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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Saturday, July 24. 2010At the airport, the God of Embalming and Friend of the DeadVia Dallas News' aviation blog: Mr. Anubis, in situ.
Posted by Bird Dog
in Our Essays, The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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16:16
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Saturday BobJoanie sings Bob's Farewell Angelina in 1966:
Peanut butter in Italy, re-posted from June 2008We promised that we would bring the Dylanologist, who is stationed in Rome for the summer, a supply of peanut butter. I guess the Italians don't have it. It's their loss. You would think the southern Italians would get sick of tomato sauce. I am, for sure. They would quickly learn to appreciate a PB&J on white. Fortunately, they do not use much pasta or really any tomato sauce in northern Italy where I am headed tomorrow. Despite the glories of Italian (non-pasta) cuisine, sometimes a fellow just needs some peanut butter - and not the unpleasant organic kind. Skippy's ultra-chunky always hits the spot. I will squeeze two large things of it into my bag for the guy. Hope Italian Customs doesn't give me a hard time for this act of smuggling. After all, it would be easy to suffocate somebody with a face full of Skippy's Creamy. The Art of the Sonnet
A book review. The sonnet form has a punchy compactness that has let it survive and thrive while other antique forms have been mostly abandoned. I have tried my hand at more than a few, and it is good challenging fun.
Posted by Bird Dog
in The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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11:11
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Sen. Webb joins the conversation on raceAmerica owes no special debt to its black citizens - or to any of its citizens. If any American does not feel fortunate as hell to be here, they should depart - while bearing in mind that half the world would move here if they could. Maybe Webb, an accidental Senator (due to macaca) felt he had to say that for political purposes. But although Webb, a Dem, does not vote in ways with which I agree, I give him credit for his thought crimes in his op-ed: He seems to believe that all Americans ought to be regarded equally in law and government regardless of the vagaries of skin tone or ethnic background. I agree with that radical postition. The Other McCain has a more cynical, and probably more savvy, view.
Posted by The Barrister
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects, Our Essays
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08:53
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Saturday morning linksRacial group differences GM sold GMAC. Now they're buying another credit co. Why? To make subprime loans Linda McMahon: John Galt in Skirts in Connecticut The K-man: Beware the lame duck How John Kerry dodges MA taxes. Hypocrite. Vanderleun: The Voice of the Neuter is Heard Throughout the Land SHOCKING VIDEO- What the MSM Won’t Show You From Shirley Sherrod’s Hate Speech
Interesting Data on Increasing Pubic Employment
Surber: Obama’s damage to Democrats Saturday Verse: The Rime of the Ancient MarinerTo be read aloud - even if alone. Coleridge, 1798. Coleridge was a sort-of Transcendentalist. PART ONE IT IS an ancient Mariner, The Bridegroom's doors are opened wide, He holds him with his skinny hand, He holds him with his glittering eye-- The Wedding-Guest sat on a stone: Continue reading "Saturday Verse: The Rime of the Ancient Mariner" Friday, July 23. 2010Off And On Record With CBO Re: "Public Plan" AnalysisAdvocates of a “public option”, meaning a government medical plan, haven’t given up. There’s a highly debatable $27 billion assumption in the CBO estimate, relating to increased federal revenues from reduced employer spending on medical premiums. I phoned the CBO to clarify. Congressman Stark requested an analysis from the Congressional Budget Office. (Full pdf here.) The CBO estimate says,
Continue reading "Off And On Record With CBO Re: "Public Plan" Analysis" Life before PsychiatryPeople love to make fun of Psychiatry, but here's a sample of what life could be like in a world without us. Remember that Dr. Benjamin Rush, the founder of American Psychiatry, was a signer of the Declaration of Independence. He was vehemently opposed to the chaining of the mentally ill, and proposed treating them with compassion and understanding. He also opposed slavery. Image is Benjamin Rush, MD. Charles Wilson Peale, 1818.
Posted by Dr. Joy Bliss
in Medical, Psychology, and Dr. Bliss
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16:59
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On DC firing teachersRhee fires 226 teachers. This is only a big deal because public school teachers are so often unionized. Pre-teachers unions, they were professionals - meaning that their work was subject to their own conscience, honor, best reasonable effort, etc., - and the judgement of those paying the salary. Today, only private school teachers can be regarded as true professionals, even though I acknowledge the vast numbers of utterly dedicated public school teachers (including many who bemoan the industrialization of their chosen field). Why should teachers get tenure anyway? Nobody else does, not even pastors. As in the post below about medical insurance, teaching should be opened up. Throw out those worthless teaching degrees and let the marketplace decide. I'd bet there are plenty of retired guys who would love to teach math or literature or history, and could do a better job than kids just out of their education degrees. The best English teacher two of my kids had (in private school) was a retired Sports Illustrated writer and editor. He knew his way around choice of words and the construction of sentences, but the "idea" and the "image" were keys. Essay structure had to be perfect, Francis Bacon-style. And with grammar, he would have ripped my posts to shreds (but I "fly casual" at Maggie's, conversational English - and it is a relief for me to do so).
Posted by The Barrister
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15:09
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Innovation: Internet Vs ObamaCareAn expert’s review of “The Internet And The Organization Of Innovation” from the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) casts light on the Rasmussen poll that “75% Say Free Markets Better Than Government Management of Economy, Political Class Disagrees.” The Rasmussen survey, by contrast to the 75% of Likely Voters who say “more competition and less regulation is better for the economy“ finds “America’s Political Class is far less enamored with the virtues of a free market. In fact, Political Class voters [“the clique that revolves around Washington, DC, and Wall Street”] narrowly prefer a government managed economy over free markets by a 44% to 37% margin.” Professor Shane Greenstein, Northwestern’s Kellogg School of Management examines the origins and development of the Internet. From a synopsis provided by NBER, he “uses the example of the creation of the internet to analyze the strengths and weaknesses of two distinct ways of organizing a long-term program for accumulating innovation.”
In other words, government funding or direction of basic research or new programs may be useful and in some cases critical but further development of useful applications, adaptation, and wider spread acceptance and utility are best the province of free enterprise, or as Greenstein calls it "market-oriented and widely distributed investment and adoption." Instead, in most government programs, the initial laws enacted that seek to foster or enlarge reform or innovation are too often crafted with further government controls in mind or as ignored unintended consequences due to hidden agendas. Not unintended but usually hidden is the self-serving enrichment and enlarged sway of the political class. If initiatives have any validity, they are still often more dangerous than presented just by not being geared to a hand-off to the private sector to adjust and improve but to enlarge the power of the political class while – by the nature of government programs – hindering transparent review and adaptive innovation. Even in the case of the Internet, as complex and involved in most aspects of business and individual lives as healthcare, if left in the hands of the centralized “skunk works” we wouldn’t have seen the developments we enjoy today. In the case of other government programs, like ObamaCare as one of the worst instances, the clear objectives and consequences are nationalization of close to 20% of the economy and 100% of our lives, and even more stultifying – indeed deadly - to free market development of improved access, delivery and economics.
Posted by Bruce Kesler
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects, Our Essays
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13:37
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Useful idiot: A role to play
But what's notable about the clip doesn't have anything to do with Beck, but with one brief clause Olby spits out during his tirade. Scenario: You're an ardent liberal. Keith Olbermann is a god amongst men, perhaps the only man alive with the courage to tell it like it really is. You believe every word he says. Shall we run over that check list one more time?
Wait — WTF?? What did he say? But this is Keith Olbermann speaking, a god amongst men. You said so yourself. Ergo it must be true. The next time you hear some righty screaming for Olby's head, bear in mind the old expression useful idiots. Ol' Keith is doing a superb job.
Posted by Dr. Mercury
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects, Our Essays
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12:14
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A simple solution to raceFriday morning linksVia Surber:
Breitbart on Breitbart Examiner: Failure is success for Obama fans Onward Toward an Entitlement Society Quinnipiac Poll: Obama Would Lose to 'Unnamed Republican' Powerline: Get your hand out of my shower Liberal Tax Revolt - Some Democrats decide they prefer lower rates. Obama isn't one of them. Jerrold Nadler?!?!? How Diversity Punishes Asians, Poor Whites and Lots of Others Am Thinker: Of Course Obama's a Socialist Democrats pull plug on climate bill
Larry Elder: NAACP fights old fights, embraces liberal policies Forty-Seven States Have Lost Jobs Since Stimulus Farce
Posted by The News Junkie
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05:45
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Name this plantSaw many of these in bloom on Cape Cod, growing in sandy dry soil. Seems to be a succulent variant of some wildflower. (I do not know what they are, but I know they are not Joe Pye Weed.) Thursday, July 22. 2010For Dr. MercI do not know what they are saying or who these people are, but I kinda like the simple folky tune. Oh. I see. They are a Filipino reggae group. What a world. We love the Filipino people, for several good reasons.
The Balance A tropical island paradise. I honestly don't know if I could describe it any better than I did in Gift Ideas, in the section on Verizon Wireless:
Yep, this is heaven on earth. Make no mistake about it. Well, at least until you click on a link and see one of these barreling ass over teakettle your way:
Posted by Dr. Mercury
in The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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17:37
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BeachIt's hot. Wellfleet would be a good place to be today. In the cool water, floating like flotsam. Plymouth Rock is across the bay, below the horizon. It's a good-sized bay. For a random beach reading fact via Carpe:
The K-man on JournoListAt NRO:
"In The Land Of Mao, A Rising Tide Of Christianity"From the article:
Perhaps governments cannot really replace God - as much as they might like to. The MSM coordinated to take down Palin
Story at many sites, but this via Volokh
Greek Debt CrisisThursday morning linksEver hear of Bikini Ideology? Sounds like envy to me. What's next in space? Chesterton on the Three Stages of Conversion (h/t Anchoress) Oakland allows industrial-scale marijuana farms. Groovy, dude. As if CA didn't have enough stoners. Poll: Faith in Social Security system tanking Jobless Giving Up on Obama Economy Rasmussen: Paul up 8 in Kentucky Limbaugh responds to JournoList death wish report AL GORE SEX SCANDAL SHOCKER, POLICE INVESTIGATE TWO MORE! Me so horney. It’s come to this: Some California civil servants making close to $1 million per year. Also, Oakland’s well-paid police. It's simple plunder of the hapless taxpayers. Harsanyi: Obama's Faith in Government Force:
Cuba release 'could lead to US lifting embargo' Jules: Arizona On The Charles Rick Moran has no friends, wants no friends. One blogger's personal profile:
And Washington Reb talks about his view of the world:
Inconvenient satellite data disappears Am Thinker: America's Fast Track to the Third World Ace: More Leaked JournoList Emails. Related: Also related: It Begins: Journolistas Start Preemptive Confessions Also, I like this one via Powerline:
Posted by The News Junkie
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06:00
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Wednesday, July 21. 2010AmericanaAs an antidote, I assume, to political insanity (like my shirt and duck hunting posts were today) Buddy emails this timely post: Oscar Greeley Hammerstein's birthday was a few days ago. The New Yorker wrote nearly 1000 songs in his career. In the "Rogers & Hammerstein" partnership enterprise, he wrote the lyrics while Richard Rogers wrote the melody. OH's parents were immigrants - father a German Jew, mother a - Scots-English (the son was raised Episcopalian). The father is credited with inventing the 'pie in the face' vaudeville routine. Oscar pronounced his name not as 'hammer-styne' but in the German 'ohmer-schteen'. He spanned the time of America's great rise, born in Belle-Epoch 1895, and left this earth in in the JFK era, as we began to go the moon, in 1960. Only in America. And this clip from the eponymous 1955 film of the wartime Broadway hit (it opened in bloody and depressing 1943, when the Axis was yet rampant, and won a Special Pulitzer in the dark year 1944) depicts a time from the turn of the 19th to 20th century. So we get a layered helping of entertainment here - the great talent and performance, but also three looks at America, all roughly a half-century apart per each. Here is the wiki about the production. Wiki doesn't (but should) mention that the familiar hollywood supporting actors are by-and-large not professional singers. The effect of the common (AKA "not all that technically good") voice seems to "break the fourth wall" and charm the audience plumb silly. Of course the leads, Gordon MacRae and Shirley Jones, are sher-nuff professional singers (Jones makes her debut here, but still you have to call that voice 'professional').
Posted by Bird Dog
in Our Essays, The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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18:46
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Non-iron shirtsFor generations (since 1818), those who need to look well put-together but not Wall Street glam have relied on Brooks Brothers for their basics. I kinda like the feel of a rumpled normal cotton Brooks shirt, but Mrs. BD and Mrs. Gwynnie recently chatted about how much they can save in dry cleaner bills with the Brooks Non-Iron shirts, which can be washed in the washer and refuse to reach that rumpled look. The slim-fits and traditional fits (many of them) are half-off right now. I ask "Why do we always have to spend money to save money?"
Posted by Bird Dog
in Our Essays, The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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17:51
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