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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Thursday, March 8. 2012A good job, "safe as crossing the street"Can you think without words?It depends on how you define "thinking." If "thinking" means an effort to form a logical progression of thoughts and ideas, words sure come in handy whether you intend to communicate the thoughts or not. In my experience, most people tend to avoid the effort that this requires unless they are trained to do it in some area of life such as diagnosing a car breakdown or a legal case or a medical complaint. But if "thinking" refers to all sorts of mental activities, then of course words are not required for most of it. Impulses, gut feelings, images, daydreams, movement, musical ideas, etc. are all wordless mental activity (I exclude mathematics, which is just another language). Furthermore, unconscious mental activity, which may be the bulk of mental activity, is all or mostly wordless. The question is raised: To what extent do our words shape our thinking? Here's an effort to study the topic: Language doesn't influence our thoughts ... except when it does. Speaking only for myself, I find that my words and my thought stream seem to do a sort of dance together, and a fresh new word or verbal concept can add new color or shape to it all. What is most fun is when a fresh word or phrase or concept crystallizes a dimly-thought thought.
Posted by The Barrister
in Fallacies and Logic, Our Essays
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13:54
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That video is a dud
I agree with Ann Althouse.
The Decorah (Iowa) live Eagle Cam is back upThursday morning linksPhoto is a delivery truck, Nashville Why the Titanic Still Fascinates Us - One hundred years after the ocean liner struck an iceberg and sank, the tragedy still looms large in the popular psyche Having faith in the invisible hand of Purim - The image of an invisible hand can enable us to bridge the gap between those with merely a faith in God and those with merely a faith in man. Otzi the Iceman Was Lactose Intolerant Realities of Higher Education in California Who is Marco Rubio? The Man Who Would Be Vice President Why Ethics Investigations Are Racist Hungarian Derangement Syndrome We're dealing with savages in Afghanistan: It's time to threaten them hellfire and get our troops home NOW Fade to Darkness? No, the Republican Party isn't doomed. Super Tuesday: How Mitt Romney won and why that worries Obama New Report: Economic Analysis Reveals Wind Power ‘Worse Than a Mistake’ Video: Female Democratic lawmakers refuse to speak out against Bill Maher’s misogynism Government Spends $11 Million to Clothe Two People A Year Later, Mysterious Space Plane Is Still in Orbit The myth of crippling sanctions - Tehran will get nukes if the world doesn’t get serious fast From Bad to Worse in Egypt - The repression of civil society is far worse than anything seen under Hosni Mubarak. Once again, the media spins the myth of the crazy Vet Free Markets Can Transform the Middle East Iran trying to build nuclear missiles capable of hitting London, Cameron warns MPs It’s Not Just Al-Qaeda: Stability in the Most Dangerous Region Wednesday, March 7. 2012Tasty Turkey Sandwiches (or roll-ups)I have some family visiting midday on Saturday en route to pay homage to a newborn member of the clan, and figured we'd provide soup and sandwiches for the crew. Somebody happened to mention turkey-mango sandwiches to me. It's a wonder how mangos have taken over in the supermarkets in Yankeeland, for good reason (I'll give y'all my mother in law's mango salad recipe some other time.) Here are two versions, but I suppose one can mix and match. These could either be sandwiches or roll-ups (I have come to prefer roll-ups - less messy, less bread, and you don't need to eat as much if you cut them into 3" lengths). Thin slices of fresh mango or slices of Stilton or (if one is fresh out of mango) turkey slices You can't get these at Subway. OK. I am hungry now. A full-time paying job changing lightbulbs? Sounds easy enough.This is what I term "a real job." These guys have balls. You may have seen this one before. I hate the way he has to make sure to tighten each hand-hold bolt on the final stretch. It's a nightmare for me. I hope these guys are better-paid than I am.
Posted by Bird Dog
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16:23
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More on food fetishismWhy moralism spoils the appetite - Adam Gopnik makes a powerful and entertaining case for why we shouldn’t ruin the aesthetic pleasure of food by adding a side order of moralism. We have often posted here about food cranks and food Nazis, "organic food" nonsense and "natural food" nonsense, and even the concept of "healthy food". The "moral food" fad is just the latest incarnation of cranky food Calvinism - which is another incarnation of cranky Calvinism.
Posted by Dr. Joy Bliss
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15:56
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They keep changing the name of itHow about "a girlfriend experience" without the hassle? The Sugar Daddy recession. There is no doubt that guys enjoy variety, or at least the idea of it. They are liars if they claim they do not. Nature made them that way. Good character can make some of them acceptable, however, despite their nature.
Posted by Dr. Joy Bliss
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14:50
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Education quote of the day"Every politically controlled educational system will inculcate the doctrine of state supremacy sooner or later. . . . Once that doctrine has been accepted, it becomes an almost superhuman task to break the stranglehold of the political power over the life of the citizen. It has had his body, property and mind in its clutches from infancy. An octopus would sooner release its prey. A tax-supported, compulsory educational system is the complete model of the totalitarian state." President Obama, Defend Your DaughtersYesterday, as Politico put it, "Leave it to Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to one-up Rush Limbaugh in the name-calling department."
Eagerly awaiting President Obama's denunciation of a Kennedy. After all, according to Obama, it's supposed to be for Obama's daughters' sake, isn't it, to clean up political discourse? But, Obama is a no-show in speaking against misogynist War On Conservative Women. Our blog friend Neptunus is deadAn ex-Navy aviator, recently a contract pilot for the Navy. Loved those jets. I don't know what happened. I presume a crash. I had read his frightening Streamer post yesterday. Yes, this might be the story, thus far. Weds. morning linksChurch Ordered to Stop Giving Away Free Water LBJ and Vietnam: The Day It Became the Longest War Cuomo’s Teaching Moment - The New York governor secures a breakthrough agreement on teacher evaluation. Spain is the new Greece:
The comments here are quite amusing, in a typically crude Wall St. trader sort of way Infinite Affirmative Action? In Eric Holder’s world, the need for racial preferences will never end. Obama’s Energy Plan: Costs Rise, Jobs Decline Obama Seeks Disability Quotas Romney's Best Defense: The Truth About Romneycare ObamaCare – why you should care and work for its repeal Reagan Was A Sure Loser Too - Conventional wisdom about Republican presidential prospects sounds mighty familiar. Krauthammer: Romney’s luck Ted Turner saves the planet Electric cars and liberals’ refusal to accept science I'll never forget the greenie who informed me, after I claimed that electric cars basically run on coal, that the electricity "comes from the wall."
For 99 percent of Americans, the Obama recovery has been no recovery at all Al Qaeda in Iraq mounts comeback - Claims a string of fatal bombings Few military options for U.S. in Syria, general says Should Defense begin cutting from the top? Vietnam: Systematic Crackdown on Human Rights - No Country for Rights Defenders and Activists Democrats In California Declare War On Farmers Harvard Law Students have started a shooting club. Meanwhile, at Georgetown Law... "do the math and find that this means Fluke and her fellow law students have sex two or three times daily" Ah, youth "Over at The New Republic, Timothy Noah explains why it's like totally different when Bill Maher calls Sarah Palin "a twat" and "a cunt," or when Keith Olbermann calls Michelle Malkin a "mashed-up bag of meat with lipstick on it." Tuesday, March 6. 2012Thank You, Ms. Fluke and Supporters for Setting A New StandardEverything has already been said about Sandra Fluke, Rush Limbaugh, supporters and opponents of each, and double-standards toward misogynistic public statements, except to thank Ms. Fluke and her supporters for setting a new standard for future misogynistic utterances by all politicians and celebrities. From here on out, we should expect a loud and persistent opprobrium by all and the media against anyone using such excessively derogatory terms to describe their opponent. Or, is such an expectation hollow and the double-standard be allowed to continue? Will the Left be hoisted by its own petard? If so, again thanks to Ms. Fluke and her supporters for making that hypocrisy evident. As yet many undecided voters are watching and taking note.
Addenda: Ingraham: Barbara Walters Laughed When I Was Called 'Slut' Irony Alert! Leftist Women Now Overjoyed That Government IS in Their Bodies Yippee! Insurance will now pay for your sex change surgery
Posted by Bruce Kesler
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13:39
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Four very good pieces on educationLots of good food for thought here. The Chaotic Legacy of the Classroom Radicals. He begins:
Butler at National Journal: The Coming Higher-Ed Revolution. He begins:
A discussion in the NYT: Should College be for Everyone? And about high school, from Lulu at Bookworm:
Tuesday morning linksToon above stolen from Protein The Origins of Political Correctness VDH: Human Nature Won't Allow People To Just Get Along What snowless winter? American Immaturity: How We Grow Up After We Grow Old Powerline: Why Paul Krugman Doesn’t Like Us. And Vice Versa. Just 27% Think Government Management Helps Economy Bernie Goldberg: Thank God for Rich People — a Second Look Prof B: I can top that rejection story In Ohio, Obama's Organization Is Outpacing GOP's White House to Congress Dems: Expect no money President Obama's Medical Board: A Backdoor Path to Health Rationing New York Times Reversal: Cornell University Research Undermines Hysteria Contention that Shale Gas is "Dirty" Israel actually is the only apartheid-free state in the Middle East Toon below stolen from Moonbattery: And this one, via Never Yet melted: Name that American architectural styleA house in Newport, Rhode Island (in a neighborhood where the regular people live):
Monday, March 5. 2012Don JuansIt's all about "The Dark Triad." From Yes, Chicks Dig Jerks, and evolutionary science gives us a good idea why:
That's all true of my experience with skirt-chasing seducers. They know how to say exactly what you need to hear but, in the end, you will never be enough for them because, Psychiatric as it may sound, they are really manchilds looking for Mommy while having fun with pseudo-adult seduction, romance and sex along the way. Image is Luigi Bassi in the title role of Don Giovanni in 1787, via Wiki. This is as fresh as the day he wrote it. The great (young) man himself conducted the premiere of this astonishing (comic?) opera in Prague, in 1787:
Smartest man in America? James Q. WilsonJames Q. Wilson had been frequently referred to that way. He knew about everything. My first reading of him was in his The Moral Sense, back when it had just come out. The book made a lot of sense to me (if you haven't read it, those Amazon comments on it are helpful). Here's a Wilson quote from the end of the book:
Here's Roger on Wilson. Also, Heather: Man of Reason - James Q. Wilson’s thinking about crime and policing saved lives and transformed cities for the better. And also, Barone: James Q Wilson: A happy American life
Posted by Bird Dog
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The Fed on Income InequalityWell, the OWS Movement didn't last through a rather mild winter. They may have some vigor left as the election cycle heats up, but for the most part the press has ceased to be impressed with their value. It seems the Fed isn't all that impressed, either. While I'm no fan of the Fed as a manager of the economy, they do some fine research.
Monday morning linksBacon Jam? Sounds delicious The Nucleus of the Digital Age - In pursuit of hydrogen bombs, a math genius and a brilliant tinkerer in Princeton developed the modern computer David Stockman economy Q&A: Economic disaster in the works:
How One Bureaucrat Almost Succeeded in Banning Car Radios Will’s Wrong Andrew Breitbart: A Torch in the Darkness A torch in the media darkness Obama, Con Artist Media knows it, doesn't care Imprimus: Blasphemy and Free Speech Leftist greed: Obama to fundraise this month in Houston, Chicago, Georgia, Vermont and Maine The Central Banks' Assault On Savers Per-Capita, the U.S. is a Century Ahead of China Would a Military Strike Against Iran Be Legal? Conn Carroll: California slipping toward bankruptcy, again SANDERS: Time to foreclose on the World Bank Media using contraception as a wedge issue for the Dems Covert message: Repubs are against sex Sunday, March 4. 2012At the flower showBeing a loyal and dutiful husband, of course I showed up. All the husbands show up in their finest and tend bar for the opening night cocktail party, and later to see the big show again. We learn to look at these things, and to appreciate them as ephemeral sculptures. Garden clubs, I know, are not only great creative outlets for gals, whether they work at jobs or not, but, like so many organizations, they also constitute a form of social capital. I even met a lady at this show who lives down the street from my Mom and belongs to my Mom's garden club. I grabbed a few pics right after they folded up the show, before we took it down: More pics below the fold - Continue reading "At the flower show" Looking for Medieval in ItalyExcept for some Romanesque churches and monasteries, and a few old tenuta, there is very little Medieval left in tourist Italy. The reason is because they became so wealthy during the Renaissance that they knocked down all of the old stuff to build new. The "old stuff" in Florence today is mostly Renaissance-era, except for some early churches. San Miniata is a good old one, and it's a fun walk over the bridge, over the Michelangelo-designed defensive walls, and up the hill from downtown, and you can sit and listen to the monks chant if you visit during a chanting time. Very friendly monks, too, who speak excellent English. Italy never really bought into Gothic style in the 1200s. Too French. Many Brit builders did buy into it, though. Photo: The Baptisterie in Firenze is Medieval, begun in 1059 long before the current duomo was built (by Cannobio, with the dome by the great Brunellesci in the 1400s. The fancy facade of the duomo is new - 19th C - which most visitors do not realize. The churches were always renovating and updating.) The previous church had stood in the square when the Baptisterie was built. A Baptisterie was always needed then: unbaptised kids could not enter the duomo. As in many areas of northern Italy, the Eastern Orthodox style of art (thought, at the time, to be based on original images of Jesus, Mary, etc) is prominent inside this wonderful jewel-box. The doors are masterpieces, as is the ceiling art inside. The Baptisterie in Pisa, just down the road a piece, is similarly wonderful. The Story of Obama and IsraelThe Obama worldview based upon retreat from engagement from confrontation with sworn, active enemies of the West and apologies for past resistance has proven time and again to be both fruitless and has increased dangers. This is starkly evident in President Obama and his administration badgering and undermining Israel while turning the other cheek to Palestinian and Arab and Moslem outrageous behavior. This video ably sums up the first three years of the Obama administration's policies with respect to Israel.
Israel’s friends can take little comfort from the president’s speech at AIPAC.
Posted by Bruce Kesler
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13:00
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Sunday linksI do not understand dark matter Via Hot Air, One Third Of Young Women Would Trade Intelligence For Bigger Breasts, Survey Says Is that the same third which has no brains to spare? WSJ: James Q. Wilson - An empiricist with a moral sense—and he could write too. Top 10 outrageous government actions European climate policy seems to be driven by the usual bureacratic twins: more control and more tax revenues Great sentence Coffee is banned... from mums' coffee morning group The Brits have become so risk-averse that it's embarassing. Who castrated them? Rent, Don't Own Holder Wants Race Preferences and Benefits . . . Forever Another 1,300 laid off after Obama’s bailout Sandra Fluke has become the Poster Child for the No Morals Movement Stunner. Georgetown “Coed” Sandra Fluke Is a 30 Year-Old Women’s Rights Activist
That's right. Never debate on the other side's premise, unless you accept their premise Obama Likens Self To Mandela, Gandhi At Fundraiser Why not Jesus Christ? Obama versus the American Dream
Consuming is fun. Production is hard. Unmarried baby boomers are five times more likely to live in poverty than their married counterparts, statistics show Not easy to run a life without a partner George Will is too defeatist Knish is right - The conservatives fell into a political trap. Stupidly, including Rush, who should know better
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