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, July 31. 2014Another Summertime Scientific PollIf you have some savings (which most responsible people sacrifice comforts and luxuries to have), what do you do with it? Investing how? Or not investing? - Short-term savings (might possibly need within a year or three) - Long-term (might need someday, or might wish to leave to kids if you croak soon enough) Inquiring people want to know what you do with your money. If I get some comments, I'll show you mine.
Posted by The Barrister
in The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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14:07
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NATO and mission creepIs there any reason for NATO to exist now? I don't think so, but typically organizations, once born, find reasons to rationalize their immortality. Just like government programs. Here's a case in point: Ukraine Crisis Reminds Americans Why NATO Should Not Expand Europe is not part of the US. They are old enough to put on big boy pants. Russia is not scary, just corrupt, obnoxious, and untrustworthy. It's their culture.
Posted by The News Junkie
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11:41
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Thursday morning linksImage from Am. Digest. Similar to Mark Twain's "A lie can travel halfway around the world while the truth is still trying to get its pants on." A taxicab's day - This visualization displays the data for one random NYC yellow taxi on a single day in 2013. See where it operated, how much money it made, and how busy it was over 24 hours. Totten: Welcome to Vietnam The Overblown Stigma of Genital Herpes "Overblown"? Here's what the numbers on your credit card really mean Sipp: I've written from time to time about homeschooling, but no one pays any attention to anything I say about it:
Michelle Nunn: Favorable Media Bias Part of Democrat Campaign Strategy Duh. Obama Administration Suing Pa. State Police Over Physical Fitness Tests De Blasio’s Policing Dilemma - The Gotham mayor must decide whether to listen to his police commissioner or the New York Times.
Italian journalist leaves Gaza, tells truth once free from Hamas retaliation Italy Suddenly Gets Ugly for Jews Wednesday, July 30. 2014What's for supper, Dad?Grilled marinated pork chops and grilled asparagus with some steamed yellow squash on the side. Here's a tip: There's no need to cook the heck out of a nice 1 1/2-inch-thick Costco pork chop anymore. Trichinosis is a thing of the past. Pink inside is perfect. Medical guidelinesGuidelines have consequences – intended and unintended. I don't know what practicing clinician has time to write guidelines for other docs, but guidelines are nothing but trouble. The best medical care is both art and science. Knowledge is always incomplete, patients are individuals with unique situations, and all docs have their own preferences and points of view. Guidelines end up being little more than fodder for tort lawyers and time-wasters. Worst of all, young docs feel as if they have to follow them. Many things go wrong when practicing by the book. Medicine is an art and a science.
Posted by Dr. Joy Bliss
in Medical, Our Essays, Psychology, and Dr. Bliss
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15:28
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A Maggie's Farm Summer Scientific PollA while ago, a reader made the point that schoolteachers rarely teach kids to read and to do basic arithmetic these days because most people learn these things from their moms and/or dads, at home. In a society with essentially-universal literacy, is it a school's job to do those basic things anymore? Wednesday morning linksPhoto: A friend's pic of a fruit dish for a baby shower "Even knowing Charles was juggling multiple partners, I never doubted how important I was to him..." Now it's called "juggling"? Study Finds That Men Like Nice Women, But Not the Other Way Around Amazon Is Unprofitable — and It's Completely on Purpose The Battle of Alexandria - How riverside parks & hotels threaten a model of American urbanism Common Core Supporters: We’ve Just Been Too Darned Principled! Collect More Than $7,000 Per Month for 'Fostering' Adult Illegal Aliens Is Obama Above the Law With Summer Amnesty Plan? Democrats Admit Amnesty Is For Political Purposes A brief history of climate panic and crisis… both warming and cooling Scientists blame the polar vortex alternatively on global warming and global cooling Just TWO climate committee MPs clash with IPCC: The two with SCIENCE degrees Government Paying $140,368 to Take 10 Students on a ‘Climate Change Journey’ Dodd-Frank’s Achilles’ heel VDH: Why Is the World Becoming Such a Nasty Place? "Becoming"? By the way, Hamas is using a hospital as its operations hub in Gaza Spanish Writer Says Israel's War in Gaza Justifies Expulsion of Jews The Demand and Supply of Sex The Demand and Supply of Sex
Tuesday, July 29. 2014Rhode Island Cuisine: StuffiesThe two best uses of big Quahogs are Stuffies and Chowda. Here's a good Stuffy recipe from Emeril (who is from Fall River - in the general neighborhood). Talk therapy and therapy talk: An update on modern Psychology
More Roger Angell: Getting old with happiness
Pic on loan from the NYT article - I've been a Roger Angell reader for most of my life. Whether interested in baseball or not, I recommend his prose to you. He just turned 93, has retired to Maine, is planning a second marriage, and is being honored in Cooperstown for his contributions to baseball. Maureen Dowd (of all people) interviewed him, and it's a nice interview. For even more fun, he wrote a piece for The New Yorker in February: This Old Man - Life in the nineties. He begins:
Also,
Posted by The Barrister
in Our Essays, The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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13:11
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Open BordersAre there any nations which have willingly voted for open borders? Or for entry from a foreign place with no passport, or for any residency without a visa? Many pundits from across the political spectrum are advocating open borders for the US, most recently George Will. Now with Central American, and Chinese, immigrants coming via Mexico, my question for the open borders crowd is "How many, who, and from where?" Or is there no limit and no choice to be made by Americans? I thought we ran this joint. There are an estimated 3 billion in poverty on this planet, many living without WiFi or big-screen TVs, and I am sure a large fraction of them would welcome the opportunity to take advantage of American material abundance. Why don't people just fix their own places?
Posted by The News Junkie
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11:53
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Tuesday morning links
Image via Eratosthenes The Myth Of College “Hookup Culture” Is One of the Most Popular Psychology Experiments Worthless? Women Against Feminism: Are These Ladies Crazy? Should High Schools Continue to Integrate Calculus into Curriculum? As Recalls Mount, Was It Worth Bailing Out the 'Old GM'? Constable Shoots and Paralyzes Man While Serving Warrant Over Unpaid Parking Tickets Harvard Prof Flies Around Globe, Decries Climate Change ‘Deniers The Government Is Cracking Down on School Bake Sales Children crossing border: 'Obama will take care of us' State Department: Christian presence in Middle East becoming ‘shadow of its former self’ Presbyterian And Now... Europe's Kristallnacht Why a Gaza Cease Fire Doesn't Help Meet the Hamas billionaires Why More Israelis Should Die: The Left's Twisted Logic Monday, July 28. 2014Why my pup went berserko Friday afternoonIt took me a little while to realize why. I was doing some cleaning up to clear some space for my computer expert who needed to do a few essential jobs for me. Had to move some things out of the way, eg vacuum cleaner, book piles, chairs, piles of papers, baby stroller, etc. Also two gun cases. That's what did it. Gun cases mean, to him, the best fun in the world. Find the bird! Reacts the same way when I pull boots out of a closet. I hate to disappoint a good dog, but he is going to Cape Cod in a few weeks and he'll get plenty of salty-dog swimming with the family out there. No hunting, alas.
How adult, married life in America is sposta be
Amusing.
Posted by The Barrister
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14:50
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Monday morning linksShut Up, Please - One man’s approach to a problem of modern music P J O'Rourke on beaches: The water is freezing, the people are fat, and the sun will kill you. Multiple Lovers, Without Jealousy Missed this: Barneys' Spring Campaign Features 17 Transgender Models Comparing Alcohol and Marijuana: Seriously When It Comes To Marijuana, The NY Times Is Suddenly A States’ Rights Advocate The Upsides of Living with Your Parents Eleanor Holmes Norton says 'you don't have a right to know' what's going on in government NEW ENGLAND’S BLUE-STATE BLUES - Once known for its stiff-lipped prudence, the region is now a case study in fiscal insanity:
Coolest Summer On Record In The US Ben Stein - Castrated by our president
Typical US Household Worth One-Third Less Than Under Bush President’s “Corporate Deserters” Pay High Taxes Russia Is Sick - Until someone lances the boil of denial by telling the truth, no one will be safe. As Libya Implodes, “Smart Diplomacy” Becoming a Punch Line Hamas Killed 160 Palestinian Children to Build Tunnels It's a fair
In two hours, I splurged and spent a grand total of $17.50. Then we got hot dogs at Rawley's in Fairfield - best hot dogs in the world.Give them a try - right off I-95. Trust me on this because everyone I have ever taken there loves it, including Mrs. BD.
Sunday, July 27. 2014QQQ: A reminder - If you think you know a lot, odds are that you probably don't"Real knowledge is to know the extent of one's ignorance." Confucius Low-information voters often willingly confess that they know nothing despite their college paperwork, but in general ignorance begets confidence and wisdom destroys it. It's Dunning-Kruger. Growing tomatoes in New England is retarded We must be stupid. Year after year, we invest gardening effort to produce delicious home-grown varieties - and, if we're lucky, get to eat them for maybe 6 weeks. And part of that time, you are elsewhere. Does that make sense? No, but it makes hobby-sense in the same way that trout-fishing does. Hobbies are not economic - which is why we term them hobbies. Do the math. All that those good garden tomatoes do, for a few weeks from August to September, is to make you hate store-bought cardboard ones and restaurant ones for the rest of the year. Nobody in my large gardening family has harvested a single tomato yet this summer (OK, it's been a cold summer due to climate change), not even a single cherry tomato. There are lots of vegetable crops one can grow successfully up here, and harvest sometime between June/July to frost in October: rhubarb, peas, beans, summer squash, winter squash and pumpkin, greens of all sorts, fruit trees of course and grapes, berries, root crops, onions, cucumber, corn, etc. Why bother with all that when those things are dirt-cheap at the store? What we really grow best in our gardens are fat deer, fat chipmunks, fat rabbits, and fat woodchucks. Tomatoes? Not a one yet. I love a tomato sandwich: white bread, mayo, salt and pepper, and fat slices of tomato hot from the garden. Why do we persist? I think it's about the power of intermittent positive reinforcement from a few of those tomato sandwiches. That's how fishing and hunting work, too. We New England Yankees may have no sense, but we have our traditions and our seasonal habits which are the fabric of our lives, rational or not. Well, not rational at all if you value your free time above zero. One tip for those in my situation: Buy big fat beefsteak tomatoes at the supermarket and grill them, sautee them, or bake them. Some flavor appears. Better than nothing. Baseball
A skilled writer can make anything interesting and absorbing.
Posted by Bird Dog
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12:50
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QQQ"Fishiest of all fishy paces was the Try Pots, which well deserves its name, for the pots there were always boiling chowders. Chowder for breakfast, and chowder for dinner, and chowder for supper, til you begin to look for fish bones coming through your clothes. The area before the house was paved with clamshells. Mrs. Hussey wore a necklace of polished codfish vertebrae and Hosea Hussey had his account books bound in superior old shark skin. There was a fish flavor to the milk, too, which I could not account for, till one morning happening to take a stroll along the beach among some fisherman's boats, I saw Hosea's brindled cow feeding on fish remnants, and marching along the sand with each foot in a cod's decapitated head, looking very slipshod, I assure ye." Herman Melville, Moby Dick. It is The Great American Novel. There is no need to try to compete with him, so don't bother trying. Give up. That job is done. How the left took over the Democratic Party.How the left took over my parents' Democratic Party. They liked JFK, probably because he was Catholic (in name, anyway). They still refuse to hear anything about what decadent, manipulative and predatory sleazes that family consists of. Glamour. Rich. Sexy. Low-lifes. Catholic. Dem Party.
From today's Lectionary: What is the Kingdom of heaven like?Matthew 13:31-33, 44-52
My happy hummingbirdsAt the family compound in the Sierras where the snow is still slowly melting, the trout in the stream are tiny appetizers, my grandkids and nieces and nephews are all bright, cute, and well-behaved, and all is right with the world in the moutains. Anna's mostly, I believe. In a few months, there will be over 10' of snow here.
Saturday, July 26. 2014In praise of burkas 10 Great Things About the Burqa, from a guy in Brooklyn. Indeed, it does protect men from constant erotic turmoil, distraction, and temptation. I blame the gals for that.
Posted by The Barrister
in The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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14:46
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But who are they? Everybody wants to "help" the poor.Well, so they claim. But who are "the poor"? How can you "help the poor" unless you know who they are? Some are probably mentally-disabled, some are college or grad students, some are young people starting out, some are Maine Guides, some are hippies, some are single moms in rural or urban areas, some are lazy or feckless bums or addicts, some are ambitious new immigrants (legal or otherwise), some are retirees, some have low income but have assets, many get paid off the books, some may be quite content, some are temporarily down on their luck, some are struggling artists, some are ill, etc., etc. "The poor" is not a unitary category. I used to be poor, and probably most Maggie's readers have been poor at some point in their lives. That 92 year-old in Florida, now a WalMart greeter, had 10 million with Madoff. Poor, now. How come nobody ever talks about who they are, and whether it's a temporary situation, or a life-style choice, or whatnot? And how come the value of government and charitable benefits are never included in figuring poverty in the USA? From the article:
I doubt Ryan, a fine fellow I am sure, ever perused such data. He just wants to care but caring for others requires a discernment and art. Money is not everybody's life goal although perhaps only a noble few have the conscience to refuse free money from their neighbors. Plain emotional "caring" doesn't deserve any moral credit, and when governments go parental they are the worst parents in the world.
Posted by The News Junkie
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects, Our Essays
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14:29
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