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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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Thursday, July 28. 2011Fun summer poll: Do you use your fancy speakers anymore?
As many have done, I went through a music system phase and bought some very fine audiophile speakers and amps along the way (not to this extent, and I never bought into the surround sound fad). However, I seem to use them less and less often, and my sizeable and eclectic CD collection gathers dust. I'd rather spend money on going to live music anyway. Pic is of Legacy Focus speakers, which I own but do not use hardly enough. What about you? Wednesday, July 27. 2011A new, new, New Deal for AmericaI have been enjoying reading Daniel Greenfield's site, one to which we have been linking recently. A quote from his latest, A New Deal for America:
Posted by The Barrister
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects, Our Essays, Politics
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17:33
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PTSDPTSD is one of those fad diagnoses which won many adherents in the past ten years, even gaining admission to the DSM. As I have written before, very few of the descriptive Psychiatric diagnoses have validity - all most of them (with a handful of notable exceptions) have is varying degrees of reliability. In my field, a diagnosis does not mean a disease in the usual medical sense (which is why we call them "disorders"). What is termed PTSD is presumed to be a collection of complaints which some (but not most) people experience following significant emotional trauma. There is no doubt that people are distressed by, and, I think, permanently altered by significant emotional trauma. It doesn't have to be bad experiences in combat, because many things in life can constitute emotional trauma (depending on the person's psychological make-up). The reason PTSD is so often studied in combat vets is because that's where the research money is. (In the past, such symptoms were classed as ""nervous in the service," "combat fatigue," "shell shock," "traumatic neurosis," and the like.)
Posted by Dr. Joy Bliss
in Our Essays, Psychology, and Dr. Bliss
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16:21
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How is RomneyCare working out?I don't blame Mitt entirely for this fiasco because has was dealing with a solidly-Dem government, but I do blame him some. If government wants to take over control of a huge area of citizens' lives, and of the economy, they can't do it in a half-assed way that injures and distorts markets and eliminates choice. They have to do it all-out and eliminate markets and choice entirely, as does Medicare (which we still have in the US, thanks to Chinese loans). I don't think Mitt intended RomneyCare to be a stalking horse for a government take-over of all medical care in Massachusetts, but it is set up to make that inevitable. ObamaCare, on the other hand, is designed to cause markets to fail so that government can step in. Many proponents admitted as much. It's the long view. If you tell an insurance company what products they may offer, they must cover, and what they can charge for the insurance, then there is no market, no choice...and soon, no company. Here's the RomneyCare update. I am for anybody who can beat Obama and the Dems. Tuesday, July 26. 2011Majority In Poll Wouldn’t Want To Be 20 AgainAn overwhelming majority of those polled would not want to be 20 again. The question: “Knowing no more than you did then, would you want to be 20 again?” The key is in making the choice knowing what the respondents do now. This wasn’t a scientific poll but was random across almost anyone I met and had a conversation with during the past month, successful in whatever field from business to arts to teaching; economically stressed from illegal immigrants to trades people to clerks to unemployed; politically conservative, liberal, somewhere in between, indifferent; married, single, happy, sad. About 20% said they’d choose to be 20 again, about half confident and about half wanting to feel free like when they were 20. About 30% didn’t want to repeat the same or similar early errors, feeling their personalities would be the same. Then, half of the respondents just believe that it would be far tougher to get ahead now than whenever then was when they were 20. Those with grown children went on about how difficult it is for their sons and daughters to even get a toehold, and those with young children remarked about what they are seeing around them and deeply worry about their children’s future prospects. Delving a little deeper into my respondents’ concerns about their children’s futures: Our children’s future being heavily mortgaged is at the core of the current Washington wrangles, and that is recognized although feeling powerless to affect it or almost hopeless that real reforms will happen. Another core issue is, as one respondent commented, “even with a professional degree, my kid is going to have to be working for the government.” Directly or indirectly through burdensome, intrusive and nitpicking regulations. I’d be interested in hearing your comments. Meanwhile, here’s a video shot for PowerLine’s contest, called “Child Abuse.”
Posted by Bruce Kesler
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects, Our Essays
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13:38
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Monday, July 25. 2011Fear and education
Unlike today, when I went to medical school there were a few Asians, lots of Jewish boys, only about 20% girls, and almost no black kids. That was not very long ago, either. My medical college expected a 20% flunk-out, wash-out, or drop-out rate. In pre-med, of course, it's much worse than that: most quit after their first B or B+ in college (there was no grade inflation then) and went off to do other things. In med school, one lousy grade, or one lousy report from a prof, and you were outta there. Packing your bags with profound humiliation. People who couldn't take the pressure just disappeared without a trace, like somebody falling off a ship. For each course or clinical rotation, we had both written and oral exams. The oral exams, maybe, were the toughest, because the profs sought the limits of your knowledge, which they could only do by pushing past your limits, making you painfully aware of your ignorance (the oral exams were administered by panels of senior docs who were checking to make sure the junior profs were doing their jobs). Interest and fear were the motivations. Especially fear, because we all wanted to be docs of some sort. At the same time, we enjoyed acquiring the priestly expertise. Nuns with rulers were not required. There is an optimal level of anxiety at which a person learns best - high, but not so high as to short-circuit the synapses. The problem is, that point varies for every individual. For doctors, pilots, ship captains, and the like, you need people with high anxiety tolerance who do not lose it or get confused when the anxiety level ramps up and the sh-t hits the fan. My point, however, was to raise the topic of fear in education. I believe it to be a great motivator, even for those highly self-motivated students but especially for those who are not. Most kids in most schools are the latter. Do we really know how kids would learn if, instead of having mandatory education, we threw them out of school if they did not measure up or take advantage of the incredible opportunities for learning we offer everybody in America? I mean, from High School and on. Problem is, they need those warm bodies to get the dollars. Sunday, July 24. 2011Sunday afternoon random slide showI think I will do some like totally random slide shows from my old pics this summer on weekends - if only for my own and for my family's amusement. "Show and Tell." It's tough to have ideas on summer weekends. I love to go places - both the old and familiar, and the new and astonishing. Anywhere is interesting to me. "Go Go Hi Ho!" as my friend says. That's the spirit. Woodstock, VT: More fun pics below the fold - Continue reading "Sunday afternoon random slide show"
Posted by Bird Dog
in Our Essays, The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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13:11
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Thursday, July 21. 2011A few fun economic links on the troubles ahead - and the refusal of politicians to recognize the limits of government or to understand Econ 101
The 70-Million-Check Constituency. It's about the delusion that "money happens." Money does not "happen" without people busting their asses in profitable work. How to Contain the European Debt Crisis: Giavazzi and Kashyap. It is not a joke: the credit cards are at the limit, and the creditors are rightly concerned. If the big creditors blow up, we all blow up with them. Debtor nations are like suicide bombers, but at some point there is not enough money in the world to pay them off. Gelinas: Why We Don’t Recover - Washington persists in postponing the bad-debt reckoning, strangling consumption and killing jobs. A quote:
That part is heart-breaking. But if you were or are an employer, would you be hiring now? We in CT are firing, not hiring, and not happy about it at all. Larry Summers, via Mankiw:
Saved by Hitler. Imagine that! McArdle: Slouching Toward Default, on Both Sides of the Atlantic. Houses of cards, nothing but debt on debt to maintain an illusion of prosperity while Asia thrives on growing economic freedom. The Fear-Based Economy - Further tax increases could bring an already frightened, sputtering economy to a standstill. We are watching the dramatic and deliberate destruction of the economy, of jobs, and of enterprise, but you'd think, from the MSM, that it is business as usual. If you have kids, you should worry because crazy, ignorant people are running this thing and harming everybody who is not a government employee.
Dan Greenfield gets it. Edge of the Spending New Frontier:
Posted by The Barrister
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects, Our Essays
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17:27
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Mother Nature – Showtime with Purple MartinsLiving in my new home state of South Carolina, I’ve come across some really interesting history. The story of building the Dreher Shoals dam impounding the Saluda River and creating Lake Murray is a real story of trial, error, engineering expertise and perseverance. Built to provide electric power to Columbia and a large section of South Carolina, the lake and it’s watershed is under the control of South Carolina Electric and Gas (SCE&G). In addition to the interesting and varied flora and fauna, Lake Murray has a very interesting military history. Due to its rather unique layout, it was considered by General Jimmy Doolittle to be the perfect place to practice bombing runs prior to the raid on Tokyo. The target was Lunch Island – a small, 10 acre former hilltop located just south of the mid-line of the lake. Flying out of Owens Field in Columbia, the B-25s would circle North and start their runs from the North West. The United Stated Navy also used to practice torpedo runs on Lunch Island. Eventually, Lunch Island became Bomb Island and that name has stuck.
Post WWII and up until the mid-60’s, Bomb Island was partially used for recreational purposes – picnics and such. SCE&G would burn off the island occasionally to keep the brush down. It was around this time that Mother Nature decided that she would take control of Bomb Island during the summer and give it over to a bird called the Purple Martin.
What is also unique about the Purple Martin at least in the Eastern US is that they seem to have made I witnessed this entirely by accident on Monday evening. I was out on the lake planning on taking some sunset pictures over Spencer and
It starts about ten minutes before sunset – you see one or two swallows swooping along the water, zipping up in the air and back down again. Eventually, one or two become ten or twenty, then a couple of hundred.
Eventually, they mass above the island in a cloud of birds – it is simply an amazing sight as they form these huge vortexes of swirling birds. They swoop down onto the island and they back up again doing this a couple of times before it gets dark and they settle down on the island with a few stragglers coming in behind the main group. This image is about 1/8th of the island and the birds above it. I apologize for the lousy image but I was using a long lens wide open at 1600 ISO to get the shot. I’ll try and get a better one next time I go out there in the evening. It is estimated that there are anywhere from 750,000 to 1,000,000 birds on the island over night at the peak of the season. There are so many birds that they have shown up on radar images from
It’s an amazing show Mother Nature puts on over Oh, just to put paid to the evening, I got this image – it was quite an evening.
Posted by Capt. Tom Francis
in History, Natural History and Conservation, Our Essays
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13:27
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A few Ronaldus Magnus quotes
Concentrated power has always been the enemy of liberty. Government exists to protect us from each other. Where government has gone beyond its limits is in deciding to protect us from ourselves. I've never been able to understand why a Republican contributor is a 'fat cat' and a Democratic contributor of the same amount of money is a 'public-spirited philanthropist'. We should measure welfare's success by how many people leave welfare, not by how many are added. Latinos are Republican. They just don't know it yet. No government ever voluntarily reduces itself in size. Government programs, once launched, never disappear. Actually, a government bureau is the nearest thing to eternal life we'll ever see on this earth! Republicans believe every day is the Fourth of July, but the democrats believe every day is April 15. The taxpayer - that's someone who works for the federal government but doesn't have to take the civil service examination. The most terrifying words in the English language are: I'm from the government and I'm here to help. You can tell a lot about a fellow's character by his way of eating jellybeans.
Posted by Bird Dog
in Our Essays, Quotidian Quotable Quote (QQQ)
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10:24
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Wednesday, July 20. 2011Cape Cod boatsWellfleet MA has a good harbor and a fair variety of boats. None of the fancy stuff like Newport or Nantucket, though. The town is not social enough to attract that crowd, but it is social enough for everybody to get in line for a Harbor Freeze cone on the pier every night after supper. (It is Mac's now, but I still call it Harbor Freeze.) I have seen people on that line from NYC that I haven't seen in 20 years. There is plenty of dock space, and a large anchorage. It still has a small commercial fleet, more engaged in lobstering or in dragging for quahogs and sea clams than in fishing. The big-time fishing boats berth in Provincetown, where they have quick access out of Cape Cod Bay to the ocean. I can not imagine living too far from the sea, and I feel that swimming in fresh water or overly-warm water is sort of disgusting. Chilly salt water is what works to cleanse and re-baptize my soul. More boat pics below the fold - Continue reading "Cape Cod boats" The Dodo Bird Verdict in education: "A"s for All"Everybody has won and all must have prizes." That's the Dodo Bird Verdict. Colleges, expecially private colleges, now hand "A"s out like jellybeans, and everybody is an honor student. Here's A History of College Grade Inflation. When I went to college, an A meant "extraordinary distinction" in my Liberal Arts studies, and they were delivered like precious jewels. Probably 0-3% achieved that. Of course, in math and science it meant simply that you mastered all of the material in depth, and made no foolish exam errors. The wisest graders would overlook careless computational errors if the rest was correct. Graph below from the article:
Tuesday, July 19. 2011Organic baloney and other food fetishes
Indeed it is a symptom of prosperity that a civilization can obsess about what they eat rather than whether they eat. This occurrence is an anomaly in the short history of Homo sapiens. In the past couple of decades, many have fetishized their food as if what you eat were a major determinant of your fate in life (fatness aside - but recent studies say being fat isn't so bad for health either). "Eat this - it's good for you." Says who? Grandma? Brown rice and whole grains? Are you kidding me? I have had four main categories of gripes: 1. What the latest research says. Eat Broccoli, then it's Avoid Broccoli. Avoid salt, but now salt is encouraged. Potatoes are carcinogenic. Avoid fats, but now it's avoid carbs (carbs will fatten you up and fat won't). My point is that whatever you read will be obsolete in a few years. Nobody on earth knows what the ideal human diet is, and that is because humans are basically opportunistic omnivores, designed to feed on whatever they can find. 2. "Supplements": A major scam and rip-off with a remarkable marketing machine, but I will not talk about that today. 3. "Genetic engineering": Unless you collect your food in the woods, pretty much everything you eat has been genetically engineered for thousands of years (except maybe mushrooms). 4. "Organic food": Back to clever marketing again directed to those who know no science or biology. Finally, Scientific American has a piece ripping apart the entire "organic" food fetish. Mythbusting 101: Organic Farming. Want to pay extra for "organic" for no reason whatsoever? Whole Foods shareholders thank you very much. Sometimes I think that food fetishes must be a mild, verging on normative, form of eating disorder. I'll have my hot dogs with chopped onion and extra bright yellow mustard, thanks, with Lay's potato chips and a cold beer. Is there anything better on a summer day?
Posted by Dr. Joy Bliss
in Medical, Our Essays, The Song and Dance Man
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19:28
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From the author of "1491"
I thought 1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus was excellent. What is a global ideal temperature?A good question, at Chaos Manor:
Holocene might be pleasant enough, but I don't even get the idea of a planetary average because, with so many climates on earth, and so many human-influenced microclimates, I would think an average would lack meaning.
Posted by Bird Dog
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects, Our Essays
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14:15
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Media bias? It's worse than you think.Prof. Tim Groseclose tells the interesting story of his research on bias in American media, via Powerline. One quote:
The truth hurts: the MSM is agitprop for the Left, and has been for a long time. The Prof's tale, however, has a happy ending.
Posted by The Barrister
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12:22
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Capt. Tom likes this boatWhat's not to like? She is ready for a summer trans-Atlantic sail to Ireland on your vacation, or, better yet, a cruise to the Med via the Canary Islands, with a quick stop at Bermuda and the Windwards en route. (You can hire people to sail her back home to the US while you and your sweetie-pie First Mate - or second - wander around Portugal, Spain, and Morocco.) That's the compact but efficient Najad 380:
Posted by Bird Dog
in Our Essays, The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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05:02
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Monday, July 18. 2011Poverty in America
Read it and weep, you all in Euroland. Mind you, the majority of American "poor" are mother-only households, too. Maybe our War on Poverty did work, after all, despite the minor detail that it enabled all of the single-parent families with unsupervised kids and alley-cat boyfriends. That's the Law of Unintended Consequences, or the Law of Incentives. Anyway, time to end that War. 40 years of antibiotics ought to suffice for the material comforts and conveniences. Of course, there is more to life than that, the things money cannot buy and that no government can deliver. And, believe me, those HDTVs will get you get nowhere in life unless lazy and distracted is your goal. Image is Norman Rockwell's vision of one of FDR's Four Freedoms, Freedom From Fear. In my view, the only Freedom From Fear would be a lobotomy, and the only Freedom from Want is death. EncyclopediasThose heavy volumes have become as obsolete as buggy whips. I brought my 10+ year-old set of the Brittannica over to the book exchange, and they told me they were "household waste." That set was expensive. When I was a student, I always looked up every topic in the Brittannica before looking at a textbook, to get the overview. I am lost without a broad overview. Wikipedia just doesn't do it, no matter how handy it is for our website. You can subscribe to Britannica online.
Posted by Bird Dog
in Our Essays, The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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12:42
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Sunday, July 17. 2011America's fling with the Welfare State: Welfare For All (just don't term it "welfare")What is a "good" and what is a "right"? At Weekly Standard, A Fling with the Welfare State - From the best of intentions to bankruptcy and recriminations. It begins:
Read the whole thing. America has become addicted to the Welfare State same as in Euroland. But if everybody is addicted to freebies, who is going to pay for it all? My favorite examples of Welfare, guaranteed to offend almost everybody who hates to think of it this way: Government student loans With freebies - welfare - for all, you might almost think that America was a nation of incompetent leeches rather than a nation of proud, independent citizens who are capable of taking care of themselves and their own problems (unlike the Euroweenies with their serf-like approach to life). I am in one of these programs (VA - but I do not use it. Also, I paid off my mortgage already, foolishly, but think I will take a home equity line so I can get some tax deductions for these Obama years). Interestingly but not surprisingly, most of such progams increase the cost of the "good" itself via market distortion. What are your favorite welfare programs? And what do you want the government to do for you with your own, and your neighbor's, money which it is not doing yet?
Posted by The Barrister
in Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects, Our Essays, Politics
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14:23
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Read this book: The Devil's In The Cows
You can buy it here, or at Amazon. I did. Better yet, buy a few copies and use them for Christmas. Here's his post about the book, with his promo video and a sample of his prose, or poetry, or whatever you call it.
Posted by Bird Dog
in Our Essays, The Culture, "Culture," Pop Culture and Recreation
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12:07
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Re-posted Turtle of the Week: The Eastern Box Turtle
There are several versions of this charming turtle - the Florida, the Eastern, the Ornate, Western, and the Gulf. Within each type, the coloration is highly variable. The above male Eastern happens to be highly colored. The Eastern is under a good deal of pressure, especially in the Northeast, where development, "progress," dopey humans, pet collectors, dogs, and lawn-mowers impinge on its ancient habitat, or just plain kill them. In much of their range, especially in the Northeast, they are either endangered or "of special concern." Land-dwelling, but not true tortoises, Boxies like to have water nearby, enjoy shady woodlands, and can swim a little bit if they have to but never live in water. They can live over 60 years in an area smaller than a football field, and they learn their way around it very well. Since they rarely encounter one-another, the females are able to store live sperm for up to 6-10 years, it is thought, using it as needed. Very feminist and modern. Still, they tend to live in "colonies," more or less. If you see one on the road, please stop and help it across so it doesn't get squashed. I have been known to barely avoid multi-car pile-ups to help a Boxie across the road. If your dog gets one, punish the dog harshly so that it will never want to bother a turtle again, and let the thing go free. They are wonderful and lovely critters, and endangered in New England. Very few of their young survive to adulthood, so a wild adult is a rare and precious thing that has survived many obstacles, but it was not designed to cope with roads and cars. Don't take them home - they are wild animals and not pets, and where they are is where they belong, unless you are working on a population transplant project. If you are lucky enough to have Box Turtles living near you, learn more about them, also here.
Posted by Bird Dog
in Natural History and Conservation, Our Essays
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11:07
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Saturday, July 16. 2011Gimme!At Weekly Standard re debt, etc. Spend Spend, Elect Elect, Tax Tax - The White House debt strategy:
Did he? I am not sure. Nobody can win this game, but everybody I know who is not a government worker thinks the economy is a disaster. My shop is cutting staff, both professional and clerical. Not only is biz down, but our CT taxes are up. Also, we figure, assuming Obamacare stays, we'll need to let go three or four professionals, and 4-5 clericals, to cover those expenses without running into the red. We have been here, mind you, for 110 years and have an excellent reputation. We have never cut staff since the 1930s other than normal firings of incompetents and slackers. Our people know this. Fear is a powerful motivator for effort, but it will not be enough.
Posted by The Barrister
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15:22
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Floods: Government incentives, and predictable (but unanticipated) consequencesBig surprise: Federal flood insurance encourages people to live in flood zones! Who could have anticipated that? Taxpayers bribe people to live in flood zones. Brilliant! For total stupidity, NOLA is not even a flood zone - it is permanently below sea level, and always has been. Why am I, who made the reasonable decision to live above sea level, responsible for the life choices of people who want to live underwater? And, of course, flood zones and flood plains are basically "wetlands." One might think these places should be protected from development for environmental and flood control reasons. A farm? OK, if you understand that it will periodically get flooded while being delivered a good supply of fresh, healthy silt for your next crop. I know about flood zones. Part of our property is in one. We keep it in horse pasture, and our pool is down there. House and barns are above. People in 1786 weren't stupid, and they did not expect the government, ie their neighbors, to protect them from nature. Furthermore, if you believe Al Gore that the water is rising, perhaps we should be bribing people to move further from water...but nobody believes Al Gore anymore.
Posted by The Barrister
in Fallacies and Logic, Hot News & Misc. Short Subjects, Our Essays, Politics
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13:38
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Solution to the wild Sus scrofa issueFeral pigs and wild boar are difficult to differentiate. The US now has both (but had neither, historically) - and they interbreed. Both are considered invasive pests, but I have to point out that the Italians know how to cook them. Cinghiale. They make good salumi out of them too. (Salami is a subcategory of salumi.) If wild pig and boar were legal to market in the US as they are in Europe, our pest issue with them would be solved. More wolves would help, also. A reader sent me these pics:
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