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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Thursday, December 3. 2009A moral imperative for insurance?
It is a moral imperative for parents to take care of their kids as best they can. And, in a nation founded on equality in the face of the law, you could make a case for universal free national legal care. Socialized medicine is no more insurance than Social Security is. What it is is having the government - ie your neighbors - pay your bills. That's not insurance. Tipping PointVia Junk Science (whence the image): This IS the Tipping Point. Similar theme at Pajamas: The End of the Line for Climate Hysteria? Thursday links
Image via Driscoll's Bowling For Afghanistan Related: We have always said that the problem with Afghanistan is that it isn't a country - it's a place. Community Organizing in Afghanistan
Bad news for the Washington Times Sort-of related: Murdoch Plans $15 M. N.Y.C. Edition From I own the world:
Medicare cuts and other D.C. fairy tales: Obama's so-called 'savings' are pure political fantasy From The Telegraph: ...even if you accept the IPCC predictions, look what happens. The IPCC says that world temperature will increase by 2100 by somewhere between 3.2F and 7.2F. A warming of half way between these two points works out at an average temperature increase of 0.05 degrees F per year. In the last 25 years of the past century, temperature increased at the rate of 0.04 degrees per year. (In this century, it has not increased at all!) Has this proved so appalling to manage?
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08:48
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CRUdGateJim Miller: It's more complicated than warmists and deniers Via Steyn:
That quote is from the post CRUdGate: Why this can't be swept under the carpet, who includes a few images of which this is one:
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07:18
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Wednesday, December 2. 2009CesspoolScathing op-ed by Driessen in Wash. Times: Pseudoscience cesspool. A quote: ...the Climategate e-mails reveal an unprecedented, systematic conspiracy to stifle discussion and debate, conceal and manipulate data, revise temperature trends that contradict predictions of dangerous warming, avoid compliance with Freedom of Information requests, and pressure scientific journals and the IPCC to publish alarmist studies and exclude dissenting analyses so as to manufacture "consensus." Global climateI am not a professional climatologist but a common-sense fellow. Therefore I think I have more credibility than the average person who makes a living from "climate change." I enjoyed Coyote's Catastrophe Denied, but I think even he gave too much credence to existing data. It seems to me that there is no accurate way to measure "global temperatures" or "global climate" other than via the troposphere. Tree rings and sediments and weather stations are ridiculous "proxies" for "global climate." Furthermore, there is no such thing as a "global climate" anyway. The reason is that, at sea level, the earth consists of thousands of climates and millions of micro-climates - all on land undergoing constant fluctuation and all impacted by natural ebbs and flows and much of it impacted in some way by man and his land use, urbanization, etc (The earth's population was 1.2 billion in 1850, now it is 6.8 billion.) - and the ocean remains incomprehensibly complex with all of its oscillations and strange fluctuating vertical and horizontal currents. I am not a climatologist, but I am always a skeptic about whatever experts tell me. I am a skeptic even about the 0.6 degree F change in the past 150 years. I think all of our temperature data is meaningless beyond its immediate locale - except for the troposphere data which we have only for recent years. Science is never about truth. It's just about the theory and hypothesis du jour. That's what it's supposed to be. Drudge headlinesright now: PAPER: CLIMATE CHANGE 'FRAUD'... I question the timing, #2I was being facetious yesterday about Climategate and Palin, but not today: is the Afghanistan "plan" timed to provide cover for health care? Sort of a wag the dog thing? Am I getting smarter about how pols manipulate us, or am I getting paranoid? Or both?
OuchFrom Spiegel Online re the O's speech. It is devastating. The US media would never be so bold or direct. Weds. morning links
Reason: The Scientific Tragedy of Climategate -Can climate change science recover from the damage done by leaked emails? Watts: Climategate: hide the decline – codified Pajamas: The Fraud Is Everywhere: SUNY Albany and Queens University Belfast Join Climategate (PJM Exclusive) Slate: Confused by the O's speech. I thought the speech was dull, rambling, and incoherent until he tried to wrap himself in the flag at the end. Ace: Obama's Speech: To Keep Afghanistan from Becoming Vietnam, I Hereby Propose the Strategy of "Vietnamization" Am Thinker: Dick Morris and the Crusade against ObamaCare Howard Dean Declares Debate Between Capitalism and Socialism to Be Over. Isn't that nice to know. MIT students to protest Copenhagen. h/t SDA Dr. Sanity: EDUCATION IS A WEAPON Green cremation:
That almost made me barf. Another contender for the worst medical reporting ever: "Coma man". h/t, Vanderleun And from Vanderleun on Climategate:
Roger Simon: Climategate: The White House Stonewalls with Stupidity
Moonbattery: UN's Green Blueprint for World Domination I suggest that the Swiss tell the UN to stick it MIT professor of meteorology Richard Lindzen has a few well-chosen words on global warming.
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Most Worthy Comment On Obama's Afghanistan SpeechOne of my oldest and, deservedly ten times over, most respected friends, a combat veteran, a journalist, a frontline refugee aid worker, a man of the cloth, a professor, major scholar, a mentor and example to generations, wrote me this email below. He offers insights based on real experience that is lacking in mere scribblers in media and blogs who haven't ever been on the front-lines of life, death, and hope and effort despite odds due to undefeatable faith. My friend's email, to all of you: From a column by David Ignatius:
This is all just a distraction from health-care and cap and trade. If the Taliban do come back He says in the speech that we are not patrons but partners, and then he speaks of the Pakistan and Afghan governments in an utterly dismissive tone, as if he were speaking to ADHD children. The Karzai government is corrupt and inefficient? Compared to what? Najibullah or Mullah Omar, Kharzai's predecessors? Is the Afghan government more corrupt than the governments of Obama says However, if the Afghans, as Obama suggests, don't want a return of the Taliban, why are we about to facilitate their return? Obama's whole plan sounds like just enough to keep his generals from resigning, but not enough to defeat the Taliban. An upfront capitulation and retreat would actually be better. That would say we don't want to win but would leave open the question of whether we could have won if we wanted to. But the result we'll get will say we couldn't have won in any case, that American arms simply couldn't prevail. Notice that he said nothing about why he's sending 2 brigades less than his commander asked for. It probably polls better that way. He plans to "end" both wars--no matter the consequences--before the 2012 campaign season begins. This will aid his reelection and help him "earn" his Nobel. I'm beginning to wonder if I can in good conscience encourage a student to remain in or enter ROTC with a commander-in-chief as unprincipled and feckless as this one--and an Army chief of staff as stupid as Gen. Casey. I've always encouraged our students to at least consider military service. I never thought this would be a question for me. But it is becoming one now. My friend is a bit discouraged tonight, to say the least. Neither you nor I nor he need worry that he will remain that way. His life is one of striving with all his being and integrity to overcome evil and to contribute good to the world. He will keep on, as must we, as Obama too shall pass, and be replaced with a better. P.S.: My friend saw this and a private email comment to him that "spirit demands fiber". He replies
BTW, Related: Read this op-ed, by another friend, of course a former Marine, and much more: Counterinsurgency Incoherence And, Related: Ralph Peters gets to the point. Tuesday, December 1. 2009I question the timing.
I loved this quote from the CRU computer guy: "We can have a proper result, but only by including a load of garbage!" Today: Jones stepping down. Penn State to investigate Mann. That's the core of the IPCC's numbers factory. Plus there has already been a political fatality in Australia - probably the first actual victim of global warming. Klaus: Global warming is a politician's mythMore climategate funTierney in the NYT says:
If Mann is telling the truth, he is utterly incompetent. I suspect he is lying, but a gullible Tierney appears to buy it. How would you not know how your cover graph was constructed?
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11:15
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Tuesday morning linksThe Christmas Season runs from the first day of Advent until the end of Epiphany. Joseph Bottum discusses. Advent and Epiphany are the religious, mysterious, joyful part, and Christmas is the secular, fun piece. It's all good, in my opinion.
The American people are mad as hell Food stamps becoming normal in America. The richer our population becomes, the more people getting free food. Related: Starvation in Gaza? NY Post: The Climate-cult con. I enjoyed this: 'Botch after botch after botch.''
Meanwhile, today from the self-satirizing BBC:
And similarly, this from the self-satirizing UN:
Politico: 7 stories Obama doesn't want told The about-face on Honduras
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06:18
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Monday, November 30. 2009Climategate, newest developmentsI just read about the circular firing squads at the IPCC, with calls for the firing of the CPU and even for the disbanding of the entire IPCC (why not the rest of the UN at the same time?). Plus other good details at Climate Depot and also in the Political Climate column of Icecap. Addendum: This UN bozo is freaking unbelievable. Addendum #2: The hypocrisy of all of these "green" celebs is amusing. Addendum #3: The more I think about it, the more I think that Climategate might be the biggest expose of the year. And yet the MSM will barely mention it because it DOES NOT FIT THE SOCIALIST NARRATIVE. Unbelievable, for people who supposedly want viewers and to sell newspapers - but they did the same thing with the ACORN stories. Thus for real news we must rely on amateurs, semi-pros, and bloggers. This from Clive Crook via Blair:
NYC photosFrom Saturday, one of the Met's large Tiffany windows in the American Wing. This is titled "Autumn."
Continue reading "NYC photos" R/C Madness
First, introducing the Hydroboat-plane-car-helicopter-lawnmower-skateboard: Pretty nifty, eh? And some review I read mentioned "sand and snow", so I guess we can add "dune buggy" and "snowmobile" to the list. Aerodynamically, what's amazing is how maneuverable it is with what little wing surface it has. But it certainly seems like it's under fairly tight control. And one big plus point is that they don't cost very much, compared to jumping into the field of normal R/C planes and expensive control boxes. So when you pile the rascal up, it won't be a wallet-killer to replace it, and it also gives us the luxury to try a different brand if we're not happy with the first one. Try Stormlauncher, Graupner and HydroFlyer, and Toys 'R' Us has a pretty good selection of flying toys. Now, if you want a more conventional plane, but one that can still pull off some simple, basic maneuvers, try this little honey: That's a pretty cool moment when he stands it on its nose. Don't try it at home! On the other hand, if the above planes are too mechanical-looking... The AGW industryWhether you call it global warming or climate change or greenie hysteria or a religion or Lefty politics, the fact is that it's an industry, and one which has become increasing lucrative over recent years. Goldman Sachs, never a company to pass up on chances to make lots of money, has done extensive planning to capitalize on carbon credit markets - as has Al Gore. But don't forget Big Academia: Surber Monday morning linksIt's rare for me to see something worth reading by Friedman, but America vs. The Narrative is pretty good. Which is the bigger scandal? News-gate or Climategate? As Steyn put it:
Heroes, from National Post:
Sheer brilliance. HHS would become gigantic insurance regulator. Related, the explanation for the lack of competition in medical insurance:' At a recent town hall meeting, President Obama said, "Now,
We're late to the party with this chart, but it sure is revealing, isn't it?
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09:40
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Climategate update with MoncktonVia Moonbattery:
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Sunday, November 29. 2009Happy St. Andrew's Day, plus excellent Climategate summaryCheers on St. Andrew's Day to our Scots friends and readers! Now we must move south of the border to take a good summary look at Climategate and its meaning, as far as we now know: Climate change: this is the worst scientific scandal of our generation: "Our hopelessly compromised scientific establishment cannot be allowed to get Andrei, you've lost another submarine?....Most fascinating to me: they got rid of, or "lost," all of their raw data. That means the raw data from which the IPCC reports have been produced - after the data was played with. In science, "losing" data is a felony, and discredits everything you have ever done. Why? Because it makes it impossible to either corroborate or refute the conclusions.
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