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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Thursday, April 22. 2010Re our "House" post yesterdayHere. A few comments: 1. Watch that Speed Dating video
Posted by Bird Dog
in The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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07:00
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Thursday morning linksCut the ‘medical’ marijuana BS Afghanistan's "Dancing Boys" The False Religion of Mideast Peace Why teachers are losing respect Michelle: All the president’s Goldman Sachs men Obamacare: Impact on the Uninsured Related, at Marginal:
Thus begins the intentional and planned destruction of private medicine in America. But don't worry - there will always be small private clinics and hospitals for the wealthy and for the politicians. Same as they have in Cuba. Reason: Down the Health Care Wormhole - How ObamaPelosiCare will saddle future generations with a public policy disaster Steyn: Tomorrow belongs to Mo Too scared to listen to Rush Millions face tax increases under Dems budget plan
Posted by The News Junkie
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects
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05:40
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Wednesday, April 21. 2010It's The Arts!Dansgaard-Oeschger Variations and human civilizationHuman culture developed during the past 50,000 years, despite homo sapiens being around for much longer (300-400,000 years). One theory is that certain rapid climate changes during the most recent glaciation phase, known as the Dansgaard-Oeschger events, are what prompted the development of complex cultures. Adaptability is a human strength. The Bug Community seems pretty good at that too. A few Barrister links- First, the salt story. As people say, No, it's not from The Onion. Government has gone insane. CO2, transfats - and now salt? One does not know whether to laugh or cry. Or to just dump some more salt on one's fries, and call it a Boston Salt Party. - "Those who think they can control their destinies are happier." That's from an old story about why Repubs and Conservatives are happier people. People with some faith in themselves - and God - feel better about life, regardless of income. It's the psychology, stupid. Feeling weak or like a victim makes life miserable, but that is up to each one of us. - Did the Dem stimulus cost us 4 million jobs? - Our friend Roger: Humor vs. Contempt: Obama and the Question of Character - The man said "I'm a Democrat, but I'm not a Communist." As Ferrara notes, many Dems could not quite say that:
Another Urbanism siteOur Urbanist friend shares another good Urbanism site: Discovering Urbanism. He has a good post on the American lawn. Who knew that turf grass is America's #1 crop? Photo below is from a Pennsylvania turf farm:
Posted by The News Junkie
in The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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15:50
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'House MD': A couple o' treatsContinue reading "'House MD': A couple o' treats"
Posted by Dr. Mercury
in Our Essays, The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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13:00
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Tea Party BlowbackBlowback to the NYT's Charles Blow (h/t, Insty):
Which are you: Ideologue, Cynic, Skeptic, Critic, Freeman?An ideologue is attached to an ideal regardless of facts. A cynic believes that selfish self-interest is the primary motivator, especially of others. A skeptic habitually doubts or questions conclusions of others. A critic develops judgments based on the merits of the situation or argument. A freeman uses civil and political rights and liberties, to enjoy life.
These categories may to some extent co-exist in each individual. But, to the extent any of us move predominantly from freeman or tolerant critic to habitual skepticism, or to being a cynic or ideologue, even when moved by others’ intrusion into our rights and liberties, we surrender some or much of our enjoyment. The trick is to retain our focus on being a freeman (or freewoman, but I’ll use freeman here throughout). If we don’t, we become susceptible to manipulation of ourselves or becoming manipulators of others. One can’t be securely free when others are not. Soldiers volunteer knowing that life-and-death choices determine their and others’ fate. In effect, they are determined to be freemen. The really religious know that opening their heart to G-d gives them freedom to enjoy themselves and others. The true citizen participates and demands that chosen leaders respect all as freemen.
Look at history. Those whose names and legacy are most treasured were freemen. Look at yourself. What are you? Really. If not a freeman, you've surrendered. The belly button and the search for GodOne Cosmos comments in On Recovering the Point of Your Filmography Before it's Too Late:
Our umbilicus, he says, is our reminder that we have already passed from one mode of being to another. One quote:
He does not mention the term "re-birth," but that's part of what his post is about. I know that some of our readers think Gagdad Bob is an annoying nut, but I have found plenty of his transcendental imagery to be useful to me (including his metaphor of "verticality"). It is an affliction of middle age, especially if one has spent much time and effort in life preoccupied with the daily, practical, dutiful, material, and mundane - as what Gagdad calls a "Flatlander" - to find oneself asking "Is that all there is?" ...and to do all sorts of wacky and reckless things to deal with that question and with that emptiness, which things, indeed, bear no soul-nourishing fruit but are only empty distractions of the "How many holes does it take to fill the Albert Hall" sort. Yet what a crazy question that is for me or anybody to ask - "Is that all there is?" - in the midst of this buzzing, blooming miraculous and frightening cosmos which is packed with road signs of all sorts (including our humble belly buttons), pointing to God. OK, that's enough preaching and platitudes for one day at Maggie's. Here's a real question: Is God female? The medical/spiritual image of a human belly button is h/t Theo. That "Nexus" shirt is right on the button, as it were, isn't it? Weds. morning linksToon via Powerline's The Pen Is Mightier Than the Teleprompter 1/3rd of IPCC claims were not peer-reviewed Obesity as a social inequity? Uncle Sam, stop me before I eat again. Does the Supposedly Superior Expertise of Regulators Justify Libertarian Paternalism? Um, no. Where do your Oxfam dollars go? Cape Wind update. I think these giant fans are insane. Plus they rarely mention that we pay for these dumb bird-slicing eyesores. Wrong narrative: The New Orleans Beating: Real Violence, Real Evidence, No Media "That was Bill Clinton, blaming me for the Oklahoma City bombing..." Am Thinker: A 'perfect storm' for socialism Taranto: 'Populism of the Privileged' - The latest laughable attempt to discredit the tea-party movement. Goldman is a heck of a good bank. Smart, hard-working people with good social skills. One example of their genius: Regulate Us--Please! One quote:
I don't know if it means much, but Obama's fifth-quarter Gallup approval slips, among worst 3 of modern presidents I generally disapprove of armchair psychologizing because it usually consists of veiled ad hominems, but here's The President Who Won't Grow Up Pew: Shocker: Public Fed Up With Government, Banks, Corporations, Unions, Hollywood, the Media Another Obamacare tax nobody mentioned: Tax the sick. Great idea. They are probably too sick to complain.
Posted by The News Junkie
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects
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06:15
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Who are we?Took this photo yesterday: Tuesday, April 20. 2010Cynicism and ChangeLowry's Cynicism and Change: How did Democrats fall so fast, and take perceptions of government down with them? begins thus:
Related from Murchison's The Democrats' Big Disconnect:
eBird: Cool bird migration mapsI heard my first warbler of the Spring early this morning, the zee zee zee of a Black and White high in a budding Maple. I went to All About Birds to double check my birdsong memory (which was correct this time), I found that they link a new feature for migrating birds: a monthly map called eBird. Click on the month, and see where they are. I checked it for the Black and White.
Posted by Bird Dog
in Natural History and Conservation, Our Essays
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14:38
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Root Causes In Middle East: What if there wasn’t an Israel?Today, modern The world would still be dealing with and suffering from MidEast extremists: First of the Soviet proxies, but without Israeli intelligence penetrating them and its military defeating them, exposing the Soviet Union as an unworthy sponsor; Then of the Islamist haters suppressing its peoples and fighting each other while harboring attackers of the West, but without Israel’s development and democracy serving as an unavoidable contrast to the potentials of freedom and sanity and its military and technology exposing the fundamental weakness of their self-created backwardness. No one in the Middle East takes seriously that the Arab-Israeli or Palestinian-Israeli conflicts are the primary, secondary, tertiary or lesser cause of Outside the Middle East, however, we have the core delusion among many of those raised on the puerile pap created by the Left that the modernity and successes of Western civilization somehow oppress the natural decency and advancement of President Obama is the poster boy. But he is not the cause. He is merely the product. He and those who follow him, thus, fall back on the false premise that No, the problem is their core delusion that we can escape history by denying it, even reversing it, though that still would leave the real root cause of MidEast instability, regional petty satraps, backward hatefulness, and those outside powers – from the EU to Russia to China – who benefit from retaining rule or access to oil. If the initial thrust of President Bush’s strategy of spurring democratization in the Middle East proved hollow, then our subsequent neutralization of Iraq’s WMD potential and funding of terrorists and our struggling effort to retrieve Afghanistan from being ruled by as much a threat is at best a holding action. We, as Secretary of Defense Gates admitted, lack a strategy toward even containing Iran, its imminent nuclear armaments, its support for those who kill our soldiers and Iraq’s and Afghanistan’s and their peoples. The exaggeration by Saddam Hussein of his own WMDs was to counter Weakening President Obama and followers are not the root cause of Israel shows the way, not the barrier. The barrier is the purposeful misfocus, the dangerous inanity, of the avoiders of truths. Isn't 62 years enough time to prove that if modern Israel didn't exist the catering to Middle East tyrants would still be the core cause of dire oppression there and threats to the West's security and prosperity?
Posted by Bruce Kesler
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects, Our Essays
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14:06
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Feelings Education
Posted by The Barrister
in Education, The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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13:16
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A second political quote of the dayRe climate, from our commenter here:
Political Quote of the Day"I can’t understand how these same people who distrust the power of large corporations tend to throw all their trust and faith into government. The government tends to have more power (it has police and jails after all, not to mention sovereign immunity), is way larger, and the control mechanisms and incentives that supposedly might check bad behavior in governments seldom work." Coyote, in his And People Trust Government?. Well, the polls say most people do not. However, America is divided between those who want to be left alone and those who want stuff. At present, that is the gist of what Vanderleun terms The American Argument. Similarly, Betsy addresses the two visions of government. In my view, too few Americans today see liberty as something precious, and I often wonder how many people would prefer to be slaves and serfs (as long as those terms aren't used) in exchange for life's necessities. Clarion Call
I had to laugh. Obviously someone didn't get the memo. So I started collecting headlines on my daily rounds. All of these are since ClimateGate: Panel Will Review U.N. Climate Work Despite Climategate, IPCC Mostly Underestimates Climate Change Climate Scientists Plan To Hit Back At Skeptics Study: Human Impact On Climate Now Clearer EPA, Countering Critics Of Greenhouse Gas Findings, Says 'Science Is Settled' World Warming Unhindered By Cold Spells: Scientists Meteorologists: Last Month Warmest January On Record by Far Peru Glacier Breaks Up, Causes Tsunami Study: Stronger Hurricanes Loom Earthquakes And Tsunamis Just The Tip Of The Iceberg, Say Experts Undersea Arctic Methane Could Wreak Havoc on Climate Climate Change Will Impact Infectious Diseases Worldwide Climate Change May Extend Allergy Season Darwin Foes Add Warming To Targets Coast Guard Sees Increasing Need For Icebreakers Report: March Was Earth's Warmest On Record Winter Was Fifth Warmest On Record On Global Warming, The Science Is Solid US Senate Climate Bill To Be Unveiled April 26 To quote Samuel Clemens, The reports of my death have been greatly exaggerated. Tuesday morning linksJapan: A nation adrift Vacation travel a human right? Gimme mine. MIT Prof Lindzen speaks rationally about AGW. But the State Dept. knows better... Volcanoes and AGW. You just knew it. Related: Gullible Media, Panicking Over Climate Since the ‘Titanic’ Went Down, Sinks Still Further Now they tell us: NYT learns why Obamacare is expensive It's a mighty pale newspaper too. Pot calling kettle white? Related: Angry Lib spreads the smear WSJ: Americans Are More Skeptical of Washington Than Ever Related: What?! Americans don’t trust Washington? Who knew? How bad does it look for the Dems? Christie Escalates Feud With Teacher's Union Real political violence. Inadvertent spittle makes for a much better story.
Posted by The News Junkie
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects
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05:27
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Monday, April 19. 2010The Deafening Silence Suddenly, flying 30,000 feet above the ground, a massive depressurization takes place and the airliner starts to break apart. It tumbles toward the ground, bucking and spinning, as the last seconds of your life turn into a living nightmare. The only good news is, in the chaos around you, your mind would be so overwhelmed that you'd be in shellshock, with no time to contemplate what could have been, no time to regret what never will be, and no time to say goodbye to life, itself. But, as ugly as that is, there is one scenario that might even be worse. You're flying along at 30,000 feet when suddenly... Click. All four engines stop. You don't like the depressurization scenario? Well, lucky you, you now have minutes upon minutes to contemplate what might have been, to regret what never will be, and plenty of time to say goodbye to life, itself, before you cartwheel into the sea and disintegrate. Lucky you. A few weekends ago I decided to wig out and watch every single 'airline disaster' show on YouTube. There were about twenty of them. And, as terrifying as many of them were, there was one that stood out above the rest. The one where the engines suddenly went click.
Posted by Dr. Mercury
in The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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17:00
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Lefties go nutsWhite Lefties go nuts when black Americans leave the plantation. They act like Simon Legree. h/t to Driscoll's Frank Rich Covers All The Bases Related: Taranto's Why the Left Needs Racism - It serves a political purpose. Also, at Tiger: Race as a political weapon against the right Image is Tom's Final Beating, from the 1853 Illustrated Edition of Uncle Tom's Cabin. Tom has been a hero of mine since I first read the book in junior high school. How "Uncle Tom" became a pejorative is beyond me. His infraction, if you recall, was to refuse to whip the other blacks to "keep them down." Today in 1775The Battle of Lexington and Concord. Those farmers had a lot of nerve to stand up to their government. How government unions broke California
Malanga at City Journal
On the radioI heard "Call your doctor or dial 911 for any erection lasting longer than four hours." Why? Isn't that normal?
Posted by The Barrister
in The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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13:04
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