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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Monday, October 11. 2010T-shirtsThese pics came in over the transom, but I guess they originally came via Funpics.
A few more, marginally NSFW, below the fold. Continue reading "T-shirts"
Posted by Gwynnie
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12:00
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In Home Depot, Saturday morningBielat's campaign goes national
Does he have a chance? It's time for Barney to retire.
Posted by The News Junkie
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08:29
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Monday morning linksThe sinister Chamber of Commerce NYT: Arizona welcomes immigrants Kent State: Another listen. What if there was an agent provocateur? Chilling in Texas: Democrats & Computer Models Claim Texas Is Warming: Real Data Has Texas Cooling Last 15 Years, -2.7°F/Century Trend. h/t, Willisms Betsy: Gee, has Rory talked to his dad about what's wrong with ObamaCare? GOP threatens Dem seats thought safe US physics professor: 'Global warming is the greatest and most successful pseudoscientific fraud I have seen in my long life'. A quote from his letter:
VDH: On looking bad Black Republicans offer hope after Barack Obama's failures on race I'm Mr. Blandings. Me, too. Drowning in Law: A flood of statutes, rules and regulations is killing the American spirit Via Lucianne, How Obama is invading your home:
Powerline on Che: Remembering a Sociopathic Mass Murderer Sunday, October 10. 2010ChopinSomebody at NRO said they couldn't stop listening to this. A Chopin earwig. Listen to it two or three times, and see if it does the same to your ears. He zooms around his simple theme like a whirling dervish. How can someone this young have so much heart? Winter SquashButternut squash or Acorn Squash, halved lengthwise and a wide shallow groove cut out of the meat, with butter, maple syrup, salt and pepper. Brown sugar would substitute for maple syrup. Good simple Yankee food. I think the Indians ate the same thing - without the butter. I would happily eat all of these. If one is not being proper, a spoon works well.
"Barack Obama is the best thing that has happened to America in the last 100 years."From the Redneck Tree-Hugger: "Barack Obama has awakened a sleeping nation." This is a Maggie's sort of fellow. h/t, reader. MontanaThe newest addition to our family just got back from a business trip to Montana. She emailed these pics. Can anybody identify the area? More pics below the fold - Continue reading "Montana" Two links about William Carlos WilliamsA book, Robert Coles' House Calls with Dr. Williams A poem, Kenneth Koch's Variations on a Theme by William Carlos Williams
Posted by Bird Dog
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06:34
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From today's Lectionary, "Your faith has made you well."Luke 17:11-19 17:11 On the way to Jerusalem Jesus was going through the region between Samaria and Galilee. Good dogSaturday, October 9. 2010MoynihanA review of a new book of his letters. One quote:
I love that humility from a politician. Readers know that I do not view poltics as a career: I like to view it as a temporary public service for care of country. However, I do understand that these people want jobs with good benefits. Who doesn't enjoy freebies with a job without heavy lifting? Condescending, arrogant, lying jerk Blumenthal deserves to lose in CTHe's rich and plays in politics because his father-in-law owns the Empire State Building, and presumably supports his life style. Video at Ace. What a weenie putz. Linda has created jobs, built a large business, and knows how the world works. You don't approve of wrestling entertainment? Then what job-creating, profitable biz could any candidate have been in that you would approve of? How different is wrestling from MSM news? We need more entrepreneurs in government, and fewer professional politicians who know nothing except government. Government is a parasite. Blumenthal has been on the government teat all of his life - and I assume, the teat of his in-laws. It's all ego for him because he has never done anything real in his life. Send this smarmy, slippery, phony jerk back to his poolside in Greenwich. He'll be just fine, like his dear buddy Spitzer (they are called "the twins") in New York who I think also lives off family real estate in NYC when he isn't busy with hookers.
Posted by The Barrister
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14:13
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An end of summer post: Some cool and popular one-design sailboatsFor true Yankees, being able to sail is a basic outdoor life skill, along with riding a horse, tennis, swimming, ice-skating, log-splitting, starting a fire, dog-training, and shooting. Every region of the country, and the world, has its basics, doesn't it? One-design racing boats. Sailing season is winding down in the Northeast US, but for no good reason I thought it time to review a few cool boats. If you have never raced, you have no idea how complicated and tricky this game is - or how athletic it can be. Talent, knowledge, experience, and skill win consistently. The Star (or International Star, or "Starboat"). This 22' 2-man keelboat was designed in 1910. No spinnaker: whisker pole for the jib downwind. It remains an Olympic Class and a favorite of serious racers. Plenty of professional big boat racers would be happier racing a Star, but there's not much money in it unless you are a sail salesman on the side. Not much fun for a day sail. A new Star goes for around $50-60,000; used $16-35,000, depending on equipment, quality, and age. Another popular racing class, and also an Olympic class. The Etchells, designed in 1965 by Connecticut's Skip Etchells. A 30' 3-4-man keelboat. You can buy a used Etchells for $15-30,000. There is almost no reason to ever buy a new fiberglass sailboat. A new suit of sails and fancy rigging can cost almost the price of the used boat, however. The good old Lightning. I could race one of these, blindfolded. A light hand on the tiller telegraphs even subtle wind shifts. The class is nowhere near as large as it once was, but is still one of the largest one-design classes. A 19' three-man racer with a centerboard, the Lightning also doubles as an enjoyable day-sailer. Over 300,000 Sunfish have been built since the 1950s. Ancient lateen rig. No sailboat is more fun for two people, preferably you at age 18 and a girl in a loose bikini. People do race them - one man - for fun and for serious. We used to think it was amusing to capsize a Sunfish and listen to the girl squeal when her boobs fell out of her top, but the best was when my buddy and I would go out right after a hurricane and surf the 10-15'-foot waves on a Sunfish. (How, and why, did we survive? Our parents never knew we were out there, no life jackets, etc. My Mom would have killed me. She was a serious sailor, though, in youth.) We learned a lot about boat-handling in the process. My final boat du Jour, the 33' J-105. Quite popular these days, as a racer and a day-sailer or cruising sailboat. Not much overhead in the cabin, however, and it's a handful for amateurs in a stiff breeze. Over 700 of them have been built. Fast boat. A pal of mine just bought a new one (around $250,000), and promised me we would sail her before he puts her away for the winter. He is getting new carbon fiber sails made. I'd like to take her for a spin in a 25 knot breeze. We'll see whether he calls me...
Posted by Bird Dog
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10:49
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A reader likes these gloves for shootingSaturday morning links
Union pushes for Obamacare, then is granted waiver Socialism for thee but not for me Rasmussen: Tea Party Participation Up As Election Nears
Good grief. This sounds like The Producers. On the dole in the UK EPA to drain $1 trillion from economy The Google Bomb. Democracy at its finest? Saturday Verse: William Carlos Williams (1883-1963)Overture to a Dance of Locomotives Men with picked voices chant the names
of cities in a huge gallery: promises that pull through descending stairways to a deep rumbling. The rubbing feet of those coming to be carried quicken a grey pavement into soft light that rocks to and fro, under the domed ceiling, across and across from pale earthcolored walls of bare limestone. Covertly the hands of a great clock go round and round! Were they to move quickly and at once the whole secret would be out and the shuffling of all ants be done forever. A leaning pyramid of sunlight, narrowing out at a high window, moves by the clock: disaccordant hands straining out from a center: inevitable postures infinitely repeated— two—twofour—twoeight! Porters in red hats run on narrow platforms. This way ma'am! —important not to take the wrong train! Lights from the concrete ceiling hang crooked but— Poised horizontal on glittering parallels the dingy cylinders packed with a warm glow—inviting entry— pull against the hour. But brakes can hold a fixed posture till— The whistle! Not twoeight. Not twofour. Two! Gliding windows. Colored cooks sweating in a small kitchen. Taillights— In time: twofour! In time: twoeight! —rivers are tunneled: trestles cross oozy swampland: wheels repeating the same gesture remain relatively stationary: rails forever parallel return on themselves infinitely. Friday, October 8. 2010My Sweet 16Mitch is repairing my favorite 16 gauge, a boxlock manufactured nearly 100 years ago by John Blanch in London and bought in marginal shape (read "affordable") in the Hamburg, PA Cabela's store. In answer to Bird Dog's 28 ga. question, just as a 28 ga. throws a better pattern than a 20 ga., so also does a 16 ga. throw a better pattern than a 12 ga. It was not for nothing that they were called "Sweet 16s". The Sweet 16 in the picture weighs 5-1/8 pounds, and so can be carried comfortably by Yrs. Truly (an ol' guy) until the Lab has retrieved a limit!
Posted by Gwynnie
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13:03
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Words like bullets, with Striper SushiWhose violent words? Not the Tea Party. Not Conservatives (via Gateway).
I have yet to hear anything close to this inciting from the evil Tea Partiers. This Tea Party sympathiser is planning to do some Right Wing violence this weekend though: I am going fishing, up around Montauk. Blood sport, and the freshest Striper sushi. Slice of cucumber, piece of watercress, slice of wiggling Striper right out of the water, a generous slice of pickled ginger, and some wasabi. Maybe the slightest dip in the Teriyaki, and a few Coronas with lime. We'll be well-fed when we come back to the dock, and will have one filet to grill for supper plus a couple of Bluefish filets. We never keep more than one Striper. That is, of course, if we are lucky to get into fish this weekend. Otherwise, it's the fish market. This is our final boating of the year.
Posted by The News Junkie
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09:54
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Friday morning linksRejection is good for personal growth and humility. Sullivan: There was no housing bubble. One quote:
Surber: An epidemic of epidemics Each one requiring a government program. Jay Cost: The Latest Sign of the Dem-Pocalypse Life in the sticks: More on the South Fulton FD Brouhaha A culture of lying in the Middle East. It's multicultural to understand that not all people share our values. Truth is far from a universal value, even in the West. Freedom of speech on trial in the Netherlands Higher-Ed-Bubble Update: Pansexuality Edition WSJ: ObamaCare and the Election - The GOP needs to raise the health-care stakes in 2010, and beyond Sowell: Red Herring Politics: Part II Postcards from Vermont I don't get why VT politics are so different from NH. Via Neo's Left and right, Britain and here:
The Battle for America 2010: Labor Unions Looking to Rescue Feingold in Wisconsin Poll: Sarah Palin Favorable Rating Just 22 Percent. The media's Newt Treatment worked on Sarah, but it almost always works on anybody who is targeted. I think she should have run for the Senate.
This did not have to happen. Low tideWellfleet Harbor, during our visit to Wellfleet on Cape Cod with Bird Dog & Co in September.
Posted by Gwynnie
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05:04
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Thursday, October 7. 2010Anything You Do, Or Don’t Decide to Do, Can Be Regulated!Today’s federal district court decision on a challenge to ObamaCare’s mandated purchase of medical insurance seeks to so expand federal powers as to override all personal decisions about almost anything. The Commerce Clause in the US Constitution has been expansively interpreted to allow the federal government to classify almost anything as an “economic activity” affecting interstate commerce. There are some guideposts laid out by the Supreme Court, basically that the regulation of economic activity be necessary to implement the regulatory purpose and that it be proper, not invading constitutional state sovereignty. A federal district judge in Michigan today decided to further expand the federal government’s regulatory authority to “economic decisions.” In the case at hand, the judge says that the ObamaCare mandate to buy insurance is legit as the decision to not buy insurance may affect others who do by possibly shifting costs to the latter. So, even if aspirin will do the job, instead of a visit to the doctor, you are shifting costs to an insurance buyer. At law blog Volokh Conspiracy, Randy Barnett points out:
Ilya Somin adds:
Posted by Bruce Kesler
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19:28
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Words that lose their magicOur post a while ago about Claire's Knee had me thinking about enchantment. You may recall that the Rohmer movie was about a gentleman who became enchanted, bewitched, charmed, by a teenage girl. Nowadays, in our pathologizing way, we might say "obsessed" instead, even though it is an entirely natural thing for men to be bewitched by women (and, until very recent history, entirely normal for young teens to marry). It doesn't necesarily take much to have this effect: a knee, the way she holds a teacup, a dimple, a sexy imperfection, the delicate way her fingers touch your hand during conversation, or the way she says "Thank you." Feminine graces do have a magic to them. Men, piggish oafs that these adorable creations are, generally lack the magical effect on women... unless they are sociopathic or narcissistic. We now say "What a charming person" without necessarily meaning too much. Perhaps just meaning that they are pleasant, use the right fork, and do not say the f word at dinner. However, the etymologies of the word charm, like enchanted (and certainly like bewitched) have powerful origins in notions of magic spells and of being captured or controlled by something. (And, interestingly, in singing. Music can be an enchantment, can't it?). The things that these words describe have remarkable powers for good, and for destruction. Like drugs. Editor's addendum: Some may recall that the three bat brothers in Pogo were named Bewitched, Bothered, and Bemildred. Always cracked me up, because my Godmother was named Mildred. She was from Tallahassee, dramatic in her graciousness and warmth, and always wore big, high-fashion hats. Would not go out without a hat. An enchanting lady who held my Godfather in her spell until he died.
How to slash the stateAt Reason, 14 ways to dismantle a monstrous government, one program at a time. Don't hold your breath. Nice kittyPic via Synthstuff:
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