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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Friday, August 27. 2010Hot damn
Pinetop Perkins, and Honeyboy Williams. It's good to know that some Brits appreciate such wonderful, old-timey American characters.
I Just Disinherited My Alma MaterI just updated my will and trust and, with heavy heart, cut out what was a significant bequest to my alma mater, Brooklyn College. What caused the disinheritance is that all incoming freshmen and transfer students are given a copy of a book to read, and no other, to create their “common experience.” This same book is one of the readings in their required English course. The author is a radical pro-Palestinian professor there. When I attended in the 1960s, Brooklyn College – then rated one of the tops in the country -- was, like most campuses, quite liberal. But, there was no official policy to inculcate students with a political viewpoint. Now there is. That is unacceptable. Continue reading "I Just Disinherited My Alma Mater"
Posted by Bruce Kesler
in Education, Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects, Our Essays
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15:31
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A Vietnam doc with PTSD"The war inside." Interesting story, from a combat doc. Not all people are natural warriors. Few, really, unless their own home or family is threatened. I have known some military docs. Some were warriors, most were not. Quite a few Vietnam vets ended up in medical school. There was an ex-company commander in my class. Tough SOB. Went into Psychiatry like me. Real science comes to the defense of menIt's about time the scientists admitted it: Ogling beautiful women a natural reflex for men. Fellows just can't help it.
Posted by Bird Dog
in The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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13:24
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More bad newsEconomic picture to get bleaker. It looks like a good economy for the repo-men. O supporter Zuckerman says The Most Fiscally Irresponsible Government in U.S. History. QQQFriday morning linksWhen govt tries to go into business: Burlington Telecom Statisticians take on warmists Not tonight dear, we're married Rove: Honey, I Shrunk My Approval Ratings To be "intellectual" today requires knowledge of science and technology. Krauthammer: The last refuge of a liberal:
From Belmont:
Is Michelle O pregnant?
More evidence that Head Start does nothing "The government is pushing these food poisoning events because they want to over-regulate." Lowry: How the Democrats lost the middle:
Thursday, August 26. 2010Some of my random snaps of ViennaYou get off the plane from NYC, dump your stuff off at the boat, then hop on the subway and get off at Stephansplatz. Suddenly, you are in a new world, like not Kansas anymore. Even for folks like us who have travelled quite a bit, it was awesome to climb up the subway stairs and to be greeted with this. With a dose of jetlag, it feels hallucinatory: More snaps below the fold - Continue reading "Some of my random snaps of Vienna"
Posted by Bird Dog
in Our Essays, The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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19:19
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Snare drums from MassachusettsVia Jungle Trader, a 155-Year-Old Drum Company Marches On. The snare drum is basically a military instrument, with an interesting history. Ottoman armies used these drums to communicate orders.
Posted by Bird Dog
in The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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15:10
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Turkey updateFor those who, like me, love that country. Wall St. QQQ"You have to act like an MD before you can become an MD." Anon. ("MD" being Managing Director, but you could also insert "Partner" in the same sentence.) Talking about Social SecurityFrom Viking's post (I agree):
Yes, it is crazy. Retirement should be by economic choice, or for the disabled. It is crazy for the young to subsidize the golf of the grey folks like me who have more wisdom and experience to contribute to the workplace than the dopey kids. Nothing against golf, mind you. Nothing against sitting on the beach reading and smoking, either. There is a time for every purpose under heaven.
Posted by The Barrister
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects, Our Essays
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09:59
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Thursday morning linksHome ownership vs. renting. Coyote.
A Physics major, no doubt. Via SDA:
Serbian cuisine, the envy of the world. Chow down, Feminazis. When is a speech code not a speech code? When it’s a “code of ethics.” Obamacare: Dems’ Fatal Conceit? Mankiw on Nantucket house prices. Did this study make his summer vacation tax-deductible? Ebay, Adobe, EA Games Leaving California For Utah Over Confiscatory Tax Rate Only in New York: Taxing a Cut … of your morning bagel. Just put the shmear on top of my uncut bagel. Why Nerds Like Games. Games are stories. New Republic: Moderate Muslims Are Not the Answer ACORN flies under the radar This is dumb: E-Cigarettes Spark New Smoking War. This is the safest smoke that exists. What's the big deal? Nicotine is harmless. Fake tea party candidates Taxes: The Left and its delusions The Professional Left vs. the Amateur Right Via Insty:
Author of Obamacare did not read it. If it's too long and complicated to read, then... Michelle: Obama’s Beltway Chainsaw Massacre Wednesday, August 25. 2010Just one of the reasons to enjoy Vienna: BreughelYou go to the home of Strauss, Beethoven, Mozart, and Haydn, and so you naturally want to hear some of their music there. That was good. However, what was most mind-boggling for me (and my son) was the Breughel collection at the Kunst Historische Museum: It was a long, jet-lagged and befuddled but scenic trek to get there on our first day after a sleepless plane ride, but our Breughel mission was worth it to get close to those pictures. They have a third of the existing Breughels. They are quite large paintings with many small details, and no reproductions can do them justice. Some are oil on board, and some are tempera. You have to go and see with your own eyes. They have comfy leather sofas to sit on, too. Pictures tell stories. If they don't, they are just "design." That's my opinion, anyway. People sure do love stories, especially when well-designed. I do not mean to disparage design: Picasso was a master of design. Matisse too, and the genius cave painters of Lascaux. Hunters in the Snow (1565), his haunting hunting masterpiece: Peasant Wedding, another masterpiece: A good summary of Breughel's career here. It's interesting to me that the wealthy churchmen and princes of Austria found this Flemish painter's work so collectible. I guess they just had good taste in art. Against the mosqueNo photo dump today! Just a question about why so many cripples in Europe, and other topicsInstead, some more thoughts collected from our trip. A Part 2 of my Guten Morgen post. - Next time I travel with a group of family or friends, I will bring my 5-mile walkie-talkies that I use for hunting trips. A great way to call in and say "Want to meet for lunch?', since each subgroup seems to go off in their own direction. - I forgot to mention how immaculate the bathrooms are. And, unlike NYC, you can just walk into any cafe and use theirs. They don't mind. - I was amazed by how many people are crippled, hobbling around on crutches or in wheelchairs. Young and old. It made it clear to me how socialized medicine saves money on orthopedic procedures. In Regensburg I saw a pregnant young lady with, I think, moderate scoliosis, wobbling around town on two crutches, carrying a bag of groceries. That would never happen in America, even if poor. HSS would fix her up overnight - and thank her for the privilege. - The vast majority of Austrians, and Bavarians too, are Roman Catholic. They go to church. Some Lutherans in Bavaria, and some Evangelical Lutherans too. Their old churches are still alive - not museums. - If Freud had not been a Jew, he would never have come up with Psychoanalytic theory. Despite being a prominent young Neurologist and researcher/scholar, a Jew could not be appointed Professor in Vienna. The Gentile docs just referred him the wacky patients they did not want to bother with, so he decided to try to listen to them and to try to make sense of what ailed them. Had he not been a Jew, he would have been a wealthy Herr Professor of Neurology. Necessity is the mother of invention. - Riverboat cruising has become a big deal over the past ten years. It's really a new form of vacation travel. I like it. I love ships and boats in general. No moving from hotel to train to hotel to car, and you always have guides right there when you want them. Our boat cruised back and forth between Budapest and Amsterdam, but most people just did legs of the trip (as we did). The boat had plenty of bikes to use, too. Just sign up for them. - Wiener Schnitzel: I still don't get what is supposed to be so good about this cardboard-like food. Why do people eat it? - Kesler reminded me of a thought I had had, regarding our deep Germanic cultural roots. (By "our" I mean especially Brit, Swiss, American, Aussie, Canadian, Dutch, etc.) Even our language is Germanic, not to mention our meat-and-potato diet. German is the easiest language for English-speakers to learn, and these folks live, act, and work like Americans. Quite a cultural contrast with Italians, French, and Spanish. - One of the things that makes German and Austrian beers so good, over there in the biergartens, is that they are fresh, usually unpasteurized, and often unfiltered. Makes a big difference. Our big brand American beers really are not very tasty - but you knew that. Is Coors Lite or Bud Lite the best-selling "beer" in the US? - Did we shop and buy stuff? Darn little. Mrs. BD bought a bracelet in Regensburg for 14 Euros. My daughter bought a cheese serving plate. I bought two sets of beer glasses from pubs, and a couple of beer mugs from a biergarten, all for 2-3 Euros each. Oh, also bought an umbrella at Schonbrunn when it started raining, but we left it behind somewhere after two days. Photos and experiences are what I like to bring home. - Random factoid: The remarkable Marcus Aurelius died in Vindobona (now Wien - Vienna) while touring the edges of the empire. He was always at war with the Germans, but Roman civilization never extended much north of the barrier of the Danube. Photo: Passau again, from the Oberhaus. I especially enjoyed Passau and Regensburg. Note the rotting mess of a 1960s-era, now-abandoned cafe up there on the left, while the c. 900 castle and fortifications stand strong and proud. Note also, from a high vantage point, how clear the demarcation is between town and country. No sprawl. That's their land use laws at work. The bad news
Economy Caught in Depression, Not Recession. Government-created, in my view. We need a Reagan recovery, not an Obama economic swamp.
George Weiss mini-tribute
And I had this gem on my own site:
Weds. morning linksGeorge Weiss died. Who? Does McMahon have a chance against Blumenthal?
Does Bielat have a chance against Barney Frank? Via Dino: Bill Ayers: “I wrote Dreams From My Father” Warmists continue to refuse to debate the science Stossel: Why businesses aren't hiring Reb: Rogue President Credit card debt drops to lowest level in 8 years A Voegli video: America's Limitless Welfare State
Adios, Jules. We'll miss ya. Tea GardenOur pal Nathan emails this cell phone pic from the Hagiwara Tea Garden, San Francisco. He gets around.
Posted by Bird Dog
in The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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05:06
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Tuesday, August 24. 2010CivitaA friend returned this week from 14 days in Umbria and then Florence. This family is a high-energy biking group, and the first thing they do when they go anywhere is to rent bikes. They go everywhere on their bikes regardless of terrain or traffic. 20 miles of hills is a warm-up for them. They told me about biking to Civita di Bagnoregio. Biked over the bridge, of course. I had not heard of this interesting, deteriorating wreck of a place. An image which sticks in the brain, because all of mankind's works come to this except some things that are put into words or math or musical notes.
Posted by Bird Dog
in Our Essays, The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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19:23
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It's a problem
Ain't that the truth? A second, bigger photo dump of Austria and Bavaria, including Freud's pottyMore disorganized snaps from our trip. This is steaming through the green Wachau Valley in early morning fog and drizzle. More pics below the fold - Continue reading "A second, bigger photo dump of Austria and Bavaria, including Freud's potty" Building PermitVia Patriot Post Humor:
Congratulations, RepubsFrom the CT Post:
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