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, June 17. 2010Judge YachtsA buddy who is a fan of Judge Yachts emails me the following:
Posted by Bird Dog
in The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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12:00
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Explains a lot about what's going onQQQ“I pretty much have my bad inclination [‘yetzer hara’] under control; it’s my good inclination [‘yetzer hatov’] that always gets me into trouble.” Rabbi Wolfe Kelman (h/t, Vanderleun). I suppose that's the Yiddish version of "No good deed goes unpunished." Thursday morning linksFemale Viagra fails From Shiver at Pajamas:
Is he? I did think this quote from his speech was strange, when he spoke of "our determination to fight for the America we want for our children ... even if we're unsure exactly what that looks like." More detail from that IPCC insider:
Powerline: The O's long nose IRANIAN AND HEZHOLLAH FLOTILLAS ARE SAILING There is plenty of oil around The BP Oil Disaster: Big Government’s Dream Come True $5m prize for good governance goes unclaimed again in Africa Feds move to grab power over state governent unions Did you wonder, as I did, who Mead was and what he does?
Posted by The News Junkie
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects
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05:45
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Wednesday, June 16. 2010Child LaborThe US Labor Department is going after employers of children age 13 and under.
I started working at age 5, sweeping the sidewalks in front of stores, dusting stock, shoveling snow, and the myriad of other jobs I could find in the neighborhood. Twenty-five cents for an afternoon’s work was big bucks to a poor slum kid. More important, I learned work habits. Friends raised in rural areas worked in the fields at age 5. They learned work habits. We all feel better off today for the learning. No one is in favor of putting kids in sweat-shops for 16-hour days, or such, as my grandparents were in the early 1900s. But, next time you hear anyone complaining that kids don’t have work habits, or don’t value the money they have or the comforts, thank the types who feel that childhood and adolescence should be a skate or so protected as to deny kids and teens the opportunities to become adults with better work habits and self-responsibility.
Posted by Bruce Kesler
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects, Our Essays
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18:54
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Who stole my cee-gar?
At Moonbattery. There must be a crisis of Brit 12 year-olds taking up Cubans to imitate ol' Winston.
The Dems and oilFrom Gateway:
We have the Chinese drilling off our southern coast, and Brazil is drilling everywhere they can. I think the Dems have an aversion to American oil. John Wesley in SavannahJohn Wesley (1703-1791), founder of what we now call Methodism (the term was originally used as an insult but was eventually adopted by Wesley), and his brother Charles spent some time in Savannah, GA. I lost a bet about that at a dinner party last year, which cost me a bottle of good Montrachet. Methodism was the ultimate source of our 12-step programs: the Wesleyans liked to have methods for spiritual discipline. John Wesley was an evangelist, and liked to preach outdoors. He tried to convert the Georgia Indians. He was a "by faith alone" preacher. He got in a bit of a problem with a Georgia lady, and eventually returned to England. Here's a piece on Wesley in Georgia, and here's a Wesley bio. The hymns written by John and Charles Welsey are among my favorites. Charles wrote 6000 hymns. John even produced a hymnal but, as this site notes,
Image of John Wesley above, Charles Wesley below:
Posted by Bird Dog
in History, Our Essays, Religion, The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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12:01
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What is enough?More on Voegli's important new book, Never Enough: America's Limitless Welfare State, at Powerline. One quote:
Good stuffGood online radio, from the Ivy League: WKCR. On Saturday they had a Howlin' Wolf festival which blew my mind. And right after, I went to hear Nozze di Figaro. How much amazing music can a brain process in one day?
Posted by Bird Dog
in The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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10:57
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Websites and collegesPowerline is clearly a Dartmouth-oriented website. Nary a month goes by without their talking about their attachment to their beloved Alma Mater. Volokh has Dartmouth connections too. I just learned that American Thinker, another essential site, is sort of a Kenyon College site. Both Lifson, Publisher, and Baehr, founder and "Chief Political Correspondent," are Kenyon guys. Weds. morning linksThe IPCC consensus on climate change was phoney, says IPCC insider Compare, contrast: News Judgment, Washington-Post style Chantrill begins:
Applebaum: Acting like politicians can solve all our problems just makes us look weak NPR Poll Shows Tough Road Ahead For Democrats MSNBC bashes the O. Scroll down and see the Frank Luntz video. Good grief. Americans really can see through BS. Powerline: Was Einstein bright? Tiger: Meritocracy and teachers unions cannot coexist A new friend in Iran? Ahmadinejad: Obama Is Immature Remarkable: One-fifth of NYC supports Tea Party Hillary Clinton: Secretary of Your Estate No Soccer please, we're Moslems Cruel, via Insty:
If not Carter's...
A repeat, which splains it all:
Posted by The News Junkie
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects
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05:28
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Tuesday, June 15. 2010A Woman's Got to Have ItWhy wasn't I invited?
Why wasn't I invited to the Kennedy sex parties? I heard about them, but did not know the right people.
Government Union bashing timeBoortz: THE GOLDEN AGE OF GOVERNMENT UNIONS IS OVER Legal Insurrection: Unions Rescued In Rhode Island These things should be illegal. The intrinsic conflict of interest would never be legal in business. Almost forgot. Today is Elder Abuse DayThanks to our friend Marianne for reminding us of this critically important day of National Awareness and Action. Make sure you get out there and abuse at least one of those "elders" today. More, if you can find them. If they have any grey hair, go for it. Do not beat anybody under 30, as they used to say. If you happen to be an elder, whatever that is (related to Elderberry?), then abuse yourself in your way of choice. I have planned my day to find a crew of those elders in line for the Early Bird Special at my local Long John Silver's. It's right next to Red Lobster, so we'll have a chance to abuse quite a few seafood-eaters. I hate to do it, but it's for America. And, let's admit it: sado-masochism is exciting.
Posted by Bird Dog
in Our Essays, The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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12:24
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Tuesday free ad for Bob: "What good am I, if I'm like all the rest?"I had best post this live performance today, before it's taken down from YouTube. It's a rare performance, from last week, of his What Good Am I?, from his 1989 Oh Mercy! album. What honest human has never asked himself such questions?
This is in Linz (home of the Linzer torte, and a place I will visit in August). That is Bob noodling on the organ.
Ambush Journalism: Goose and Gander QuestionRemember CBS’ 60 Minutes Mike Wallace? One of the most feared questions used to be, “I’m Mike Wallace, and I’d like to ask you a few questions,” as Wallace showed up with camara crew at someone’s front door. As this tribute DVD to Wallace summarizes his career, “Take any great event in the last 50 years, and CBS News correspondent Mike Wallace has been there – asking the tough, frank, and even impertinent questions of the famous and the infamous.” Now we have a young person daring to just ask a congressman whether he supported the Obama agenda, actually “"Do you fully believe in the Obama agenda?" The congressman repeatedly asks, “who are you?” The young person repeatedly answers, “a student.” The congressman grabs the questioner. (It is still unknown who the questioner is.) It may be an “assault” by the congressman, punishable under law. It is a congressman acting excessively, when he could have just walked away. It is, also, a sidewalk interviewer, accompanied by another shooting video, refusing to identify himself. I would ask the same question as the congressman did, and without an answer or an answer that would lead me to not talk with the interviewer, I would walk away. (Scott Johnson at PowerLine agrees, and still reminds us that the congressman acted like a “bully and a nut.” I think neither, but rather unhinged as the congressman apologized for acting.) At least Mike Wallace identified himself. Yes, there is fear being struck into the hearts of liberal Democrats by being exposed as fools and tools by ambush journalism. Liberal journalists are defending the congressman. There’s also many fools and tools among Republican congressmen. Will those who defend anonymous ambush journalism be as defensive of it when Republican fools are similarly exposed? Anyone being interviewed has the right to know who the questioner is, and the right to not reply to questions. Anyone asking a question of another should have the civility and integrity to let the interviewee know who the questioner is, at least if asked. Unless assaulted themselves, the target of the interview does not have the right to assault the questioner. That much is clear. What isn't clear is whether ethics, journalistic or otherwise, flow both ways. It should.
Posted by Bruce Kesler
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects, Our Essays
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11:01
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Tuesday morning linksGraph above via a post at Coyote. Forget man-made threats – the catalyst for the apocalypse will come from outer space Re that viral YouTube: Isnt that assault? Way to go, Bobby: Gov. Bobby Jindal Defies Obama Administration – Begins Building Barrier Walls Off Louisiana Coast & Calls for End to Obama Moratorium Thoughts about the Afghanistan mineral wealth, from A Jacksonian Jules begins:
Mandated Maternity Benefits Are Wrong for Our Struggling Economy Tom Friedman says ride a bike to prevent oil spills, or something like that Stossell: Why did America prosper while most of the world remains poor? Can the French Cut Welfare? Sarkozy touches the troisième rail. Brilliant idea: Politicize the Fed. Politicizing Fannie and Freddie sure worked out well. Hollywood strangely silent on Afghanistan, and on oil spill Mona Charen: Abolishing Department of Education isn't extreme Daniel Hannan: I admit it: I was wrong to have supported Barack Obama See Lucianne this morning for more good stuff.
Posted by The News Junkie
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05:33
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Monday, June 14. 2010Pure geniusNYS borrowing from pension fund to make annual required payment to pension fund. Just like Euroland. I have heard of people who use credit cards to pay the interest on other credit cards. "What is an educated man?"From a discussion about the current education of men in America at Chicago Boyz:
Like I always say, most men were made just for fishin, huntin, and lovin. Addendum, from a post by AVI:
Posted by The Barrister
in Education, The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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15:54
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Showing the FlagA re-post from Aug. '09, for Flag Day - All of the flags on houses in our Woodstock, VT photos reminded me that we have not had a flag since we rebuilt the side entry porch about 14 years ago. Shame on me. It's a grand old flag. I ordered a set from this place today. I will place the bracket low, so I can easily pull the pole out in rain or at night. I am not in favor of those night-lit flags, but I recall that Barry Goldwater had an automatic flagpole at his place in Arizona that lowered and boxed the flag at evening, and raised it in the morning. I loved Barry, but that sort of hi-tech flagpole seems cheesy - and lazy - to a Yankee like me.
Posted by The Barrister
in Our Essays, The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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15:24
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Fair Use
Always link to your source, and don't quote more than a couple of paragraphs.
Posted by Bird Dog
in The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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14:50
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The caves of Okinawa
An American GI has been exploring the caves of Okinawa since 1966.
h/t, Wizbang:
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