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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Tuesday, September 13. 2011Krauthammer hammers Obama
Krauthammer's take. His capacity to cut through BS is always remarkable. No doubt his years as a shrink helped with that.
FabulousLet 447 Billion Flowers BloomBob's artwork in NYCPrestigious NYC gallery lands Bob Dylan art show, Sept 20-Oct 22. I spose people are curious about what's in his head. Via a commenter on VDH's The California Corridor: Some Lessons on Government Largesse From the New Frontier, via Vanderleun: Interesting sitesThere are so many of them, it's impossible to keep up. The DC Trawler with Jim Treacher is quite good. I also like Zero Hedge. The government "job-training" scamTrue, in my experience: What Job 'Training' Teaches? Bad Work Habits - A 1969 government study warned that teens in federal jobs programs 'regressed in their conception of what should reasonably be required in return for wages paid.' Government "Job-training" provides jobs for the job trainers, and not much else.
Posted by The Barrister
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13:53
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Tuesday morning linksBumper sticker from Jacobson - Remarkable number of practical links at Theo Testosterone drop helps men do dad-duty: study 10 Reasons why you should not have a cheat meal It undoes a week of restraint Cities as private enterprises Why not? "An Egyptian woman has applied for divorce after her husband's cooking skills proved to be better than her own, the local Al-Masry Al-Youm newspaper reported on Monday." Markets in Everything: First Commercial Jetpack Every man his Superman. Icarus likes it. Is God Above the Constitution? Duh. Only 40 Percent of Pell Grant Recipients Get Bachelor’s Degrees Swing Voters Recoil From Unions, and Obama Totten: Egypt’s Botched Revolution Turkey sending 3 warships to eastern Mediterranean Israel facing 'diplomatic tsunami' with Arab neighbors People are sneezing in New York. Must be global warming. Today's special elections: Dems are O so afraid they’ll win Gore-a-Thon: ’24 Hours of Reality’ Not Jerry Lewis? Yes, it is a Ponzi scheme REVEALED: Obama's Jobs Plan To Raise $400 Billion In Taxes. At NRO, "Obviously, having proven unable to persuade his own party to raise those taxes by that much during his prime, the president will be unable to persuade Republicans to do so now. Rick Perry: I am going to be honest with the American people Moonbats Are Still Falling Out of Berkeley Trees Strange fruit? America needs a control group Aren't the states supposed to be the laboratories of democracy? Capital Gains Taxes: Washington Post Omissions Romney: Social Security Is Like a Criminal Fraud He said it too, and everybody knows it Betty Freidan, Global Warming Denier Will 3rd government school bailout improve education? Slo-mo train wreck Huntsman is right about these things From the Sixth Circuit: Good News, Bad News
SANDERS: The puzzle of dealing with Islam Boot: We Need Troops in Iraq
Stop Calling the Tea Party Extreme. It Isn't. Regular, but informed, Americans, seems to me Yes, It IS a Ponzi Scheme… There Are Only 1.75 Full-Time Private Sector Workers Per Social Security Recipient Toon below borrowed from Lucianne: DucksA flock of divers on a marsh in Lake Winnipegosis, a couple of years ago. Alas, neither Gwynnie nor I can make it this year. This is one of my favorite pics:
Disgraceful Republican Debate (Updates)The preamble to the Constitution lists several reasons for it, including providing for the common defense. It is the only one listed for which the federal government is uniquely essential. Yet, while our defense expenditures are already being heavily trimmed, it is likely that they will be virtually gutted. Fifty percent of the budget cuts are supposed to come from 20% of our federal spending. Meanwhile, the threats abroad have not only not receded but are growing. It is disgraceful that the Republican candidates for the nomination didn’t get into this, while spending two hours repeating clichés and arguing how much wall to have along the Mexican border. Yes, the domestic issues are pressing and very important, but to ignore the global threats, the denuding of our military capabilities, the added burdens on our already heavily burdened volunteers, and our responsibilities to defense is deplorable. Read about what the Republican Chair of the House Armed Services Committee has to say. A sample:
Apparently, the Republicans vying for the nomination can understate, indeed ignore it. I’m not feeling safer tonight. Added: At the Washington Post, A pathetic discussion on national security And, Jennifer Rubin, also at the Washington Post called the debate A foreign policy horror show : "It’s time to figure out if any of these guys and gal are up to the job of commander in chief." Jonathan Tobin chimes in at Commentary's Contentions blog, The GOPs Foreign Policy Void: "...the Republicans are in danger of throwing away one of their party’s greatest strengths."
Posted by Bruce Kesler
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00:36
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Monday, September 12. 2011On this day in 1683From Gates of Vienna:
The Battle of Vienna in which King Sobieski defeated the 100,000-man army of "Islamic hordes" under Kara Mustafa Pasha was one day after the arrival of the Polish army with their winged hussars - Sept. 12. The western expansion of the Caliphate ended there, but the push back took many years. Juliasz Kossack's Sobieski in Vienna Harvest MoonThis week. I saw it early this morning. It is so clear and close, if you squint you can see the little houses and the little moon-men walking around. QQQIf 9/11 had really changed us, there’d be a 150-story building on the site of the World Trade Center today. It would have a classical memorial in the plaza with allegorical figures representing Sorrow and Resolve, and a fountain watched over by stern stone eagles. Instead there’s a pit, and arguments over the usual muted dolorous abstraction approved by the National Association of Grief Counselors. The Empire State Building took 18 months to build. During the Depression. We could do that again, but we don’t. And we don’t seem interested in asking why. James Lileks, via Driscoll Limits of the entitlement stateRe-posted - 57 inches on center is "gallery height"We don't post much about interior decorating here, but we do post about things we learn about. Since the lad and his bride are moving into a new place, I thought I'd re-post these useful tips as I attempt to supply them with oriental rugs from my stash. I did the research. For a plain wall or over a table, etc, your main picture should be hung so the center of the picture is 57" from the floor. In other words, eyeball height for a slightly short person. 57" is known as "gallery height." It feels right and it looks right, but it can be lower in a seating area. People tend to hang 'em too high, and it feels awkwardly unbalanced and looks a little silly. Obviously there are all sorts of special situations - mantles, staircases, massed images, castle walls, giganto modern oils, etc. Years ago, when we needed a decorator's help with some rooms, he taught us that it's good to hang some pictures low, at seated-eyeball height in seating areas. I recently re-hung some pics like this on the right, in the Farm HQ, and it feels right to me. The David Maass woodcock print is centered at about 57", and the two smaller hunting prints are obviously lower, at seated-eyeball height. Mrs. BD said I done good, for an amateur.
Posted by Bird Dog
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13:35
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NEW BOOK - The Morality of Capitalism: Featuring John Mackey on the Morality of BusinessTheory: Presidential Management and InspirationThe debate among Republicans over the 2012 presidential nominee seems to divide between those favoring management skills and those favoring inspiration. Americans have oscillated between the two. Eisenhower = management; Kennedy = inspiration; Johnson = neither; Nixon = management; Ford = neither; Carter = neither; Reagan = inspiration; Bush (Senior) = management; Clinton = inspiration; Bush (Junior) = management; Obama = inspiration. These aren’t “pure” characterizations, but rather what aroused the balance of electorability. It was the persona that was the characterization of the nominee. This may, or not, be applicable to 2012, but I tend toward thinking it very well may be. If so, then, that may explain my leaning toward Romney (and Pawlenty before he dropped out). On the other hand, one can as well posit that Obama = neither, in which case the oscillation would favor inspiration. That might favor Perry. On the other hand, the theory may be worthless. The test of a theory is in its simple predictive power. 2012’s election will tell. Regardless, however, internecine battles -- as opposed to civil discussion and debate -- among Republicans will weaken the 2012 chances of defeating Obama. That is a proven theory. Comments? From the Comments thus far, let me make this clearer: I'm talking about the persona or characterization at election time, not what comes after.
Posted by Bruce Kesler
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12:38
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Monday morning linksThe Edge: The Marvels and the Flaws of Intuitive Thinking Mel GIbson's Jewish Epic? I'm In! When Happiness Was a Warm Toy Gun Why Are the Children of the ‘Greatest Generation’ So Selfish? Scientists explain why the office party so often ends in embarrassment More good news for energy diversification: Tullow Oil PLC and Royal Dutch Shell PLC have struck it big off the coast of French Guiana. Samuelson: Job Creation 101 Robert Barro: Norquist: Obama's Plan Just 'More Leeches' Clueless about jobs - The president's plan moves us in the wrong direction Pethokoukis: Obama’s $447 billion reelection plan Wkly Std: Obama's Search for the Holy Grail Jamie Gorelick: Mistress of Disaster At Insty:
Sunday, September 11. 2011"For those who like this sort of thing, this is the sort of thing they like." About Julia ChildSDA used that Abe Lincoln quote to link their complete collection of Julia Child's cooking series. I find them highly educational, and Julia was a pip. She covers the basics. A quote:
Here was her first show: Boeuf Bourguignon:
The 9-11 SicknessFrom Paul's Obama and Our 9/11 Trauma:
Posted by The Barrister
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13:45
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WTC MemorialAt the risk of sounding insensitive, I always thought the idea of an elaborate 9-11 Memorial was wrong. I always thought what it required would be a plaque on the wall of some new buildings: "On this site, on September 11, 2001, 2700 Americans died in an attack by Moslem Jihadists." Perhaps a statue on a square. NYC is all about survival, endurance, optimism. I feel this way for a number of reasons, not the least of which is that, in a sense, it elevates our enemies. I say this while having personal connections with a number people immediately touched by the attack. The people I know who lost family and friends in the attack have their own personal memories and rituals, and little need for canned public display. Steyn might agree with me, but I'm not sure. My own memory/memorial is seeing the jumpers live on TV. It is an indelible nightmare memory. A friend of mine saw them there and then. He at first thought it was material falling from the first building. Bush said it: "Evil is real. Courage is real." We all know that.
Posted by Bird Dog
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12:31
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Sunday morning linksPhoto: The USS New York, built with WTC steel, arrives in NYC on Thursday GW Bush at Flight 93 Memorial: "Evil Is Real, So Is Courage" Video at Tiger: Growing Up In a Post 9/11 World Chesler: What to Say to the Totalitarian Left on 9/11/11 - The definitive take-down for all who blame America first. Noonan: We'll Never Get Over It, Nor Should We - Ten years later, remembering a day of horror and heroism:
Figures. Obama Blamed Climate of Poverty & Ignorance for 9-11 Attacks Two Decades of Pursuing al Qaeda - When 9/11 happened, Judge Michael Mukasey—later U.S. attorney general—knew all about a free society's vulnerabilities to mass terrorism. Prof. Jacobson's memories are similar to mine
The Onion: Remembering 9/11 A Pleasure For Nation Compared To Remembering Past 10 Years
If Women's Medication Ads Gained Self-Awareness An elusive command philosophy and a different command culture 7 Cartoons from the Great Depression Selling Bibles: The imagery of religion and war Europe: From debt crisis to bank crisis Borowitz: Homeland Security Studying Two-Hour Video from Wednesday Night Prohibiting Employment Discrimination Against the Unemployed U.S. Can't Afford to Pay to Print More Money Another Reason to Hate Woodrow Wilson PBS alters transcript to hide Obama gaffe Cure For Asthma Found in Connecticut Coyote: I Don’t Think This is Settled Gunwalker Explodes: FBI Hid Weapon, Tax Dollars Subsidized Murder Krauthammer: People finally realizing Obama ‘is a mortal who is in over his head’ Economists sort of like it but NY Post: The check may never be in the mail again Nigel Farage: We’re led by college kids with no experience in the real world.” The guy is a terrific speaker. From today's Lectionary: "Not seven times..."Matthew 18:21-35
My Son, Age 11, Made This 9/11 Video For His 6th Grade Classmates
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