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, June 13. 2011Joy of MathematicsThe Joy of Mathematics is on sale at The Teaching Company. It's "designed for you." Math is fun, endlessly challenging, relentlessly logical, brain-exercising, and intriguing. Two years of Calc and Stats should be required for a Thinking Permit.
Posted by The Barrister
in The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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13:48
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Fallacy del Giorno: False assumptionsHonest discussions or debates have one purpose: to illuminate a subject with facts and theories which relate facts to eachother, and perhaps to persuade. Dishonest debates or arguments are really just fights with words, and of interest only to litigators and politicians. Fallacious arguments of the false assumption type are used in both: in the former by accident or out of ignorance, and in the latter as a tactical trick (eg "If the glove don't fit, you must acquit."). When questions are posed in that manner, they are known as loaded questions. They are "loaded" with an effort to seek your acquiescence to an unspoken assumption. (The classic is "When did you stop beating your wife?") The correct response to questions with hidden assumptions is to point that out, and to challenge the hidden assumption. Otherwise, you will fall into a trap. When engaging on an issue, always examine the other guy's assumptions first, because a topic can go nowhere with fallacious assumptions, and there can be no constructive discussion if you do not accept the other guy's premise. In that case, you must address the premise first, backing up before you can move forward. Here are some simple examples of fallacious assumptions. Usually, in arguments, the assumptions are unstated, "assumed." It's better to state them first just as one lists one's "givens" in geometry proofs. Sometimes, just addressing the assumptions clears everything up. John at Powerline: You Can Prove Anything If You Make the Right Assumptions. Certainly true, if one is engaging in dishonest or tendentious debate. (I am aware that I am not discussing the huge and important topic of unconscious assumptions, but that is more about psychology than logical debate.) Identify this birdA not-uncommon bird East of the Rockies. I had them around the garden this weekend as I was doing manual labor. No need to continue trying to answer this - I already commented that she is a female Baltimore Oriole. Progressivism: From Great White Hope to Great White WhaleMead's usual clarity: When Government Jumps the Shark. Mead is one of the few Liberals I read who is willing to say that the Progressive project has done enough - maybe too much. Monday morning linksAs Promised, Obama Is Destroying Coal Industry Dude, Where’s My Freedom? The government tightens the noose on guns, health, travel, and more. Scrutinize the president, not Palin Steyn: Obama’s Road to Nowhere - This is Main Street, Obamaville: All bumps, no road. Fanning Imaginary Flames: A Look Back At The Great Church Fire Propaganda Campaign:
Via Flopping:
Superb Chris Muir toon below the fold (totally SFW) Continue reading "Monday morning links" Watching meI always seem to have close bird or animal encounters on Pentecost, and I like to think it's The Holy Spirit visiting me in a form I can recognize. This fellow had a young Cottontail rabbit in his talons, and he is not going to let me take it away from him. Somebody should phone PETA or the ASPCA.
Sunday, June 12. 2011I loved this guy's musicFly fishing with wounded warriors
With wounded warriors in quiet waters. A lovely essay.
Posted by The Barrister
in Hunting, Fishing, Dogs, Guns, etc.
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14:27
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Is love a virus?How bad romance can mess up your life. He advises:
Political quote of the day, but from 2006“The fact that we are here today to debate raising America’s debt limit is a sign of leadership failure. It is a sign that the US Government can not pay its own bills. It is a sign that we now depend on ongoing financial assistance from foreign countries to finance our Government’s reckless fiscal policies. Increasing America’s debt weakens us domestically and internationally. Leadership means that ‘the buck stops here.' Instead, Washington is shifting the burden of bad choices today onto the backs of our children and grandchildren. America has a debt problem and a failure of leadership. Americans deserve better.” Senator Barack H. Obama, March 2006 Interview with David Mamet
Mamet is late to the party, but better late than never. I don't think he thought much about politics before. More Umbria: Onward to Bevagna (with a stop for a fine lunch in Montefalco)We wanted our trip to be as much off the beaten path as feasible, and to try to soak up Italy instead of tourist Italy (which I term Disney Italy - been there, done that). After using our delightful tenuta outside Todi as our base for a few days, we headed up over the hills and through the vineyards towards Bevagna in the Valle Umbra because Mrs. BD knew, during her planning, that I wanted some time based in a little old, non-touristy town to walk around in. On the way there, we stopped by the hilltop walled village Montefalco, where we did the most shopping on our entire trip: She could not resist the famous tessuto artistico - the textiles of Umbria - tablecloths and linens - and I could not resist their heavy Umbrian olive oils and wines. Sagrantino di Montefalco, in particular:
Well, also known for its Umbrian textiles. She bought a yellow tablecloth with some pattern in it or whatever, taking well over 1/2 hour to do so while I explored around. (It is against my religion to enter clothing stores, shoe stores, or textile shops). This is a pic of a pic on the wall in one of Montefalco's many vino and olio shops. Lots of pics below the fold - Continue reading "More Umbria: Onward to Bevagna (with a stop for a fine lunch in Montefalco)"
Posted by Bird Dog
in Food and Drink, Our Essays, Travelogues and Travel Ideas
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12:22
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Sunday morning linksThe 50 Best Books for Urban History Buffs. h/t, Old Urbanist Sayet: Why Jews Support the Democratic Party More Marriage Advice from the Media "Amoralising"? Good neologism I completely agree with NYM re the candidates Via Dr. Merc, Worldwide ages of consent Cocksure Weiner MOCKED Larry Craig Sex Scandal Teachers’ unions will never willingly give up their power, says Terry Moe. Krauthammer: 'Keep it Ideological' Y’Know What I See? I See Dead Donkeys. Advice from Dr. Sanity:
Kamikaze government in the UK O'Reilly: Obama sees rich as his to plunder Actress defends Weiner, says 'everyone lies about sex' When the 2-year hate of Palin starts losing Left-feminists … This is not a witch-hunt Teachers’ unions will never willingly give up their power, says Terry Moe. China ratings house says US defaulting: report Will: Obama and free trade: Appease big labor
Pentecost: From today's lectionaryActs 2:1-21
Saturday, June 11. 2011Blackmail
Posted by Bird Dog
in The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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15:45
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Liberal media hate on paradeFrom a piece at IBD:
Also, LA Times Won’t Release Obama-Khalidi Tape But Posts 24,000 Sarah Palin Emails
Posted by The News Junkie
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects
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12:41
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QQQIt is dangerous to be right in matters on which the established authorities are wrong. Voltaire Through the cultural divide
Posted by Dr. Mercury
in The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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09:35
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A few Saturday morning linksAbove pic from my visit to Newport, RI, last summer Big return of Little Anthony Many of us won’t be able to retire until our 80s Retirement isn't all it's cracked up to be anyway Prison Math - What are the costs and benefits of leading the world in locking up human beings? We lock up too many people for non-violent crimes. In the end, it's the taxpayers who pay for it. Let them pay for their errors with money or work instead of residing on my nickel. Negotiator for CT State Employees Brags: ‘They Want to Know How We Did It’ Easy as pie, if you own the governor. Government unions elected this guy, so he is paying them back. Infantilizing the Culture - Our students may have stopped working, but they have not stopped playing. A clever diversion: "It wasn't indecent" It's indecent on the face of it, for heaven's sake. Even Bill Clinton left the charming high school girls alone. Adults just aren't supposed to do that, Humbert Humbert: it's not "sick" - it's plain old bad. The guy has a pattern of bad, of all sorts. Media Darling Chris Matthews: Weiner in Trouble Because his Behavior Offends“Culturally Backward” Christian Conservatives Darn uptight Christian Conservatives don't think guys should be hitting on high school girls. It's somebody's daughter. Sheesh. I guess it is not unseemly, in the view of like really hip dudes like Matthews. Is "unseemly" obsolete? Saturday Verse: Cowboy PoetryLasca, by Frank Desprez I want free life and I want fresh air; The author of this famous cowboy poem, Frank Desprez, (1852-1916) was a Brit essayist and playwright who had spent three years in the American West. Here's a cowboy poetry website. Continue reading "Saturday Verse: Cowboy Poetry" Friday, June 10. 2011Villa ZuccariThat's the name of a hotel that we did not stay at. Somebody's old villa. We discovered this gem by accident while stumbling around the countryside outside Montefalco looking for a Sagrantino winery to visit on our way (on the "Strada di Sagrantino") to visit the wonderful town of Spello - also a gem of a place. A stunning and elegant place in a tiny hamlet outside Montefalco. I love the elegant simplicity of classic Italian design: zero glitz, sedate and serene, good use of subtle colors, formal gardens - the things the Brits loved and learned from, and enthusiastically integrated into their sort-of-crude commercial culture in the 17th and 18th C. Brits love - and need - Italy for the yeast in their northern European bread, as it were. Same for New England Yankees, I think. Mrs. BD and I thought it would be perfect for a destination wedding or a second, third, or whatever honeymoon. She walked in and had a chat with the manager, who was happy to show her around, while I stayed outside and took pics of their gardens and smoked a short ceegar. It's in fairly easy driving distance from Assisi, Spello, Spoleto and Montefalco, and what could be better than that? Look at their website, and make up your own mind about whether you might like to spend a few days there in the Valle Umbra with your honey-pie and a Costco-rented standard transmission Alpha Romeo with talking GPS. Big swimming pool, too, even though no Italians can swim to save their lives. I do not know why that is. They like to strut around pools and beaches in their tiny clothes, but they can't swim.
Posted by Bird Dog
in Our Essays, Travelogues and Travel Ideas
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16:43
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The World Bank and the mess in EuropeMr. Strauss-Kahn is leaving a mess for his successor. A quote from the essay at The American:
YourName.com = going, going, gon-
I'll say. I cringe at the mere thought. Like a lot of people, my friend always assumed that because his last name is somewhat unusual, he'd always be able to pick up his "name.com" domain whenever he wanted. He also thought he'd never actually have a use for it, in the sense that he doesn't have any kids, so it's doubtful he'll be posting pics of his cute grandkids a few years down the road, plus he doesn't have any interest in blogging. Then he went to some kind of 'crafts school' for a month and is now gearing up to sell online some of the nifty things he's turning out, like lamps and chandeliers. But he doesn't want to commit himself to any one genre in a business sense, like using "JimsCustomLighting.com" for the domain, so what he really wants to do is — you guessed it — use his real name. And — you guessed it — the domain is gone, gobbled up by the domain harvesters. It just goes to some "This domain is for sale" page. And, in many cases, you don't actually get to buy it from them for a mere $4,999.99, you lease it from them on a yearly basis extending from now until the end of eternity. And then there's this (names have been changed to protect the innocent):
Ya got me. You wouldn't think that Bing (Microsoft) would actually sell its list of searches with the word ".com" in them to some domain harvester, but, on the other hand, it's not illegal to harvest domains, so it probably wouldn't be surprising to find out the domain harvester in this case is owned by Microsoft. As it is, my friend isn't sure what the hell he's going to do. Probably end up using "JimsCustomDoodads.com". So if you ever think you might want your own domain name, now's the time. Nor do you have to actually do anything with it, like build a temporary web site to 'hold' it. And most web hosting companies will automatically re-bill you each year so you don't lose it. I've been designing web pages since the web was one month old, have used a lot of web hosting companies over the years, and my pick of the litter these days is BlueHost. Unlimited bandwidth, unlimited storage space, unlimited email boxes, a whole shitload of helper programs, and all for a lousy $6.95 a month. The direct link is here. If you want to read a bit more about BlueHost and get some ideas on conjuring up an available domain name (like using hyphens), read this, then use the link on the page to get to BlueHost. If the domain's available, GET IT. You're not signing up for a 1-year contract or anything. If you later decide you don't want it, they'll pro-rate it back and refund you the difference with no 'disconnect fee'. If you're interested in firing up a blog site (elections are coming up!) or web site, please... Continue reading "YourName.com = going, going, gon-"
Posted by Dr. Mercury
in Dr. Mercury's Computer Corner, Our Essays
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11:00
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Friday morning linksObama Proclaims June 'Gender Confusion' Month Up To 8-Foot Long, 160-Pound Mountain Lion On The Loose In Conn. Mitt Romney Endorses Global Warming Hoax 'Kill a camel' to cut pollution Even Iowans don't care about ethanol subsidies anymore. Obama’s EPA Regulations Will Cost Coal Industry $200 Billion & Cause Electricity Rates to Skyrocket Naked therapy for Weiner? Remind me why we are at war with Gadhafi Thursday, June 9. 2011I Rule The WorldThe various academic fields of –ists and –ologists try to decipher why and how individuals and groups do things, and the effective ways to get them to do them better or differently or to do other things. I’d suggest that the further they get from coercion, material or otherwise, the weaker their prescriptions. With one exception, that is, persuasion. The field of persuasion is what I focused upon in my doctoral studies of organization and decision making, as offering the most direct and directly measurable avenue to offering improvements that are accepted and acted upon. Reducing a complex subject, full of tautologies, persuasion is getting someone to do what they want to do. One does that by listening, observing and understanding the person’s wants and offering information with comfort that they find useful which will lead them to rearrange their priorities. A corollary to that is understanding why individuals choose attitudes and behaviors that are less constructive to their own wants. This article by a leading social psychologist says that we form narratives of ourselves and the world that are often misleading. Personally, I believe that we all are exposed to roughly equal proportions of good and bad things in our lives, although of differing dimensions, and we each choose which to focus upon. The happier among us tend to focus on the good things more than the bad. None of this is to contradict deep psychoanalysis, discursive or medicinal, for very serious problems. However, for most of us, the functionally dysfunctional common to humanity, the more direct path is through understanding our and others’ narratives. The academic –ists and –ologists tend to go well beyond that -- often based on controlled experiments with college students from which they overgeneralize -- into how to influence or control groups of people, adding such magnitudes of mathematical and knowable uncertainties that they blunder about in faith-healing based on catering to whatever their powers that be desire. Once one gets too far away from eternal verities, from moral lessons that have been, in effect, empirically tested across hundreds and thousands of years by all people and peoples and found to point in the right direction, one enters into the experimentalists that have no more respect for us than rats and no more object than controlling the rats. They haven’t been too successful, so they increasingly turn to coercion. The resistance of individual constructive independence and relationships eventually wins out, although after great costs along the way.
Posted by Bruce Kesler
in Our Essays, Politics, The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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20:54
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