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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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Sunday, June 12. 2011Fly fishing with wounded warriors
With wounded warriors in quiet waters. A lovely essay.
Posted by The Barrister
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14:27
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Interview with David Mamet
Mamet is late to the party, but better late than never. I don't think he thought much about politics before. Friday, June 10. 2011The World Bank and the mess in EuropeMr. Strauss-Kahn is leaving a mess for his successor. A quote from the essay at The American:
Thursday, June 9. 2011An "apathetic Liberal" sees the light
It's a remarkable photo-essay. He says:
I went through a similar transformation years ago. I am heartened to see that some are still capable of real "critical thinking." Perhaps all Liberals are not hopelessly committed Communists. My main take-home from the pics, however, is that these are not well-indoctrinated ideologues - they are just greedy for my money. There is no end-point to the Leftist's desire for the fruits of my labor. It is always "more." This has nothing to do with education. Image from the article. ED addendum: related: Elites Gone Bad - What America needs is a better class of left-winger. Another addendum at Powerline: Long Live High School English Teachers. Photo from that piece below:
What's her pension invested in? Not-for-profit windmills? What about your greed, honey? Wednesday, June 8. 2011Enumerated powersThe original argument against the Bill of Rights as an amendment to the Constitution in the US was that it would make it appear that those were the only rights of the people and of the states. "Enumerated powers" do not enumerate the rights of the people, but delimit the powers of the state (all Maggie's readers know that). Randy Barnett discusses. A quote:
The people opposing the Bill of Rights amendments had a good point. Tuesday, June 7. 2011Your rights to my propertyFrom Click at Protein:
Monday, June 6. 2011D Day
At Dino
Two links about the Western WorldBalch at PJ: Why We Should Study the West. Prof Deneen discusses the two kinds of freedom: The Future of Democracy in America.
Saturday, June 4. 2011The move to make embedding YouTubes a felonyStory here. You can't make this stuff up. What's this country coming to? The government doesn't have enough to do? If something is copyrighted, should it be embeddable on YouTube in the first place? No. Crazy thing is, lots of people use YouTube for self-promotion. If you are a would-be performer or show or whatever, and copyright your stuff, do not make it embeddable. Simple. Can't have it both ways. Can't tell me not to post a photo of your billboard along the road. YouTube is good fun, a vast resource, and one of the best time-wasters ever invented. If George Shearing's estate, or the Feds, come after Maggie's for embedding his YouTube vid, I have good defenses planned already. Make my day!
Posted by The Barrister
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13:52
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Friday, June 3. 2011"Bad Facts"We are not going to participate in the Weiner roast (because what regular middle-aged guy hasn't sent pics of his trouser pup tent to young girls he doesn't know on Twitter now and then?), but lawyer Ace has a good related post on what lawyers term Bad Facts. Dealing creatively with Bad Facts is one thing lawyers get paid the big bucks for. It is always a fun challenge. Life is simpler if we are careful to avoid Bad Facts in our own lives, but sometimes Bad Facts find us, and nobody is perfect. Never try to be your own lawyer, because you do not know how the game is played.
Posted by The Barrister
in The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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13:37
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How's that Obama economy working out for you?People seem to feel it's pretty lousy, unless you are lucky enough to have a government job. Since we all work as serfs for the government from January 'til May, and since the Chinese are loaning us money to pay the bills, no surprise there. Speaking of jobs, Dogs Make Employees More Productive At Work. Perhaps our economy needs more puppies. Or perhaps we need less government: Businesses afraid to hire here Speaking of the economy, my neighbors down the road are adding a fancy new master bath, and I stopped by to take a look. I like construction. Things are not universally bad, I guess. Those are legal Mexicans working on it, of course. The jobs Americans don't want to do.
Posted by The Barrister
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12:50
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Wednesday, June 1. 2011WW 2 VetsThere are still nearly two million WW 2 vets in the US. Those who saw the combat tend not to talk about it. Too much pain and horror to talk about. Some of them spoke with James Hornfischer. h/t, Powerline. Tuesday, May 31. 2011
Posted by The Barrister
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18:13
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The Northeast's best book sale
Just a calendar reminder for book lovers: the 51st Annual Pequot Library Book Sale, July 22-26. Be there or be square. I'm going. I don't need no steenkin' Kindle.
Posted by The Barrister
in The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
at
16:00
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Sunday, May 29. 2011Rethinking college Cheering the University’s Collapse links to New York Magazine:
Saturday, May 28. 2011The Maggie's Farm Breakfast Scientific Survey
Breakfast is my favorite meal, but I rarely bother with it beyond a couple of cups of coffee. If I had breakfast every morning I would weigh 30 lbs. more than I do. What are my favorite breakfasts? - Home-made fresh cut-up fruit in a bowl - including Pineapple I cannot pick a single favorite. Love 'em all. Please post your favorite breakfasts in the comments. Friday, May 27. 2011Summer beverages: Chilling your red wines
If you are one of those folks who keep the house at 55 both summer and winter, you can ignore this post. Otherwise, you may be grateful for this reminder about the ideal serving temperatures for red wines - 55-62 degrees F. That is cellaring temperature, not room temperature. In the summertime, you will enjoy your reds much more if they are chilled a bit, rather than drinking them at 85 degrees. Yuk. Here's a site which discusses storage and serving temps for wines. Wednesday, May 25. 2011ClausewitzFrom Mead on Clausewitz:
New York's Garment District is survivingLong Live the Industrial City - New York City’s garment district illustrates that manufacturing can still be vital to the innovation that cities foster. A quote:
I still miss the blocks of garment racks blocking all the sidewalks over there, and the hordes of rude and crude "garmentos."
Posted by The Barrister
in The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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13:52
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Tuesday, May 24. 2011QQQ: The war on funHappy Meals, smoking, fried food, etc. Maybe they will try banning booze next. President Obama's War on Fun.
Buckley interviews AlinskyWhat is a gentleman?Attributes of the Gentleman, or Mr. Darcy’s Rules of Engagement. He omits the classic "A gentleman knows when/where he is not wanted," but that might be subsumed under one of the other Five Traits.
Posted by The Barrister
in The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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11:19
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Monday, May 23. 2011Three education links
Everything is a crisis these days, and this is not one either. Much of college education has little to do with the workplace, and most practical education is self-education. Still, the author is open to the sorts of educational flexibility that make sense. Princeton's Neili has a major piece responding to the Chace piece on affirmative action which we posted a while ago. It's A Desperate Defense of Affirmative Action. One quote:
And here's another interesting one: Comparing Yale to Southern Connecticut. A quote:
Sunday, May 22. 201151 days in a dinghy
Posted by The Barrister
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16:54
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The Moslems in Spain She knew all about it, and is taking a course in Ottoman art and design at Yale. We wondered what had happened to to Moslem civilization, and how and why it deteriorated to the point of its apparent current barbarianism. I speculated that perhaps it was not Islam, but the Ottoman Empire which had a civilization relatively independent of religion, as the Romans had, but I was just trying to maintain the level of the conversation. Photo: One does not tend to associate the culture of the Alhambra with the current Middle-Eastern Islamicists who seem more focused on destruction than creation.
Posted by The Barrister
in History, Our Essays, The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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14:20
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