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 |
Sunday, January 10. 2021From today's LectionaryMark 1:4-11 1:4 John the baptizer appeared in the wilderness, proclaiming a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins. 1:5 And people from the whole Judean countryside and all the people of Jerusalem were going out to him, and were baptized by him in the river Jordan, confessing their sins. 1:6 Now John was clothed with camel's hair, with a leather belt around his waist, and he ate locusts and wild honey. 1:7 He proclaimed, "The one who is more powerful than I is coming after me; I am not worthy to stoop down and untie the thong of his sandals. 1:8 I have baptized you with water; but he will baptize you with the Holy Spirit." 1:9 In those days Jesus came from Nazareth of Galilee and was baptized by John in the Jordan. 1:10 And just as he was coming up out of the water, he saw the heavens torn apart and the Spirit descending like a dove on him. 1:11 And a voice came from heaven, "You are my Son, the Beloved; with you I am well pleased." Saturday, January 9. 2021Heather MacDonald explains the Trump tragedyAs for so many if not most people, Trump's fate was in himself, not in his stars. Hubris is part of it. One year ago we commented that Trump's 2020 adversary would be himself. That is a tragic hero. Heather always gets it right: Trump's Exit
Posted by The News Junkie
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects
at
16:52
| Comments (29)
| Trackbacks (0)
A Tale of Two Cities
Posted by The Barrister
in The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
at
13:57
| Comment (1)
| Trackbacks (0)
Planet PartyPlanet party happening this weekend with triple conjunction - Mercury, Jupiter, and Saturn. I assume they will wear masks. Binoculars are good - no need for a telescope.
Saturday morning linksDriscoll at Insty: Kicked out of the comedy club Nearly two-thirds of college students think government should have power to punish ‘hate speech’: survey "Fearing not that I'd become my enemy in the instant that I preach". Bryn Mawr College Agrees to ‘Reparations Fund’ Following Student Strike That Shut Campus for Weeks President Trump Says He Will Not Attend Joe Biden’s Inauguration on January 20th Non-traditional as expected, but the magnificent bastard would be a huge distraction
I guess she doesn't like him The tech monopolies have sprung into action Big Tech Launches Massive Coordinated Cyber Attack on 74,000,000 Trump Voters — GOP SILENT Biden Plays Race Card: ‘If It Had Been BLM Protesting Yesterday, They Would’ve Been Treated Very Differently’… Very true
How Warnock and Ossoff painted Georgia blue and flipped the Senate Friday, January 8. 2021A Dose of RealityHopefully calm will be restored as the nation moves back toward some semblance of whatever it is we consider 'normal' for the last 9 months. I hope things continue to improve as we move out of the Covid scare and fear mongering (yes, Covid is real, I had it as have many friends, but no it's not so bad for 95% of the people who get it). If we can move past all this, my job opportunities may improve. Then again, who knows? I know few of you are on Facebook, but I am (or was). It allowed me to reconnect with friends and family and it's a useful tool. I've also shared Maggie's articles there with my friends, and met many other people who I share interests with. I am well aware of the privacy issues, but I know how to navigate them (part of my everyday job) and manage them effectively. There is, however, one thing I can't manage. It's the real problem we're facing today. It's the reason I deactivated my Facebook recently (after letting people know how they can reach me if they want/need to). I am aware of many HR Departments doing sweeps of social media to find things out about people. I have heard several stories of pro-Trump people losing job offers. This doesn't surprise me at all in NYC today. The shift here has been significant from not just hating Trump to full-fledged belief that anyone who supports him is a deranged psychopath. I have never been a Trump supporter, but that doesn't mean anything because I've never hated him, either. It's best to hate him with the passion of a thousand suns in order to win approval with many organizations today. I haven't loved him, haven't hated him, I've merely tolerated him, and realized his persona was a massive problem but that he was accomplishing some good things. I was for honesty and balance of thought and reason. Today, you can't be that way. You have to be a true believer, or at least not come across as a believer of "the other side". In other words, it is almost a requirement to be Progressive to be "acceptable". Such is the nature of modern definitions of Diversity - be like us or you're not acceptable. I'm all for Diversity. Diversity of thought, and respect for other views, without accepting the enforcement of those views on others by law, social shame, or other means of behavioral modification (brainwashing via education, for example). Continue reading "A Dose of Reality" Scarlatti, with anti-aircraft fireI don't have the exact date of this Paris recording of Wanda Landowska with Sonata in D Major. This remastered version actually reduced the French anti-aircraft noise but some can be heard around the 2-minute point. The Germans were coming, but this famous Jewish, lesbian keyboardist played on.
Who will stand up for everyday Trump voters facing retribution from the left?
Posted by The News Junkie
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects
at
13:36
| Comments (27)
| Trackbacks (0)
Friday morning linksBetsy DeVos’s Higher Ed Legacy In Florida, we’re still seeing a flood of New York refugees Cuomo's COVID Vaccination Rollout In NY Is A Total Mess Covid-19 immunity likely lasts for years Enough with the outrage Zuckerberg Bans Trump From FB, Instagram “Indefinitely” Parler CEO (Who Is Actually A Democrat) Calls Twitter Cowardly Authoritarians For Banning POTUS & Others… “They’re Not Gonna Let Up and They Should Not” – Kamala Harris Egged On Violent BLM Rioters in 2020 — Trump Told Protesters to Go Home Worrisome Signs the Capitol Breach was Planned to Discredit Trump Supporters Trump Acknowledges Election Defeat, Stops Pushing Fraud Claims, Slams Those Who Got Violent At Riot Back on the rails Thursday, January 7. 2021Film recommendationPixar's Soul. It is out now.
Trump has gone off the railsI hate to say it. but there it is. He was never ordinary (which is why he was elected), but now, with just a few days left, people are fleeing his leadership. Heroes have great strengths and great weaknesses. ‘I can’t stay’: Mick Mulvaney resigns his Trump administration post Former AG Barr: Trump Betrayed ‘His Office And Supporters,’ ‘Orchestrated A Mob’ Over Election Loss Stephanie Grisham, Top Aide to First Lady Melania Resigns Farms, factories, and "Failure to Launch"
My main point is that many are not equipped to launch out into the big world to become world-beaters, or even to become well-adapted to current economic-psycho-social expectations. In my view, it is remarkable that so many are equipped and willing. It is a social expectation now but not a useful one. Humans are tribal, family- and extended-family-oriented creatures. Every human has some gifts, and many shortcomings. Luck matters in life of course, but I do believe that "we make our own luck" if we have the temperament to do so. In my career, I have seen many flawed but talented flounder on the rocks because wealth, privilege, and family enablement made it possible. A bit more than a century ago, and forever before that, most people worked on farms. Family farms. Life was hard before machines, but there was work for everybody in the family for generations. Occasionally, an ambitious kid would leave for the city for work or further education. With the industrial revolution, there was work for all (including kids) off the farm, at whatever level one sought to achieve. Not pleasant work in the mills until skills were achieved, but still work, contributing to the family... Continue reading "Farms, factories, and "Failure to Launch"" Thursday morning linksElite runners need a specific combination of physiological abilities to have any chance of running a sub-two-hour marathon When the world reopens, will art museums still be there? Celtic Coin Hoard Found By Birdwatcher The Vaccination Plan Isn’t Working Comedian Rowan Atkinson: Cancel Culture "Like A Medieval Mob" Cancel culture CLAIMS ANOTHER VICTIM Leftists Call For Radical Legislation After Warnock Projected Win: End Filibuster, Pack The Courts Insanity Wrap #119: Democrats Go Full Radical Nutjob, Win Anyway "Buckle Up!": Schumer Drunk With Power After Ossoff Declares Victory The Slow Implosion of the European Union In Praise of Trump Administration Transactional Diplomacy The boot comes down in Hong Kong Kim Jong-Un Admits His Own Shortcomings… Sort Of Wednesday, January 6. 2021Jefferson Quote"Yet where does this anarchy exist? Where did it ever exist, except in the single instance of Massachusets? And can history produce an instance of a rebellion so honourably conducted? I say nothing of it’s motives. They were founded in ignorance, not wickedness. God forbid we should ever be 20. years without such a rebellion. The people can not be all, and always, well informed. The part which is wrong will be discontented in proportion to the importance of the facts they misconceive. If they remain quiet under such misconceptions it is a lethargy, the forerunner of death to the public liberty. We have had 13. states independant 11. years. There has been one rebellion. That comes to one rebellion in a century and a half for each state. What country before ever existed a century and half without a rebellion? And what country can preserve it’s liberties if their rulers are not warned from time to time that their people preserve the spirit of resistance? Let them take arms. The remedy is to set them right as to facts, pardon and pacify them. What signify a few lives lost in a century or two? The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants. It is it’s natural manure." Jefferson would have shrugged off today, much as he shrugged off Shay's Rebellion and (more or less) supported the Whiskey Rebellion (later repealing that stupid tax). He also supported the French Revolution, not for what happened, but for its original principles. People can't always be well informed - and certainly with nonsense information spewing from not only the 'mainstream' media but also from myriad other 'sources' like Qanon - we need more than ever to look back through history and put things in perspective both ideologically and historically. Few people remember 1954 and Puerto Rican nationalists shooting up Congress. Today's events may have been wrong and lawless, but they are not at all unusual or necessarily misguided in the larger scheme of US history. Regarding Today's Activity in DCThe real issue I see coming out of what's going on in DC is not what has happened. What occurred in DC is not that different from what's been going on all summer. It's not right, it's uncalled for, and it doesn't matter who you support. It's just lawless behavior and it should've been stopped in the summer - just as it should be stopped here (and I'm sure it will be). It's wrong that the media spent the whole summer telling us riots were 'peaceful' protests and didn't care about the destruction of businesses and livelihoods. That was wrong. The only thing we 'lost' here was a few hours and a slowdown to the certification. As a result, the credibility of our journalists has reached a new low. Today was wrong - we cannot pretend that this kind of behavior is acceptable regardless of who we want in office. But we've been told all summer that rioting is fine. It just matters what you're rioting 'for', I guess. The REAL problem, as I see it, is that finally the politicians have a taste of what they've wrought...and they will use it to insulate themselves further from the people. And that will be a very bad situation. These politicians have outsourced their riots to other cities for years. They've never felt the wrath of the people. Now that they have, they are blaming the people for the problems they, the politicians, have created. You can be sure they will find ways to continue to distance themselves from us rather than realizing this is just the start of the people demanding our PUBLIC SERVANTS act like what they are, rather than acting as our overlords. Living joyfully, off the grid in a Swedish forestI wonder how they get money. There is no evidence that they work, but maybe they write or something. She says she makes artisanal cheese, but not now.
Radicals in the ClassroomSan Diego’s school district tells white teachers that they are guilty of “spirit murdering” black children and should undergo “antiracist therapy.” I have grown weary of linking such reporting, but San Diego? When ballerinas were prostitutes
Posted by Bird Dog
in The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
at
15:01
| Comments (10)
| Trackbacks (0)
Vitamin DDon’t Let COVID-19 Patients Die With Vitamin D Deficiency — We can't wait for perfect evidence Take some. Not too much.
Scott Adams' terrible one-day vacation to UtahWednesday morning linksAre The Vaccines Already (Partially) Obsolete? Teachers are not showing up for work Quit the excuses — and get New Yorkers vaccinated Walmart to Increase Number of Clinics in Its Stores Interesting development Video: 2020: What a year of climate alarmism tells us about green ideology In 1903 The Electric Car Was 54 Years Old Who Gets to Tell the Story of 2020? The lying media are the worst historians. THE WAR ON STANDARDS, WEST POINT CHEATING EDITION What about oaths? TV: Mr. Mayor Makes a Much-Deserved Mockery of Urban Politics. The spiritual successor of 30 Rock keeps its edge. Prager: I Now Better Understand the 'Good German' Radical Democrats Are Turning Minneapolis Into A Violent Wasteland THE BIDEN BORDER SURGE COMES EARLY Warnock defeats Loeffler in Georgia Senate runoff Sheesh President Trump Sends Message to Democrats and RINO Republicans: ‘Thousands Pouring Into DC Won’t Stand for Stolen Election’ Shut up, Donald China calls Biden administration ‘a new window of hope’ for US relations Tuesday, January 5. 2021Republican senators who refuse to certify Biden’s victory are inflaming doubts they helped kindle.I agree with Ponnuru: It is time to throw in the towel. Furthermore, I do not think Trump is doing himself any favors by talking the way he is. A graceful exit is the way to do it, and let history judge it all.
Posted by The News Junkie
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects
at
13:56
| Comments (63)
| Trackbacks (0)
Tuesday morning linksGoodbye to Gerry of Gerry and the Pacemakers. Gerard reviews his leaving NYC, from 2005 Alibaba Founder Jack Ma Has Been Missing For 2 Months ISRAEL LEADS THE WORLD IN CORONAVIRUS VACCINATION SHOTS 64% Of D.C’s COVID Vaccine Supply Is Literally Sitting Unused… Identity Politics is Behind the Failed Vaccine Rollout To Speed Up Vaccine Distribution, Let National Chains Like CVS And Walgreens Take A Role Re Cuomo:
COVID world update Kamala Tells Tall Tale of How She Fell Out of a Stroller During Civil Rights March, Then Told Her Mom All She Wanted Was “Fweedom” – Story Was Lifted From 1965 Playboy Interview with MLK! As a new year dawns, be very grateful you are not Joe Biden Monday, January 4. 2021Scott on how Trump hoaxes, even now, are produced
Posted by The News Junkie
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects
at
17:31
| Comments (3)
| Trackbacks (0)
It's mousetrap season around hereActually it's always the season for House Mice. We have an issue with them right now. In cold weather, their numbers can be supplemented by outdoor wild mice. The solution is good old (humane) Victor Mousetraps. $11 per dozen.
Posted by Bird Dog
in The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
at
14:31
| Comments (15)
| Trackbacks (0)
« previous page
(Page 4 of 5, totaling 111 entries)
» next page
|