignorant" Bribing the voters of New Jersey: How Democrats like Corzine survive Biofuels will destroy the planet Dede, and the Gingrich view vs. the Limbaugh view. Uh oh, she endorsed the Dem. This is strange. Who is Ted Cruz? The Aussies beat the US in per capita carbon. Good on 'em. I think they beat us on per capita beer too. Obamacare vs. the Hippocratic Oath The other side of the Scozzafava case: RWNH
How did government insurance mandates work out in Massachusetts? Via Driscoll:
Big Lizards offers a reform plan everybody would probably support “This is not about insuring the uninsured, this is not about health care, this is about stealing one sixth of the private sector and putting it under the control of the Federal government, and when they get this health care bill, it they do, that’s the easiest fastest way for them to be able to regulate every aspect of human behavior. “Because it will all have some related costs to health care, what you drive, what you eat, where you live, what you do, there will be penalties for violating regulations, it’s gonna be the biggest snatch of freedom and liberty that has yet occurred in this country.”
Posted by The News Junkie
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects
at
05:59
| Comments (4)
| Trackbacks (0)
Sugar MapleYesterday:
Sunday, November 1. 2009The ObamaCare Rx
Obamatics = Payola PoliticsIt was reported earlier today, here and here, that the machine-picked liberal Republican candidate whose poor polling -– and lack of support from Republicans -- led to her withdrawal from the race threw her support to the Democrat instead of to the Republican who challenged her – Doug Hoffman. Hoffman is polling neck-and-neck with the Democrat for this upstate Congressman Darrel Issa just sent out an interesting and telling email about how important Obama sees this election:
Issa says,
Issa asks that urgent contributions be made via his own Political Action Committee to help elect conservative Republican Doug Hoffman, send the White House and Congressional Democrats the message that we’ve had enough of their ruinous tax-and-spend-and control our lives, send Republican hacks in Washington the message that truer Republican principles and support are required, and not let Obama and Emanuel run the Republican Party. Instead of sending your contributions via Issa, send them directly to Doug Hoffman’s campaign. The link is here to donate and to learn more about Hoffman. We already know that Obama-style politics is payola politics, trying to buy off votes and power with our taxes and earnings. Say ENOUGH!
Posted by Bruce Kesler
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects, Our Essays
at
17:31
| Comments (5)
| Trackbacks (0)
The secularization of MedicineIs Medicine still a vocation, or has it become a technical service industry? In my view, the Internists, Family Practioners, and Psychiatrists are maintaining the core of the medical priesthood. Many other devoted docs as well.
Posted by Dr. Joy Bliss
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects
at
16:38
| Comments (14)
| Trackbacks (0)
New England Real Estate: Roxbury, CTRoxbury (pop. 2300) in southern Litchfield County is one of the most pleasant exurban towns (among many) in CT. It's far enough north to be beyond NYC commuting distance, but it's a good distance for a weekend home - and every wealthy American urban Lefty deserves his dacha. Roxbury has plenty of old farmhouses, barns, and well-maintained horsey estates with white-painted fences, but even it has been contaminated by some grandiose new construction over the past 20 years. Marilyn Monroe lived there during her hook-up with Arthur Miller. He may have suited her for a little while, but I doubt that Roxbury, or the Roxbury Congregational Church, were her cup of tea. Not that she ever knew what she needed... The 1850 farmhouse pictured above on 4.5 acres is asking 1.9 million. (I would be inclined to get rid of that big old Norway Spruce on the front corner. People always planted those gloomy trees too close to their houses.) More Roxbury listings here.
Posted by Bird Dog
in Our Essays, The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
at
10:44
| Comments (0)
| Trackbacks (0)
What’s wrong with California is also wrong with much of the USWhen I left Today, the Still, there’s striking differences among the states, and the results show. William Voegeli writes in today’s Los Angeles Times, "The Golden State isn't worth it." Voegli compares It’s not ideologues who are moving. For example, I recently ran into a couple I was friendly with in Voegeli continues: “Overall, the Census Bureau's latest data show that state and local government expenditures for all purposes in 2005-06 were 46.8% higher in California than in Texas: $10,070 per person compared with $6,858.” Between 2000 and 2007, “16 of the 17 states with the lowest tax levels had positive "net internal migration," in the Census Bureau's language, while 14 of the 17 states with the highest taxes had negative net internal migration.” Why?
How?
What to expect?
It’s not just Government workers and their unions are prime beneficiaries of our heavy taxes. Most of even the made-up stats recently released about jobs saved or created by the federal appropriation of the near $1-trillion “stimulus” show relatively few and most of those among government workers. The $1-trillion, likely to be much more, cost of the wholesale upheaval of 1/6th of the US economy in health care – which really only serves about the 25% of those who truly need it who don’t have insurance at the expense of the 85% of Americans who do have coverage -- will fall heavily upon the working and middle class. The $trillions of indirect and direct taxes of the “cap-and-trade” illusory environmental bill will also add $thousands each year to each American's costs of living, to the economic benefit of profiteering fat cats and their politicos who garner contributions. At root this may be an ideological battle, as Voegeli says. But, it is really a practical battle between those who aspire and work for a better life and those relatively few who would squander its underpinnings for their own greedy benefits. The real populist revolt is already shaking Ask what your country can do for you?At National Journal, A Reaganite or Jacksonian wave? I think it's time for a JFK wave. Things have changed: he would be a pretty good Republican candidate today. His murder by a Lefty-loser-Commie-Cuba-sympathizer set in motion a generation or so of bad things from which we continue to experience the repercussions.
Posted by The News Junkie
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects
at
08:07
| Comments (5)
| Trackbacks (0)
"I failed..."
You are not alone. So have I, many times. But less frequently, as time goes by.
« previous page
(Page 9 of 10, totaling 226 entries)
» next page
|