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 |
Monday, October 17. 2011A happy NYC park full of happy peopleThe OWS people have a very minimal impact on NYC. We went down to the city yesterday afternoon with friends for matinee theater and dinner, had a little time to kill so wandered around Union Square Park and Broadway. Happy parks filled with young happy people do not make the news. These are the people Obama should be celebrating. More people here enjoying a lovely October day than in Zucotti Park. It was Sukkot, so there were plenty of Hassidim around with their citrons and palms. They ask you "Are you Jewish?" and if you are, they will wish you a good Sukkot. Same as in Washington Square, these speed chess guys with their tables set up will play you for money. More happy pics below the fold - Continue reading "A happy NYC park full of happy people" AOL Irony Gold: Goodbye YUPPIES, Hello DUMPIESReplacing the YUPPIES, AOL hits the irony jackpot today, naming the 2010s young generation the DUMPIES, downward mobile, unemployed, poor. Of course, relatively few of last decade's young were Yuppies, and relatively few of today's are Dumpies. But the Dumpies appelation does seem to fit well the Occupy Wall Streeters. Besides the most common fecal meanings of "dump" as displayed by the photo of a protester defecating on a police car, there's more definitions found at the Urban Dictionary that fit their OWS scene: *To refer to a place or setting that is in poor condition or standards. *One who wallows in their own laziness. *A very lazy, trashy person, often smelling of foul body odor and looking like an all-around ragamuffin. *A word used to describe a person/object/situation that is definitely not even good. Often used in a situation where a boring person makes a boring statement or is just generally being a fail. *To whine about one's problems and let out many emotions to any unfortunate person who has to listen. *Noun; to be someone who's annoying or stupid and annoying.
Posted by Bruce Kesler
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects, Our Essays
at
11:23
| Comments (2)
| Trackbacks (0)
Wonkette Anti-Right Headlines, week ending 10/16/11
In case you don't know what Wonkette is, it is — by far — a blog site full of the biggest Lefty fruitcakes in existence. "Frothing at the mouth" would be an adequate description. Following is a selection of their posts and links from just this past week. Remember, folks, if you want the latest anti-right screed, then you want Wonkette! The "Perry’s last chance" debate The lesson of Perry’s candidacy: Think before you run Does Rick Perry really want to be president? Huckabee to Perry: Stop complaining and toughen up "Perry's soft on guns, soft on life…the only thing he’s strong on is his own voice." Mitt Romney: The devil you know Romney can’t beat Obama in 2012 Coulter endorses Romney: "You’ve got to go with what you have" RomneyCare: Making a fool of every Republican it touches since 2006 Harry Belafonte: Herman Cain is a "bad apple" The Cain train is going to wreck This 9-9-9 plan isn’t very progressive "When I hear 9-9-9, I want to call 911" Cain doesn’t have a clue about foreign policy Will the tea party abandon politics? These tea-party congressmen don’t love America That GOP debate certainly was terrifying
Oh, wait a sec. Damn it! Sorry, everyone. I've made a terrible mistake. Those were last week's links from Hot Air, the "leading conservative blog for breaking news and commentary." And just why is the "leading conservative blog for breaking news and commentary" so incredibly defeatist? I have no idea. But hey, this was the blog site that had more anti-Palin links than pro-Palin links during the 2008 election, so who knows what's going on behind the scenes? If anyone out there has the scoop, please let us know in the comments. It's all quite the little mystery. After founder and ex-boss Michelle Malkin wrote her anti-Perry HPV article a month ago, Hot Air promptly ran twenty anti-Perry headlines in a row over the next two weeks. Twenty. The kicker is that Hot Air is a wholly-owned subsidiary of the California-based Salem Communications Corporation, owner of over 1,650 sites, and the "bloggers" are actually compensated writers. In other words, they were paid for the above. Again, I apologize for my grievous blunder, and I promise to be more careful in the future. At least, until next week. Monday morning linksWhere's the outrage? How About An "Occupy Yankee Stadium"? Samuelson: Downward Mobility
Real-estate and newspaper mogul Mortimer Zuckerman voted for Obama but began seeing trouble as soon as the stimulus went into the pockets of municipal unions. Authoritarian Virus Spreading in Europe Entrepreneur de jour: Police lineups on demand What Do You Call a Jobs Bill That Begets No Jobs?: Caroline Baum Elderly patients are being condemned to an early death by hospitals making secret use of “do not resuscitate” orders, an investigation has found Atlanta: Unlike the Tea Party these protestors do not seem to have jobs to attend or families to take care of. They have time on their hands. And they are becoming more emboldened. O'Reilly: What's wrong with the younger generation? Why Is Obama Sending Troops Against the Lord's Resistance Army? Can We Credibly Compare the Current Economic Crisis to the Great Depression? A state sponsor of terrorism gets a taste of its own medicine and doesn't like it Cars are topic of academic inquiry at Stanford University program Welcome to the World of Cyber-Terror Vulnerability Take my Detroit...please.
Central OhioNear Gambier, last autumn. On my next trip out there, I plan to stock up on more old oil and kerosene lamps. We lose power so often that flashlights just don't do the job. The junk shops out there are full of them, interesting ones - the Amish use them, and there are lots of Amish out there. Mennonites, I think. They live off the grid, in many ways. There are no Mennonite blogs, as far as I know. "Tis a gift to be simple..." Potemkin Protests Contrast With VeteransInstaPundit Glenn Reynolds, author of Army of Davids: How Markets and Technology Empower Ordinary People to Beat Big Media, Big Government, and Other Goliaths, which "hails the emergence of a new entrepreneurial class resulting from the democratizing power of technology" according to Publishers Weekly, preceded the Occupy Wall Street protests. But, OWC is a different kind of protest. OWC is a big media promoted event, one that fits its liberal-left memes, organized by radical "community organizers", funded and added manpower from government-union thugs (just look at the size of the OWC bouncers). Struggling to find any allies, President Obama clings to the OWCers ranting at anyone "wealthy", who have avoided facing Obama's crony capitalism -- funding him and he funding them in return with taxpayer dollars 50% supplied by the wealthiest 1% -- that is the real core of our and their economic complaints. As Glenn Reynolds comments about major media coverage of OWC protests, "When lefties want to make the Tea Party fit their preconceptions, they have to make things up. When righties want to exercise their preconceptions about the Occupy movement, on the other hand, they just have to take a picture." Reynolds includes this quote from a columnist:
Continue reading "Potemkin Protests Contrast With Veterans" Sunday, October 16. 2011Escape From New York (The Met, Anyway)Armchair art lovers, you don't need Bird Dog's notes anymore to visit the Metropolitan Museum of Art (the Met) in New York. Plus, you'll save airfare, high hotel and meal costs, cab drivers who cuss at you in some tongue while smiling, stepping over winos, and other joys of visiting New York. The Met's website is a free ticket to its entire collection of over 340,000 objects, including those in storage that onsite paid ticket buyers don't get to see. It's easy to navigate by various criteria, periods or locations, and each photo is accompanied by an interesting explanation of the piece, its history, context, and so forth. The search engine is also easy and will take you anywhere in the Met's vast collections, without having to get out of your jammies or put on shoes. Plus there are guided tours and videos of Met experts on diverse subjects and on their own artistic passions. Let's take for example the unicorn from the Unicorn Tapestries at the Met's Cloisters, miles uptown in Fort Tryon -- a seedier part of town -- that Bird Dog posted about today. Here's the Met's website page for that. See for yourself what its about and compare to what you didn't learn from Bird Dog. Have at it. Occupy The Met and throw off the yoke of the capitalist-running-Bird Dog. Non-Bird Dogs of the world, Unite! Medical Cost ContainmentMy wife had knee surgery recently, and our medical group has a wonderful facility nearby. We arrived at 6:30 AM, checked in, she was brought into surgery at 7, and I went home. The drive being only 15 minutes, I was able to return, get something to eat, do some work, and return in time to pick her up. We left at 9:00AM. It was only arthroscopic surgery, something I've had several times over the last 12 years (anyone playing sports is likely to have had it at least once). But it amazes me how quick these have become, showing the huge productivity gains in the medical community. I've had my knee, my elbow, and my back all scoped. The amazing thing is all of these were done at ambulatory care centers. In 1985 I had work done on my knee which today would have been done utilizing arthroscopy. The work was done in a hospital, requiring an overnight stay. It's amazing so many of these surgeries, which at one time required opening up a good portion of the joint, are now barely invasive. It's also incredible that you can literally walk away from many of them. My wife is already limping slightly, and should be moving fairly well by Monday (Friday surgery). When we talk about the rising costs of medicine, we never talk about the improvements that have accompanied the price increases. The Hortus conclususI've seen enough cloisers and cloister gardens in Europe to occupy my brain for a lifetime, but we went down to The Cloisters yesterday with friends to go on the Medieval Gardening tour. The museum overlooks the Hudson River near the northern tip of Manhattan, not far from where Alexander Hamilton's farm and country house was located. Good fun. 1 1/2 hrs. Excellent docent, clearly loves her topic. She spent 15 minutes on the plants in the 15th C. unicorn tapestries besides going outdoors to discuss the medieval gardens. (I think most people go to the Cloisters just to see the unicorn tapestries, the subject of which is a symbolic mingling of romantic and sexual love with Christianity but it is difficult to understand them without an informed introduction to them.) A Hortus conclusus is an enclosed garden, taken by monks from the Roman enclosed gardens, with a Christian symbolic gloss. (As I always say, if you want to understand the Romans, one must look at oneself. We of the Anglosphere are Romans.) It's taken me many years to learn one thing: Wwherever you go, Always Take The Tour first. Be humble and learn. That's the Hudson River in the distance. More pics below the fold - Continue reading "The Hortus conclusus" Dressing for successPresentation matters, in dress as well as in attitude, comportment, and, of course, useful skills and ability.
I do a fair amount of interviewing and don't give a darn about how people are dressed as long as it shows some respect for themselves and for my time. Most people care about these things more than I do. However, one must sell oneself, not just to get a job but also to keep a job.
Posted by The Barrister
in The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
at
13:21
| Comments (3)
| Trackbacks (0)
Sunday morning linksImage via Vanderleun They moved Alexander Hamilton's farmhouse again The $62,000 Per Year Bachelor’s Degree Girl Scouts abandon service for self The Islamization of Londonistan Holy S***: NY Detective Admits To Planting Cocaine On Innocent Citizens Just To Make Drug-Bust Quota; Says Practice Is Widespread AP coins new slogan for Illinois In which Insty begins to get a little ticked off Schultz says 'break' is a 'southern racist term' Message to Maldives president Mohammed Nasheed: your claims are BS They just want OPM Megan: Where did the Green Stimulus money go? They just want OPM Nazis and Communists Throw Their Support Behind Occupy Wall Street Movements Birds of a feather... Have moral choices become simply a matter of taste? Morality is a downer, man. Gotta go with your feelings. Reverse Brain Drain: U.S. Workers Head to Canada We need to be careful around Thanksgiving time as well Sheesh. OK, we will be very careful with the Indian Pudding. Why Romney Can't Beat Obama in 2012 I think a ham and Swiss sandwich could beat Obama, but I have my parochial view on things How long before Dems call OWS a Rovian plot? Resist We Much!… Black Man Starts Chanting “(Obama’s) a House N*gger” at Sharpton Rally Via Driscoll:
From today's Lectionary: "Then shall all the trees of the forest sing for joy..."Psalm 96:1-9, (10-13)
Saturday, October 15. 2011Why do men shave?Please shave your beaver, or have the Korean ladies give you a Brazilian. Why? Why must men shave their faces in Western civilization? It is just one more annoying chore in getting ready to face the day, and it is surely "unnatural," and doubtless a contributor to global When I take a pass on this annoyance on the occasional weekend, She Who Must Be Obeyed tells me that I look like a bum. Well, I find taking showers a time-wasting burden too. I think I have an inner hippie, an inner Cave Man, or an inner Occupy Wall Street. Probably an inner Yankee Farmer. If you shave your pet beaver, I will shave my face. I don't really care if I look like a bum on weekends. Sue me. Good grooming is a hassle. When you reach maturity, hair grows revoltingly out of your damn ears and nostrils and everywhere else. She is probably right that I need to conform to fit into modern society. I find it all tedious and tiring sometimes, but I have what it takes to keep on keepin' on. Happy wife, happy life, as they say. Brucie's New CarIf you haven't shopped for a replacement car lately, it has become -- pricewise -- crazier than ever. That's not because of the usual dealer tactics. In fact, with the Internet, the consumer has acquired added info with which to avoid being hornswaggled. It is because due to Cash-4-Clunkers removing so many used cars from the market and the recession reducing new car sales the past few years the price of used cars has increased by 25-50%, so a one or two year old used car -- even high mileage -- costs near as much as a new one. This has increased current new car sales, as why not? That's what I found when searching over the past month for a replacement for my 2000 trusty Taurus, now having imminent engine and suspension problems that would cost me more than the car's value to repair. My wife's criteria was only that it be reasonably reliable and fit my 6-year old Gavin's bike or hold three or four large suitcases. After trying every old trick I knew, I was getting frustrated and furious. Then I found Truecar.com. It tells you the true dealer cost for a new car, thousands below MSRP and well below dealer invoice. It also tells you which dealer in your area is selling for close to dealer cost. So armed, I made my offer to several dealers, being rejected. Then, yesterday afternoon, a dealer agreed. I am now the owner of a new 2012 car. I took 11-year old Jason with me as my tech advisor. Although I chose a bottom of the model, middle-class car, the new car has so many fancy, cool electronics for auto-diagnoses and warnings, communications, music, navigating, etc. (none of which I care about) that my eyes glazed over and my ears heard the seashore. But Jason took it all in immediately and promises to educate me. Almost as techy as Micky's new car.
Posted by Bruce Kesler
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects, Our Essays
at
09:30
| Comments (9)
| Trackbacks (0)
Saturday morning linksImage via Moonbattery Successful parasites never kill their hosts What are the Best and Worst Countries for Women? Islamic sex guide says wives meet only 10% of husbands' desires Men are insatiable. No comment. The Next Bubble: Higher Education Europe gives up on global warming Chevy-Dealing Congressman: “There Is No Market” For The Volt Devastating: HHS abandons part of ObamaCare as fiscally unworkable You Know That Your City Has Become A Hellhole When…. Morning Jay: Without Independents, Obama Has No Chance of Victory Astonishing vid: ‘LEAVE HIPPIES ALOOOOOONE!!!’ The intellectual vanguard of the Dem party in action NYT defines “economic vandalism” to fit Obama campaign narrative They are part of the O's campaign once again Elizabeth Warren wants to bust your balls. Funny. Brown could use it as an ad. House Bill Would Criminalize Satire of TSA Who cares? They satirize themselves. I have been bullied by these would-be police officers, who could never pass a police exam - or an exam on good manners. Trust me - I do not look like a shoe bomber.
Could be a plot. I don't know. Redstate: What the GOP Must Do: Finding Common Ground With the Occupiers Giuliani: I Would've Told OWS Protesters, 'Streets Are Not For Sleeping' Occupier: It's the rich Jews EPA's CO2 Endangerment Finding is Endangered Treasury officials: Never saw a loan like Solyndra:
Crony socialism and political payoffs. It's the Chicago Way. Nice. Mead: The administration’s goal has to be to get this story off the front page and fast. Uh oh. Obama wants a government bank to fund more Solyndras Via Gateway: Saturday Verse: Robert FrostThe Death of the Hired Man Mary sat musing on the lamp-flame at the table
Continue reading "Saturday Verse: Robert Frost" Friday, October 14. 2011What Might Happen If OWS Stays?Anyone who is familiar with the Occupy Wall Street movement knows that it has more or less 'settled' Zucotti Park. This is a very small area (roughly 33,300 square feet) down by the World Trade Center. It's a private park owned by Brookfield Partners. It has no habitable area, but the squatters are creating their own living conditions. They claim they will stay for as long as they have to. Most of us doubt this is true. I'm willing to bet the minute the TV cameras leave, or the first large snowstorm blows through, most of them will leave. What if they don't, though? Could they stay forever? It's possible. The potential is there. In fact, there is history supporting this kind of thing. So let's take a look at what might happen if these people never leave. If you've ever been to Denmark, or Copenhagen specifically, you might be familiar with Freetown Christiana. Christiana is an old military barracks/base which was abandoned by 1970. In 1971, local residents broke down the fence to create a playground, and eventually many people began living in the facilities because housing in Copenhagen was hard to come by. It became a relatively autonomous commune. I found out about it as a teen, when I visited Copenhagen in 1976. At the time, I was deemed "too young" to see it. Seven years later, as a college student living abroad, I visited Copenhagen and this time I made three trips to Christiana. I will admit, it was a great party. But even then I realized it was no place to live. I was alternately impressed and repulsed. With each visit, I was less and less impressed.
Continue reading "What Might Happen If OWS Stays?"
Posted by Bulldog
in History, Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects, Our Essays
at
17:15
| Comments (16)
| Trackbacks (0)
21st-Century Campus CultureEssay of the above title at Chronicle. One quote:
Posted by The Barrister
in Education, The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
at
14:01
| Comments (0)
| Trackbacks (0)
Finally, a Manifesto
"Demands"? Are you kidding me? Well, it's about time: Occupy Wall Street: A Manifesto for [Insert Date]
Posted by The News Junkie
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects
at
11:28
| Comments (6)
| Trackbacks (0)
Friday morning linksFive best books about writing for newspapers Steve Jobs Was A Lousy Role Model Yom Kippur: Worthy of the Covenant The Global Overselling of Higher Ed ...where do they all come from?
Somin: Incentivizing Terrorism We are the 53% Colleen Carroll Campbell: Obama is alienating Catholic voters Are Democrats Eyeing 401(k)s, IRAs for Tax Hit? Pelosi: Pay for abortion, or women 'die on the floor' Good grief. Didn't people ever hear of paying the doctor? Another one: Solar Project That Received $1.2 Billion Federal Loan Sponsored by Financially Troubled Firm Solar Energy Lobby Calls For Extending Obama's Stimulus Grants for Solar Power That is termed "chutzpah" “Professors are asking their classes [emphasis added] to take the day to actually go to this rally," So either the profs feel they have little of value to offer, or the profs have contempt for those paying the tuition Will: Can Occupy Wall Street give progressives a lift? A quote:
Stoners and career protesters in the grass, alas Rules for WI Radicals (and public unions, really) This is an exciting time for the taboo science of solar physics Bill Clinton Rebukes Obama: “Should You Raise Taxes Today?… No!” Rush Limbaugh: Mitt Romney Is Not a Conservative Rush is right, as always. Mitt is a successful businessman and talented executive turned pol, and not deeply ideological. I think lots of people are comfortable with that. Romneycare? Big error, but the people who have not fled MA yet seem to sort-of like it thus far. I would hate it, on principle, just like Medicare. Socialism never adds up because job-creators won't take risks for nothing. Thursday, October 13. 2011The End of Evil?If you can't find utility in the concept of sin and evil, then I don't know how you can find utility in the concept of the good. At Slate on evil, Neuroscientists suggest there is no such thing. Are they right? A quote:
Many people do make conscious decisions to be hurtful or destructive. What could be more obvious? These neuroscientist folks can't see the mind for the neurons, it seems to me. As always in such cases, however, a conversation with the scientists would reveal that they do, themselves, lead lives in which good, evil, and choice are operative. Otherwise, they would deserve no recognition for their research because it was just their neurons making them do it. Relevant good book: Columbia Prof Andrew Delbanco's The Death of Satan CreepyI don't take this as threatening because I think he's not too bright, but I still can't believe he says this: Jackson, Jr: Obama should ‘declare a national emergency,’ add jobs with ‘extra-constitutional’ action. So much for his oath of office, and for his respect for the law of the land. And yes, he will be re-elected for as long as he wants to run.
Posted by The Barrister
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects
at
13:51
| Comments (10)
| Trackbacks (0)
Eat the Rich!
The numbers are, of course, the effective rates (ie after deductions), not the marginal rates. Related, at Human Events: Tax the Rich? It's Been Done, With Depressing Results. A quote:
In other words, it's not our money.
Posted by The News Junkie
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects, Our Essays
at
13:02
| Comments (4)
| Trackbacks (0)
Election 2012: Streaming debate aftermath
James Taranto in yesterday's Best of the Web Today expounded on this in his usual exemplary fashion and I thought I'd bring it to your attention. He really nailed those liberal asshat moderators.
« previous page
(Page 839 of 1495, totaling 37375 entries)
» next page
|