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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, May 9. 2010Stresa. A re-post from 2008In a chat with an Italian guy from Torino with his two little kids and wife on the flight to Milan, he said "You are only visiting for ten days? In Italy, we have 8 weeks of vacation. We have been in the US for a month, two weeks in New York." In a chat with a Brit on a ferry on Lake Como: "When you travel with a wife, you see villas and gardens. That's just what you do." They were on a one month trip around Italy. When do these folks ever work? We talked with plenty of friendly people on our trip, including a Swiss gal who had come down from Bern to the lakes with her dog (travel in Europe is very dog-friendly) for a long weekend. Some more Italy photos - a cafe in a pleasant piazza in Stresa with a bottle of our staple - the local Barbera:
Another shot of the Isola Bella gardens: A view from the funicular which connects Stresa with the ski village of Motterone. In the "Borromean Gulf," the left island of the triangle is Isola Pescatore, the far one is Isola Madre, and the one on the lower right is Isola Bella:
More photos on continuation page - Continue reading "Stresa. A re-post from 2008" An Antidote to schmaltzy Mother's Day
All men knew that already, but were askeered to say it for fear of the innate female propensity for violence, vengeance, grudge-collecting - and their use of their sexual charms and sharp tongues to oppress, manipulate, and control the hapless males of the species. Why the professional feminists never discuss this is a mystery, but females are a mystery to men anyway. Photo is a no-doubt future mother, eagerly awaiting - or inviting - vigorous fertilization, via Theo. From her spectacles, surely one of the bookish, intelligent ones (like Mrs. Barrister). Me? I am certainly one of the stupid men, as the simple fact of my posting this link must make obvious.
Posted by The Barrister
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11:53
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The popularity of birding
I owe my Mom (and my Dad) gratitude for introducing me to these interesting things. They are both curious people who do not like to not know about things around them, in whatever depth they are able to pursue. The energetic curiosity of parents, as of teachers, must surely be a good inspiration for growing rugrats. Thanks, Mom and Dad. While an expert in nothing, I have learned enough over the years to see and understand more of what's going on outdoors than the average bear. As our readers know, I am interested in the geology, the geography, the wildlife, the plants, the seas, and habitats in general. I have been birding since I was around 10, when I started with weekend groups from the local Audubon Society, but I remain a novice. Female warblers can drive me nuts, and Fall warblers - forget about it. Birding can be challenging, physically like hiking and mentally like Organic Chemistry: birds have seasonal plumages, and many vary during their first couple of years of life. Like hunting or fishing, it provides a mission for one's expeditions to the Great Outdoors. I am not one of those obsessives who pursue a Life List: I just like to see what is around in whatever corner of Creation I happen to find myself. Even when hunting, I tend to have my binoculars with me. From Birding popularity is flying high, report shows. One quote:
Photo is a tough diagnosis for amateurs, especially when among flocks of Herring Gulls. Sometimes seen on the coast in the Northeast in winter: Glaucous Gull. A big, tough denizen of the high Arctic.
Posted by Bird Dog
in Natural History and Conservation, Our Essays
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08:26
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Saturday, May 8. 2010Europe the Model? No way.Gremlins - evil gremlins - kept our site down all day today. This is good, from Bergner at Weekly Standard: Europe Is No Model - The genius of American politics. No regular American would want to be anything like Europe, however much we like to visit them to try to experience their interesting and colorful history, and to hear their quaint accents and languages. The real Disney Europe is what I call it. A receding, suicidal civilization. The charm comes from their having been frozen in time by insane governments - not from their present condition. Go see it before it disappears and becomes a subject for anthropological study. The Nilgiri Mountain Steam RailwayTamil Nadu, India. You can read about this scenic ride here, and how the trains handle the 1:12 grades. Take a ride, and see a bit of India:
Posted by Bird Dog
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11:01
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Thursday, May 6. 2010Congressman Cao Shoots Down Vietnamese GovernmentCongressman Joseph Cao, elected to replace "Ice Box" Jefferson in Louisiana, faces an uphill battle to keep the seat. Cao is unafraid of speaking up for what he believes. Recently, the Vietnamese government asked him to arrange meeting with the US Vietnamese community for Hanoi to present its case. As Cao replies, Hanoi has no case. In his reply letter, Congressman Cao says the premise for the request is misguided. The Vietnamese left their homeland because they rejected tyranny. Until the government of Vietnam demonstrates real changes, respecting human rights and freedom, it will not be taken seriously by the Vietnamese-American community: release political prisoners, stop oppressing democracy activists and religious freedom, respect the rule of law. That's just a quick summary. Read Cao's entire letter for much more. It is eloquent, heartfelt, and quite an education for those not familiar with the conditions in Vietnam. Continue reading "Congressman Cao Shoots Down Vietnamese Government"
Posted by Bruce Kesler
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21:57
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Being a Christian in the World: "Passing through..."I attended the funeral of a colleague and pal of 20+ years early this afternoon. Jewish funeral, very short notice. Just took him and his wife to dinner ten days ago. Massive stroke. Second close death for me in one week. They played Louis Armstrong. The last year of his life was probably the best he had ever had. Recently retired (wife still working), biking through Asia with his lovely Mrs - who is a doctor, a month in Cabo, visiting kids in Lake Como and in California. Loved four things the most: deep thinking, bicycling long distances, his family - and good meals with good wines. Always cheerful, except when stupidity or dishonesty pissed him off. So modest, I never knew he was a Harvard grad til today at the funeral. Full scholarship, worked as a janitor for spending money. Tough for me to lose two special pals who loved life so much, in one week: I am not old yet. It connects to this "passing through" theme for me right now:
Anchoress posted this well-known (but new to me) second century letter to Diognetus, presenting an ideal version of A Christian In The World, in her Paradoxes of Christianity: Christians in the World Christians are indistinguishable from other men either by nationality, language or customs. They do not inhabit separate cities of their own, or speak a strange dialect, or follow some outlandish way of life. Their teaching is not based upon reveries inspired by the curiosity of men. Unlike some other people, they champion no purely human doctrine. With regard to dress, food and manner of life in general, they follow the customs of whatever city they happen to be living in, whether it is Greek or foreign. And yet there is something extraordinary about their lives. They live in their own countries as though they were only passing through. They play their full role as citizens, but labor under all the disabilities of aliens. Any country can be their homeland, but for them their homeland, wherever it may be, is a foreign country. Like others, they marry and have children, but they do not expose them. They share their meals, but not their wives. They live in the flesh, but they are not governed by the desires of the flesh. They pass their days upon earth, but they are citizens of heaven. Continue reading "Being a Christian in the World: "Passing through..."" College graduation rates: Who cares?
So what? Given how lax American higher ed has become in requirements and expectations, I am surprised it's below 60%. Apparently, historically, American graduation rates have never been very high. Quickest way to increase grad rates would be to simply sell degrees, or to hand them out for free like the Wizard of Oz. Now I do realize that a "college degree" no longer necessarily means a Liberal Arts degree as proof that one has mastered a language or two, calculus, sciences, masterworks of philosophy, theology, and literature, etc: many colleges today entail various combinations of remedial education, high-school level coursework, and job training. Flunking out is a thing of the past, so lots of folks must just figure it's not worth the trouble. They could be right. Wednesday, May 5. 2010Arizona: Play Ball By The RulesSome of those opposed to Commissioner of major league baseball, Bud Selig, is in a difficult position. As is If any player wants to express an opinion, that’s their right. If Selig wants to express an opinion, however, that is his right but not his job. Any player from another country who wants to play in another country should try that, but otherwise is bound to play where they are told. Bud Selig, as well, should find another job if he is not up to avoiding the politicization of baseball. Even this sports analyst, opposed to
And, this is the Bud Selig’s phone number is (212) 931-7800.
Posted by Bruce Kesler
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14:41
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Kondratiev on Greece
Kondratiev's predictions are: 1. There is no way Greece will ever repay the $146 billion; either (a) the austerity measures if accepted and complied with will plunge the country into deep recession, or (b) the general strikes that the austerity measures inspire will cause depression. 2. In either case, the Greek government will fall for agreeing to the austerity conditions, and the government that gets elected will repudiate both the austerity measures and the euro. Because the European Central Bank is not the issuer of euro notes and because that function has been left to individual countries, all Greece needs to do to "unpick" from the euro is to declare that each Greek-issued euro note (one with a serial number starting with "Y") is now a drachma note and will be exchanged 1-for-1 by the Bank of Greece. 3. Then Greece will go back to devaluing and inflating and devaluing and inflating just as it used to do. The euro has been fabulous for European trade, but with a majority of Germans polled saying they opposed the Greek bailout, something will have to give. I hazard a couple of guesses, first that the euro might split into a soft euro for the PIIGS and a hard euro for the other countries, or that the rest of the PIIGS would follow Greece and return to local currencies. Bottom line: if you are holding any "Y" euro notes, deposit them in your bank as soon as you can for their full face value.
Posted by Kondratiev
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11:57
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Tuesday, May 4. 2010California = the Venezuela of North America!The June issue of Chief Executive magazine confirms that while my residence in
No surprise, the other states at the bottom of the barrel for governments deemed unfriendly to business: With 2010 census reassignment of Congressional seats coming up, there are consequences:
Good. But not so good for taxpayers in the states unfriendly to business.
Investors Business Daily adds:
Posted by Bruce Kesler
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19:21
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"Nature, nurture, and noise"Nature/nurture is always a fun topic. Why aren't identical twins identical mentally and emotionally? It's only around 50%. Or, does parenting make any difference at all in who the adult turns out to be? Probably not too much, barring massive trauma. Well, it is all complicated, and getting more complicated as we learn more about how the brain develops. The noise matters. A degree of messiness is built-in. In the end, however, I do not think will-power is built-in. It is a choice, a daily choice.
Posted by Dr. Joy Bliss
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13:18
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Monday, May 3. 2010Chavez's War Against The Jews In VenezuelaFrom the Huffington Post:
Below is the preview. What will be the conclusion?
Posted by Bruce Kesler
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11:14
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Death of a buddyEverything is as green as can be, and my Wisteria is coming into bloom. Yes, the big bridge is washed out but I am fairly sure it is getting fixed. Entropy rules, but we do the best we can. After church yesterday, Mrs. BD and I decided to do an inspection tour of our church cemetery. We noticed that the columbarium was in bad shape, and that some good friends had bought a nice modest granite stone for their plot. I hope they do not need it anytime soon. We also noticed that the grass is getting high and the dandelions and weeds are everywhere, but that's as it should be in a New England graveyard. When I got home, I learned that one of my good tennis buddies had dropped dead last week, where he would have wanted to do it, on the tennis court. He had a slick, tricksy game, wonderful tennis exhuberance, and near-perfect technique: no flash, but steady as a rock. He was a professional wordsmith too. Too soon, my friend, but that is the right way to depart. Now, nobody is left who is willing to give me those special sarcastic critiques of my flubbed shots.
Posted by Bird Dog
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09:21
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Sunday, May 2. 2010Lessons Of Quemoy For TodayA small island group near the coast of mainland Few remember the history shaping role in the 1950s of The defense of Quemoy by Nationalist forces against an invasion from newly Communist China in 1949 effectively stymied mainland The same mistaken line drawn by the Truman Administration placed Preoccupied in In 1953, President Eisenhower, though believing Quemoy to be indefensible and believing the French position in IndoChina would not hold, allowed In 1954, however, the Chinese, not to appear deterred, unleashed thousands of artillery strikes upon Quemoy, took another small island over 200 miles north of Continue reading "Lessons Of Quemoy For Today" Love and Theft
Sheesh, most singers don't even write the songs they sing. Mrs. BD told me that Martha Graham said "If you're going to steal, steal from the best." I remember flying home on Aer Lingus one time, listening to the Irish music. I thought to myself, "Damn. That's the tune of Boots of Spanish Leather. Where did Dylan hear that?" He's a human jukebox. Not the Second Coming, but a darned interesting jukebox, and he has gone the distance. Smart, perceptive, and eccentric too, with or without a rhyming dictionary. He adds a "special sauce," as they say on Wall St. Whiteside rips Dylan. (h/t, Driscoll) Friday, April 30. 2010We’ll Meet AgainLast week I was at a Memorial Service where the song “Wind Beneath My Wings” was very fittingly sung about the lessons she transmitted to her family with her life. Since, it has been running about my mind, what song would I want sung at my Memorial Service (besides “Hit The Road Jack”). Yesterday, while driving I was listening to a local AM station that has classic songs of the ‘40s and ‘50s. I was struck by the rendition of “We’ll Meet Again”, sung by Anne Murray. As an older father, I try to communicate to my sons the optimism, positive thinking and perseverance that I have lived and believe will be central to their futures, and hope that will guide them and serve as their remembrance. The words seem to ably sum it up:
Research has it that the song was one of the most popular in Since, many have recorded the song. My selections below the fold - Continue reading "We’ll Meet Again"
Posted by Bruce Kesler
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14:02
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Jamaica Bay: A Warbler-free zone in late AprilA couple of birder friends and I took an early morning trip down to the Jamaica Bay Refuge in Queens, NYC, for some early warbler-watching last Saturday. Since we had already had a wave of warblers passing through further north, it seemed like a good time to get a head start on the May warbler-watching before all the leaves came out. Wrong. Not a single one. As with hunting or fishing, it is so often "You shoulda been here yesterday." Our birds have not bought into the global warming hysteria. The Spring migrants were absent, and the winter birds had left already. I did not even see the usual flock of breeding Ruddy Ducks. The Jamaica Bay Refuge is a unique oasis. Behind you is JFK with planes constantly overhead, out to the ocean side is Far Rockaway, and in front is Brooklyn with Manhattan rising in the distance. It's a special green and watery stopping-place for migrants on the Atlantic Flyway, but the refuge hosts plenty of breeding birds too. Mixed habitat: beaches, woods, vast bayberry fields, salt- and fresh-water marshes. Plenty of Tree Swallows. Here's my pal walking up to one of them while fumbling with his fancy camera, Far Rockaway in the distance: More photos etc below the fold - Continue reading "Jamaica Bay: A Warbler-free zone in late April"
Posted by Bird Dog
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14:02
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Letter to the Hebrews, plus CS LewisMy men's study/confessional group has been reading the Letter to the Hebrews for a couple of months. One of the topics we stumbled into this week was a discussion of obedience to God, and dutifulness. (Here's a recent post on obedience via Vanderleun.) While we guys all seem to acknowledge the need for discipline for spiritual growth, many of us confessed our tendency to lazily and self-congratulatingly replace a life in the spirit with "Christian" dutifulness and "doing good." We more or less ended up thinking of moral and religious dutifulness, if lacking the Holy Spirit and the direction of God, as clanging cymbals - empty noise. Of course, that was one of Christ's teachings. From a Christian standpoint, pride in one's Christian dutifulness and righteousness is a devil's snare - as is pride in one's humility. From Screwtape's Letter #14 with his advice to his apprentice Wormwood:
Thursday, April 29. 2010The Fearless Al Gore
So does anybody still think he really believes his nonsense? Yes, he is making ark-loads of $ from it but, even so, he is so on board that it would be too late for him to change his mind regardless of facts. Like Al Sharpton and Tawana Brawley. But "facts" and "evidence" are just patriarchal and racist tools of oppression anyway, aren't they? In this brave new world, we all get to pick our own facts, depending on how we feel or on which side our bread is buttered, and reality is a politico-socio-emotional construct. Isn't it? Remind me to post my bit on "Psycho-utopianism" some time soon.
Posted by Bird Dog
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13:41
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A Tale Of Two Westminsters: 28 and 35 Years LaterThirty-five years ago, Yesterday, I went to Before the forum, attendees went outside in the I knew three of the speakers well (and two others less from shared personal experiences, more as acquaintances, but major figures) from many years of collaboration and friendship to not let the Vietnamese and American sacrifices be in vain, to educate new generations in the lessons personally witnessed and learned... Continue reading "A Tale Of Two Westminsters: 28 and 35 Years Later"
Posted by Bruce Kesler
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13:32
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Tuesday, April 27. 2010Executive Pay: New Jersey’s Good For The Goose…Now that ObamaCare restricts the pay of all at health care firms to $500k, New Jersey Governor Chris Christie – struggling with the huge deficits that are causing states to cut basic services -- wants to restrict the pay to executives of non-profits that provide services to the state for aid to 1 million needy families. Depending on size, pay will be limited to between $105,850 and $141,000. Further:
Executives can try to make more from private contributions targeted to their salaries, bonuses and benefits. That should be interesting.
Posted by Bruce Kesler
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20:38
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Qui Tam Litigation Expands Under ObamaCareAs if the A Qui Tam action is brought by a private citizen against a company for fraudulent claims on a federal agency in violation of the False Claims Act. If triumphant, the claimant gets part of the court award. To now, it was necessary for the claimant to be the provider or original source of otherwise unknown information. If not, the claim was denied court jurisdiction. Now, the failure to be the provider or original source will not deny jurisdiction, and should there be such dismissal the government can oppose the dismissal and allow the court case to proceed.
Posted by Bruce Kesler
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20:09
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Europe's self-hatred (and their efforts to project it onto America)Excellent, from Daniel Pipes: In Europe, Remorse Has Turned to Masochism. He nails it. One quote:
Related, Sowell's Misusing History: Inhumanity, like humanity, is universal.
Posted by Bird Dog
in Our Essays, Politics, The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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14:00
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Info you can use: The Cigar Bars of NYCThe Cigar Bars and Cigar Lounges of NYC. Plus a reminder: in NYC, despite Nanny Bloomberg, you can still abuse tobacco like
Posted by The Barrister
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09:33
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