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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, October 25. 2011Educational Achievement GapsFascinating and serious essay by Hess in National Affairs: Our Achievement-Gap Mania. One quote:
There will always be achievement gaps until 1+1=2 is the math test and "See Spot run" is the literature exam. Humans are far too variable in interests, talents, abilities, self-discipline, and motivation for it to ever be otherwise. As somebody recently commented, "Why not aim for equality in violin, film-making, dress-design, tomato-growing, or basketball?" Poisonous demagogueryFrom Matt Patterson on Obama:
More taxes is not good enough. They want the prosperous to be dead. At Maggie's, we want everybody to be prosperous who wants to be. Two good books I am enjoyingMonday, October 24. 2011Lochner"Either the Commerce Clause gives Congress a plenary power to regulate anything it pleases or it doesn't; and let's have that argument," says George Mason University law professor David Bernstein. Dalio: There are no more tools in the tool kit.At Surber. It's about deleveraging. A quote:
He thinks we have a decade of economic doom in the US anyway. His biz is global. Sunday, October 23. 2011Blue States are dangerously irresponsible
Seems to me that most of it is about pols being in bed with government unions, and splitting the pie at the taxpayers' expense. In blue states, who represents the citizens against the union machines? My state government (CT) is owned, top to bottom, by the government unions and functions like a Mafia conspiracy preying on the taxpayers. Dems have nationalized the method: Has Harry Reid lost his mind?
Perhaps the goal is to have everybody working for our government overlords. Feudalism. Government jobs are a necessary evil and are functionally parasitic, not a basis for the real economy which is required to work and make a profit to pay those government bills. McConnell is right: These are local and state concerns, not federal concerns. The federal government has enough to deal with as it is with its constitutional duties, and is not doing a very good job with that. States and localities have to run themselves, or surrender their sovereignty to the feds. Like Greece. That is not a good idea.
Posted by The Barrister
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14:17
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Educational Consumerism: Who Wants to Be Evaluated by Students?It's all about this "consumerism" rage in the past two decades. Students are consumers of education, patients are consumers of medical care, citizens are consumers of government services, prisoners are consumers of rehabilitative services. It's a strange point of view. The notion that students evaluate profs as if school were American Idol seems perverted to me. School is not infotainment. I can be an entertaining speaker and did some litigation in my distant past, but I would never teach where my career, even in part, depended on student evaluations. When teaching, I like to be a demanding SOB, intolerant of anything short of excellence and keeping people on their toes. In the end, people are thankful for my demanding attitude. Saturday, October 22. 2011Winter in New England #6: Boots and Wellies for footwear fetishists
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. 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
in Our Essays, The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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13:40
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Friday, October 21. 2011Some 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. 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 Wednesday, October 19. 2011Which is heroic?There are many small ways of being quietly and undramatically herioc in life, short of going into combat. It's heroic, in a sense, for an agoraphobic to go to the store, for a drunk to go to AA, or for a man to do an unpleasant job his whole life to take care of his family. Heather MacDonald has fun with the OWS people (who seem to be slowly getting less coverage and interest - and cold rainy Octobers are not fun times to sleep in a park) at City Journal: Get a Job! Working is (usually) more admirable than protesting. She begins:
I am deeply concerned about a risk for obesity and constipation among these heroic protesters. Read the whole, amusing thing, and realize that this is a sort of lark for these people, a vacation from real life, party time in the guise of socio-political importance. Mead asks: What's the point? The Vain And Empty Rituals Of Protest On The Streets. It's not "news," he correctly notes.
Posted by The Barrister
in The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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19:23
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A lesson on hubris
To paraphrase Insty the other day, the message is "Government is corrupted by power and money, and we need more government with more money to run more things." Maggie's Autumn Scientific Poll: Hobbies, Acovations, Sports, and VolunteeringI never have the free time to do all of the things I want to do. All I have is late evenings and weekends, plus stealing a few minutes to try to throw something of interest onto our website. Besides work and taking care of kids, what productive, fun, or constructive (or unconstructive) things do our readers do? Inquiring minds want to know. Here's what I do: A little golf, a little horseback riding with the Mrs., Deacon at church, one committee in our town government, a committee at our golf club, a fund-raising committee for a conservation charity, a little fishing in season, a little shooting, unskilled labor on our place (field-mowing, tree-clearing, log-splitting, fence-repairing, some barn cleaning), spare-moments surfing the net, some book-reading every night, and a fair amount of socializing which I try to limit to two things per week. A quite ordinary American life for a fellow whose kids have flown the nest, I think. A nobody, or an everybody. I am blessed that my spouse, dogs, and friends like me. Tuesday, October 18. 2011In my email this afternoonI know this is a boring waste of cyber-ink, but many of our readers may not be on the emailing list and perhaps Dr. Mercury might enjoy the game:
Guess these people want to keep their jobs. Unemployment sucks. Government as a monopolistic industryI have been returning to the theme of government as enterprise over the past couple of years, but the Knish Man put more effort than I ever did in fleshing out the concept: The Business of Government. Government is indeed a bubble, as much in the US as in Greece. Just two of many possible good quotes:
and
Sunday, October 16. 2011Dressing 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
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13:21
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Saturday, October 15. 2011Why do men shave?
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. Friday, October 14. 201121st-Century Campus CultureEssay of the above title at Chronicle. One quote:
Posted by The Barrister
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14:01
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Thursday, October 13. 2011CreepyI 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
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13:51
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Wednesday, October 12. 2011Ray Dalio's management principlesThe founder and now "Mentor" of Bridgewater Associates - probably the world's largest hedge fund - became fascinated by markets as a young caddy. This sui generis fellow, a HBS grad, has now put his company and management principles up on the internet. Interesting, possibly idiosyncratic - and not the usual corporate stuff at all. It seems to work.
Posted by The Barrister
in The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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16:04
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Saturday, October 8. 2011One effect of KatrinaKatrina provided the opportunity to reconstruct NO education from the beginning. The Big Easy's School Revolution - John White, superintendent of New Orleans' public schools: 'In other cities, charter schools exist in spite of the system. Here they are the system.' Friday, October 7. 2011Too fat, too skinny, and the freedom to screw upIf there is one political theme here at Maggie's, it is distrust of the power and of the wisdom of the state. Especially, the remote governmental powers. We have faith in the ability of the individual citizen to make his own choices and decisions according to his own lights. We do believe in collectivism, of the voluntary sort. Regarding close-up government, in my town, you can walk into our First Selectman's office (if you bring a Starbucks for her with you) or Second Selectman's office, and chat about anything for a bit. They only work 9-3, so you have to bear that in mind. If somebody else is there too, you all chat together. That works for me. We're a small town. That is sort-of by way of raising this subject of whether the government should have the power to take your fat kid away from you, and charge you with a crime. I don't think so. That's a topic for you, the kid, and the pediatrician. What if your kid is too skinny? What if she's an early anorectically-minded girl who nibbles on lettuce and is driving you to exasperation? Should that 14 year-old be taken from you while you are charged with felony child-neglect? I hear all of these stories. Life is full of all sorts of stories. I tend to fall on the freedom side of things. It's messy and things go wrong, but that's the way life is. Freedom to screw up is the closest to utopia we're gonna get. And, if we are to see government control of medical care, what if I am too fat for their cost statistics? Can they take me away from me? Thursday, October 6. 2011Twisting the social contractFrom George Will:
Elites like Warren believe that we benighted masses cannot really handle freedom. What we really cannot handle is excessive government meddling in our lives. Maggie's Autumn Scientific Poll: What was/is your favorite Beatles album?
Mine was/is Rubber Soul. No, it's Revolver.
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