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 4. 2012Monday morning linksWhy Anchoress wants you to read Sigrid Undset Britain’s Already Dead, It Just Hasn’t Been Buried Yet - Don’t be fooled by the pomp of the Queen’s royal Diamond Jubilee flotilla this weekend. Britain is a country rotting from the inside. Boats take to Thames for queen's jubilee flotilla Ungridlocked - Mayor Bloomberg’s transportation reforms have unclogged New York’s streets and made them safer Dr. Sanity: ENVY, RESENTMENT, AND HUMAN NATURE What Couples Want to Know But Are Too Shy to Ask Nebraska lawmakers question EPA's aerial livestock surveillance I just can't understand what happened with McCotter Jenkins: The 5th Avenue to Serfdom - Nobody thought about taking away your Big Gulp until the government began to pay for everyone's health care. Republicans need to go on the offense on healthcare, suggest free market solutions Public opinion about the National Rifle Association A House of Horrors for Autistic Children but Cash for Democratic Pol Believe it or not, that is not satire
Barack Obama Longs for an Opponent Who Rolled Over and Died What if Barack Obama was president? Bookworm: Entropy is setting in and Obama will lose this election More good poll news for Romney Wehner: Obama Is Simply Overmatched by Events Article of the Year: The Fourth Revolution? A quote:
Where did all the billions of dollars given to the Palestinian Authority go? Muhammad Ali’s Grandson is Bar Mitzvahed Mullahs Stopped Bin Laden Killing Children SANDERS: The perils of intelligence blabberitis O’HANLON: Rays of hope in Afghanistan - Progress portends stability by 2014 pullout Sunday, June 3. 2012Why there's no Dunkin' Donuts in CaliforniaIt takes the Marines to open just one!
Posted by Bruce Kesler
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22:08
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O Fortuna Misheard LyricsPaul Simon, nowAlways a crisisLet no crisis go to waste. It's always a "crisis" when government wants power and control, and it is in the nature of governments to desire those things. Not from The Onion: Frank Bruni in the NYT tries to make the case that government should control what we eat. It's a crisis, you know. Related article: Is Freedom Possible Without Virtue?Albert Jay Nock on doing the right thing:
Image is from Political Commentator's Mayor Michael Bloomberg starring in "The New York Nanny State of Mind"
Posted by The Barrister
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14:28
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"Uh-Oh--The First Loophole in Student Loan Debt" - Asperger's!From the article:
Diamond JubileeWe attended a delightful Jubilee party that some Brit friends threw yesterday. Jolly good fun. Buckets of Pimm's Cup. Our friends were also celebrating their achievement of American citizenship, about which they feel proud. There are tight citizenship quotas for northern European immigrants despite our friends' being a Cambridge-educated economist and mathematician. I think he has waited ten years, working with a green card. Their house was flying both Brit and American flags for the occasion. One of a bunch of cool pics from the year of the Queen's coronation (h/t AVI). What are those bags hanging on the wall?
Posted by Bird Dog
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12:24
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The "Serenity Prayer"The entirety of Reinhold Niebuhr's serenity prayer: God grant me the serenity Amen. What I did to help the economy yesterdaySaturday, June 2. 2012“Existential Defeatism” Abroad and at HomeIn the fall of 1971, in grad school, I did a 60-page analysis of the Nixon/Kissinger détente policy. I concluded it was largely a holding action meant to slow down what otherwise was believed by its primaries as the inevitable declining power of the West in the face of rising Soviet and Chinese power. I termed it “existential defeatism”. Although pragmatic coping in many ways, defeatism or its better cousin called nuance, has not been terribly beneficial to US interests since. There isn’t a linear relationship from 1971 to now, but rather a trend. This trend is toward restraint in asserting our interests, with the confused interruption of our Iraq experience. It is increasingly coupled with deference to the alternate or contrary interests of other countries, called internationalism. These policies can take little credit for the fall of the Soviet Union, under the weight of its own internal contradictions, in 1989. On the other hand, China kept ascending, US fecklessness in Indochina is touted by Islamist radicals as encouragement for their causes, and Russia is following its old path contrary to Western interests. Meanwhile, many of today’s foreign policy gurus tout international law and international organizations, usually most often in play to hinder or attack Western interests. Restraint in foreign engagements, particularly military, is certainly to be prized unless clear US national interests, mechanisms, and follow-through plans are pretty clearly present, and articulated by our national political leaders so necessary to domestic support. However, instead, what we’ve increasingly seen is muddling and disparagement of the very concept of US national interests, substituting outright negativity, conceptual distractions, and refusal to actively engage unless elusive or impossible international consensus is reached, to include Russia and China who aren’t shy about exerting themselves actively in opposition to US or Western interests. In effect, as well, the US and Western Europe have too often abandoned its moral core, as well, to the favor of those who don’t share it or deride or hate it. All that said, this critique must face the serious real-world problems we face immediately in the Middle East and coastal Asia, and the influence of financial problems. Understandably nervous and hesitant to confront crazies in the Middle East, we have defaulted influence to Iran and to Russia. Not wanting to indiscriminately support or arm possible future foes, as we did in Afghanistan to chase out the Soviet Union, there is little effort to discriminate and strengthen those not antagonistic to the West. Syria has been a cat’s paw of Iran to ferment conflict. Our non-action furthers this, rather than decrease it, aside from the humanitarian toll on Syrians with Iranians on the ground adding to the murders and Russian arms arriving in torrents. The US is rightly seen in the region and elsewhere as ineffectual, hardly worth allying with. Meanwhile, enough said, Iran continues its steady march to nuclear weapons, stirring others in the region to possibly also do so, further destabilizing international order and security. One would hope that the US is doing more behind the scenes than is apparent, but no observers have seen such which is telling in the usually open sieve of reporting and NGOs. The US should be doing more in Syria, and more openly and assertively, including arms to those less problematic. The US should announce a date certain in 2012, after which all informed analysts recognize it will be too late, by which the US will devastatingly bomb—as only the US could -- Iran’s nuclear installations if there is not a convincing abandonment of Iran’s nuclear war-making capacities. Neither in Syria nor Iran are US military forces necessary on the ground. But short of that we have done far too little to influence the outcomes, leaving the threats to grow and to undermine confidence in the West, and influencing Middle East countries and citizens to accommodate or ally themselves with Iran. The primary rationale for the US Senate to ratify its decades-pending Law of the Sea Treaty (LOST) may be to strengthen the hand in an international forum of the states in coastal Asia against the expansiveness of China. However, all, including China, have long since joined LOST, and that hasn’t slowed China’s claim of virtually the entire South China Sea as its own. China’s navy is expanding, often acting aggressively toward other states, and its oil and gas exploration is reaching into deep waters near other countries. See this map, the red lines far away from China being ocean borders that China wildly claims.
Continue reading "“Existential Defeatism” Abroad and at Home"
Posted by Bruce Kesler
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13:37
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WeedsMy Mom, an avid gardener and an avid reader, recommends Richard Mabey's Weeds: In Defense of Nature's Most Unloved Plants. The WSJ said “Entertaining. . . . [A] sprightly journey through horticultural history.” Saturday morning linksDeconstructed Fluffernutter sandwich via Laughing Squid. Some blame the fluffy Lefty brains of Massachusetts residents on being raised on this stuff. Why kids go to DC for jobs: No skills needed What's wrong with being stupid? Getting On the Road To Marriage The Corzine Rule 53-Year-Old Cross To Be Torn Down, Thanks to ACLU And there is no joy in Obamaville today The President who manages to embarrass a nation Miserable May jobs report suggests U.S. in recession red zone What is O’s case? It’s sure not the economy How is this "carbon-free"? Non-citizens voting? Feds to Florida: halt non-citizen voter purge Bloomberg pitches soda ban in appearance to celebrate National Doughnut Day Around the economic world in a few minutes Greenies want you dead True believers first, please All (Green) Thumbs - Voters realize that the benefits of renewable energy aren’t worth the costs. Hiawatha Warren is speculating in foreclosed real estate Paul Krugman’s Intellectual Great-Grandfather Meet the Radical DOJ Lawyer Forcing Florida to Keep Foreigners on the Voter Rolls Are the Negev Bedouin an Indigenous People? Fabricating Palestinian History Ilya: Asian-Americans, Affirmative Action, and Fisher v. Texas Jerusalem or al-Quds? The European Union’s Choice Saturday Verse: Stephen Spender (1909-1995)The Little Coat The little coat embroidered with birds Everything is dragged away. KlimtGustav Klimt's Portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer (1907). Ronald Lauder paid 135 million for this painting in 2006. It resides in NYC's Neue Gallery. (Gallery, and the restaurant, are a nice touch of Vienna.) A pupette and I spent a very pleasant day seeing the Klimts, and other good stuff (Schiele, Kokoshka), at the Belvedere in Vienna two years ago, then moved on by foot, trolley, and subway to lots of other fun things and tasty food treats - Viennese pastries and beers - along the way. She likes Schiele. Here's the story behind The Mona Lisa of Vienna
Posted by Bird Dog
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05:08
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Friday, June 1. 2012Lookin' good, Bob
Getting a bit older, but still cool enough.
The sport of politicsI get the impression that Mitt Romney is in it to win it. Wants the job. Team Romney Uses Obama's Media Pals To Hit Him With Solyndra:
We have been wondering lately whether the Dems are beginning to throw Obama under the bus in an effort to save themselves, and when Bill Clinton, well-known to have disdain for Obama, comes out as a virtual Romney supporter I have to think we might be on track. Clinton, unlike Cory Booker, is not spankable by the O team. In fact, Team Clinton, still the de-facto heads of the Dem party, has carefully announced that it's OK not to pin your future on Obama. That is politically devastating, I think. Romney is a JFK-era Democrat. Or, you could argue, a JFK-era Repub. They weren't all that far apart, back then. Back then, the federal government did not play such a large role in daily life, and did not aspire to it so it did not matter too much. Does Obama have any friends at all? I mean, besides the notably unappealing David Axelrod who is a guy who makes you want to take a shower after listening to him, and government union thugs who will expect to be paid off, Chicago-style?
Posted by The News Junkie
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12:26
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An iPad Beer AppIt's about time. When can I buy that app? Me like German unfiltered fresh iPad beers. Especially weissbrau.
Unscrabbleink and Grandma's DominosDo you like Scrabble and dominos? No, let me rephrase. Do you like the concept of Scrabble and dominos, but don't like the actual games? Would it be fair to say that Scrabble is extremely frustrating because of the limited number of words you can play, and dominos seems like a kid's game? Well, that's because you haven't played Unscrabbleink and Grandma's Dominos yet. Below the fold is the way to play these two great games. Continue reading "Unscrabbleink and Grandma's Dominos"
Posted by Dr. Mercury
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09:45
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Friday morning linksBombshell Study: College Guys Like Women Drunk and Stupid Duh. The Touch of a Man Makes Women Hot Duh. A Floridian Cesspool for the Rich and Vulgar Has Amelia Earhart's anti-freckle cream jar been discovered? What if Bush (or Palin) did this? Connerly: Black Studies--A Set-Aside Whose Time Has Passed Coke Responds to Bloomberg: Americans Can Make ‘Own Choices’ Bloomberg is an idiot. It’s Official: New Yorkers Are Slaves of the State Lamer and lamer: Republicans, Democrats agree: No one cares about Obama’s to-do list Are the Dems getting ready to throw Obama under the bus? Obama Will Not Win Re-election Famous Chicago political organizer … outorganized?; Update: Romney holds surprise presser of his own outside Solyndra When Romney Fights Back, Politico Declares the Day 'Nasty' ObamaCare in Reverse - Maine deregulates the insurance market. Premiums fall. Duh. “Al Sharpton alleges GOP like Hitler, ready to exterminate blacks” Lagarde: taxes are for little Greeks Sultan on racial politics Stim Bill May Have Cost as Much as $4.1 Million Per Job The Surprising Global Shortage of Skilled Workers Cubans still waiting for the internet Life CyclesVia Laughing Squid:
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