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 8. 2010For Johnny Cash Week, John with BobA bit of the past for my kids: "Dear Sis"My Mom recently mailed me a stack of letters, postcards, etc that my Grandpa had mailed to his kid sister from a June-August 1940 trip he had taken his two kids on - my Mom and my late uncle. (My Grandpa's lovely wife died after giving birth to my Mom, and he never remarried. Not sure he ever got over that loss.) A single parent. He wrote about three letters or postcards per week to his dear Sis in Bridgeport, CT. It's a delight to read these travelogues. Seems like the fellow (who was a good pal to me when I was young), a great yachtsman (also a fine horseman, polo player, and shooter), spent much of his time on the bridge with the officers during the cruise part of their trip. He reported all the warships he admired en route - Sis' husband was a naval officer in the Pacific at the time. Probably spent the rest of the time in the bar playing poker, which he reported was pleasantly air-conditioned. He also reported that my Mom, as usual, won the shipboard trap shooting contests (she has always been good with a horse and a shotgun, but now all she does is tennis and gardening). At the time, my Mom was in high school on the riding team and my Uncle at Dartmouth on the drinking team. Their cruise took them from NYC to San Francisco via Baltimore, Havana, Cristobal, Balboa, Acapulco, Los Angeles on the Panama Pacific Line's City of San Francisco. From his letters, they also stopped in Colon and Panama City. As I do, my Grandpa loved the shipboard life, especially the coasting up from Panama to California. Then they spent a few days at the Hotel Empire in SF, then variously trained and drove to the Yosemite Lodge, the Grand Canyon, spent a couple of weeks at the still-wonderful old Eaton's Ranch in WY, thence to the New Lawrence Hotel in Chicago and then train back to NYC. Nice summer trip. Christmas, mid-1950s, in Grandpa's parlor I think. My cuz added some color to the B&W. My Grandpa with pipe in hand on left next to Sis, and other relatives: A bit more about this one of my two fine Grandpas on continuation page below. One day soon, we will do a post inviting readers' Grandpa reminiscences. Not today. Continue reading "A bit of the past for my kids: "Dear Sis""
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"...explores the themes of worry, loss, and redemption. Lou Reed wishes he was this good, I'm telling you."Don't Buy It. Damn good advice these days. "It's not real, and it's not perfect." Sipp has got himself a bright little rug rat there to support him in his old age. Or two. I like totally agree with that little chipmunk...except when something really sings to me. Like a new shotgun...or an S&W .357 Airweight...or a trip to Budapest. QQQBe not angry that you cannot make others as you wish them to be, since you cannot make yourself as you wish to be. Thomas ŕ Kempis, Imitation of Christ, c.1420 Thursday morning linksThe Moonbat Left can never decide whether they are for free love, or whether all sex is rape. Multiple census forms to some neighborhoods? Moran: DON’T SLANDER STATES’ RIGHTS Harsanyi on Michelle Obama's misguided war on childhood obesity Michelle: True Confessions from America's Census Workers Dr. Clouthier's slick new site: Liberty Pundits Villianous asks how do you marginalize a majority? Black conservative tea party backers take heat The people who do not need to pay taxes. Related: Welcome To Vermont Where We Subsidize (Almost) Everyone. Related at No Pasaran: The Land of the
Plus it's an easy way to tax the middle class and the poor. Wiz: Massachusetts health care system killing insurance companies?
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Wednesday, April 7. 2010John Cash Week: JacksonYou cannot not love June Carter who, I am sure almost all of our readers know, was Mrs. Cash.
From Birmingham: Stop me before I steal againAt Pajamas, excellent brief tragi-comic post on Jefferson Co, Alabama. One quote:
Doc's Computin' Tips: The IDE/SATA/RAID story Pictured: Average reader upon hearing the bad news. Well, there's no sense in beating around the bush. Let's get right to the good news. For a mere $49.95, it's possible that you could more than double your hard drive speed. That means everything would be quicker. Boot-up time, saving, converting, copying, formatting, rendering, transcoding, frameserving, demuxing, remuxing, bitmapping, raytracing, defragging, scanning, disk-checking... Everything. For a crummy 49 bucks. Think that's impressive? With the mere flip of a setting, you might be able to almost double it again. More info and official techie-type graphs & numbers are below the fol- "But Doc, wait! What about the bad news?" Oh, let's just keep that between ourselves. There are children present. Continue reading "Doc's Computin' Tips: The IDE/SATA/RAID story"
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Too much sea ice, plus medical careExcessive Arctic sea ice endangers cute baby seals, Polar Bears, this year.
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A snowball headed for hell
At Powerline, in praise of Merle with a great tune.
Unions and politicsWhich Side Are They On? American labor unions and how they got that way. It begins:
Government education and Diane RavitchAt Am Thinker. Readers know how I feel: I want the Feds out of education. Should be a local thing, in the hands of the local taxpayers. Teaching should be a calling, not a government-unionized sinecure. What sorts of preachers would you get if you had unionized, government-employed preachers? Or, for that matter, doctors? Weds. morning linksHow has the American diet changed over the past 100 years? Goldberg: How much taxation is enough? They sent Volcker out to say it first The guy who is going up against Barney Frank The world's tallest building opens Too late to short carbon stocks? Current Senate race rankings Gaming medical insurance in Massachusetts Catch 22: Higher CAFE standards and more ethanol - but ethanol lowers MPG. And why ethanol anyway? Electric cars: The Coal-Powered Car And Its Discontents A (Teddy) Rooseveltian concept: limit the size of banks. My question of the day, though, is this: Is KKR "too big to fail"?
The Case for Common Educational Standards. In 1950, 60% of the jobs required no particular skills. The world has changed. The Menace of Strategic Default: Homeowners who walk away from their mortgages undermine our financial system. From Insty:
From Surber:
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Tuesday, April 6. 2010CashThe Four Horsemen"Professor Arkes discussed the Four Horsemen, four conservative justices on the Court during the 1930s who tried to block many of President Roosevelt's New Deal programs. He examined many of the Supreme Court cases from the Roosevelt era." Those four guys saved us. Says the Prof: "We are the beneficiaries of the world that Sutherland and colleagues preserved for us." Video from 1996. (h/t, No Left Turns) Are you carrying, Mr. Smith?A friend of mine was recently pulled over for speeding. The constable, ambling over to his driver's side window asked "Are you carrying, Mr. Smith?" "No, sir. I am not carrying today. But why do you ask?" "I ran your plates. Have a good day, sir, and watch your speed." The cops around here know that if you have a carry permit, it means you've been well-vetted by the local PD, the State Troopers, the FBI, and who knows who else - and that you have been found to be a solid citizen.
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Dems applaud their obstructionismTuesday midday linksWhite & guilty: ‘Whiteness’ workshop helps expose your inner racist Will you still need her, will you still feed her, when she's 64? Next Bailout - Hospitals Hurt By Obamacare From Tiger: Thor Heyerdahl meets recycling: Follow the voyage of the Plastiki. Surber on academic idiocy:
Many grow happier with the years, experts say. And then you die. Chris Currey: How the GOP Purged Me Update: A Complete List Of Bad Things Attributed To Global Warming
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China blocks Dylan tourTwo MagazinesUp here in Yankeeland, many people read Town & Country to keep up with what's going on socio-culturally. Garden & Gun may become the Southern version of T&C, but we enjoy it very much also.
Posted by Bird Dog
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Joseph RatzingerOur friend Anchoress emailed me this piece from a Lutheran, The dictatorship of relativism strikes back—and goes nuclear. It begins:
Farmall T-shirtsFound these at the Bass Pro Shop in Nashville a couple of years ago. In my case, their message happens to be true. Yes, there are still some Farmalls in New England, and my Grandpa's is still running fine even though he stopped running long ago. The ones with the close-together front tires creep me out on Massachusetts hills, though. I prefer a "wide stance" on the hills.
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Monday, April 5. 2010Monday late afternoon links: Lots of good readsCalifornia Voters Support ObamaCare. They eat Unicorn meat out there (image via Surber). An atheist: Secularism's Ongoing Debt to Christianity Outsourcing grading Dr. Helen: Is Control over Porn Really about Control over Men’s Sexuality? From Back to the 1970s: Let’s Get Small!
Can Christie save New Jersey? Wilkinson: Glen Whitman and the Rise of the New Paternalism Insurers not demons, just messengers Containing Mexico Switzerland as an example for the world From Mead's Liberal Internationalism: The Twilight of a Dream:
AVI: America is a Pacifist nation Is the O eloquent no more? Related: What do some Democrats say in private to each other? Powerline: Why can't they just forgive and forget? Rahe: Global warming, RIP Guy at the NYT thinks he understands me:
Plain cruel: The O's sissy pitch Classical liberals should support open borders. It is a debate. It's Johnny Cash Week at Maggie'sThe Man Comes Around, h/t Protein Good News: They believe in material objects80% of professional (!) philosophers believe in the independent existence of material objects (but only 7% in God). What do philosophers believe? I am not a philosopher, but I sometimes play one at Maggie's Farm. I sometimes muse that life is a dream of God.
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