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. |
Our Recent Essays Behind the Front Page
Categories
QuicksearchLinks
Blog Administration |
Friday, March 22. 2013More Ribollita
Made another Ribollita for Dad tonight (photo). Will deliver tomorrow - these things are always much tastier a day later. My ol' Yankee Dad loves Italian peasant comfort food. I used a different recipe this time for the Ribollita. These greens are half Kale and half chopped cabbage, plus the whites of two leeks. I pureed about 1/3 of the Canellini beans, and had to use plenty of chicken stock to keep it from being too thick. Water would be purist but I like flavor, and I throw all chicken bones in the freezer for whenever I need to make chicken stock. Or I make it and freeze it. There's over 1/2 cup of olive oil in there, and pretty much all the rest of the (frozen) Thyme I could find in the icy garden. Plenty of garlic, onion, celery, carrot, of course. Large can of crushed tomatoes - maybe a little too much. Cheap and delicious, and fun to make. It is difficult to over-use thyme in soups and stews. That's where the "savoury" comes from. Serve on top of small 1"-cube chunks of preferably-stale Italian or French bread in a soup bowl. A glass of Chianti Classico Riserva. Then take a nap. About your heart attack Over the transom, with info from the Mayo Clinic cardiologists - I knew you need your minimum water to help flush the toxins out of your body, but this was news to me.
Subject: Mayo clinic aspirin While England Slept: Disarming the BritsHow they disarmed our British cousins. It's the pitiful story of how Brits lost the right to self-defense. Here in the USA, we hold with the Castle Doctrine even though we have never had castles. We have stories like this one in the news daily: Texas Sheriff: Homeowner’s Gun Key to Saving His and Wife’s Lives from Home Invaders. Bad guys ignore gun laws. An unarmed home is just a target. And dead men don't talk... Pic is a Taurus. That's the gun Marianne kept handy.
Do national candidates need to pander to the low-information voter with Pop Culture savvy?
Just curious, but how does Obama have so much time to watch TV and to listen to tunes? I find no time for TV. Not that that bothers me very much but I spose it would matter if I were running for office.
Posted by The News Junkie
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects, Our Essays
at
11:54
| Comments (2)
| Trackbacks (0)
Friday morning linksMore details on how well the Polar Bears are doing these days You can learn some interesting natural history from the article and the comments Fox hunting is an extreme sport Tried it a few times with my Mom as a lad. Scary and exhilarating. We had a local hunt club. We had a member die on a hunt (overhead branch). Broken bones galore, of course. It sucks to fall off a galloping horse. Think Ethanol is Environmentally Friendly? Think Again. Soda Wars: CBS News Declares a Statistical Zero 'Staggering' Pew Study Proves Fox News' Critics Horribly, Terribly, Completely Wrong Elizabeth Warren already planning to cash in She's already made $7 million in teaching and public service. Does she need more? Or is it just the Indian Way? Proof that cold weather causes murder Government Is The Liberals' Religion People in Newtown want guns ‘Illegal immigration is to immigration what shoplifting is to shopping’ (video) Great quote. Are white people allowed to discuss racial issues? Legal Education: Are Two Years Enough? Why loans are a bad idea for certificate education Tennessee State Senator Whips-Up Opposition to University’s Sex Week Insty likes to claim that every week was sex week when he was in college US plan calls for more scanning of private Web traffic, email Thanks a lot, George Bush, for creating that psychotic agency We Have Met the RINO and He Is Us Thursday, March 21. 2013Big-Project Binge Fueled Motor City’s MeltdownEd Glaeser begins:
Yale and Harvard linksThe Decline of Marriage and the Rise of Unwed Mothers: An Economic MysteryThe Decline of Marriage and the Rise of Unwed Mothers: An Economic Mystery. The real question here isn't "Why so many babies?" It's "Why so few marriages?" And we have an answer. As we say here, building a complex life with social pleasures, financial stability, family structure with continuity, traditions, and reliability, and the general comforts of life, is difficult without marriage and family. Walter Weyl: All of your property is belong to usTo understand the now-antique Liberal/Progressive mind set in America, we must go back at least to the turn of the last century. Around 1910, Walter Weyl was all the rage - the new, new Coke. At the time, the Western world was excited by utopian ideas about everything being run by brilliant, virtuous, and omniscient overseers who aspired to unburden us common folk of freedom, risk, and excessive responsibilities. With a h/t to Doug Ross, here is some of it: Walter Weyl (1873-1919): The state has a “primordial, intrinsic, underlying right to all property”. A quote:
As most Maggie's readers know, individual freedom is not about "the greater good," nor is it about the State. It's about individual sovereignty. Thursday morning linksSorry, greenies. Polar Bears are thriving. I was dumped after sex: was I wrong to do it?' The lady advice columnist suggests she might need therapy for wanting to wait for sex a few weeks with a new date. I'm sure the fellows would heartily agree... A First: Conservative Studies Professor at a Public University I am deeply offended by the new cult of microaggression. Child Services, Police Descend on Home After 10-Year Old Poses with Hunting Rifle Why Do Economists Urge College, But Not Marriage? How does a local eye doctor make this kind of dough? In Cyprus, Europe Sets a New Standard for Stupidity Media Losing Their Freedom Without A Fight In Britain Attracting sports teams does a city no good As Calif. Drowns in Debt, Group Advocates For Free Healthcare for Illegals Illegal Immigrants Make Commercial Demanding Free Healthcare Republicans Must Show Support for Hispanic Dreams Wednesday, March 20. 2013Vacation planning: Bucket lists, plus What do you have in the works?It's the time of year for trip planning. A bit early to think about fall hunting, but spring and summer plans are on the menu. For no reason that I can comprehend, Mrs. BD likes to go places with just me. I enjoy including the kids and giving them special life treats as did my parents for me, and their companionship and getting to know them better as they unfold is a joy. She has gotten a little carried away, and now has things in the pipeline for 2014 too, God willing. She has scheduled Little St. Simon's Island in April to catch migration season (to please me), a kid's graduation mini-trip, and the annual family reunion week in Wellfleet in August (for the first time, sadly without Mom but, I hope, with all of the immediate and extended family). For fall, I dunno. Before I get old, my short-term (3-yr) bucket list includes: - a good-sized villa (5-8 bedrooms) in Tuscany for 2 weeks with enough room for the entire family and dearest friends, with a cook and housekeeper (they all come with that anyway) and rental cars for all. I am saving up for that, but it's not really too expensive. As much as I love Umbria and enjoy Sicily, the family all deserve more time in Tuscany. Well, my kids are lucky. They've been everywhere. - More Sicily. Rent a sports car, drink a little Tenuta delle Terre Nere Etna Rosso, then drive all over with my cowboy hat and a history text and ignore the speed laws like everybody else. Try to frighten the Mrs. with speed, but that is difficult to do. She likes speed too. - a barge trip through southern France with the inlaws and family. Dad's a bit too feeble for this now, but he already took plenty of these with my Mom. - I need to get back to Pine Butte in Montana soon, maybe next Spring for wildflower bloom and Grizzly Bears, - and to Big Sky in the winter before my joints begin to creak. I need new skis. - Bermuda again, for a romantic 5 days (we like Cambridge Beaches - they call it luxurious but it is only luxurious by British standards) - Another Holland-America Line cross-Atlantic trip, as we used to do when I was young. I love the North Atlantic stormy days on a ship. - Another Holland-America Line history cruise What's on the top of Mrs. BD's bucket list? A week down the coast of Turkey on a gulet. I would love to get back to Turkey again. Carpe diem, friends, because memories are all we have of lasting value, and memories rarely include our daily routines and chores. Even if they should, so much of it just blends together. What do y'all have in the works?
Conservatives must fight!
Nice conservative people have no idea of what an institutionalized, ruthless, partially-corrupt apparatus they are up against. It's the big leagues. Voters do not study the Constitution before they go to the polls.
Posted by The News Junkie
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects
at
13:59
| Comments (0)
| Trackbacks (0)
This Is What It's Like to Take on School Unions As a Democratic Leader in CaliforniaSchool choice is not a Democrat-Conservative split. Nobody likes the government monopoly and everybody wants school choices, the same school choices that the Obama kids have. Inner city families long for school choices for their kids. The only problems the Dems have are to deal with are their wealthy allies in the teachers unions. Here's a story: This Is What It's Like to Take on School Unions As a Democratic Leader in California
Posted by The Barrister
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects, Our Essays
at
13:32
| Comment (1)
| Trackbacks (0)
Software magic Today's program lets you enhance a photograph in a number of ways. You might have seen software on shows like 'NCIS' that can age a person, but this stuff takes it to the next level. Apart from making them younger or older, you can also enhance the image to show the effects of a different lifestyle, like "Weathered Sea Captain" or "Grizzled Veteran Soldier". Wishing to give it a spin, I jumped on the web and grabbed the first facial pic I saw, one of President Barack Obama. I checked both the "Mad Max From Thunderdome" and "Aging Battle-Hardened Warrior" boxes, and this is what it produced: You have to admit, Obama looks friggin' awesome. If I'm going to pit someone against the likes of bin Laden, that's the guy I want. Yes, these new computer programs are just amazing, and I- Oops, hold on a sec. Sorry, wrong photograph. The above is Satan in the new History Channel series, 'The Bible'. Sorry for any confusion. The left, of course, is up in arms because of the resemblance. It seems to me that they're asking the wrong question, though. They're asking why Satan looks like President Obama. My question is, why does President Obama look like Satan? QQQ"We're created to love people and use things. In our decadent society, we love things and use people." A commenter at Schneiderman Weds. morning linksCow manure is not good fertilizer Chart of the day: As a share of household spending, the US has the most affordable food in world Summer Boot Camp for Freedom Fighting Law Students Is it possible for the legal profession to reform itself? This Is the Scariest Statistic About the Newspaper Business Today The Texas Growth Machine - The data show that the Lone Star State’s prosperity is no mirage. Scott Walker: Obama measures success by government dependency Democrat Gubernatorial Candidate Promises Free College 'Government-Established Regulatory Body' To Oversee UK Media Many Americans are wondering how their country, a supposed A Major Take-Down of Howard Zinn by David Greenberg in TNR. Don’t Miss it! Ben Carson's Problematic Views on Health Care Explaining The Minimum Wage To Harvard Law Professor Elizabeth Warren - My Arguments In Favor of a $50/Hr Minimum Wage (/sarcasm) Back in the day, a real New Yorker would look that tiny troll in the mayor’s office in his beady little eyes and laugh, “Hey Mikey, I got
Herring GullA reader sends us a pic of an immature Herring Gull in New England, with a big barnacle-covered Blue Mussel. He'll fly up with it 20 or 30 feet and drop it on rocks or asphalt until it cracks open.
Tuesday, March 19. 2013More on Thomas Nagel and Materialism
another quote from the piece:
Materialism, then, is fine as far as it goes. It just doesn’t go as far as materialists want it to. It is a premise of science, not a finding. Scientists do their work by assuming that every phenomenon can be reduced to a material, mechanistic cause and by excluding any possibility of nonmaterial explanations. And the materialist assumption works really, really well—in detecting and quantifying things that have a material or mechanistic explanation. Materialism has allowed us to predict and control what happens in nature with astonishing success. The jaw-dropping edifice of modern science, from space probes to nanosurgery, is the result.
Posted by Bird Dog
in Our Essays, The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
at
19:16
| Comments (7)
| Trackbacks (0)
Charles Murray on college
"There is no magic point at which a genuine college-level education becomes an Continue reading "Charles Murray on college" Tuesday free ad for BobOur friend at the Old Urbanist has compiled a collection of his favorite Dylan live video recordings. That could keep you entertained for a while. (Some just audio - it starts with Delia. Second in the line-up is Blind Willy McTell. Good, solid stuff. A treat. The pieces run in series) Why Do People Believe Scientifically Untrue Things?Why Do People Believe Scientifically Untrue Things? Bailey argues that it's because of moral presumptions, biases really. I'd agree that that is a factor, but he doesn't consider peoples' healthy skepticism about the Truth du Jour. Science offers theories, not facts. Educated people know that Science is not a religion, and few scientists claim Truth. Few things that were believed to be "scientific truths" 50 years ago are believed today, and the same will apply 50 years from today. Ah, memories If you weren't hanging around Maggie's during the 2008 presidential election, you really missed something. The media attention we received was simply fierce. Ah, they just don't make presidential races like that anymore. And, unfortunately, that's true. They didn't do a 2012 update, but the above is still active. To make your own, click here. If you want to embed the player on your own site, like above, open the source code of the displayed page and copy the block from <OBJECT> to </OBJECT> to the source code of your own page. It may not be topical, with that glaring '2008', but at least you can file it in your 'Favorite Memories' section. I present this not only for fun, but as a casual reminder of how easy it's become to overlay video on top of video and have it look 100% perfect. The only scene where they flubbed up was the bus going by, but the rest was excellent. On the subject, I hereby move we strike the word incontrovertible from the language. At this very moment, someone out there is doctoring a video to make an innocent man look guilty of murder. This video, the prosecuting attorney will tell the jury, is incontrovertible proof of the defendant's guilt. You will watch the accused murder the innocent victim with (slamming fist on jury box railing) your own two eyes! It's a word whose time has come and gone. Looking For Links Dept. On the subject of video doctoring, I once saw a terrific video on YouTube of a UFO flying along, right there in front of you, big as day. As I recall, it was shot from inside a moving vehicle driving through the brush. Despite years of skepticism on your part, you had to admit that the final proof was right there before your very eyes. Then they re-played it, this time with a split screen, with the original video on one side and the identical-but-doctored video on the other. When it comes to 'home gimmickry' and the average slob fooling around with modern video editing programs, it was a masterpiece, and I'd like to include it in a future post on the subject. Also, I have a page of web vids in my Art Gallery where the music really makes the video. I have the half-feeling I've asked this before, but I'll give it another shot. I once saw a commercial on TV (which I presume has since been videoized to YouTube) that took place in the downtown part of a city, presumably New York. I can't remember if it was a smile or a nice gesture, like helping out a stranger with something small, but it traveled from person to person through the streets, finally making some kind of loop at the end. I honestly don't remember if the music was anything special, but there's a pretty good chance it was, and, if so, I'd like to include it on the page. Any leads to these links would be appreciated. Palin/Mercury 2016! Tuesday morning linksGovernment as Old-Age Home Let Them Eat Fat - Listening to the doctors on cable TV, you might
And Schneiderman comments on food and sex cults Materialism is a premise of science, not a finding. Black conservative leaders discuss how the NRA was created to protect freed slaves “The women’s studies crowd looked constipated” (fixed) Coffee Here, and Coffee There: How Different People Serve the World’s Favorite Hot Drink My Unrecognizable Democratic Party - The stakes are too high, please get serious about governing before it's too late. Domestic Drones Stir Imaginations, and Concerns Is capitalism moral? VDH: Politically Correct Language Distorts How We Understand Race, Diversity New sites for our blogroll: Monday, March 18. 2013Stuyvesant High School, NYC
Holy mackerel. They do color-blind, gender-blind admissions. Readers know that I do not think that we should categorize people in those ways anyway. Character and capability only.
« previous page
(Page 3 of 8, totaling 191 entries)
» next page
|