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, March 11. 2011Friday morning linksOur ancestors are the Bushmen So much for my family geneology Americans Line Up for the Jobs They Allegedly Won't Do Honor killing in Leviticus
Voegli: Thoughts on Wisconsin Neoneo: Peter King McCarthy Teacher tenure is poisonous: Cory Booker, mayor of Newark, says it's time to put performance first Editorial: Is America Becoming A Welfare Nation? Yes. Entitlement is a cultural and spiritual cancer. Q&O: Is the military leadership “too white and to male?” Diversity gone wild … Pipes: The shores of Tripoli Stigmatizing fat people Are fat people just as evil and greedy as rich people, taking more than their fair share of the pie from the skinny and the poor?
The Hanging Gardens of BabylonAs I mentioned earlier, we stayed at Pueblo Bonita Sunset Beach. Nice place. No obnoxious LA celebs, just regular folks but well beyond the also obnoxious college crowd. You can see why I gave it the nickname, because everything there looked like this. Toto, I don't think we're in Maine anymore.
Posted by Bird Dog
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Thursday, March 10. 2011Let The Mystery BeBetcha can't listen just once -
Cocktail hour in Mexico (pic)Thursday DylanIt was intereresting to see our readers' responses to our Dylan poll last week. The guy has done so much good stuff that it's difficult to narrow down. This is very good, though: Ain't it just like the night to play tricks when you're tryin' to be so quiet? Three cheers for Jonathan HaidtHaidt is the Liberal academic who has shaken up the academic world with his self-analysis and self-criticism. He applies the tools of his discipline to his own stifling academic world. From Neili's Two Bombshells for Social Psychologists:
Apparently it takes "great courage" not to think in lockstep nowadays, in academia. It's a fascinating essay. Why I'm fighting
Gov. Walker: Why I'm Fighting in Wisconsin
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Thursday morning linksOvercoming introversion. Is the cure worse than the disease? Forget the seven-year-itch, the breaking point for couples comes after THREE years Schneiderman: Sex, Marriage, and Happiness Sowell: Cynical Unions Are No Friends To U.S. Workers "Why Aren't Environmentalists Cheering Higher Gas Prices?"
The Bullet Train to Bankruptcy - Researchers and residents are growing suspicious of high-speed rail in California. h/t Insty Driscoll: The New York Times, Still Looking Out for the Common Man Helmut Schmidt calls for IPCC inquiry Juan Williams: NPR 'All White Organization,' Exhibited 'Worst Of White Condescension' In Firing Me Via Doug Ross:
Wednesday, March 9. 2011Stupid governmentGovernments are packed with foolish and self-important jackasses who mostly could not run a corner candy store. I tried to link this article at Pajamas again, and the link still doesn't go through. It's What We’re Talking About When We Talk About Big Government - Behold: the structure of redundancy, stupidity, and unconstitutional power the 100-year fog of leftism has created. Scroll down a bit at Pajamas, and read it there in the left-side column. One quote:
Editor Dog addendum: Government needs to support the cause of cowboy poets. Sheesh. If cowboy poets want a handout, we are done for as a country. Kaput. I do not recall Robert Frost asking for taxpayer money - but he was a New Hampshire fellow: Live Free Or Die. College admissionsCollege admissions, and the new affirmative action for white males. Are non-Asian white boys too stupid and lazy to compete on a level playing field? Treat the Patient, Not the CT ScanI would add, "Don't treat a test result." I have seen that end badly many times. I wrote yesterday about how Psychiatry is tending towards treating symptoms rather than people. Perhaps it is a general tendency in medicine today to retreat from the personal to the technological. See Treat the Patient, Not the CT Scan. Medical care is not science. It is applied science - and an art. No checklist of symptoms, blood tests, and CT scans can sum up what is ailing an individual human, whether physically or mentally. It must be clear by now that the dehumanizing trend in Medicine is something that I deplore. Good docs have to be more than good technicians who follow consensus protocols. More on that in a letter to the New York Times here.
Posted by Dr. Joy Bliss
in Medical, Our Essays, Psychology, and Dr. Bliss
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Lunch in Todos Santos, with birdwatching and Mexican architectureOne day last week we drove an hour or two north to Todos Santos. Todos Santos is an artsy oasis village in the desert, with a rare fresh water lagoon a few miles east, just behind the beach. Some Americans and Europeans move there to truly get away from it all for good. Like that retired CIA spook on NCIS. Our little group had lunch at Posada La Poza, a tiny boutique hotel out in the boonies with a rooftop restaurant. We requested that they make us a mixed seafood platter of whatever they had on hand. They brought us Tuna Tostados, grilled marinated shrimp, fried scallops, and grilled Sea Bass which they cooked rare - as good fresh fish should be cooked. Salad too, with peas and corn in it. Real Mexican food. Margueritas, of course (for the Vitamin C), which they mixed on the strong side: Here's the outside of Posada La Poza, where they have to turn many people away for lunch despite its remote location. They only have 5 tables for lunch - Lots of fun pics of that side trip below the fold - Continue reading "Lunch in Todos Santos, with birdwatching and Mexican architecture"
Posted by Bird Dog
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Weds. morning linksJuan Williams lets it fly at NPR O’Keefe: More Controversial NPR Videos to Come
Welfare State: Handouts Make Up One-Third of U.S. Wages Corporate Social Responsibility: A Fundamentally Subversive Doctrine In a Free Society Sick Days in CT Volokh: Afghanistan and Nation-Building de Rugy: The Truth About Fannie and Freddie’s Role in the Housing Crisis Malanga's Shakedown: The Continuing Conspiracy Against the American Taxpayer:
My breakfast in CaboAt 6:30 in the morning the Mrs. was down at the gym while I quietly enjoyed the view from our terrace with my idea of a good breakfast: Mexican coffee, a Cuban Romeo y Julieta, and a little tropical fruit, including avocado.
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Tuesday, March 8. 2011Psychiatrists who don't want to talk to youNo, Virginia, there is not a little pill to fix everything that ails your heart and soul. It's the new fad, however. Your soul isn't troubled: you just have a little chemistry problem. Better living through chemistry! In the New York Times, Talk Doesn’t Pay, So Psychiatry Turns Instead to Drug Therapy. It's not just about money. It's more complicated than that, but it's all very sad, in my opinion. I will not go into all of the reasons now other than to say that any doctor, Psychiatrist or not, who doesn't take the time to know you, and just wants to know your disease, isn't worth your time or your hard-earned money. OK, now I'm depressed by my profession. Where's the pill for that?
Another good one from MeadWalter Russell Mead is rapidly becoming one of my favorite Liberals. This from Paul Krugman Gets It Half Right:
These are things I have been preaching for years. (Good comments here. Thank you.)
Posted by The Barrister
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Some notes and pics from Los CabosEntry porch of the place where we stayed, Pueblo Bonito Sunset Beach on the Pacific side. Lots of people with kids, but elegant, beautifully-designed, built for the ages, friendly, simple, and utterly free of any tackiness. I nicknamed the place "The Hanging Gardens of Babylon" because it's built into an oceanside cliff. A few of my random Cabo notes: - Baja California Sur is a desert, dominated by cactus forest habitat. There are always rocky mountains in the distance, running north-south down the long peninsula. There are no rainy days and no cloudy days except in August and September. That's what creates the huge arroyos and canyons. - The weather is said to be similar to that of Palm Springs, but with a constant sea breeze. Cool desert nights. No humidity. - Besides the place where we stayed, other resort hotels that seemed especially appealing were Hacienda Del Mar and Palmilla (with golf) in San Jose. - Cabo is famous for its fishing, deep-sea and coastal. Lots of tournaments. I like to know that the Marlin and Sailfish are out there, but I don't feel much of a need to hassle a fish anymore. - In the winter months, whales are everywhere for calving season. Gray Whales and Humpbacks. Whether you go fishing, whale-watching, or just sit on the beach, they'll be out there. On the morning we left, I watched, from our terrace, a baby Humpback leaping and cavorting like a puppy. - Our place had seven pools, some with jacuzzi jets in the corners and some with swim-up bars. We swam in a couple of them, but I am not a pool person and did not sit by one for a minute. - I'm not much of a resort guy either, but I have to admit that they do know how to make a vacation as comfortable, painless, and convenient as this life can be. I am adaptable, and can adjust to that for a while before I feel like chopping some wood or doing something useful. - Overheard at night in a pool between two Texas guys with drinks in hand (the only time I heard any crude talk at all): "My f-ing wife, her neighbor gets a f-ing 20-foot Christmas tree, and she has to have a 40-foot tree. Where the f-ing f- does she thinks this money comes from?" "My wife, it's the f-ing shoes. Thousand dollar shoes, she wears them once and tells me they pinch." "Yeah, well last week my f-ing wife..." - Once you get off the main drag, it's dirt roads everywhere. Everything is coated with dust until rain comes in August. - Odd as it seems, Cabo is only a 2-hr time difference from the East Coast. - The Cabo area seems to mainly attract wholesome people from the Midwest and the West Coast. I suppose it serves similar purposes to those the Caribbean, Bermuda, and Florida do for Easterners. We met a number of delightful people, and spent a good evening having drinks and learning to play Mexican Train Dominoes with them. It's a good game, and you don't have to think too hard. - Cabo San Lucas is on the southernmost tip of the long Baja peninsula, 1000 miles south of LA. My lad drove from LA to Cabo once. Mexican roads. I would not drive those highways at night - no guardrails or shoulders, cliffs, constant detours, cattle on the highways, etc. - The ocean-side beaches, alas, are mostly not swimmable but are surfable. They tend to have a steep drop-off with powerful churning surf, strong currents, whirlpools, and undertows. Easy for a strong swimmer to lose control. The Sea of Cortez is entirely swimmable, and swim in it we did. Mrs. BD and I like cold salt water with waves. Chillier than one might expect down there. Most people use the heated pools, and make like a Manatee. - The old part of Cabo San Lucas and the marina are predictably touristy and honky-tonk, with some fine, relatively inexpensive restaurants. Lively at night. Almost all of the resort hotels are on the Sea of Cortez side, so if you like lots of activity, guys selling faux-Mexican junk, crowded beaches, water taxis, Sea-Doos, girl-watching, boozed-up college kids, etc., that's your place. You have to go to that side to swim in the sea though, which is what we like to do. - You get the feeling in Mexico that many jobs are either partly completed, never completed, or just abandoned. The ramshackle, third world look becomes part of the dusty charm after a day or two. On the other hand, the jobs which involve the gringos, like the resorts and vacation homes, are done very well and with fine craftsmanship, especially the stonework. - We saw little of what we think of as "Mexican food" in the East. Yes, they have taco stands all over for the workmen, but the food we had was excellent with nary a refried bean. Not much guacamole either, but sliced avocado on top of lots of things. Saw no lemons, but those little limes are always sliced on a plate. Some Mexico photo dumps later. It's Mardi GrasAll set up for Carnivale festivities at the beach in Mexico: Tuesday morning linksWSJ: The Decline of U.S. Naval Power Marginal Rev: In praise of impersonal medicine. I still prefer the personal version. He doesn't address the shortcomings of a doc or computer who doesn't know you. How the Tax Code Broke Healthcare (h/t SDA) The UK wants to be a Third World nation Rasmussen: What You Can Learn About Wisconsin Dispute from Differences in Poll Questions Pacific SunriseEarly morning on our Cabo beach last week, with surfcasters. Note the 6-foot berm on the beach; there's a similar one just inside the water's edge such that there is no safe footing in the surf. Monday, March 7. 2011Good food in MexicoWe ate very well in Mexico. These were seafood enchiladas with a creamy wine sauce, a relish of chopped raw vegetables marinated in lime juice, and some fried plantain chips. The green salsa with the brown corn chips was tomatillo, cilantro, onion, and chilis. Also, the necessary daily Marguerita or two, to ward off scurvy and to prevent dehydration. (This nice lunch was at the Cilantro Restaurant, next to the Pueblo Bonito Rose resort on the Cabo San Lucas harborside beach. That's not the hotel where we stayed but it's a good one if you like to be around a lot of activity.) I'll do a few more Mexican food posts this week.
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Inequality, Consumption, & HappinessVia Vanderleun, why we've never had it so good. This captures many of the points we have been making here:
Eagle CamHere's this year's live Eagle Cam from Virginia. Predatory birds tend to nest early. Monday morning linksKrauthammer to Write Magnum Opus on Politics Iran and yellowcake again Suze Rotolo died WSJ: ObamaCare's March Madness - After one year as the law of the land, mayhem abounds. Union greed and the New York Times: Radosh The Hill: Number of healthcare reform law waivers climbs above 1,000 Samuelson: Why Social Security Is Welfare Rubin Report: Now We Know: How the Obama Administration is Going to Bring Disaster to the Middle East and U.S. Interests Harvard for Tyrants - How Muammar al-Qaddafi taught a generation of bad guys. We do it to save you the troubleWe go places and take photos to save our readers the trouble, hassle, and expense of travelling around. We do it for you! Rolled back home to Maggie's HQ in Yankeeland at 3:15 this morning after several lengthy flight delays, stuck irritably in the Houston airport. I only have time to post one pic now - our hotel suite's terrace overlooking the quiet and peaceful Pacific side of Cabo San Lucas (as opposed to the Sea of Cortez side). Very pleasant to step into your palatial suite (His and Hers bathrooms, daily sheet changes, hot and cold-running help, chilled Pacificos on hand with lime slices, etc) and to see this sight (decadent hot tub out of sight on the left): I found Baja Sur to be interesting in many ways. I'll get to my many pics and thoughts about it over the next few days. And yes, Capt. Tom and Dr. Merc, I did do a little fishin' - but just coastal fishing for dinner. Morning links later today, if I can get my brain in order.
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