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, January 8. 2012Sunday morning linksThe moronic world of Occupy Copenhagen Will Harvard Stop Trying to Impose Orthodoxies? DC lawmakers propose law to require all students to apply to college More Conservative Than You Think -The new Mitt Romney Why getting a good education and a good job doesn’t necessarily mean going to a four-year college "You don't see Korean or Vietnamese immigrants risking their lives to make it to America, only to complain after they get here that all the slack is gone. Why? Because they appreciate slack and know how to use it. Indeed, if not for state sponsored racial discrimination, most of the students in the UC system would be Asian." Rant du Jour: The World’s Most Dishonest Newspaper Saturday, January 7. 2012The global warmening thing is overAt Watts: Green Movement Dead In The Water. It's been said many times before, but it certainly seems moribund. Problem is that too many people, and governments, make big bucks from the scam. I remain in favor of more warmening for the benefit of the human species, but am preparing for the coming Ice Age apocalypse by buying a 1-BR condo in West Palm. (Just kidding. Florida is not my kind of place.) Like this tune, though:
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Saturday morning linksVanderleun: The 9 Minute Lecture on How to Have a Longer Life Exercise Via Insty, Revenge of the Point-and-Shoot - Samsung wants you to know the camera isn't dead yet. Kodak invented the digital camera, but... How Art History Majors Power the U.S. Economy: Virginia Postrel Lefties Wet Their Pants Thinking about Post-Obama America Will: Government: The redistributionist behemoth The Mt. Rainier Shooting and PTSD: How the Media Got It Wrong Charles Blow: Repubs already going racist Good grief Senator Marco Rubio to Obama: You’re Turning America Into a “Deadbeat Nation” Fred Siegel and Joel Kotkin - The New Authoritarianism: A firm hand for a “nation of dodos” Friday, January 6. 2012"Death to Pennies"
Personal thoughts: — IMHO, the greatest invention of the 1990's was the 'penny tray' at convenience stores. — I've referred to them as 'pocket pollution' for decades. — When I get home from shopping, I empty my pockets, file any important receipts, dump any coins in the change jar and drop any pennies in the waste basket, where they rightfully belong. Friday morning linksOrthorexia - When eating healthy turns obsessive Like babies, dogs pick up on human intent Migration of whooping cranes halted in Alabama because of FAA regulation Does hot sex prevent breast cancer? Doubtful, but it's never a bad idea anyway Sign of Discontent: NYT’s Largest Union Sends Letter to Sulzberger With Over 500 Signatures How $1 in health insurance gets spent Nine of the Top Ten Religious Persecutors Are Islamic in Advocacy Group’s Annual Rankings Wind farm requires diesel engines Like the Greeks, Romans don't pay their taxes The desire for government policies to address the "obesity crisis" Good grief Will Republicans Hand the Left a VAT Victory? - Mitt Romney won't rule out the possibility of imposing a tax that's the fast track to a European welfare state. Mitt Romney Is Stuck Because He's Not A Pro-Growth Republican He isn't? Kudlow claims he is. Wilkinson: Why I am not a bleeding-heart Libertarian Half of World’s Richest 1% Live in America – Obama Wants to Change That David Brooks: Obama is ‘certainly more liberal than I thought he was’ It always takes David years to see the blindingly obvious. He should write his op-eds, then past-date them a few years. He is a naif, and a pussy-man too - but that's why he has his job. Commentary: Upcoming Election Will Determine America’s Standing as a Superpower Rhode Island Miracle Explained - How a liberal state reformed its pensions. Thursday, January 5. 2012Thursday morning linksSeriously, If You Pick The Wrong Major Then Prepare To Be Unemployed Walmart’s Ancestor - A new book chronicles the rise and fall of A&P. Walter Williams: I love greed:
The Great Golden State Business Exodus Whitewashing History for California's Kids In the UK, the dole pays out close to the UK median working wage Their politics sanctions - or encourages - dependency and lack of dignity Advisory group recommends withholding billions for high-speed rail Capitalism Is A System Of Wealth Redistribution Always seemed to me that a mortgage is just renting from a bank, while you assume all the risk and all of the costs Obama defies lawmakers with recess appointments to NLRB But if Bush did this... White House: When Congress Won’t Cooperate, Obama Will Take ‘Small, Medium and Large’ Executive Actions But if Bush tried that... Children of the Corn: The Renewable Fuels Disaster The Beginning of the Negative Campaign Probe reveals feds pressuring agents to rush immigrant visas – even if fraud is feared How to Confront the Anti-Israel Fixation of the Left New forms of Terrorism in Turkey A Call for Sanity in the Anti-Romney Rhetoric Wednesday, January 4. 2012Hope and Change happening in NHNew Hampshire Ends Affirmative-Action Preferences at Colleges:
I am strongly in favor of preferential treatment for skills, talents, achievement, and potential. Commuting, Taxes and Spending in 2012I was informed, as 2011 waned, that my tax credit for commuting would fall from $230 a month to $125. This bothered me. Not because I feel I deserve a credit to commute, but because I can't figure out what the government is trying to do.
The fact is, if public transport is a 'good' we should all take advantage of no matter what, then the government should pay for it by taxing everyone and making it available for 'free' - as they do in Portland. Of course, I oppose this idea entirely. However, if the theory is that we can get people to do something that is 'good for everybody', then isn't this the way to do it? Half-measures, like credits, subsidies, and other methods of this ilk only mask what is possibly (though probably not) a problem - that public transportation isn't really viable. There are ways to determine whether this is true, but not for the average commuter. What is the premise behind having a tax credit for public commutation? I like it, I'll use it if it's offered, but I didn't demand it, nor did I write Congress to keep it at $230/month. The cost, to me, of increased taxation due to the lower credit will be about $270 over the course of the year, so it's not a big deal. Why not just get rid of it altogether? If public transport is truly efficient, then it would make much more sense for me to take it, rather than driving into the city myself (or carpooling). My commute is about $330/month. The cost of driving (assuming the Federal allowance of .55/mile and $150 a month parking) is about $780/month. Even if I made a more realistic assumption of about .25/mile, public transport is still an advantage. But public transport is heavily subsidized. So I really don't know which is more efficient, and determining this is very hard. Here is the issue: Subsidies and tax breaks are supposed to promote the 'public good'. But how do I know which is more efficient, let alone even better, for me personally? If it is a 'public good', then its value will be transparent without subsidies and credits. I'll take whatever credits get offered. It would be crazy for me not to. But I'd much rather have a clear means of determining which makes more sense by comparing simple features like cost, time and effort (hey - in the end, I like reading on the train, so if it did cost more I'd probably still take it). It is precisely this lack of transparency that makes other government initiatives, like Obamacare, a pure misallocation of resources. Unable to determine where our real efficiencies lie, we opt for what we assume is 'best' or costs us least. But we cannot know for sure if these things really make sense at all.
Posted by Bulldog
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Weds. morning links
Monopoly - Official Trailer Man eats pizza slice from EVERY joint in Manhattan What Vietnam Taught Us About Breaking Bad Habits Ohio unemployment falls, but so does support for Obama WaPo: Gloomy numbers for Obama The latest briliant intellectual offering from one of our nation’s Ivy League universities. It’s January 2012 and so far we’ve avoided the Climate Apocalypse Progress: Canadian Senate Listens to Global Warming Skeptics Why Best Buy is Going out of Business...Gradually US Closes 2011 With Record $15.22 Trillion In Debt, Officially At 100.3% Debt/GDP, $14 Billion From Breaching Debt Ceiling The Stratfor Scandal "They [Catholics and others] will either have to change their views..." Tuesday, January 3. 2012The Romney boysA reader sent us this info about the Romney lads whose pics we posted this morning:
Tuesday morning linksNeo-neo thinks the Romney boys are hunks. I think Mrs. R rates a perfect Mrs. Late-Middle-Aged Barbie. Is she 60 years old? Well, here's Raquel Welch at 71, lookin' hot. "Progress." What is it? The Greatest Paper Map of the United States You’ll Ever See An atheist with some tough and strange messages to atheists:
Everybody "believes in something," even if it is only Self. Self is a false idol. Question is whether the "something" is worthy of devotion. Ahead of Iowa Obama campaign readies to fight Romney Father Christmas Stabbed to Death by Muslim Fanatics inTajikistan Religion of peace and tolerance kills Santa. Better not inform the kids or they might develop some intolerance too. This was evil. How journalists create the news Are we finally seeing an end to the ridiculous ethanol subsidies? A good thing. Ethanol is for drinking, not burning. CURL: Is Romney the next Kerry?
Still, everybody seems greedy for OPM. I want my MTV. Columbia jumps the shark: Columbia offers ‘Occupy 101’ I'll offer to teach Tea Party 101 for free. After all, it was a much bigger deal, with clean, non-sociopathic and polite people, involved tons more people with no arrests, and had real impact. Guess the Academic Left doesn't care for those sots of things. 40,000 new laws as of January 1. How can we be expected to know them all? We're all crims these days. Americans bought record numbers of guns last month amid an apparent surge in popularity for weapons as Christmas presents. That's a good thing. The good folks should all be armed, and guns are fun tools. Furthermore, an armed Santa is a safe Santa. The AP’s 2012 Playbook For Romney Accusations of antisemitism are building against the Center for American Progress (CAP), the left-wing umbrella organization that serves as a “brain trust” for Democrats on Capitol Hill and in the Obama administration. Bumpersticker below stolen from Legal Ins: Monday, January 2. 2012Why are all the good Jews Democrats, but you an evil Republican?
The MSM continues to boggle my mind.
Posted by The News Junkie
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Monday morning linksIn Pictures: Hang Son Doong Cavern – The Worlds Biggest Cave Gore-mobile recalled as a fire hazard Half a billion dollars of taxpayers' money for twenty-five $89,000 cars? Adam Bellow hopes to give voice to the tea party with new conservative imprint at HarperCollins Ninety floors... and counting: The breathtaking views from One World Trade Center (and there's still 14 storeys to go) Update on that CT cop applicant who scored too high to be a cop I can’t help but think that if we had a Republican in the White House we’d be hearing wall-to-wall sob stories on that topic. George Will's Obama needn’t lose for GOP to win:
Gun Permit Holders Substantially More Law Abiding Somehow, the NYT manages to find a danger in this Related: NYT Squeezes Bad News From Good More from the NYT:
When home invaders arrive, do you phone the Brady Campaign? Sunday, January 1. 2012OWS mocks itselfThe Bigger They areThe Harder They Fall. It has been a long standing theory of mine, starting back in the late '90s, that the more complex systems become, the easier they are to break. The complexity creates conditions in which a minor glitch in one system can create havoc in other associated systems all without human interaction. This theory also applies to society as a whole as far as I'm concerned meaning that the more rules, regulations, laws and policies are enacted, the ability to circumvent them becomes easier and easier. Some other much smarter folks than I am agree.
Posted by Capt. Tom Francis
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12:23
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Sunday morning linksIf you're like, well, almost everybody, you're not saving enough. Can Online Learning Meet 21st Century Demands? MIT’s new learning platform points to future of higher ed Are cashiers obsolete? Krauthammer on Why We’re Alone in the Universe Mitt Romney's humor problem The Moral Foundations of Occupy Wall Street - An illustrated guide to the signs at Zuccotti Park Obama Will Govern Without Congress The concept of "Guilt by Association" Top Ten JunkScience.com Stories of 2011 Ten 2011 Examples of Major Media Malfeasance - It will get even worse in 2012. On a $4M Vacation, Michelle Seeks $3 From Backers Saturday, December 31. 2011The only ad the Repubs should needSaturday morning linksWhat's become of England's aristocracy? 30 years later, revisiting Brideshead Vanderleun on prayer Yuletide Mead on the Trinity Khan Academy Jumps To 4M Uniques Per Month Like the Teaching Company and the MIT online courses, this is the new model for self-motivated learning Brooks: Midlife Crisis Economics Payroll tax cut raises worries about Social Security’s future funding CT Gov Schemes With SEIU To Unionize Day Care Providers & Others Without A Vote California is trying to unionize babysitters too How do the rich earn their livings? Lots of small businesses in those stats The Case for Walmart - New York City politicians should drop their misguided war on the retail giant. MSM Refuses To Ask Obama Tough Questions They Ask GOP Barone: Voters Want Growth, Not Income Redistribution Surber: It’s bully government, not nanny Watching the painful death of the welfare state
Friday, December 30. 2011Friday morning linksWhy Is There an Adderall Shortage? Because Demand Exceeds Supply. Duh. Is Freud obsolete? Origins of the term security blanket Harvard Prof Marc Hauser wrote a book about morality: Disgrace: On Marc Hauser We've been reading a lot about scientist malfeasance lately 99-year-old divorces wife after he discovered 1940s affair Middle Class Aided Its Own Decline:
Did people watch too many episodes of Dallas? The Answer Is Always A More Intrusive State Because we're all bozos on this bus? Iran saber-rattling? It's a big nothing, designed for news excitement. VDH: The Old New Europe Same old, same old. Secretly and decadently longing for a benevolent tyranny. A lost cause. The energetic Asians will eat their lunch. The Law School Bubble: How Long Will It Last if Law Grads Can’t Pay Bills? Might lower the price of basic legal services Pew Poll: Hispanic Voters Favor Obama by Wide Margin Why? Beats me. I thought they snuck here for opportunity, not freebies. Everybody loves a freebie though, right? Even Conservatives... The BBC As Warmists' Best Friend A Bad Year for Obama’s Green Dream Even the Warmists Don't Believe In Global Warming Top 10 Worst Federal Rules of 2011 Scandal of NHS 'production line' as readmissions soar Wisconsin: New work rules set in as contracts lapse "The left-right coalition against corn ethanol has been growing for some time..." Thursday, December 29. 2011Romney is gonna be the guyHe's the Repub candidate, OK? Nobody is perfect. Was Obama a perfect candidate? As far as rabid celeb enthusiasm goes, that's more appropriate for Hollywood than for governance. That's kid stuff. I've been around the block enough times to learn that you will never have perfect political candidates, and that Messiahs are not for this world. Mostly, the best people avoid the toilet of politics. Obama's Messiah shtick was boob bait (but it worked as a trick). Romneycare? Yes, wrong move - but Newt loved it. There will never be a Conservative Utopia just as there will never be a Socialist Utopia. Freedom and politics are messy, and depend on who can collect votes and cash. Obama will be flush with automatic union, blue state, and ethnic votes - and with automatic Wall St., union, and California cash. People forget that, last go-round, Romney was considered too Conservative. Hence "moderate, maverick McCain." Go ahead if you want and beat me up about it, but the time for dating is over. Dog donut, I cannot embed this important, relevant video. (I am speaking only for myself, of course, and not for the Maggie's crew.) Addendum: Why Ann Coulter supports Mitt (thanks, reader. I saw this but didn't link it.)
Posted by Bird Dog
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Kesler in City Journal: Hypocritical CalState OKs Anti-SemitismA California State University, Northridge, economics professor maintains a website devoted to promoting sex-tourism in Thailand. The loud denunciations on campus pressured him to take the off-campus website down. Meanwhile, a vile anti-Semitic website is maintained by a CalState, Northridge. math professor, using the university’s own server, and contrary to university regulations it is OKd as “free speech” by the university’s president, retiring this month.
The Manhattan Institute’s City Journal carries my “Cal State’s Chutzpah,” labeling it a “hypocritical university.” This is an update on my post December 6, “Looking Away From Hate At California State University.” The Chancellor of the California State University system, Charles Reed, fails to weigh in on the side of decency or academic standards or rules, but appoints as interim president the CSUN Provost who signed the math professor’s November letter to the Chancellor that study abroad should not be allowed in Israel. The letter levies charges against Israel (debunked by the reply from Scholars for Peace in the Middle East) not applied to any other democratic nation. This is anti-Semitism, according to the European Union’s Working Definition of anti-Semitism. At CalState’s sister public university system, University of California, Mark Yudof, president of the University of California system, also pussy-foots around confronting the rife anti-Semitism at U of C campuses. His evasions are discussed here at Maggie’s Farm and in a shorter version at New Criterion. These are both taxpayer-supported public university systems. Neither wants to do the legal or decent thing in fear of the pro-Palestinian/leftist faculty members who wield predominant power on campuses. Such callow anti-Semitism would be condemned if at a private company, and the malefactors terminated. Continued exposure is necessary if our public universities are to meet standards applicable elsewhere throughout America.
My City Journal article is below the fold. But, please go to City Journal’s “CalState’s Chutzpah” to read it, to demonstrate that Maggie’s Farmers are smarter and more decent than California’s irresponsible and hypocritical public university administrators.
BTW: Keep your eye on the City Journal website for the Winter edition, out soon. Sure to be jam packed with erudite and informative goodies, as always. Needless to say, I'm grateful to its editors for seeing the importance of the scandalous behavior of California's top public college administrators, and honored to be included among City Journal's contributors.
Continue reading "Kesler in City Journal: Hypocritical CalState OKs Anti-Semitism"
Posted by Bruce Kesler
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17:30
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Obama simply does not trust AmericansFrom Dr. Milton Wolf, Obama's cousin, in In Obama he trusts - Why our president fails:
OK, but how many Americans trust themselves anymore? Judging from the video we posted earlier today, the youth seem to be trained to want Uncle Sam to be their parent for life. 2012 PredictionsAs we approach the new year, a common theme of many sites is to review the previous year's events, while casting an eye to the future. Part of my job is to create business models for various lengths of time, so the idea of 'predicting' the future is something I have a level of comfort with. However, the art of prediction is art only. In making any kind of prediction, I've found it is useless to suggest that something will happen with a level of assuredness that exceeds even odds. In fact, my models typically have a High, Medium and Low outlook, with High having about the same likelihood as Low, and Medium being most likely. But Medium is couched as a 50/50 possibility. Another problem with predicting things is that you can go overboard. Making absolutely outrageous predictions may garner headlines and attract attention, but unless you get extremely lucky, you only wind up looking foolish. I don't need to make myself look any more foolish than I already am. Unless I'm going to make a reasonable prediction, I'd prefer to not make any at all. It's far too difficult to make assumptions about the behaviors of others, the outcomes of their actions, and the potential ripple effects to make a prediction that is completely assured. That is, unless you rig the system. I don't have the power to do this, so rather than discuss how I'll rig things to make sure I'm right, I'll just link to some predictions from others, make several of my own, and let Maggie's commenters have some fun thinking about how the new year will unfold.
Continue reading "2012 Predictions"
Posted by Bulldog
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13:16
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Thursday morning linksHow to locate yourself without a GPS 'I'm the only person in the world who didn't get an iPad': Hilariously ungrateful Christmas gift tweets Something useful: THE LORD'S PRAYER IN CHEROKEE TRIVIAL PURSUITS: Since What Year Has the New Year’s Eve Ball Been Dropped in Times Square? Parents, have you read your child's textbook lately? Top 25 OWS backers worth over 4 billion The 50 Best Political Quotes For 2011 Badly Written Bad Rules - New studies show the quality of federal regulation is plummeting. Women owning guns, update What Ben Nelson's surrender means for 2012 If you’re on Facebook, please take a minute to report a truly vile page Egypt’s sinking economy belongs to the Islamists now Republican Lawmakers Question AARP'S Tax-Free Profits From Product Endorsements Rise of the drone: From Calif. garage to multibillion-dollar defense industry The Unintended Consequences of Internet Regulation China’s Noisy Subs Get Busier — And Easier to Track The Democratic Party's War on the Poor The GOP's Answer to Union Money - Achieving parity with the Democrats in campaign spending would be no small feat. Yet it appears possible. If you can't find any real racism, invent it. Wednesday, December 28. 2011I am not bashing MaineSome readers felt that my last post about Maine was Maine-bashing. Not at all. I am simply curious about their politics. This scenic and rugged rural (woodsy and rocky, post-glacial or should I say "pre-glacial") state, often proudly referred to as "The West Virginia of the Northeast," has more welfare recipients than taxpayers. That is a problem, isn't it? I wondered whether it was an official policy. A legal vote-buying policy. It sounds like it is.
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