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, July 16. 2009Today in 1779Monday, July 13. 2009The Glorious RevolutionThe Englishman reminds us that yesterday was the anniversary of the Glorious Revolution. We Americans do not think much about that 1688 event, but his link explains why we should. It was a precursor, of sorts, to the American Revolution. The Columbia Encyclopedia says:
Image: William of Orange (William lll) Sunday, July 12. 2009"I lived in a tenement."Above: Lower East Side of Manhattan, 1937, where many waves of immigrants found their first foothold in America. Those 1860s-1890s tenements are still standing, in what is now one of the hippest young neighborhoods of NYC. Below: Mulberry St., NYC, c. 1900, packed with southern Italian and Sicilian immigrants. The misguided Progressives wanted to tear down these neighborhoods, from the time of Teddy Roosevelt to Lyndon Johnson. What's a "slum"? The Dylanologist and I have always been interested in the tragedies of urban planning, and fans of the organic, natural growth of urban areas designed by market forces and human desires, not by hubris-infected government experts. One of his great-grandmothers, 1st generation Irish, raised 5 kids (with great success) in a NYC tenement, using bureau drawers as cribs. The Dyl said to me the other day: "I lived in tenements for eight years. No elevators: two to three-story walk-ups, no a/c, shared bathrooms down the hall, unreliable heat, no cable, no phone, no wireless, with one tiny room with a dirty window and an old single bed with one thin, lumpy mattress. For the first four years, my parents paid around $30,000 per year for the privilege, and for the second four years, closer to $40,000." Here's Jane Jacobs:
Posted by Bird Dog
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Friday, July 10. 2009Calvin's 500th BirthdayIt's John Calvin's 500th Birthday today (1509-1564). He was indeed one of the shapers of the Western world. Marvin Olasky offers Three Cheers for John Calvin. Here's a Calvin quote via Marginal Rev:
Tuesday, June 30. 2009Good quote about H.G. Wells, plus goats"Orwell was right. It was Wells who made it respectable, even before World War I, for liberals in England and America to demean their own native democratic culture in the name of an imagined antidemocratic World State. And it was Wells, with his stature as the prophet of the future, who taught upper-middle-class liberals that they were entitled to govern in the name of social evolution." Fred Siegel, writing on HG Wells, via Samiz. Readers know that we proud gun-and-Bible-clinging redneck Northeast Yankees hate it when Chardonnay-sippers who see themselves as our betters try to tell us how to live. We ain't stupid neither - cuz we been government-eddicated! At great expense! BTW, we do love chevre - to the point that our editor wants to keep some goats. The meat is quite tasty, too. What's the PC term for a she-goat? A goatess? Goatette? Help me out. Friday, June 26. 2009David Hackett FischerBlogger and frequent Maggie's commenter AVI mentioned historian David Hacket Fisher a while ago in a comment here. It reminded me of Fisher's fine book, which I once meant to read but never did: Historian's Fallacies: Toward a Logic of Historical Thought. From a post on that book from this site:
Wednesday, June 24. 2009WheelsFrom Smithsonian:
Tuesday, June 23. 2009The Emperor of AtlantisThe Jewish-born Roman Catholic convert Czech composer Viktor Ullmann's Der Kaiser Von Atlantis was his last composition in the Terezin concentration camp outside Prague before he was shipped to Auschwitz in 1944 and gassed on arrival. One of the remarkable stories of the era is about all of the music in the camps, and Terezin had more than its share of talent. The Nazis and even the SS loved music and thus encouraged camp musicianship. Mrs. BD recently heard a Terezin survivor speak about being in the choir there at age 11. (140,000 passed through Terezin: 20,000 were liberated at the end.) In this short (50+ min.) modernist opera, the Emperor of Atlantis (a thinly-disguised Hitler-type) declares total war on the world. (As one would expect from a prison camp opera, the "Loudspeaker" has a major role and, instruments being limited, it's like a cabaret band.) Death goes on strike out of resentment at the competition from the Emperor, but love reappears on the battlefield and, in the end, Death is persuaded to resume his merciful task of erasing pain from the world when the emperor himself agrees to die. Here's a snippet of the opera on YouTube, the Emperor's farewell aria:
Posted by Bird Dog
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Friday, June 19. 2009I Am Spartacus, I Am AmericanMy grandmother, advocate of the turn of the century (that’s early 1900’s) democratic socialism based in defense of the little guy from rampant big business, taught me that the biggest myth in America is the efficiency of big business. So, government grew in regulations and programs, and so did unions, to counter big business and favor the little guy. ‘Till now it’s a truism that big government is inefficient and too little the friend of the little guy, and big unions are money founts for their leaders at the expense of labor having jobs. Meanwhile, big business has more and more become an ally of big government and unions to divide the spoils, and stifle competition and innovation. All that leaves to maneuver for the little guy against the increasing encroachments of the biggies is small business and individuals. It’s time for more small businesspeople and individuals to defy the biggies with a chant of I am Spartacus, or I am an American. (No, I didn’t purposely ignore big academia. It has made itself largely irrelevant via meaningless coursework enriching self-serving pedants.) Consider a few datapoints: Investigative journalist Tim Carney reminds us that in 1993 the biggest insurers supported Hillarycare, to shift liability risk onto taxpayers and profit from claims-processing contracts. Small insurers, brokers who work with small companies, and individuals revolted. Today, the big insurers are again cooperating with the government-dictated health care advocates, as long as the big insurers can profit from more premium payers steered their way. The Canadian medical societies remind us not to go north for a model of government-dictated health care, as the waits are excessive by even long-wait standards approved by the government. The former Chief Economist of the US Chamber of Commerce reminds us (sorry, a subscription only column) that when government as umpire controls a team, bad and self-serving calls are to be expected. Michelle Malkin reminds us that Mrs. Obama and President Obama’s chief political operative worked to reduce care for the poor, to enrich her employer (and her compensation). Mickey Kaus reminds us that unions are to be exempted from Obamacare, and further benefit from attracting members through higher benefits than the rest of us. The CEO of the consumer highest-rated insurer in the Be Spartacus. Say "I am American. I refuse to be pushed around by the biggies, or under their thumb." Write or call your congressional representatives to represent your views. Ask your employer and your doctors to do so too.
Posted by Bruce Kesler
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Wednesday, June 10. 2009Stories from Area 51
The Road to Area 51, in the LAT
1938Dr X labels this photo: Caruthersville, Missouri (Russell Lee).
Monday, June 8. 2009Christian Soldier: Anthony ComstockA Connecticut moral crusader and the YMCA. I guess the Y has seen some changes over the years. A quote from the essay:
Saturday, June 6. 2009Omaha BeachFrom S.L.A. Marshall's First Wave at Omaha Beach, in the November,1960 Atlantic:
Friday, June 5. 2009United in HateFront Page's Jamie Glazov discusses his new book, which addresses a topic about which we are always curious - the affinity between the Liberal-Left and brutal tyranny, especially Islamic tyranny. Relevant today with our government's submissive overtures to Islamic dictatorships. Fairly short, but it's in two pieces:
Thursday, June 4. 2009Best talks of 2009: Why government should not fund science, and related topicsFrom the Oxford Libertarian Society, the remarkable Prof. Terence Kealey - author of Sex, Science, and Politics (h/t, Samiz). A wide-ranging and fascinating talk, with wonderful Q&A. The guy is a genius. Please watch:
Terence Kealey - 'The Myth of Science as a Public Good' from oxford libertarian on Vimeo.
Posted by Bird Dog
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Monday, June 1. 2009A 50 anos de la RevolucionThe reporters of this series were never allowed back into Cuba. This is Part 1 of 6, in Spanish:
Sunday, May 31. 2009The Golden HighwayVia Aurelia: The Roman Empire's Lost Highway. A bit more interesting than Route 66. Photo from the article. Wednesday, May 27. 2009What I'm readingAndrew Jackson: American Lion by Newsweek editor Jon Meacham. An imperfect but absorbing book about the Presidency of an interesting American during interesting times. The Tennessean Andrew Jackson was a tough guy, but a loving, emotionally sensitive and volatile guy. A General and a hard-nosed pol - not a philosopher. Monday, May 25. 2009A Ring
For Memorial Day, A Ring from VDH in 2002: http://www.nationalreview.com/hanson/hanson052402.asp
Saturday, May 23. 2009Up from PovertyVia RCP, a superb essay by Carl Schramm Up From Poverty. How economic growth occurs remains a mystery to economists - or at least a subject of endless debate. An enduring truth often forgotten (or ignored) by proponents of state-led development: economic growth owes more to the forbearance of the state than to its intervention. Governments do not, indeed cannot, make wealth-only their citizens can. And when government protects their freedom, the world's growing population of entrepreneurs, in the bargain, expands human dignity and establishes the foundation of ongoing growth on which civil society ultimately depends. One quote from the essay:
Tuesday, May 19. 2009George W. Cromwell
You're never going to understand the contemporary fringe left until you understand what happened to Oliver Cromwell.
Maureen Dowd got caught plagiarizing a blogger in her New York Times column the other day. But calling the lockstep mindset she's channeling "plagiarism" is superfluous. She's cribbing the homework of someone who writes something called Talking Points Memo, after all. They can all finish one another's sentences, or start them to get the ball rolling. Makes no never mind. They never have an original thought, just endless permutations of the same drivel about George W. Bush. They all think if they rearrange the words a little one more time, George Bush will be guilty and Karl Rove will be arrested or Alberto Gonzales won't be able to rent movies from Netflix or... something. Or maybe they'll all be tried in absentia in some weird traffic court based in a European country whose GDP is less than Al Gore's electric bill, and George will be forever unable to travel to some frosty HMO masquerading as a country to pick up the Nobel prize they'll never award him anyway. It seems like trying to invest heavily in tulip bulb futures at this point to any sane observer. George wasn't running in the last election; he's very, very unlikely to stand in the next one. But still they persist. If you are a monomaniac, you try to convert others to your mania. Smart people give you the cold shoulder immediately. If you listen a little, you're going to have to listen a lot. It's the reason you don't make eye contact with people yelling at traffic in the street. It doesn't pay to seem interested and polite. Continue reading "George W. Cromwell"
Posted by Roger de Hauteville
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Sunday, May 17. 2009This is superb: The History of Political Correctness, with "Cultural Terrorism"All readers should listen to this piece of history, in which a disappointing "proletariat" - which refused revolution - was replaced by a Gramscian program for an intellectual elite-driven neo-Marxism designed to bring down Western civilization to replace it with...whatever...run by them. (For Marcuse, it seems to have been all about random sex with interesting strangers rather than anything economic, which is fine with me but Mrs. B., who I am quite fond of and to whom I am quite attached and comfortable, would never go along with that idea. Therefore I comply with her wishes and am not a sexual revolutionary despite my many and almost continuous adventurous and curious thoughts about all of the charming females one encounters in life. That was the deal I made with her, and keeping my word is important to me. I guess that makes me a reactionary.) A big wave of an old Montecristo and a glass of single malt to Thompson for finding this excellent 20-minute piece:
Posted by The Barrister
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Saturday, May 16. 20091936Negro Barber Shop, 1936, Atlanta, GA. Walker Evans. (h/t Dr X, who likes the kind of photos I like.) In 60 years, a photo of your barber shop will be just as interesting.
Posted by Bird Dog
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Sunday, May 10. 2009Oldest house in AmericaReposted - The Jonathan Fairbanks house in Dedham, MA. 1636. Those are the bones of the basic center-hall Colonial. The slope of that roof is great for either snow or rain. Multiculturally-sensitive though he may be, Sippican Cottage is omitting pueblos and phony old houses in St. Augustine from his thorough research on the topic. He means real wood-framed houses. It's easy to detect the core of the farmhouse, before all of the additions and extensions. What a young nation we are.
Posted by Bird Dog
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11:25
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Thursday, April 23. 2009What ancient Greek music probably sounded likeMonotonic music mainly, with lyre, drum, trumpet and flute, with different "modes" to evoke different states of mind. The ancient Greeks considered their music and lyrics to be central to who they were as a civilization, and, of course, to be a gift from the gods. As best I can tell, poetry (the lyrics) was never offered without accompanying music. The group Melpomen recreates the ancient sounds from surviving fragments. (Samples of the music at the Amazon site.) Wiki has a fine summary of ancient Greek music. Interesting to read that Plato (c 400 BC) complained about the modern music which defied old forms. Image: Music lesson, c.460 BC, from this site about ancient Greek music.
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