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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Sunday, February 13. 2011Equal Opportunity ValentineCommon sparrows at my winter bird feederDiligent students of Maggie's Farm have had the chance, over the years, to become familiar with many of the common birds of North America - or at least of the Eastern US. The common winter sparrows around my parts (not including Junco, which is a sparrow): In winter at my feeder, I mainly see Song Sparrow
In some winters, we get a surge of Fox Sparrows, but not this year. This year, though, I have seen more Tree Sparrows than ever (that's the American Tree Sparrow, not the Eurasian): The Chipping Sparrow is common here in the summer, but migrates south. I rarely see a Field Sparrow anymore these days. No idea why. Never see White Crowned Sparrow at my feeder either. This is the common urban pest, once called the English Sparrow (they were a nasty import from Old Blighty):
Posted by Bird Dog
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Sunday morning linksThis is silly: Does Liking Rap Music Make You Stupid? Wow — Government Overreach of the Week Guess I'd better sell my pied a terre before they catch me. More Mitch. "The charisma of competence." Megan: Doing Business In Iraq Betsy: Why unions can't get "More" More shrubberies! "More" is their job, for heaven's sake - even if it's "more" from their neighbor. Powerline: Scientists Set the Alarmists Straight Is Al Gore wrong on the environment? IPCC says global warming is NOT to blame for snow Al is confused about the "science." But that is not news. He is not a scientist: he is a Vandy divinity school drop-out. Boudreaux wonders about this: Peggy Yen insists that “people need simple guidelines for choosing the food they eat” It's a wonder we can feed ourselves, or even survive, without that wise government advice. High-speed rail: Obama's gift that nobody wants Tough preaching from today's Lectionary: If your eye causes you to sin, tear it out...Matthew 5:21-37
Saturday, February 12. 2011More Snow GeeseA large flock in a Vermont field, taken by Vermont Woodchuck (now of American Moxie) To understand America...
You need to understand the meaning of the Gettysburg Address: Vanderleun
Saturday morning linksA review of MISTRESSES - A history of the other woman Legal Ins on race: Why Don't We Just Stop Counting? Treasury plan would end Fannie, Freddie Wkly Std: States in Trouble: Bankruptcy, Bailout or Default? Is there a real honey bee crisis? CliffsNotes for CliffsNotes? Yeah, Pretty Much. Saturday Verse: Petrarch (1304-1374) on loveO you, who hear in scattered verse the sound
Sonnet written by Francesco Petrarca for Laura, of course. Who else? This devout Renaissance poet drew inspiration from Dante, but maybe never escaped his shadow. Said he, in his Letter to Posterity (everybody should write a ltter to posterity): "In my youth I was blessed with an agile, active body, though not particularly strong; and while I cannot boast of being very handsome, I was good-looking enough in my younger days. I had a clear complexion, between light and dark, lively eyes, and for many years sharp vision, which, however, unexpectedly deserted me when I passed my sixtieth birthday, and forced me, reluctantly, to resort to the use of glasses. Although I had always been perfectly healthy, old age assailed me with its usual array of discomforts." Friday, February 11. 2011Guest post from Rug RagAn interesting perspective on internet marketing from our respectable oriental rug consultant/expert friend at Rug Rag, who is clearly frustrated by the Google system in which, as I understand it, one can buy one's position on searches. Commerce is a tough game: Sniper sites show up in the top 10 search results for "Oriental Rugs." A 100% commission-based single page facade website literally has every site link directing traffic straight to an affiliate Canada-based dealer which cannot sell most of their Persian rugs to the States unless they happen to be warehoused in NY. We want to keep the junk Persian rugs off peoples' floors, but we don't rank high enough to be seen before people make purchase decisions.
Posted by Bird Dog
in Our Essays, The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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17:56
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The beginning of the end of Wall StreetCapital collection, distribution, and creation is a global industry now, and it doesn't really require buildings in New York anymore. Bad for New York City in the long run, but it's great for the world. Capital is the world's most important commodity and even the most powerful governments must now bow at the altar of free market capital. Wall Street is now a global, virtual, electronic street which is now, in many ways, run by computers. Decline and Fall, at NYM. IBM's new machine plays Jeopardy
Story at Watts
Posted by The Barrister
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14:13
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QQQ, some Shakespeare notes, and other misc. notesI wasted time, and now doth time waste me. WS, Richard II I wasn't able to join Mrs. BD and friends to hear the great Yale and NYU Prof Harold Bloom talk about Shakespeare Monday night at the Classic Stage Company (a theater company she loves and supports) just off Union Square. She reported a few random things Bloom said, paraphrased: "Lear is Shakespeare's greatest work. I don't know how a human could have written it." "I am not a Shakespeare scholar. I give no credence to any Shakespeare scholar." "Shakespeare used a 22,000 word vocabulary in his writing. No other writer has ever come close to that. And he probably invented 1000 words, many of them now part of ordinary English." "He wrote Othello, Macbeth, and Lear within 14 months. How could that be done?" "He may have died of Syphilis." Mrs. and Co. had supper at the Blue Water Grill. With the Union Square Cafe, The Gotham Bar and Grill, the Blue Water Grill, and Toqueville (which my daughter loves), Union Square has come a long way since I sort-of lived on University Place. Back then, the cops would stop by to pull dead guys out of the bushes in the morning. ODs, mostly. Now it has a dog park and an open air bar with live music, and I guess most of the old addicts and drunks are dead. Antique fear-mongeringOver the transom:
I apologize, I neglected to mention that this report was from November 2, 1922. As reported by the AP and published in The Washington Post……… 88 years ago! Friday morning linksFewer Want Spending to Grow, But Most Cuts Remain Unpopular Related, from Robinson: Republicans persistently underestimate the political costs of taking on the welfare state. Hannan: Banks are ordered to make more easy money available. Isn't that what caused the crash in the first place? Charles Tells EU To Listen To The Grass Coyote: Race Tests in America Jammie: Good News: Muslims Students in UK Celebrate Diversity, Learn Fine Art of Amputation and Jew Hatred Dino: High-speed rail and the Maginot Line Surber: Why fund Planned Parenthood? While you were watching Egypt, the rest of the world wasn't sitting still. Now Sarkozy: Multiculturalism has failed, says French president CrabapplesThursday, February 10. 2011Maggie's FarmStratblogMead has a blog for his college course:
Looks like good fun. He begins with Sun Tzu.
Posted by The Barrister
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15:03
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Stuck in time
Yep, if it weren't for the goofy stuff coming out of those third-world countries, we wouldn't have anything to laugh about at all. And look, here we go again! Headless Ghost Forces Theme Park to Move Ride Pretty amazing, eh? A huge theme park has to relocate a ride because of a... ghost?
Wouldn't you just love to know what an Ouija reaction result is? The person holding the board hiccuped and the pointer moved? And I like the term "extra" paranormal activity — as referred to the normal amount of paranormal activity found at construction sites. Oh, and the name of this backwater third-world country caving to medieval superstition? Well, just click on the link and find out for yourself. I'd hate to spoil the fun.
Posted by Dr. Mercury
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12:38
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Goose du Jour: The Snow Goose (plus hunting and cooking )A seasonal re-post - Interesting bird, the Snow Goose. For one thing, it comes in a blue There is almost no real limit on these birds, and it is now legal to use electronic calls to try to bring them into your field decoy spread during the spring Snow Goose season in the midwest. However, as it turns out, hunting makes no dent in their numbers. When a flock of 100 or 1000 of them descend over your blind into your field decoys on a frigid dawn, it's one hell of an adrenaline rush and one hell of a shooting experience. A literal "blast," and you cannot reload your auto fast enough to keep up with the action of these determined birds who can, at times, seem quite undeterred by the sound of shotgun fire. They go down very easily, compared to Canadas which can sometimes coast or flap for a quarter mile with a fatal wound, which gives a retriever - or a fellow - a good work out. We say "They go down like a prom dress." Our Brit cousins would love this shooting - they have, alas, nothing comparable for fun. Neither prom dresses nor Snow Geese. Our good pal Mr. Free Market would have the time of his life. When 5000 of them decide to chose the seemingly identical barley field adjacent to the one you happen to be in for brainless goose reasons, it is a deeply frustrating experience and there is not a damn thing you can do about it. A northern Canadian nester, this medium-sized honker is highly migratory across the US, especially in the Central Flyway. It is not unusual, these days, to see them flying over Vermont ski slopes in winter, or on Long Island potato fields. The causes of the potentially self-destructive population boom are unclear, but may have to do with changes in the agricultural lands on which they winter. I wish I had a decent digital image of the size of the flocks of these birds, capable of truly blocking out the sun, but my best shots are from my pre-digital era, a few years ago. Beautiful, and awe-inspiring but, according to the biologists, a big problem too. They could be wrong; it might just be a natural boom and bust cycle like the housing market. Being game birds, a word is always in order on cooking, since you must eat what you kill. These geese do not hold a candle to the delectable Canada Goose. The tough breast is best stewed, or crock-potted, and can be quite fine in a cassoulet. But anything is good in a cassoulet on a cold snowy, blowy winter evening, with crunchy garlic toast and a few bottles of Cote Roti and a mountain of powerful stinky French cheeses on the side. More about Snow Goose at CLO, whence the photo, here. Our old post on Cassoulet is lost for the moment. Good hearty peasant food, best made with game sausage and game meat of any sort. We once made one with venison sausage, wild boar, and Snow Goose breast. Thursday morning linksDylan to share Grammy stage with Mumford, Avett Brothers Does an academic dare come out of the (political) closet? They shouldn't hide their real identities. But if they are all weenies, they could always play the victim card and scream "McCarthyism." Am Thinker: Why Can't My Health Insurance Be Like My Car Insurance? The Weather Isn't Getting Weirder - The latest research belies the idea that storms are getting more extreme. It's just getting reported more hysterically. Weather sells soap. Homeowners face 'new normal' in housing bust If you bought before the bubble, you're doing just fine. Nationally, housing prices are now pretty much back to the historic trend line - thanks to a full inventory. Malanga: Rhode Island: A Fiscal Mess Few Care About Between chronic Dem control, unions, the Mob, and corruption, rational Rhode Island governance seems like a lost cause Four Reasons Why Big Government Is Bad Government (h/t Linkiest) 42nd Street
Posted by Bird Dog
in The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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Wednesday, February 9. 2011Academic Negligence Masquerades As Academic Freedom At Brooklyn CollegeJust when I thought it couldn’t get more inane, Brooklyn College is exposed for gross negligence in its hiring and supervision of a self-professed pro-Palestinian activist – a grad student himself -- to teach the Politics of the Middle East to other grad students. As a reporter cites, Kristofer Petersen “makes no secret of his aggressively pro-Palestinian, anti-Zionist views.” The report, titled “Drawing Lessons From The Brooklyn College Uproar,” by quoting those directly involved in the hire, makes it evident from the horses' mouths that this hire is a horse’s ass, irresponsible, ignorant and unprofessional. Although Petersen says of several dozen demonstrators who turned out to support him “he was disappointed that some of his defenders turned their speeches into diatribes against Israel,” Petersen nonetheless addressed them rather than leave. A Commenter to the report lists the virulent hate groups Petersen attracts. Petersen says he modeled his heavily slanted syllabus on that of a professor of Mideast studies at CUNY’s Graduate Center, who recommended Petersen for the position. That professor, however, told the reporter, “the Israeli-Palestinian portion of his former student’s syllabus is different from his own and that Petersen-Overton includes some scholars he would never use in his own class.” He cites Edward Said, “not a Mideast scholar…much more political advocacy than scholarship”; Noam Chomsky, “a linguist, not an expert on the Mideast”; Ilan Pappe “sees himself as an advocate” not an objective historian. That professor says, “many of them should be balanced with others”. But they aren’t. This professor advised Petersen to keep his own views to himself, “but [the reporter sums up] this former student takes the opposite approach.” The recommending professor knew better but didn't act upon it. Although the PoliSci professor who hired Petersen argued that he should be rehired after he was terminated, that professor says the “Israeli-Palestinian conflict [is] a subject with which Ungar isn’t familiar.” So, where was his competence to hire Petersen? Another senior professor at the college says “academic freedom for adjuncts should begin once they distribute their syllabus – but not beforehand. ‘The department has influence, if not control, over the structure of the course, including readings and the topics to be covered.’ “ Instead, the PoliSci department abdicated its responsibility. The report ends with this choice double-talk by Petersen of his slanted course: “Asked whether he sees himself as a scholar or an activist, the professor said he regards himself ‘as a scholar in my scholarly work and as an activist in my activist work. The answer would be both.' ” Petersen, also, has a Brooklyn Bridge to sell. This gross negligence at Brooklyn College is a disgrace. If there’s a lesson to be learned, Brooklyn College must exercise proper vetting and supervision in its classrooms. Anything less would be another Brooklyn Bridge for sale on campus. Academic negligence, and slant, cannot be hidden behind or excused by chanting academic freedom.
Posted by Bruce Kesler
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21:41
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Multi-culti going down fastAnti-multiculturalism is going mainstream, at NRO. It's about time the pols and intelligentsia caught up with the common sense, experience, and wisdom of the people. Movie Review: True Grit, Toy Story 3, Shrek 4
True Grit Doc's List Of The Toughest-Talkin' Hombres In All Of Western Moviedom: 5. John Wayne in The Alamo 4. Clint Eastwood in Hang 'Em High 3. Kurt Russell in Tombstone 2. Gene Hackman in The Quick and the Dead And #1 on Doc's List Of The Toughest-Talkin' Hombres In All Of Western Moviedom: 1. Little 14-year-old Hailee Steinfeld in True Grit I mean, wow. Write some tough lines for any of the above heavyweight dudes, then stick a dainty 14-year-old girl wearing her daddy's big floppy hat in front of the camera speaking them, and watch the sparks fly. Poor old Rooster never knew what hit him. Neither did this poor slob: Nor did Jeff Bridges, who said in an interview that he was full of trepidation at the thought of giving the lead to an unproven 14-year-old, but the first scene they filmed was when she walked in while he was sleeping and proceeded to verbally kick his ass all over the room, at which point he never had another doubt. What was particularly impressive about the movie was that it had a nice unhurried feel to it, as befitted the times, yet it never dragged. I had complained in my Jonah Hex post a few weeks ago how slow and boring Westerns had become, and while there wasn't a lot of gunplay in Grit, it sure never felt boring. Even the 'quiet' scenes, like around the campfire and saddling up the horses, had a sharp edge to them because of the ever-present tension between Marshall Cogburn and Texas Ranger LaBoeuf, played to perfection by Matt Damon. Another nicety is the way they stick to the language of the day and don't use contractions — a purely modern convention. I'm sure it felt a little awkward and unnatural for the actors at times, and it's a little jarring to hear, but its authenticity made up for any disjointedness. They also use 'full' sentences, unlike the clipped way we speak today. Old way: "I do not know of that which you speak!" Modern way: "Huh??" A truly enjoyable movie. Notes on Toy Story 3 and Shrek 4 are below the fold. Continue reading "Movie Review: True Grit, Toy Story 3, Shrek 4"
Posted by Dr. Mercury
in Our Essays, The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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15:10
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A movieDr. Merc had a movie to post, but I think he wants it in tomorrow's edition. Woops, wrong about that. Anyway, it brought to mind a movie that Mrs. BD has watched three times in the past two weeks: A Woman in Berlin (2009). The Russian invasion and occupation of Berlin in 1945. We didn't read the book. It's a serious movie, and a true story written by "Anonymous." War is hell.
Posted by Bird Dog
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