|
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 20. 2013From today's Lectionary: "you have kept the good wine until now"
2:1 On the third day there was a wedding in Cana of Galilee, and the mother of Jesus was there. Saturday, January 19. 2013Penultimate Classic Mommys of America Cheap 'n Easy suppers, #18: Spaghetti and Meatballs
I loved it as a kid, but now I feel it's an unpleasant meal. At least, we have evolved beyond Chef Boyardee. Here's Easiest Spaghetti and Meatballs. One genuine Italian touch: Crazy Martha says to throw the drained pasta into the meat and sauce in the saucepan. That's the right way to do it. Pasta in the sauce, not the sauce on top of the pasta. The Obama economyYale is offering a course on bartending. I'm surprised, because I thought Yale College now specialized in the fun of sex toys and at the same time, in some sort of straddle, in combatting the evil and politically-incorrect male sexual interest in females. Not in alcohol. Maybe Yale is trying to compete with Dartmouth in the drinks category. Yale will lose that competition hands-down. Is the reality of this economy sinking in yet? Admittedly, making a Perfect Manhattan is not child's play. High NoonToday, firearm-appreciators rally around the country to counter the gun-grabbing hysteria: Nationwide High Noon Rallies to Oppose Obama's Gun Grab. Readers know my views. I am in favor of grabbing the firearms of violent criminals and loonies. Start with the violent crims in gun-controlled Chicago, please. Bill Bratton knew how to do that in NYC. Law-abiding people ought to have all the firearms they desire. Lethal hammers and knives, too. They do not need a reason. This is America. Did you know this, via Schneiderman:
For the convenience of readers, I collected two posters which you anti-gun nuts might wish to enlarge and display to advertise your virtue, if you have any cojones:
Here's an alternative yard sign for those who believe that evil exists, but know they are probably not it:
Posted by The News Junkie
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects
at
12:00
| Comments (4)
| Trackbacks (0)
Low-info voters on yesterday's Presidential inaugurationThis is cruel and unfair to Obama fans.
Saturday Subbing LinksLaw Banning Genetic Discrimination Doesn't Apply To Some Insurers The simple pull-up rises in exercise popularity 65% See Gun Rights As Protection Against Tyranny Obama's Kids: Stooping to New Presidential Lows Banks Seek U.S. Help on Iran Cyberattacks Hamas’ military wing won’t disarm as part of unity deal The message Hagel carries on Iran The Archaeological Archive of Israel is Scanned and Going Online (mostly English) Don't Ignore This Emerged Market What a surprise (not)! Journal News map listed guns, permits stolen from New City home, cops say Obama bypasses Congress, attempts to force companies to reveal political donations through SEC Individual And Group Coverage Under The ACA: More Patches To The Federal-State Crazy Quilt Court ruling in Prop. 30 case limits use of 'spot bills' in budget: "The opinion does not affect the passage of Proposition 30 but could limit the Legislature's future use of so-called "spot bills," placeholder bills included in budget packages and passed as urgency measures only after they are filled with language later. Such budget-related bills are useful to lawmakers because they require only a majority vote and take effect immediately." Actor Danny Glover tells students 2nd Amendment was created to protect slavery Federal Appeals Court upholds Wisconsin union law Read more here: http://blogs.sacbee.com/capitolalertlatest/2013/01/court-ruling-in-prop-30-case-limits-use-of-spot-bills-in-budget.html#storylink=cpy Saturday Verse: Aristophenes (c. 456-386 BC)Song of the Clouds (from The Clouds. This translation by Oscar Wilde) Cloud-maidens that float on forever, Friday, January 18. 2013Mommys of America Cheap 'n Easy winter suppers #17: More Bean dishes
Red Beans and Rice. It doesn't really need the ham hocks as long as you use some bacon. I lived on this when I was in college. I miss it. Need to make some. Each of these dishes is not harmed by some hot sauce or hot pepper flakes. Dog teaches puppy to go downstairsThe Graduation Rate MythWeissberg: Higher graduation rates won’t help the economy because college reinforces bad work habits:
and
Posted by The Barrister
in Education, The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
at
13:53
| Comments (6)
| Trackbacks (0)
Lethal items, for the uninformedToon is h/t to Lucianne
Let's face it: many of the effete urban elites are just plain askeered of guns. Afraid to touch one, but no problem driving their lethal Volvos to their vacation homes or hiding behind armed security guards or bodyguards in their hotels, banks, office buildings, private roads, and private schools. Guns go "boom," and make holes in things. However, I shoot with many of the non-effete elite, and they are all quite comfortable with guns. They run businesses, or are heirs to fortunes, or are doctors and lawyers. They are outdoor people, know how to protect themselves and their families, and they read books, too. These guys I know tend to have lots of firearms. Some gals too, but they tend to rely on guys for their protection. I know it is not PC, but married women do, statistically, tend to rely on masculine guys for lots of things. Firearms are not just for criminals. They are basic life tools, like hammers. Who wants to be killed by a scumbag, or eaten by a Cougar?
Posted by The News Junkie
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects
at
12:19
| Comment (1)
| Trackbacks (0)
On the digital front First, voice recognition, which I've been following for decades. One of my pet fantasies is to run a business converting everything in a client's home to voice operation. "Dim the lights, Hal." "Yes, master." "A little more." "Yes, my lord." I'd actually program some 'character' into it, like every 23rd time you tell it to dim the lights, it makes you say 'please' first. If anyone out there has some moolah and thinks this would be a fun business venture, let's do it. But I stray. While Google might be a little unethical and/or greedy in certain areas, it also remains a fact that Google Maps blew the doors off MapQuest, Google Translator blew the doors off every translation program in existence, Google, itself, blew the doors off the other search engines of the day, and nothing even compares to Google Earth, Google Images and Google Street View. I feel they mightily dropped the ball with their Chrome browser, though, since it's only the ugliest, most ill-equipped browser in history. You can't even load a local page into it, last time I checked. But eventually they should get things sorted out (it says here). It does, however, now incorporate what appears to be a quantum leap in voice recognition. If you've ever wasted hours upon hours on programs like 'Dragon Naturally Speaking', then you'll see what I mean. Although it's a brief video, it still provides three key moments. Note (1) how it capitalizes the first word of the line after he says "New paragraph", (2) how it first thinks he says "notes", then changes it to "no" when "notes" doesn't make sense in context, and how it converts the word "exclamation" into an exclamation mark after it hears the whole phrase. Very smart.
As a small aside, that's not quite the truth up above. It's not Chrome, the browser, that's doing this, but an add-on program. We'll most likely see a conversion of the add-on for IE and FF soon enough. Google's just saying that to fluff Chrome's feathers. Next up is controlling a computer with just one's hands. Below the fold we'll examine a 'magic box' called Leap Motion. As these things go, it's pretty amazing. Whether or not it's practical is the question at hand — both literally and figuratively. Continue reading "On the digital front" Second-term headachesVDH's Second-Term Reckonings begins:
Friday Subbing LinksBird Dog is off somewhere or other, so you are stuck with what is on my spindle for today and tomorrow. Today there is a lot piled on my spindle. (Please notify Guinness) Tomorrow should be a shorter stack. Pension Funding Gap Widens for Big Cities Corporate Pensions Finished 2012 with Highest-Ever Deficits Murdered Diplomacy: How the Israel-Palestinian Conflict Has Been Totally Transformed The Struggle for the Fertile Crescent UC Irvine’s ‘Islam Awareness Week’: A CAIR Convention Disarming Americans, Arming Terrorists UK Textbook Wipes Israel Off the Map Venezuela To Sit in Judgment of Israel? State of confusion over state of Palestine Don’t Raise Debt Ceiling Without Balancing the Budget How a Federal Menu-Labeling Law Will Harm American Pizza 10 Ways Dodd-Frank Will Hurt the Economy in 2013 Pilgrims or Mercenaries? Iranian Hostages Freed by Free Syrian Army Oliver Stone’s Distortion of the Eisenhower Era 7 Crappy Products from The Green Movement New version of Stolen Valor bill introduced Real California budget numbers way higher than politicians let on American film companies bow to Chinese censorship Failing History: Colleges Neglect Core U.S. Principles Why Is Germany Repatriating Its Gold? Jack Lew: Not Fit to Be Secretary of the Treasury Netanyahu jabs at WH: Israelis know what’s best for Israel, thanks Blue Storm Ravages California City Is the MOOCs Panic Under Way? (MOOC = massive online open courses) The key to increasing upward mobility is expanding vocabulary Eight interesting things about Obama’s anti-gun proposals Grocery Bag Bans and Foodborne Illness Southwestern Pennsylvania hospital to stop baby deliveries Is Manti Te'o a victim or a liar? We're Leaving Now; The Wars Remain The Center for American Progress and Islamist Influences over the White House Fists Killed More in New York than Rifles in 2011 Obama Recess Appointment Ruling Coming Soon The Veil Descends (Mark Steyn) Married Couples Penalized By New Tax Laws Ironic Lede: "The Chicago Bears hired a Jewish head coach, Marc Trestman, to improve their pigskin prowess." George Will: Some questions for Hagel End of hope for peace isn't embrace of war How Conflicts in Cyberspace are Challenging America and Changing the World How Is a Medical Premium Determined? A More Complete Picture Moody’s New Pension Rules Would Bankrupt Six Cal Counties The Qatari Challenge to U.S. Foreign Policy America’s Exodus from Marriage When even a critic of aid to Israel says, "Obama ‘arrogant and presumptuous’ about Israel" Gold Digger!: An amateur prospector hunting for gold in Australia has astonished experts after stumbling across a mammoth nugget worth some £200,000. OK, the long chain of links may not have been sexy, but to keep your interest, count the links in these chains:
Fishing in CaboWe went after the eating fish (Spanish Mackeral), not the big game fish. More practical. It's like a zoo. With the Humpback Whales all around peering at your boat, the Frigatebirds stealing your bait, and the Sea Lions stealing either your bait or your catch, it was a bit of an obstacle course. But how bad is that? When you go, make sure to sup at our friend Roberto's shrimp joint, and at Mi Casa for traditional Mexican food and jollity. Good fun. To cook the fish you catch, bring them to Solomon's Landing and ask them to make some wonderful dishes with it for suppertime. They will amaze you.
Posted by Bird Dog
in Hunting, Fishing, Dogs, Guns, etc., Our Essays, Travelogues and Travel Ideas
at
05:05
| Comments (7)
| Trackbacks (0)
Thursday, January 17. 2013Thursday Patti PageWill Longer School Year Help or Hurt U.S. Students? Plus some thoughts about reinventing government education
However, I think it's time that the entire structure of public K-12 education ought to be reinvented. We started out with home-schooling, with tutors for the wealthy, then neighborhood one-room schoolhouses supported and controlled by the parents of the kids, then we went to the tax-supported, age-cohorted Prussian (yes, our public schools were based on the then-modern Prussian schools) factory model for the poor which we still use today in the US, while the prosperous (and the Catholics) used private schools. One size does not fit any, much less all. Nobody cares what I think, but I do have plenty of ideas. One of the first things I would do would be to eliminate the age-cohort system and, with that, those talented and gifted programs. Proceed at your own pace after demonstrating mastery of modules of study. The highly-motivated and bright move faster, the rest more slowly - or never. So what? Most kids cannot handle integral calculus but some kids are eager to tackle it. Another would be to eliminate the huge summer vacation. It's obsolete. Give them August off, if need be. Why should kids have life easier than the grown-ups who take so little time away from their work and pay the bills for the supposed professional education? Third, I would reintroduce technical training. The fancy private schools my kids attended have more technical training than the public schools have. Schools can take their pick: wood shop, metal shop, music shop, forestry shop, computer shop, kitchen shop, farm shop, garden shop, car and engine shop, construction and architecture shop, art and graphics shop, electrical shop, stone shop, ceramics shop, gun shop, etc. Few parents can teach all of these things, and the opportunities to integrate book learning - math, history, etc into real life tasks can be inspiring. If we had stone shop today, we might find another Michelangelo. Our kids' Kitchen Shop ultimately produced a Cordon Bleu four-star chef whose first task in Kitchen Shop was to understand sanitary dish-washing and the workings of a commercial dishwashing machine. Because private schools are non-union, the Kitchen Shop kids work in the school kitchen and take orders from the chef. Fourth, I would get rid of the costly educational edifice complex. The building doesn't contribute anything. Any old empty mill building or vacant factory would be fine. Fifth, I would bring back Civics. Every American needs to be taught how to be a citizen of a free republic. It's not easy to be one; it's all about man and God and law. Not all parents explain this plainly, or even by example. Sixth: Sports. Every kid ought to do some team or individual sports as part of school or outside of school. Not just the athletically-gifted. America is a sports country. Builds character even if you are a spaz. Mens sana in corpore sano. Seventh: Get rid of the unions. Teaching is a calling, not a factory job and definitely should not be a government job. Eighth: Abolish the Federal dept. of Education. It's not their yob, and they are mostly idiots who could not change the oil in their car or hammer a nail straight into a 2X4, much less diagram a sentence. I could go on and on, but that's a start. Winter Squash recipes
A friend asked me about squash pie. It's really the same thing as pumpkin pie, but made with winter squash (of which the pumpkin is just one type). The winter squashes were discovered and genetically-engineered by clever American Indians - as was corn (maize), the potato, and the tomato. Modern Western cuisine owes a lot to the Indian gourmets. This recipe for Butternut Squash Pie works for any type of winter squash including pumpkin. Squash pies (as in photo) have a more subtle flavor than pumpkin. For a wonderful but not New Englandy dish, Butternut Squash and Pasta With Sage. Pumpkin or winter squash ravioli is a fine dish too. We have become convinced, by a Cordon Bleu chef friend, that using supermarket wontons is perfectly fine for making ravioli. We will never bother to make our own homemade ravioli pasta again, because it's too darn much work and it's the inside that counts. (My Woodcock ravioli recipe will be posted one of these days). I am fond of baked Acorn Squash with some butter and Maple syrup inside, but you can use any winter squash. Simple, and tasty:
QQQ"The central conservative truth is that it is culture, not politics, that determines the success of a society. The central liberal truth is that politics can change a culture and save it from itself." Daniel Patrick Moynihan
Posted by The News Junkie
in Quotidian Quotable Quote (QQQ)
at
12:31
| Comments (4)
| Trackbacks (0)
Thursday morning links
I bailed out of an attempt to induct me into a cult tonight. Evil TV Network Takes Income From 11 Children Are Gold-Plated Health Benefits Making American Workers Worse Off? Kathryn Bigelow on Zero Dark Thirty: 'It's illogical to ignore torture' IRS Warns Employers: Do Not Try to Avoid ObamaCare Insurance Mandate:
In ‘fiscal cliff’ deal, a blow to Obamacare Whole Foods CEO: ObamaCare “more like fascism” GE: Hybrid And Electric Vehicles Make No Financial Sense Memo to Beijing: Carbon Dioxide Doesn't Cause Smog House Passes $50 Billion In Sandy Relief (Mostly Unrelated Pork) With Democrats Providing Majority Of The Yes Votes - UPDATE: Less Than Half The Money Is Sandy Related The Whiz Kids - They didn’t come here to cut spending:
Gun rights advocates should not rely on the Second Amendment. NY Punishes Law-Abiding Citizens: Cuomo signs Nation's Most Punitive Gun Legislation into law The would-be murderers are shaking in their boots Sultan on guns and the "We have to fix this" ethos:
Obama Regime Stalls on Lisa Jackson Emails California: Money not set aside for retiree health benefits Bob Schieffer Likens Obama 'Taking on the Gun Lobby' to Hunt for Bin Laden, 'Defeating the Nazis'
Journalist Rebellion in China Egyptian court sentences Christian family to 15 years for converting from Islam Vatican slams breakaway group for anti-Semitism - Cardinal calls Jew hatred ‘non-Christian,’ questions validity of Priestly Fraternity of St. Pius X Egypt’s U.S.-Subsidized Politics of Hate State Dep’t investigation: Assad used chemical weapons against Syrian rebels last month Wednesday, January 16. 2013Cheap 'n Easy Mommys of America winter suppers #15: Pot Roast
Either way, it gets the family well-fed and meated-up. Kids need meat to grow their brains. I like this recipe because it has lots of my favorite root vegetables in it, parsnips, turnips. Pot Roast is not a roast, it's braised. I call it Braised Beef and it has to be cooked until fork-tender. Here's a basic one: Beef Pot Roast Recipe Here's Alton Brown's version which we have made and is uniquely tangy. A (tomato-free) Italian version: Stracotto Seems like a good thing for crock pot cooking. "The Piling on by Political Left to Use Massacre of Children to Advance Political Agenda Disgusts Me"
That's Gov. Perry. I could not agree more.
Posted by The News Junkie
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects
at
16:28
| Comments (2)
| Trackbacks (0)
Hanging out and receational sexYou know you are reaching true adulthood when you read articles about The Kids These Days and end up grimacing. We have posted about the hooking-up culture in the past, about "friends with benefits," and about how the youth are mating randomly and promiscuously like rabbits in the woods and yet are spared the reputational problem which would have occurred when I was 20. The example from The New York Times is about girls: Voyeurism is fun, but tacky. From what I see in life, which is quite a lot, it seems to me that these stories are the exception rather than the rule. From what I see, the average middle-class American girl avoids casual sexual encounters and wants to be treated respectfully if not lovingly. There is a bell curve, and the left tail of the curve is sociopathic. So much for the girls. For the 20's guys, there is no doubt that it has gotten very easy to get lucky in the bars these days, if that is how one chooses to live. The modern trends of feminism are great for the guys: they get much more sex and sexual variety without committment, and the women make their own money. Unless you feel that relationships are a serious matter and that using others is a form of low life, that is.
Posted by Dr. Joy Bliss
in Our Essays, Psychology, and Dr. Bliss
at
14:44
| Comments (7)
| Trackbacks (0)
Phillips Andover jumps the sharkI had been under the impression that the reason to spend big bucks for an elite education in prep schools like Andover, Exeter, Choate, Deerfield, etc. was for a very rigorous classical education, traditional and strict moral standards, and, in general, a special culture set apart from ordinary society and its fads, from factory-style public education, and from ordinary mindless and immature teen pursuits. If these sorts of schools no longer aspire to be different, what's the point? Heather MacDonald reports from Andover: Hey, Kids--How About Studying Oppressed Sex Workers? So now Geoff Chaucer, the father of modern English, is voiceless and the whores have voices? Thus the culture progresses, forgetting the Wife of Bath - and the Whore of Babylon. Doc's Computin' Tips: Changing a program's icon
...to this wretched abomination:
This begs the question, why didn't they just rename it 'Bowling Ball'? Using a free program called Resource Hacker, it's easy to change an ugly icon to something better. We shall delve into these digital wonders below the fold. Continue reading "Doc's Computin' Tips: Changing a program's icon"
« previous page
(Page 759 of 1533, totaling 38319 entries)
» next page
|