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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Saturday, October 22. 2011Rev Up For Saturday Night Driving MusicWinter in New England #6: Boots and Wellies for footwear fetishistsIt's the time of year when we re-link our world-famous Boots and Wellies opus as part of our series of All You Need to Know For Snow (and mud) season. It's also a good time of year for another free advt for Sierra Trading Post. Good discount outdoor gear, plus sneakers, etc. Often, good deals on dress shoes and work shoes, too. Some folks collect knives, or guns, or knick-knacks. I collect boots because happy feet make for a happy man. I also collect boots because, as many unhappy feet learned the hard way, your winter boot size is probably not your foot size. You will put your wool socks and maybe liner sox inside them if you plan to spend any real time in the cold. You gotta size 'em for your socks and not for your feet, in the north. Adolescents At Home and Abroad, with Eric HofferThe OWS movement embodies certain qualities which we don't seem to fully understand. It's neither a generational or an issue-driven movement. It lacks solutions. It has no direction or focus. There is a reason for this, defined many years ago by Eric Hoffer. Hoffer was skeptical of mass movements, feeling they epitomized juvenile behaviors. He was able to determine why, pointing to a lack of self-esteem which the protesters exhibited. Hoffer felt self-esteem was critical in the development of adult behaviors. He outlined how widespread affluence and the rapid changes in modern society lead to a desire to attain adulthood more quickly, but with certain rites of puberty being shortchanged, particularly with regard to work and endeavor. In his view an extended adolescence led many to seek outlets for their inability to define themselves. These people, lacking in self-identity, defined themselves as they saw themselves described by others. There was an intense self-loathing and guilt regarding position and place. This was a direct result of low self-esteem. Self-esteem was not being cultivated as many of those in protest movements didn't work, and were incapable of understanding their responsibilities. From this perspective, all mass movements were interchangeable, regardless of what they sought to promote.
Continue reading "Adolescents At Home and Abroad, with Eric Hoffer" Signs in EnglishIn a Bangkok Temple : And finally the all time classic: Seen in an Abu Dhabi Souk shop window: IF THE FRONT IS CLOSED PLEASE ENTER THROUGH MY BACKSIDE…
Posted by Bird Dog
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13:55
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What to Do with Super-Achievers?It's an interesting question but, of course, high achievers always find their own paths anyway. Here's Kling's chart from the essay: What to Do with Super-Achievers?
Posted by The Barrister
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13:40
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Saturday morning linksAfter nearly 3,000 years, does the “Iliad” really need translating again? Lattimore is good enuf for us Renovated Church Home in Kyloe, Northumberland Stop Funding College Sports - Why should taxpayers have to pay for college athletic programs? The Role of Friendship in Marriage One potential way to reform academia is to combine academic "book-learning" with an old-fashioned, hands-on apprenticeship. The EPA's Electric Vehicle Mileage Fraud A Snippet on Alleged Middle-Class Stagnation Shock: War-Hating Left Pretty Psyched About Killing People, So Long As They Can Claim This Somehow Means They've Scored a Goal Against Conservatives Thornton: The End of the Euro? The possibililty of Marco Rubio entering the fray has Obama 2012 scrambling for dirt. Today’s Questions for the President Obama, delighted with Senate defeat of his jobs bill, criticizes GOP anyway Unions and left-wing groups organize Occupy Wall Street Occupy Museums to protest at art exhibits in New York A President's Class War - Where on the income scale does Mr. Obama divide the country between us and them?
Romney Wins in 'Blowout' Over Obama in 2012, Poll Shows Saturday Verse: Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1806-1861)The Autumn Go, sit upon the lofty hill, And turn your eyes around, Where waving woods and waters wild Do hymn an autumn sound. The summer sun is faint on them -- The summer flowers depart -- Sit still -- as all transform'd to stone, Except your musing heart. How there you sat in summer-time, May yet be in your mind; And how you heard the green woods sing Beneath the freshening wind. Though the same wind now blows around, You would its blast recall; For every breath that stirs the trees, Doth cause a leaf to fall. Oh! like that wind, is all the mirth That flesh and dust impart: We cannot bear its visitings, When change is on the heart. Gay words and jests may make us smile, When Sorrow is asleep; But other things must make us smile, When Sorrow bids us weep! The dearest hands that clasp our hands, -- Their presence may be o'er; The dearest voice that meets our ear, That tone may come no more! Youth fades; and then, the joys of youth, Which once refresh'd our mind, Shall come -- as, on those sighing woods, The chilling autumn wind. Hear not the wind -- view not the woods; Look out o'er vale and hill- In spring, the sky encircled them -- The sky is round them still. Come autumn's scathe -- come winter's cold -- Come change -- and human fate! Whatever prospect Heaven doth bound, Can ne'er be desolate. It's that classic Victorian tone. You can read about her interesting life here.
American architecture: Gambier, OhioThere's a good reason old Ohio architecture resembles that of New England and upstate NY - that's where the people came from. The central Ohio highlands have a similar geographic feel to that of New England, too. The extension on the left is clearly modern (wrong - readers suggest that it is a renovated old barn or carriage house), but attempts to reflect the older building.
Obama Doctrine: How Obama Blew It In IraqNormally I'd leave this link for the morning compendium, but this is too important to be mixed in with others. After 9-years of US sacrifices, President Obama's rush for the exits in Iraq and the incompetence of his administration is seen again, with very probable bad consequences for Iraq's ability to withstand internal discord and external influence from Iran. The US is left with little but a likely buffer protecting Iranian interests and a sanctions evasion route that allows Iran greater freedom from Western pressure. Once again, each time over and over, Obama blows US interests into the crapper. Read it and weep. How the Obama administration bungled the Iraq withdrawal negotiations. Also, read Obama abandons Iraq. Morning Postscript: Carl Cannon makes the case that "The Obama Doctrine, Made Plain at Last in Libya, Iraq": The administration "They preferred to frame the events of the week in ways that play into a domestic, election-season narrative: Namely, Barack Obama made promises regarding foreign policy, and kept them....Distilled to its essence, this approach envisioned an American foreign policy that was less militaristic, less confrontational, and less-unilateral than that of his predecessor." Fred and Kimberly Kagan, however, call it "Retreat With Our Heads Held High", as the Obama administration's veil for failure to meet even newly President Obama's criteria for US goals in Iraq, citing his speech of February 2009. I'll quote them at length to see how Obama or his defenders should hang their heads in shame:
If there's any multilateralism buried in the manure, it is that of widespread burying heads in it to avoid facing the reality of a contra-Western interests Middle East that we will see in Iraq and Libya, as we've seen in Egypt, while Iran and its proxies are encouraged as was al-Quaeda by prior US weaknesses and excuses.
Posted by Bruce Kesler
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Friday, October 21. 2011Evening ShowIf you happen to be up late tonight, or just enjoy waking up and looking at the sky, tonight is the peak of the Orionids meteor shower. I may take a bit of time to go out and have a look. Chicken Little could use the company.
Posted by Bulldog
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19:34
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Friday Night Driving MusicHad it up to here with your week, then escape and cruise to Vegas with Sara Bareilles
Turning normal variants into diagnosesMy colleague Dr. Allen Frances asks Should Temper Tantrums Be Made Into A DSM-5 Diagnosis? Of course not. I regard the planned proliferation of "disorders" as a bit of a joke, but some people take it all very seriously. Internet Addiction Disorder? Tobacco Use Disorder? Sex Addiction? In my view, the person is the issue, not the so-called diagnosis. Most of the time, I try to be of help to individual people, not diagnoses. There is a major division in Psychiatry today between those who treat diagnoses and those who treat people. Everybody has neurotic quirks. Some Occupiers are more equal than othersH/t Volokh, this is indeed amusing: All occupiers are equal — but some occupiers are more equal than others. This rabble of self-important losers is even a bigger joke than SDS was. Do they know how to do anything useful in this world besides beg for my money? I doubt it. This is half-amusing: Violence Spirals Out of Control at ‘Occupy Oakland’ As Homeless People, Ex-Convicts, at Least One Sex Offender, Students & Anarchists Vie For Power. and this not amusing: Gun & Knives Pulled at Obama-Endorsed Occupy Portland Protest After Black Man Called a N*gger Oh yes, these degenerates are exactly like the Tea Party people. Lucky husband
Posted by The News Junkie
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13:22
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Leisurely LunchSometimes squirrels eat bird food & sometimes birds eat squirrel food! This guy (gal?) Red Tail spent from 10:30 am to about 3:30 pm on our lawn yesterday, with only occasional departures from munching on its kill. I was about 15 ft away with an 800mm lens and really didn't bother the hawk at all.
QQQOne of the sad signs of our times is that we have demonized those who produce, subsidized those who refuse to produce, and canonized those who complain. Thomas Sowell, via Cafe Hayek Friday morning linksMost American colleges will accept anybody. "Selective" schools are a tiny minority. The Perils of Academic Groupthink Support mental health or I’ll kill you Dr. Helen got a kick out of this book: The 4-Hour Body: An Uncommon Guide to Rapid Fat-Loss, Incredible Sex, and Becoming Superhuman Wow Colorado, colliding views on the proper form of government Herman Cain Really Doesn't Know A Damn Thing About Foreign or Military Policy, Does He? In Their Words: What Is the Biggest Problem Facing Americans Today? The Bizarre World of Radical Climate Science An Unprecedented 26 Million Americans Are Now Underemployed Don't Let Obama Kill "Tony the Tiger" Jeff Goldstein via Driscoll:
The guy can't spell his way out of a wet paper bag, but I think he is right Descendants of Persian traders in Kaifeng, China, move to Israel with the help of a religious group and finally learn Jewish rules and traditions. Haiti Doesn't Need Your Old T-Shirt - The West can (and should) stop dumping its hand-me-downs on the developing world. Citizen Islam: The Future of Muslim Integration in the West How Many Electricians Does It Take to Screw In a Light Bulb? Car Company Gets U.S. Loan, Builds Cars In Finland Thursday, October 20. 2011Winter preparations: Your local Chimney SweepMy sweep pal was here yesterday morning for my biennial or triennial chimney cleanings. We have posted here several times about chimney fires and chimney cleaning, such as here. Attention recent college grads: He gets $150/chimney, and it takes him 20-30 minutes. A discount for multiple chimneys. He runs his own life his own way. Retired USMC. He is a fireplace buff and keeps a wood stove burning in his kitchen all fall and winter. He has a place on Cape Cod and burns there on those cool damp summer evenings too. He agrees with me that a clean fireplace makes a lousy fire. You need a 5 or 6" pile of ash underneath. A clean chimney is another matter. I keep the Maggie's Farm home fire burning all day, October-May. Generally, he scrapes a bucket of stuff out of my flue each time he comes. Why don't I invest in the brushes and do it myself? Perhaps I will. We have protection these days from ye olde Chimney Sweep's Cancer - cancer of the scrotum. Nasty disease.
Posted by Bird Dog
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Driving Music in the ZZTopmobile
A perfect metaphor for the Welfare States of America: Free diapers for allAs the Left leads America deeper and deeper into a welfare state in which we take money from our neighbors to pay for our personal responsibilities and to cover our losing risks (after government takes its hefty cut, of course), I found this proposal amusing: Free Diapers At the risk of pissing off most of our readers, I would assert that anyone benefiting from unemployment, mortgage interest deductions, Medicare, Medicaid, food stamps, government pensions, Social Security, welfare checks, disability, SSI, etc etc is in diapers. I am sick of that old "I paid into it" line. Maybe you were fooled into thinking you did, but you did not. I never hear any gratitude from the recipients, just endless demands for more money to be extracted from the shrinking pool of taxpayers - who I term "neighbors" because that is who they are. They told you that you did, that you did pay into it and deserve it, and they told you that fiction so you would feel entitled to it and eternally grateful to "government" - not to your neighbor - for supplying it. However, you did not pay into "it." There is no "it" there, to distort Gertrude Stein. There is no money there, waiting to be used. It's just all borrowed from the Chinese, who will soon own the USA as a semi-dysfunctional subsidiary - a "distressed asset." We Americans should be ashamed of ourselves, or at least own up to our condition in which dependency has become socially and politically acceptable instead of being viewed as charity. It's not the way our tough ancestors lived, and mine led fine, honorable, sacrificial, difficult lives as far as I know, without expecting anything from anybody except spouse, family, and neighborly helping. Good lives, no mooching. In America, they put you into diapers, sooner or later, whether you want the freebies or not. Most people welcome the freebies, because, however undignified, it's human nature and we want to convince ourselves that we are entitled to it, somehow, to rationalize our sponging off of others and to reduce the shame of dependency in adulthood. I suppose I would accept the money too were I in dire straights, but I would not feel good about it because I would know that it is taken from my neighbor - not voluntarily, but by force. That's the plan - a nation of dependents. It might be the European Way, the Serfdom Way, but I do not think of it as the American Way. All of this weakens our people, our nation, our spirit, and our backbone. It is designed to do that. It is a political strategy. It's a shame Ron Paul is such a (partial) nutjob. A shame that Cain doesn't know what he is talking about, compared with your average Maggie's reader.
Posted by The News Junkie
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Critique of Codevilla's "The Lost Decade"With temerity I critique one of the clearest foreign policy analysts in America, Angelo Codevilla. We share some friends and common roots in the teachings learned at the knee of Robert Strausz-Hupe of laser focus on core US interests over distractions, especially those wasteful or unproductive. With timidity at facing Codevilla’s sharp pen and keyboard with which he punctures and flattens flabby or fatuous thinking, I face his latest essay, The Lost Decade. Codevilla disembowels the foreign and domestic policies of the US since 9/11, with many telling arguments. Yet, I stride forth to face his iconoclastic critique with iconoclastic critique. I agree in temper and some hindsight but disagree with some of Codevilla’s specifics that go too far or which share some common illusions with those Codevilla criticizes. There are two core arguments in Codevilla’s almost 8,000 word essay, a self-serving, misfocused and exclusionary US elite that failed to identify or act against domestic and foreign threats. Instead, they enriched themselves and intruded into all Americans' freedoms with the overly expensive and expansive, ill-suited to US liberties, feeble Homeland Security, and got bogged down in self-limited wars of illusory nation-building that distracted funding from the major weapons systems necessary to US strategic superiority and failed to confront real enemies. Combined with irresponsible profligate domestic spending and programs that have led to our deep ongoing recession, our means and will to continue our foreign engagements or rebuild our needed future weaponry and military has deteriorated. No wonder most Americans distrust these elites and the federal government.
Continue reading "Critique of Codevilla's "The Lost Decade"" Government Venture CapitalThe idea that we need more entrepreneurs to help improve the economy (a theme I've been thumping) is not lost on the government. However, their solution is to use taxpayer money to invest in areas they deem worthy. Most venture capitalists look for profitable businesses with a high potential return. Or at least some kind of return. The government has the luxury of being able to borrow as much as it wants from the Fed, or taxing the citizenry to death to pursue its dreams of a greener world...and is not seeking any return. This is not entrepreneurial behavior. This is not venture capitalist behavior. It is the kind of behavior we should all be wary of - the government picking winners and losers. It's a precarious game, particularly if you choose a market that is so small your money isn't likely to have any kind of decent return. This administration claims the GM and Chrysler bailouts "made money" (though I am sure a careful accounting will prove otherwise). Assuming this is true, and politicians are astute enough to put taxpayer money to a profitable end - why the hell are we investing in this? At its very core, it's just wealth redistribution. They just slapped a different label on it. Ed: A quote from that piece:
QQQ: A rough time in life, in Christ"... we must not be surprised if we are in for a rough time. When a man turns to Christ and seems to be getting on pretty well (in the sense that some of his bad habits are now corrected) he often feels that it would not be natural if things went fairly smoothly. When troubles come along - illnesses, money troubles, new kinds of temptation - he is disappointed. These things, he feels, might have been necessary to rouse him and make him repent in his bad old days; but why now? Because God is forcing him on, or up, to a higher level: putting him into situations where he will have to be very much braver, or more patient, or more loving, than he ever dreamed of being before. It seems to us all unnecessary: but that is because we have not yet had the slightest notion of the tremendous thing He means to make of us." C.S. Lewis, Mere Christianity The magic of (quantumtatively-locked) levitation
Yeah, well...
Hat tip Theo. Home site is here, although there didn't appear to be any more vids or info on the above. Pretty amazing, though. You know that fun old literary theme of going back in time and appearing real smart compared to everybody else? If I'm going back in time, I'm bringing along one of these babies. Exit question: How long would it spin in a vacuum with no air resistance to slow it down? Thursday morning linksMrs. BD likes this gardening site Japanese mathematician breaks record for determining the value of pi The Western World: We are better than them Man living as an ‘adult baby’ is cleared of Social Security fraud A Long, Steep Drop for Americans' Standard of Living:
Schools need less emphasis on empathy NYC's economy is equal to that of all of Australia: Which Countries Match the GDP of U.S. Metro Areas? Oops: Energy Department contractors caught altering old press releases involving another troubled green-energy project Desperately Seeking Talent - Employers worry more about the effects of a bad hire than about the problems of hiring someone who is competent but not exceptional. GAO: 42% of temperature gauges in U.S. are wrong Clean Up NY’s Nonprofit Sewer Walter Williams: Pitting us against eachother Biden: ‘All Crime Will Continue to Rise’ if Republicans Don’t Pass WH Jobs Bill Occupy D.C.? Most Back Protests, Surtax Barney Frank supports protesters, raises Wall St. cash Despite frosty relations with the titans of Wall Street, President Obama has still managed to raise far more money this year from the financial and banking sector than Mitt Romney or any other Republican presidential candidate, according to new fundraising data... Wall St. is overwhelmingly Democratic, esp in the upper echelons Washington, D.C. Becomes America’s Richest City - Obama’s $4 trillion army settles into its barracks. The Imperial City, built on our labor Student loans outstanding will exceed $1 trillion this year Hugo Chávez: sick in mind and body The EduJobs III Bailout; Update – Harry Reid: Who cares about private sector jobs? Why Romney Alarms Me President Obama's strategy on jobs is working — even if Americans aren’t Scapegoats: Obama wants The People angry angry angry at the Wall Street bankers and money people Redirection Sol Stern: Who’s a Zionist? The AFL-CIO’s Revolutionary Activist:
Report: Military ballot problems rise Israel’s Impossible Choice
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