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, May 8. 2011Worth a thousand words
A case of Lyme Disease: Lyme, CTAfter fishing yesterday, Gwynnie and I took a drive through Lyme, CT, as charming and homey an antique town as I have ever seen in the US. It runs along the east bank of the lower Connecticut River, has wonderful riverside marshes for bird watching, fishing, and hunting, and has a fine cove with a marina - Hamburg Cove. "Quaint and charming" can be real things in our Yankeeland. I even began looking at the For Sale signs (which was my first symptom of Lyme Disease), but there is no work for my profession there, I'm afraid. For jukebox maintenance and repair, one must go where there are jukeboxes... Where I live, there are many highly-accomplished, scary-smart and mega-educated people, but "quaint and charming" does not jump to mind. ("Wonderful friends" does jump to mind.) I took a few snaps, but Gwynnie declined to stop for my architectural photography. I don't blame him - if you stopped every time I wanted a pic, one would never arrive at one's destination. I can be a pest, that way. Also, in other ways (pedantic, insensitive, critical, intolerant, etc.). Here are more online pics of Lyme.
Posted by Bird Dog
in Our Essays, The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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16:01
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CUNY's PrinciplesThe New York Sun editorial on the Tony Kushner now you have it - now you don't - now CUNY's Chairman will get it for you honorary degree (my sum up and links here):
Red Kites in slow moLife, Unplugged: Richard LouvRichard Louv is not an environmental extremist but a lover and appreciator of nature. A review of his latest book, The Nature Principle, contains his question:
Another quote reminds me of a friend who would take me on nature walks:
Louv used to be a columnist for the San Diego Union Tribune. I miss his columns and the walks with my friend. I wrote about Louv previously, A Treatment for Cultural Depression.
Posted by Bruce Kesler
in Natural History and Conservation, Our Essays
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Name this shrub
From our fishing yesterday. An easy one, and no, it's not named "Frank" - The Sorrow Of Mothers DayFor mothers who have lost a child to wars, to ill-health, to accidents, there is no consolation that will ever fill their hearts as did their child. If you know such a mother, you know what I mean. If you don't, count yourself fortunate. Either way, take a moment with her or with yourself to count the blessings during life of a child. Hallmark should have a card for this, but there are no words that can communicate the sharing of such a loss. There's only your quiet embraces for the mothers who feel such sorrow on Mothers Day. A nation feels the loss today. And, the origins of Mothers Day:
New horizons What made it particularly intriguing is that you know the author wanted to put a negative slant on it, i.e., the lavish benefits and pensions the guards receive are further proof of this once great state's demise — but she just couldn't. The numbers were simply overwhelming. The only logical summation one can arrive at upon finishing it is that only a moron would go to an Ivy League school, or even college in general. Why bother going through all that, when you can expend a tenth the effort and end up in a cushier position when you retire at an earlier age? But wait. Before you send your boss that angry "I QUIT, ASSBITE!" email and head for the nearest California Prison Guard Academy, let me toss out another golden opportunity (they don't call it the 'Golden State' for nuthin') that you might find even more attractive. We'll use a photographic display to help you decide. The scenario: You're at your job, tending to people's needs, when suddenly you're confronted with one of your young charges in distress. Of the following two choices, please pick the person in distress that you'd most like to see before you: If you chose 'B', be sure to check out this amazing job opportunity!
Oh, to be young again! From today's Lectionary: You were ransomed...1 Peter 1:17-23
Happy Mom's Day, Moms
Two Mary Cassatts -
Saturday, May 7. 2011Hayek: Think for YourselfThe book review in the New York Times of the new edition of Friedrich Hayek's Constitution of Liberty credits his thought -- at core, distrust of central government and its ability to coordinate society better than the agglomeration of individual and local choices -- as winning since the 1980s. As the reviewer says, "President Obama’s return to “big government” didn’t last more than a year before it was met with fierce resistance." The reviewer, still, raises limitations on that core thought as presented from Left and Right, but moreso from practicalities and realities in some cases, such as the Civil Rights Act of 1964 needed central government to correct a long-lasting wrong. All well and good. But, doesn't undermine Hayek's core point, except in cases of major and agreed need. The criticism from the Left is spurious. The economic and social schemes of government to increase the freedom, as the Left sees it, of the population have proven largely failures and counterproductive. The criticism from the Right bears more weight, although the reviewer doesn't delve deeper than this:
Just as Big Government is a slippery slope, so too is moral relativism. Read the review for yourself, and comment. (I've omitted the reviewers name from this post so as not to have it, one way or the other, influence the reader's consideration.) Above all, I think Friedrich Hayek would want you to think for yourself. In that vein, The Institutional Risk Analyst, presents an essay on Keynesianism corrupted by "today's econometricians pretending they are." The essay requires subscription, so it is presented below (via one of the co-authors blog; and don't miss the real story of Gunnar Myrdal, Hayek's co-winner for economics of the Nobel Prize). First, an excerpt:
Continue reading "Hayek: Think for Yourself" Nice day of fishin'
Lovely day of fishing with "Gwynnie" today on his beautiful stream. Is there a name for the color of the earliest spring leaves in New England, that easy-on-the-eyes translucent yellow and green? A darn shame Capt. Tom couldn't join us to offer me some fishin' tips and some photo tips.
Pool on the stream. There's a Red Tail nest down a little ways. We saw a Bald Eagle en route. Woods were full of singing flycatchers, warblers, and thrushes mostly headed further north. Atlantic Flyway.
Brought home a good-sized Brookie who obviously thrashed in the leaves for a minute. I considered a new recipe - oak-leaf-encrusted trout. Will cook him up for dinner tonight for Mrs. BD as an early Mother's Day treat. Orange flesh, like Salmon. (No wonder Dunkin Donuts pays Maggie's $5 million/year for publicity...it's a good deal for them. Next, we'll work on a similiar deal with HARPOON BREWERY, makers of delicious brews. Consider it, fellas - Maggie's is an elite market!) When is a trout not a trout? When it's a char.
Posted by Bird Dog
in Hunting, Fishing, Dogs, Guns, etc., Our Essays
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More Jack Daniels: "We must've been drunk when we said we'd stop drinkin..."Life is good in the South, to amuse Capt. TomI went fishing this morning, but after a short time I ran out of worms.
Knowing the snake couldn't bite me with the frog in his mouth, I grabbed him right behind the head, took the frog, and put it in my bait bucket.
Just then, I realized I had a problem, how was I going to release the snake without getting bit? So, I grabbed my bottle of Jack Daniels and poured a little whiskey in its mouth. The snakes eyes rolled back and he went limp. I released him into the lake without incident and carried on fishing using the frog.
A little later, I felt a nudge at my foot. Where would Osama be without wife?: Mothers Day ponderingMothers Day special: Osama's wife left OBL's cave for home but returned to him once in mansion in Pakistan. Yes, we men would all live in caves if not for women; and, in Osama's case he might still be living! And, OBL's current roommate isn't too pleased with him in paradise. (Careful of language, and hilarious from Iowahawk.) A clean language sample: "So it's been pretty much like that here since Mumbles showed up. Every day, it's calisthenics, fwip-fwip-fwip SEAL time, human shield time, pa-papp pa-papp, zwip-zwip-zwip, Excedrin headache #1. Just like that infidel movie of yours, Groundhog Day, except you really don't want to know what they use the groundhogs for. Trust me." A quip I saw: Osama gets killed, and we get 72 versions from Obama. El Mirador
What fun it must be to be an Archaeologist with places like this to explore.
Doc's Computin' Tips: Windows 7 review (redux) I hereby take them all back. So, to sum up: — If you're an average user who just grabs the ol' email and surfs the 'ol web, then Win7 is a great step up from XP or Vista. It's quicker than older versions in almost every way you can name. — On the other hand, if you're a geek like me who wants a tough, robust operating system that you can tweak and reconfigure and generally thrash about, then you want Windows 7. You don't get any of the tweaking and reconfiguring and thrashing stuff — but the increased speed makes up for everything. Specific notes and fixes are below the fold. Continue reading "Doc's Computin' Tips: Windows 7 review (redux)"
Posted by Dr. Mercury
in Dr. Mercury's Computer Corner, Our Essays
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Saturday morning linksFrom the royal wedding to this: VIOLENCE BREAKS OUT AS HUNDREDS OF ISLAMISTS Hold Mock Osama Funeral at US Embassy in London Wake up, England. You should know what we do with countries that harbor terrorists. Remedial History Student Lawrence O'Donnell Gets Schooled By Condoleezza Rice Models Say Climate Change Has Already Whacked Grain Yields Since when are models facts? Stanley Thornton, Liberal Avatar We all sometimes want to retreat back to childhood... Life's a bitch Finding good in bad girls The rise of tablet computers They do seem to be taking over. Something Wonderful: "Jersey Shore" Gone Wilde The Wonders of Reality Discipline Old Mr. Reality is always the best, but harshest, teacher What If Everyone Had a California State Pension? - A thought experiment on how much more bankrupt we could be Deaf Fan Sues U. of Kentucky for Football Game Captioning I'm more worried about the rights of the blind UK fans Eat Your Veggies - Why the broccoli argument might backfire in the ObamaCare case Shortsighted utilitarianism has ruined the Cal State system The Hudson River Destruction Project - How the EPA is harming nature and ruining communities Good Grief: PC Police Says Children’s Books Are Sexist… Obama: Don't get between my wife and a tamale That's a good way not to get lucky tonight Friday, May 6. 2011CUNY Chairman: Kushner "made the trains run on time"No, the Chairman of the City University of New York did not say that Tony Kushner, a la praise that was given to Mussolini, "made the trains run on time." Instead, Benno Schmidt Jr. -- formerly of Yale -- says something similar (Reconsidering, CUNY Likely To Honor Kushner):
A meeting is to be held Monday to overturn the rejection by the CUNY Trustees to not grant Tony Kushner an honorary degree. The venue is a smaller Executive Committee, which Mr. Schmidt apparently feels he controls. So, Mr. Schmidt, would CUNY grant famous philosopher and Nazi Martin Heidegger an honorary degree? Is a man seperable into compartments for the sake of bestowing honors? As pointed out by Ron Radosh's read-it-all on Kushner:
Tony Kushner is an extremist, libeling Israel and Catholics, and even taken to task by other gays for shoddy literary/political work, as Andrew Sullivan points out (before Sullivan proceeds to himself libel Israel, using edited and false quotes from an anti-Israel hate site):
And, as pointed out in the Heidegger link above, Kushner's literary works aren't that great, except to liberals who go in for Kushner's bashing of others they dislike. Mr. Schmidt says, "“Freedom of thought and expression is the bedrock of any university worthy of the name.” So are standards, Mr. Schmidt. Letter from CUNY Trustee Jeffrey Wiesenfeld in the New York Times: Continue reading "CUNY Chairman: Kushner "made the trains run on time"" Tony Kushner Bashes Catholics As Well As IsraelBill Donohue, president of the Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights, remembers Tony Kushner's words about Catholics:
Creative genius and mental illnessIt's an old topic, but always of interest. A Conversation With Dr Richard Kogan. Many people, rightly or wrongly and for better or worse, reject Psychiatric medicines which can be remarkably helpful things at times, but also emotion-blunting at times. Fortunately, it's a free country. Let slip the dogs of war: War Dogs
I have a friend who was a dog handler in Vietnam. He would take the dogs into the jungle, find the caves, then go into the caves. Scary as hell, even with the dogs. Last I recall, he and his wife have two little Shih Tzus.
Posted by Bird Dog
in Hunting, Fishing, Dogs, Guns, etc., Our Essays
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13:54
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"I"Via VDH:
If you listen to the Lefty pundits, you'd think he was a battlefield hero now. Right decision for sure, but also a no-brainer if there ever was one. "Let's send some guys to kill Bin Laden, OK?" "Well, let me Legal beagles at Volokh discuss legality of assassination. "A spellbinding new film"Werner Herzog's Cave of Forgotten Dreams. Here's the trailer. Here's the WaPo review. I agree with the reviewer about art: It does not "advance" or "improve." In my view, it's just fashions in art and design that change. Friday morning linksCarpe: What Can Onions Teach Us About Oil Prices? Conservatives Should Look to the Founders to See How to Fight for their Ideas There is no autism epidemic I Thought Affirmative Action Was a Good Thing Matt Miller hopes the O will use his poll bump to "go big" Harry Reid wants Rubio to be more Hispanic (ie Liberal). Rubio responds The overwhelming body of scientific evidence supports the safety of myriad chemicals in use today. Optimism Turns To Fear In Libya's Rebel Stronghold Surber on Sesame St., etc: Cut the damned funding off and figure out how to have a society where half the people are uneducated. The Great Society programs have ruined the nation financially and socially. At Moonbattery: Huffington Post Readers Respond to Osama bin Laden's Demise Related, Euro media and Archbishop react in predictable manner. A quote from the piece:
Krauthammer: Evil does not die of natural causes House GOP Throws Down the Gauntlet on Energy NPR hires firm to lobby for its taxpayer funding Good investment ideas: Six Scottish windfarms were paid up to £300,000 to stop producing energy, it has emerged.
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