Monday, April 05, 2010
Sunday, April 04, 2010
Friday, April 02, 2010
bad news
i like reruns, but not of the cuban missile crisis:
update 1: i'd also like to avoid reruns of the french revolution, please:
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez announced the offer by Russia (that) officials would discuss the possibility of setting up a "satellite launcher and a factory."... The two countries are also discussing new weapons deals, Chavez said in televised remarks, without giving details.but don't worry about that, just keep worrying about those angry white males...
Chavez's government has already bought more than $4 billion in Russian weapons since 2005, including helicopters, fighter jets and 100,000 Kalashnikov rifles. Chavez said last year that Russia agreed to loan Venezuela up to $2.2 billion for additional arms deals.
update 1: i'd also like to avoid reruns of the french revolution, please:
In his Reflections on the Revolution in France, published in 1790, Burke, a Protestant, asked the French, "From the general style of late publications of all sorts, one would be led to believe that your clergy in France were a sort of monsters, a horrible composition of superstition, ignorance, sloth, fraud, avarice and tyranny. But is this true?"update 2: iowahawk put a lot of research into another kind of bad news.
Labels:
islam,
leftism,
sick sad world
a matter of perspective
the tick praises the ant for being larger than the flea:
"Over all, the numbers were: 9.92 million viewers for NBC; 8.27 million for ABC and 6.45 million for CBS.So that means about 276 million Americans did not watch any MSM news, right?
Is this a signal that viewers are abandoning network newscasts in droves?
Not really. The number of viewers still watching the three shows together — more than 24 million in the first quarter — continue to dwarf any news program on cable."
Thursday, April 01, 2010
Constitutionality
update & bump: No fooling - a 14-year-old has written a book on conservatism: Defining Conservatism: The Principles That Will Bring Our Country Back.
This blog got two referrals from two posts on similar topics:
Your thoughts on the matter would be greatly appreciated. There may be a follow-up to this post *IF* my inspiration can hold out.
This blog got two referrals from two posts on similar topics:
- The Declaration of Independence
- The Constitution as liberals see it
Your thoughts on the matter would be greatly appreciated. There may be a follow-up to this post *IF* my inspiration can hold out.
Tuesday, March 30, 2010
don't fill me up with your rules, old man
paraphrasing one comment here:
"The 60s radicals are now "the man," and the Tea Partiers are now the civil rights activists."
reverse the curse
A common complaint made by atheists (particularly the militant kind) is:
"How can there be a god if there is so much evil in the world?"I wonder if any of them have ever asked themselves (or anyone):
"How can there be no god if there is so much truth and beauty in the world?"
Monday, March 29, 2010
2011 Mustang GT
I only see two problems with it:
1) They still haven't fixed the crooked lines over the headlights and under the taillights.
2) The number on the badge should be "302" not "5.0"
1) They still haven't fixed the crooked lines over the headlights and under the taillights.
2) The number on the badge should be "302" not "5.0"
Labels:
planes trains and autos,
random thoughts
blowing the curve for everyone
one of the few times i can recommend cbs news site, check out president hussein's low grades.
Labels:
blogdom,
president hussein
Friday, March 26, 2010
Health Care Deformed 2
Ten updates was enough for the previous post about the big 0's healthcare scam. Here's more:
Phil Gramm:
Phil Gramm:
Any real debate about health-care reform has to be centered on solving the problem of cost. Ultimately, there are only two ways of doing it. The first approach is to have government control costs through some form of rationing. The alternative is to empower families to make their own health-care decisions in a system where costs matter. The fundamental question is about who is going to do the controlling: the family or the government.NRO:
President Obama and his congressional allies systematically excluded every major proposal to empower consumers to control costs. From beginning to end, they insisted on a government-run system. That's why compromise was never possible.
"It’s a sad day when the President of the United States uses taxpayer dollars to travel around the country ridiculing and provoking those taxpayers with whom he disagrees."Director Blue lets Chavez Del Norte and his victims speak for themselves.
Thursday, March 25, 2010
Monday, March 22, 2010
Health Care Deformed
(10 updates below)
The anti-intellectual liberals at my workplace are congratulating themselves today as to how much more compassionate they are than "those bigoted and mean-spirited conservatives". I would like to ask them "how can ruining everyone's health can be considered compassionate?" (...but i'd much rather remain employed)
update 1: in response to one particular person's wait-and-see attitude, i'll point out that the legal resistance has already begun.
update 2: some related quotes via dustbury:
update 5: telling us all what some of us already knew - "it's all about control".
update 6: if the program is so great, why did obama, pelosi, et.al. exempt themselves from it?
update 7: truth in numbers and pictures.
update 8: the best summary yet:
update 10: explanation of how this is bad numbers and bad law
The anti-intellectual liberals at my workplace are congratulating themselves today as to how much more compassionate they are than "those bigoted and mean-spirited conservatives". I would like to ask them "how can ruining everyone's health can be considered compassionate?" (...but i'd much rather remain employed)
update 1: in response to one particular person's wait-and-see attitude, i'll point out that the legal resistance has already begun.
update 2: some related quotes via dustbury:
Our political class and bureaucracy are a bunch of bumblers, time servers who are squatting on the neck of society. Their cost far exceeds their benefit. It is perfectly rational — not extreme — to demand relief from their predations. They simply aren’t very good at what they do and need to be downsized like any other enterprise that has lost its focus and no longer produces value... Political leaders have no idea what they are doing. They need to listen rather than preach so that they can become marginally less incompetent... It isn’t that there is some magic formula, some set of politicians and policies that can make huge, centralized authoritarian societies work well. They can’t work well. It’s a silly idea that arises from muddled thinking that glosses over the particularities of systems. It [is] a juvenile notion that belongs in a jar kept by the door where you place your cherished illusions when leaving your cloister to engage with the reality of the world at large.update 3: imao is optimistic:
There’s no use in conservatives getting too down in any political defeat, because we’ll always still be our awesome selves, and liberals will still be losers who smell weird... We’re conservatives; we have useful things to do.update 4: double, double, toil and trouble, fire burn and cauldron bubble.
update 5: telling us all what some of us already knew - "it's all about control".
update 6: if the program is so great, why did obama, pelosi, et.al. exempt themselves from it?
update 7: truth in numbers and pictures.
update 8: the best summary yet:
We've passed a health care plan written by a committee whose chairman says he doesn't understand it, passed by a Congress that exempts themselves from it, to be signed by a president who smokes, with funding administered by a treasury chief who didn't pay his taxes, all to be overseen by a surgeon general who is obese, and financed by a country that's broke. What could possibly go wrong?".update 9: How do the democrats plan to enforce their takeover of America? ACORN brownshirts.
update 10: explanation of how this is bad numbers and bad law
Labels:
leftism,
random thoughts,
sick sad world
Sunday, March 21, 2010
coincidence? 2
up against cspan's healthscam vote coverage, tonight's tv schedule includes:
madhouse
mad men
mafioso
monster
kill bill
tool academy
the titles (if not the actual shows) seem fitting...
madhouse
mad men
mafioso
monster
kill bill
tool academy
the titles (if not the actual shows) seem fitting...
Saturday, March 20, 2010
yes. please. now.
Impeach Obama:
"(The Slaughter Solution - the scheme to avoid actually voting on president hussein's healthcare takeover) would be an unprecedented violation of our democratic norms and procedures, established since the inception of the republic. Article 1, Section 7 of the Constitution stipulates that for any bill to become a law, it must pass both the House of Representatives and the Senate. That is, not be "deemed" to have passed, but actually be voted on with the support of the required majority. The bill must contain the exact same language in both chambers - and in the version signed by the president - to be a legitimate law. This is why the House and Senate have a conference committee to iron out differences of competing versions. This is Civics 101.
The Slaughter Solution is a dagger aimed at the heart of our system of checks and balances. It would enable the Democrats to establish an ominous precedent: The lawmaking process can be rigged to ensure the passage of any legislation without democratic accountability or even a congressional majority. It is the road to a soft tyranny. James Madison must be turning in his grave.
Mr. Obama is imposing a leftist revolution. Since coming to office, he has behaved without any constitutional restraints. The power of the federal government has exploded. He has de facto nationalized key sectors of American life - the big banks, financial institutions, the automakers, large tracts of energy-rich land from Montana to New Mexico. His cap-and-trade proposal, along with a newly empowered Environmental Protection Agency, seeks to impose massive new taxes and regulations upon industry. It is a form of green socialism: Much of the economy would fall under a command-and-control bureaucratic corporatist state. Mr. Obama even wants the government to take over student loans.
Yet his primary goal has always been to gobble up the health care system. The most troubling aspect of the Obamacare debate, however, is not the measure's sweeping and radical aims - the transformation of one-sixth of the U.S. economy, crippling tax increases, higher premiums, state-sanctioned rationing, longer waiting lines, the erosion of the quality of medical care and the creation of a huge, permanent administrative bureaucracy. Rather, the most alarming aspect is the lengths to which the Democrats are willing to go to achieve their progressive, anti-capitalist agenda.
Obamacare is opposed by nearly two-thirds of the public, more than 60 percent of independents and almost all Republicans and conservatives. It has badly fractured the country, dangerously polarizing it along ideological and racial lines. Even a majority of Democrats in the House are deeply reluctant to support it.
Numerous states - from Idaho to Virginia to Texas - have said they will sue the federal government should Obamacare become law. They will declare themselves exempt from its provisions, tying up the legislation in the courts for years to come.
Mr. Obama is willing to devour his presidency, his party's congressional majority and - most disturbing - our democratic institutional safeguards to enact it. He is a reckless ideologue who is willing to sacrifice the country's stability in pursuit of a socialist utopia."
Democrats... would guarantee that any bill signed by Mr. Obama is illegitimate, illegal and blatantly unconstitutional. It would be worse than a strategic blunder; it would be a crime - a moral crime against the American people and a direct abrogation of the Constitution and our very democracy.
It would open Mr. Obama, as well as key congressional leaders such as Mrs. Pelosi, to impeachment. The Slaughter Solution would replace the rule of law with arbitrary one-party rule. It violates the entire basis of our constitutional government - meeting the threshold of "high crimes and misdemeanors." If it's enacted, Republicans should campaign for the November elections not only on repealing Obamacare, but on removing Mr. Obama and his gang of leftist thugs from office.
Friday, March 19, 2010
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
"stop making sense"
when i first saw "stop making sense", the talking heads' famous concert movie years ago, little did i know that so many people would make its title their personal philosophy...
(this thought was inspired by several recent "debates" with people whose logical skills are not yet as advanced as chomskybots.)
(this thought was inspired by several recent "debates" with people whose logical skills are not yet as advanced as chomskybots.)
Tuesday, March 16, 2010
The hopes, they is a-changing
History will note that, after numerous setbacks, the American Dream died during the Obama administration. Now all we have to wonder is how and when the light of freedom will shine again. (I'm hoping for November of this year or sooner, or winter of 2012 at the latest...)
Monday, March 15, 2010
random thought
i'm old enough to remember way back when "jedi" was just two words out of a beverly hillbillies episode
;)
;)
Tuesday, March 09, 2010
power
Peter Hitchens via Viewpoint:
Why is there such a fury against religion now? Because religion is the one reliable force that stands in the way of the power of the strong over the weak. The one reliable force that forms the foundation of the concept of the rule of law. The one reliable force that restrains the hand of the man of power. In an age of power worship, the Christian religion has become the principal obstacle to the desire of earthly utopians for absolute power.read the rest of both
Monday, March 08, 2010
un(?)intended results
dustbury, edited:
"Some men see things as they are and say why. I dream things that never were and say why not."... "Why not?"
It never occurred to (utopian progressives) then — and it doesn't occur to them now — that there might be good and sensible reasons why not. In the summer of 1968 we were not quite four years into the War on Poverty, and no one except for those evil, wicked conservatives ever wondered if it was ever going to end; poverty was already on the decline after Lyndon Johnson made his pitch and Congress followed through, and the level of poverty hasn't changed very much in the decades since. (Did someone say "quagmire"?)
If you think about it, just about every single ostensibly-"progressive" idea pitched in the last forty years has been motivated largely by "Why not?" It's not a function of partisan politics per se: pie-in-the-sky notions have risen from both sides of the aisle on a regular basis, and there's no reason to think the practice is in decline. And once in a while, something actually works: (our cities have cleaner air, for instance...) But generally speaking, the more utopian a proposal... the more likely it is to generate something downright dystopian.
Sunday, March 07, 2010
don't mess with Texas
"...contrast Texas, the nation's second most populous state, with the most populous, California. Both were once Mexican territory, secured for the United States in the 1840s. Both have grown prodigiously over the past half-century. Both have populations that today are about one-third Hispanic.read the rest
But they differ vividly in public policy and in their economic progress -- or lack of it -- over the last decade."
update: a related comparison chart
truth is...
a zombie in pajamas says:
"Leftism fails as a coherent philosophy on its own terms. We shouldn’t try to wring significance from the delusional outburst of someone who just happened to be leftist. There are plenty of ways to logically disembowel Marxism and its numerous noxious contemporary offspring without having to resort to an unnecessary round of political “gotcha!”"read the rest
Saturday, March 06, 2010
if you care about your health...
Here's what Parker Griffith says about President Hussein's "frantic, late-stage push on health care":
"We can, and we must, stop this government takeover of health care,"
"For (democrats), health care reform has become less about the best reforms and more about what best fits their 'Washington knows best' mentality — less about helping patients and more about scoring political points.. This is no idle observation. I've witnessed it firsthand."
multiverse
i've long thought about the multiverse and related concepts. viewpoint does so more clearly, and comes to a surprisingly grand conclusion.
Friday, March 05, 2010
Unconstitutionality
Researching two current issues - the Census' unconstitutional questions and Chicago's unconstitutional gun laws - I found one quote in particular that applies wonderfully to both:
"States may have grown accustomed to violating the rights of American citizens, but that does not bootstrap those violations into something that is constitutional."This also applies to ongoing Ponzi schemes...
Thursday, March 04, 2010
saudi influence
looks like the house of saud (rhymes with fraud) is running quite an "anti-zionist conspiracy".
spam trap
to whoever commented on my old optimus keyboard post: if your seemingly irrelevant comment about raising rabbits was legitimate, i apologize for deleting it, but it looked like a spam test to me. feel free to explain in comments here (in a turing-test-passing way) if that was a mistake.
Labels:
blogdom,
computer/tech
Wednesday, March 03, 2010
it's not just restaurants
Restaurant News Magazine explains why the industry is shrinking despite a growing population.
The increase of government legislation targeting the foodservice industry, on the federal, state and local levels, is one of the largest challenges restaurateurs face...
...the intrusion of government through such proposed legislative measures as menu labeling, card check and health care reform, would have the most profound effect on the industry’s future cost of doing business.
“Government, that’s the greatest single threat we have,” Luther said Monday during a panel discussion at the New York State Restaurant Association’s trade show...
down please
...and take your crooked gang with you.
obama takes charge, demands "up or down vote" on health care.
obama takes charge, demands "up or down vote" on health care.
Tuesday, March 02, 2010
substance
I don't know who Snooki is, but Broun makes sense:
Washington, Mar 2 -
U.S. Representative Paul Broun, M.D. (GA-10) released the following statement after President Barack Obama announced his intentions to incorporate only four minor Republican ideas into the 2,000-plus page health care bill:
“I don’t know if we should be insulted or humored at the President’s feeble attempts to incorporate Republican ideas into his latest health care proposal. Snooki, from the Jersey Shore, has more substance than President Obama’s offer.
“Instead of listening to the American people, the President has once again demonstrated his arrogance and ignorance about what the nation expects from its leaders. This is “The Situation,” Mr. President: the American people do not want unconstitutional mandates and job-killing tax increases. They are concerned with the costs of premiums, the quality of their health care and ensuring their children and grandchildren are not left with the bill. If you want to govern with the consent of the governed, you need to scrap this government take-over plan and embrace more of our commonsense solutions that protect the vital patient/doctor relationship and decrease the costs of premiums without adding to the national debt.”
Friday, February 26, 2010
2-26-10
so, is a friday the 26th like two friday the 13ths added together? or do they cancel each other out? just wondering if should expect good or bad news later in the day...
(just kidding, i'm not superstitious)
update: no more news for friday, either good or bad. today is both a "rainy day" and a "monday" though, with the usual results.
(just kidding, i'm not superstitious)
update: no more news for friday, either good or bad. today is both a "rainy day" and a "monday" though, with the usual results.
Labels:
humor - real and alleged,
random thoughts
Monday, February 22, 2010
Thursday, February 18, 2010
the crash
norton and mcafee can't help, and neither can kreskin. unless removed, parasites will kill the host.
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
nuclear reactors
another of the very few topics on which i agree with obama. (maybe loan guarantees aren't the best way to support them, but still...)
update: ...and then he mouths off like this, which is as ridiculous as claiming "the patient was cured by the shotgun blast that sent him to the emergency room."
update 2: imao has more obama analogies.
update: ...and then he mouths off like this, which is as ridiculous as claiming "the patient was cured by the shotgun blast that sent him to the emergency room."
update 2: imao has more obama analogies.
Labels:
president hussein,
sick sad world
a late valentine
mish mash recommends carrots, which is an improvement over the aforementioned potatoes...
Labels:
humor - real and alleged
Sunday, February 14, 2010
Friday, February 12, 2010
oft evil will evil mar
james martin takes the high road, while ol'yawns lohan and beavesse and bette-head take the gutter (again)...
Thursday, February 11, 2010
jones finds our lack of faith... disturbing...
this would sum it up nicely, except that vader didn't hide behind some lame-o eminent domain scam...
making the rounds
these related posts are getting plenty of links, perhaps not at the same time though. go read both:
The Right's Revolt
The Revolting Left
The Right's Revolt
The Revolting Left
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
i can haz fotochop?
Monday, February 08, 2010
Quotes of the Day
Viewpoint:
"...just about everything that scientists have told us over the years about evolution turns out to be either untrue or questionable? Everything from the importance of natural selection and genetic mutation, to Haeckel's phylogenetic law, to the proof provided by finch beaks and peppered moths, to the crucial importance of the gene, to the junkiness of junk DNA, to the primordial soup, to who knows what next. The only belief about evolution that's remained undiminished over the decades is the dogmatic certainty that it happened, even though at the rate we're going everything we believe about it will be proven wrong by 2020."Dustbury:
The idea that there was some massive segregation-enforced gulf between white and black is almost entirely fictional, largely a creation of the days after segregation, when certain individuals discovered that they could make an easier living from race-baiting than from seeking out honest work.Saradactyl - make sure to read all of this one:
On February 5th, Stokes County, NC was hit pretty hard by a snow and ice storm. Downed trees and widespread power outages plagued the county.. our power was restored after just 5 short hours... Concerned about the possibility of looting and "misdemeanoring", the mayor felt the need to proclaim a state of emergency, as such powers are delegated to him by means of general statute 14-288.12. Any person violating any provision of said ordinance or enacted proclamation is guilty of a Class 3 misdemeanor.and read this pic
As I looked around at the cloudless sky, and the surrounding area being illuminated by street lights - powered by FULLY FUNCTIONING ELECTRICITY - I asked the officer whether he thought those measures might be a little extreme?
...Part of our conditioning [is] to accept what the government believes to be in our best interest over our own common sense and burden of personal responsibility...
One day it could be an after-dark curfew enforced with UN officers showing up at your home to confiscate your guns, and the National Guard coming to immunize your children. I'm not fear mongering, people! Just trying to point out that we have been lured by the warmth and comfort of an ordinance enacted to keep us safe, and by the time you realize you're boiling - you're already cooked.
Saturday, February 06, 2010
GBU-57A/B
It is sad that the naive idealism, utter incompetence, and total counter-productivity of agencies like the IAEA have made weapons like this necessary. For the sake of our descendants, let it be remembered which methods of deterrence are and are not effective against the aggressions of dictators.
coincidence?
Nation's capital paralyzed by snow.
Unemployment rate drops to 9.7%.
...sounds like a good excuse to start a beltway-sized Ice Age. :D
Unemployment rate drops to 9.7%.
...sounds like a good excuse to start a beltway-sized Ice Age. :D
Labels:
humor - real and alleged,
politics,
random thoughts
Friday, February 05, 2010
a kinder gentler body count
unlike hillary's old tricks:
(actually, i don't believe this kind of conspiracy stuff as much as i used to back during the x-files era.)
The State Department has refused to answer basic questions about an accident that took place in Washington on Wednesday night, in which a U.S. Diplomatic Security Service vehicle struck Daily Caller employee Sean Medlock as he was crossing the street.guess they decided not to have him accidentally shoot himself repeatedly in the back of the head and walk to the park this time...
An agent in the vehicle, Mike McGuinn, did not identify himself to Medlock at the scene, or apologize for running him down. Indeed, Washington, D.C., police drove to a local emergency room to serve Medlock with a jaywalking citation as he lay prostrate in a hospital bed, while a man who identified himself as “special agent” stood by watching and taking notes.
Reached on his cell phone the following day by the Daily Caller, McGuinn refused to answer questions about the incident.
“I’m a federal agent and I’m not allowed to talk to the media,” McGuinn said, citing “liability.” McGuinn initially declined even to reveal which agency he works for. “You can refer to the [DC] police department report,” he said before hanging up abruptly. (According the police department, no report will be publicly available for at least three days.)
According to Medlock, who writes under the name Jim Treacher, he was struck at about 7:15 p.m. on Wednesday, while crossing M Street in downtown Washington. Medlock says he was walking within the bounds of the crosswalk, toward a blinking white signal, when a government SUV suddenly turned left and plowed into him, knocking him to the ground.
(actually, i don't believe this kind of conspiracy stuff as much as i used to back during the x-files era.)
a vaccine is needed
IGST:
see also: hockeysticks galore.The most onerous expression of idolatry in the modern era was the communist conceit that the scientific ordering of society can eliminate uncertainty. Scientific socialism was supposed to eliminate economic crises and war; instead, it brought about 100 million deaths and reduced once-prosperous countries to penury. Seventy years after its founding, the entire value of the industrial plant of the Soviet Union and its satellites was less than its scrap value . . . . Russia and its former satellites have such low fertility that their populations will fall by between one-third and one-half by mid-century. Europe's nanny-state version of social democracy is a low-grade version of the same infection.On this side of the Atlantic, Democrats, long since hollowed out by progressives, socialists, and fellow-traveling lunatics (whatever distinction between these there may be) -- voted in by morons who think the hideous misery of the last century is distilled in the terms “Dick Cheney,” “Moral Majority” and “corporation” -- labor as you read this to inject that same bacillus here.
Labels:
leftism,
sick sad world
Thursday, February 04, 2010
unavoidable
One of the restaurants I go to always has CNN on a bigscreen tv in the corner. Fortunately the sound is turned way down, but the text and captions are still readable. What little I could gather of their blather tonight inspires some comments...
First, CNN aired "select quotes" from the State of New York vs Bank of America Corporation. Portions of the original summary read:
Second, it's laudable that both Haiti's government and CNN suddenly care about the plight of Haitian orphans, especially since their underlying belief systems are largely to blame for their ongoing (if not current) plight. On second thought, maybe they're just complaining because a few orphans got rescued/kidnapped rather than aborted.
Lastly, one anchor asked the question "How is the economy like a Toyota"? A few suggestions:
First, CNN aired "select quotes" from the State of New York vs Bank of America Corporation. Portions of the original summary read:
This merger has, in many ways, become a classic example of how the modus operandi of our nation’s largest financial institutions led to the near collapse of our financial system. In order to complete its deal, Bank of America’s management misled its shareholders by not disclosing massive losses that were mounting at Merrill Lynch so that the shareholders would vote to approve the deal. Once the deal was approved, Bank of America’s management manipulated the federal government into saving the deal with billions in taxpayer funds by falsely claiming that they intended to back out of the deal through a clause in the Merger Agreement. Ultimately, this was an enormous fraud on taxpayers who ended up paying billions for Bank of America’s misdeeds. Throughout this episode, the conduct of Bank of America, through its top management, was motivated by self-interest, greed, hubris, and a palpable sense that the normal rules of fair play did not apply to them. Bank of America's management thought of itself as too big to play by the rules and, just as disturbingly, too big to tell the truth.The similarities between this lawsuit and a certain recent election are striking...
Second, it's laudable that both Haiti's government and CNN suddenly care about the plight of Haitian orphans, especially since their underlying belief systems are largely to blame for their ongoing (if not current) plight. On second thought, maybe they're just complaining because a few orphans got rescued/kidnapped rather than aborted.
Lastly, one anchor asked the question "How is the economy like a Toyota"? A few suggestions:
- Both were running quite well until Obama took over.
- Neither respond well to being flooded with cheap gas.
- Neither can be fixed by a bunch of tax-cheating tradeschool rejects.
Labels:
humor - real and alleged,
msm,
random thoughts
Saturday, January 30, 2010
Friday, January 29, 2010
how the brain doesn't work
lileks doesn't need a link from me, but i laughed more at (and identified more with) today's bleat than many in recent memory.
Labels:
humor - real and alleged,
random thoughts
Tuesday, January 26, 2010
it's a start
Sensible reductions in government spending are always welcome:
Make that a really large "portion of the federal budget" being scaled back, and quickly please.
update: imagine my surprise - not even a day later, the senate rejects the deficit reduction plan. you've heard it said that "the devil's in the details"? i suspect he has his minions from top to bottom of this government spending insanity.
WASHINGTON – Facing voter anger over mounting budget deficits, President Barack Obama will ask Congress to freeze spending for some domestic programs for three years beginning in 2011, administration officials said Monday...Further details in the article (plus knowing how bureaucrats think) makes me less optimistic about how seriously anyone inside the beltway is taking deficit reduction.
The spending freeze would apply to a relatively small portion of the federal budget, affecting a $477 billion pot of money available for domestic agencies whose budgets are approved by Congress each year. Some of those agencies could get increases, others would have to face cuts; such programs got an almost 10 percent increase this year. The federal budget total was $3.5 trillion.
Make that a really large "portion of the federal budget" being scaled back, and quickly please.
update: imagine my surprise - not even a day later, the senate rejects the deficit reduction plan. you've heard it said that "the devil's in the details"? i suspect he has his minions from top to bottom of this government spending insanity.
Labels:
politics,
sick sad world
Monday, January 25, 2010
restaurants with character
In 1996 my sister and I drove from Fort Worth to the northeast. The primary purpose was to attend our cousin's wedding in Wilmington DE, but there was much other sightseeing involved. At the start of the trip, I was a much pickier eater and would have probably relied on Burger King, but thankfully my sister changed that habit.
The most memorable restaurants on that trip were a wood-fired pizza place (which I now cannot find on a map) in Cincinnati OH, and two places in Toronto. One of these was just a microbrewery in a basement whose kitchen happened to be open late, and served the most interesting interpretation of quesadillas we have ever seen (both cheese and beans were white). The other was a small but nice Italian restaurant, where the waiter told us the Italian-named specials in English with a French-Canadian accent - imagine how that would sound...
Driving to the west coast in 1999, I found a couple of interesting restaurants. First was a chinese restaurant in Kingman AZ (not sure, but "Golden China" seems to be in the right location on that map) where the lunch special including tea was $4, and the radio was blasting Zeppelin, Ozzy, and B.Ö.C. Next on that trip was Chalet Basque, which cost five times as much for three times the amount of food on ten times the number of dishes. All I ordered was the roast beef dinner, and out came a basket for rolls, the entree plate, bowl and saucer for each vegetable, a saucer for the butter pats, glasses for water and tea, etc., etc., etc... filled the table for four I was seated at alone.
So now it has become my habit to find interesting places to eat. Of course the best barbecue is usually found in the smallest spots, like Ranchlanders' near Hammond TX and Big O's in Valera. Plus, most towns with populations over 1,500 on the back roads I travel have some little place for the locals to eat, like Staghorn Cafe in Cross Plains or George's in Post. Most are a gamble that usually pay off.
The inspiration for this post came Sunday evening, when I found Gunny's Place in Eastland TX. With only six tables in front, it's not even big enough to be on Google maps. But Gunny is one of those larger-than-life characters that I wasn't sure still existed. He's a cigar-chompin tough-as-nails Marine that wouldn't have been out of place in a John Wayne war movie. The menu says he invented a few sandwiches, and I had the Gunny Burger, which is something between a burger and a philly cheesesteak. Ground meat and/or sausage grilled with bell peppers and onions, covered in nacho cheese on a philly roll - might sound odd but it tasted great.
So if you're not in the habit, instead of relying on lowest-common-denominator fast food chains, give the local places a try.
The most memorable restaurants on that trip were a wood-fired pizza place (which I now cannot find on a map) in Cincinnati OH, and two places in Toronto. One of these was just a microbrewery in a basement whose kitchen happened to be open late, and served the most interesting interpretation of quesadillas we have ever seen (both cheese and beans were white). The other was a small but nice Italian restaurant, where the waiter told us the Italian-named specials in English with a French-Canadian accent - imagine how that would sound...
Driving to the west coast in 1999, I found a couple of interesting restaurants. First was a chinese restaurant in Kingman AZ (not sure, but "Golden China" seems to be in the right location on that map) where the lunch special including tea was $4, and the radio was blasting Zeppelin, Ozzy, and B.Ö.C. Next on that trip was Chalet Basque, which cost five times as much for three times the amount of food on ten times the number of dishes. All I ordered was the roast beef dinner, and out came a basket for rolls, the entree plate, bowl and saucer for each vegetable, a saucer for the butter pats, glasses for water and tea, etc., etc., etc... filled the table for four I was seated at alone.
So now it has become my habit to find interesting places to eat. Of course the best barbecue is usually found in the smallest spots, like Ranchlanders' near Hammond TX and Big O's in Valera. Plus, most towns with populations over 1,500 on the back roads I travel have some little place for the locals to eat, like Staghorn Cafe in Cross Plains or George's in Post. Most are a gamble that usually pay off.
The inspiration for this post came Sunday evening, when I found Gunny's Place in Eastland TX. With only six tables in front, it's not even big enough to be on Google maps. But Gunny is one of those larger-than-life characters that I wasn't sure still existed. He's a cigar-chompin tough-as-nails Marine that wouldn't have been out of place in a John Wayne war movie. The menu says he invented a few sandwiches, and I had the Gunny Burger, which is something between a burger and a philly cheesesteak. Ground meat and/or sausage grilled with bell peppers and onions, covered in nacho cheese on a philly roll - might sound odd but it tasted great.
So if you're not in the habit, instead of relying on lowest-common-denominator fast food chains, give the local places a try.
Saturday, January 23, 2010
details, details...
update & bump: President Hussein re-treads the worn out notions of Smoot and Hawley.
sowell and igst, very edited:
sowell and igst, very edited:
Hoover and FDR had no understanding of the U.S. economy after the stock market crash of 1929 and their interference in it deepened and prolonged the nation's misery...
Prior to this time, no president had attempted to have the federal government intervene to bring a depression to an end.
Many saw in the Great Depression the failure of free market capitalism as an economic system and a reason for seeking a radically different kind of economy — for some Communism, for some Fascism and for some the New Deal policies of Franklin D. Roosevelt's administration... remarkably little effort has been made by most of the intelligentsia to try to sort out the cause or causes...
While unemployment went up in the wake of the stock market crash, it never went as high as 10% for any month during the 12 months following that crash in October 1929. But the unemployment rate in the wake of subsequent government interventions in the economy never fell below 20% for any month over a period of 35 consecutive months...
In the wake of (the Smoot-Hawley) tariffs, unemployment rose far more dramatically than in the wake of the stock market crash. The unemployment rate stood at 6.3% in June 1930 — eight months after the stock market crash — when the Smoot-Hawley tariffs were passed. A year later, the unemployment rate was 15% — and a year after that it was 25.8%.
All of this unemployment need not be attributed to the tariffs, but the point is that the tariffs were supposed to reduce unemployment. The unemployment rate was already trending generally downward for several months when the Smoot-Hawley bill was passed, a trend that reversed itself just five months after the new tariffs went into effect. Once the unemployment rate rose into double digits in November 1930, an unemployment rate as low as 6.3% was not seen again for the remainder of the decade...
(Obama & Co.'s) $1.6 trillion worth of interference (is bad enough, not to mention its) payoffs in aid of subversives...
Labels:
leftism,
politics,
sick sad world
Friday, January 22, 2010
In a land close, really close by . . .
One of the most entertaining "musician wanted" ads i've seen is for a bassist in the Fort Worth area:
In a land close, really close by . . . (FW)
Date: 2010-01-16, 11:40PM CST
Reply to: comm-hpdae-1556479541@craigslist.org
Close, really close by, in a magical, mystical kingdom, there live a band of merry musicians who, while their sound really rocks, they sense in their collective musical psyches that their group is in dire need of some ... serious bottom end.
Those of the band are all experienced musicians, able to make magnificent melodies and hand up heart-warming harmonies, entertaining the masses while at the same time having a joyous revelry in the presence of each other . . . and yet, they are still severely lacking of . . . serious bottom end.
This band of merry musicians is welcomed at the events of their fellow man & maid as well as in the cloistered halls of the nobles, though the band prefers to avoid sharing their music in places commonly referred to as "dives." (If fact, conversely to performing in "dives," these musicians might instead even be seen plying their trades at their preferred houses of worship on Sabbath days (which happens to be this particular minstrel's favorite place to share his craft)! Those of this band also make it a point to reserve time for their families!) In all of this, the band does enjoy the company of each other, and occasionally (and in moderation) they may partake of the fruit of the vine or of the vat. However, they DO NOT partake of nefarious substances such as evil potions or concoctions created by those of any underground apothecary. And thus, the merry band happily share their craft far and wide, though they are still in need of . . . serious bottom end.
But in the meantime, unbeknownst to the merry band (and yet not far, far away . . . and soon to be revealed), there lives an ingenious troubadour who can meet their need! He is a friendly fellow, and he has masterfully designed musical equipment that can reach WAY down low, providing the earth-moving rumble that this band seeks. He is able to play a variety of musical styles (though he considers "heavy metal" to be something that knights should take off at night and wash regularly), he has masterful chops, and he is able to lay down tasty tones that will satisfy the greatest needs of the adoring masses and give them . . . serious bottom end!
The land waits for answers . . . . What will the band of merry musicians do? Will the masses remain bereft of things down low, only to live out their days filled with woe and treble? Will the band find the mysterious musician with serious bottom end skills who lives close, really close by?
Write me to find out . . . .
Labels:
humor - real and alleged,
random links
Thursday, January 21, 2010
the rule of law
...is not and has never been the rule of lawyers — especially lawyers we can’t vote out of office when they say we must let trained terrorists move in next door.
As for privacy, Americans are not as self-absorbed as ACLU staffers — who, by the way, reserve the right to search your bags before you enter their offices. If you fret about privacy, it’s Obamacare that ought to give you sleepless nights. The lefties who’ve told us for nearly 40 years since Roe v. Wade that the government can’t come between you and your doctor are now saying you shouldn’t be able to get to a doctor except through the government, which will decide if you’re worth treating — that is an invasion of privacy. Penetrating enemy communications, on the other hand, is what Americans think of as self-defense. It’s what we’ve done in every war in our history. It’s what common sense says we must do to win. And when America goes to war, Americans want to win.
And our reputation in the international community? Reputation with whom? Sharia states where they stone adulterers, brutalize homosexuals, and kill their own daughters in the name of honor? Rogue regimes where exhibitions of American weakness are taken as license to mutilate? Euro-nannies who rely on us for protection because they’re without the will and the resources to do the job themselves? They ought to worry about their own reputations.
Labels:
islam,
leftism,
sick sad world
ignorance
Calling someone "ignorant" isn't necessarily an insult. Different people have knowledge of different topics, and are "ignorant" of other topics. For instance, one blind date I had in college referred to a Bible verse "in the book of the Phillipines" (seriously).
However, one would expect members of Congress to have a better knowledge of our Constitution.
However, one would expect members of Congress to have a better knowledge of our Constitution.
Free Credit Score Quiz
Adjusted for inflation, the cost of Obama's credit bailout is less than which of these previous government expenditures?
1 - Marshall Plan
2 - Louisiana Purchase
3 - Race to the Moon
4 - S&L Crisis
5 - Korean War
6 - The New Deal
7 - Iraq War
8 - Vietnam War
9 - NASA
Answers below:
1 - Marshall Plan
2 - Louisiana Purchase
3 - Race to the Moon
4 - S&L Crisis
5 - Korean War
6 - The New Deal
7 - Iraq War
8 - Vietnam War
9 - NASA
Answers below:
Labels:
president hussein,
sick sad world
Wednesday, January 20, 2010
The Massachusetts Results
update & bump: Democrats admit cheating against Scott Brown - in 2004.
Some follow-up on Scott Brown's victory (most of these are a link or two away from Instapundit):
Daily Pundit:
Some follow-up on Scott Brown's victory (most of these are a link or two away from Instapundit):
Daily Pundit:
America has been given an unavoidable look at what the Democrats really are: power-crazed taxing, spending tyrants who care no more for the will of the people than they do for liberty itself. Now we have to give them a good look at a better option - no more “not quite as bad as the Dems”... McCain-style RINOs,... “Benedict” Arlen Specter(s), the Pennsylvania Turncoat...Tom Blumer
This nation is only as good as its voting citizenry, but today showed that when that citizenry makes the effort to be good, it can be very good indeed. The Dems, with their socialist agendas, had convinced themselves that liberty in this nation was dead, succumbed to the sweet siren call of security from womb to tomb. Today they learned otherwise.
In electing Scott Brown to what the elites believed was Ted Kennedy’s U.S. Senate seat one day shy of the anniversary of Barack Obama’s inauguration, Massachusetts voters have delivered an irrefutable repudiation of the president, his agenda, and the people in Congress who support him....the up-tingle is now a down-trickle...
Make no mistake. All the attempted post-election distancing in the world won’t change the fact that this election was all about Dear Leader... if Obama & Co. can’t sell their agenda (in Massachusetts), it’s an epic fail everywhere. (ed: link mine)
Tuesday, January 19, 2010
The Massachusetts Vote
"The Chicago-Obama Democratic machine must be bursting with pride at a Massachusetts Democratic operation that clearly has the skill sets necessary to deprive the voters of an honest and unpoliticized outcome."
update 1: Tom Blumer continues:
update 3: The Anchoress weighs in...
update 1: Tom Blumer continues:
The run-up to the 2008 presidential election and the first year of Barack Obama’s administration represent a virtual case study in how authoritarian rule begins to take root. History surely will recite a lengthy litany of freedom-restricting and/or government power-enhancing laws, regulations, actions, and statements that have come from Obama, Nancy Pelosi, Harry Reid, and their swelling ranks of apparatchiks since they assumed one-party control of the U.S. government and Congress early last year.update 2 & bump: Like Chicagoa, MA has plenty'a dead votahs.
update 3: The Anchoress weighs in...
Labels:
leftism,
politics,
president hussein,
sick sad world
war of words
For reasons both obvious and unpublicized, David Horowitz...
can’t set foot on this campus – or any campus – without being accompanied by a personal bodyguard and a battalion of armed campus security police to protect me and my student hosts.read it all
Sheer prudence forces me to visit campuses with these security measures in place because I’ve been demonized by the campus left at virtually every school I’ve visited in the past decade and physically assaulted at several. USC officials regard the threats against this event seriously enough to have assigned twelve armed officers to watch over the proceedings. These police are not here to protect you from me. They are here to protect me from you members of the USC Progressive Alliance, Students for Justice in Palestine and the USC Muslim Student Union who have made these threats and incited hatred towards this event and its speaker. These are the tactics favored by fascists – and when I use that word I mean it literally. I don’t use it the way the Left does, as an epithet for anyone they don’t like.
The attacks on this event and those organizing it are part of a national hate campaign that the left has organized against me and others who share my views. It can be tracked on numerous websites over nearly a decade and is evidenced in the common themes of slander and abuse that are directed towards me. The left’s campaign – really a declaration of war — is in part a response to my opposition to its anti-American, anti-democratic and anti-Semitic agendas.
so it is written
Science once again is catching up to what is already known: the Bible was written when it says it was written.
Scientists have discovered the earliest known Hebrew writing — an inscription dating from the 10th century B.C., during the period of King David's reign.
The breakthrough could mean that portions of the Bible were written centuries earlier than previously thought... (ed: by those who put too much faith in science)
Until now, many scholars have held that the Hebrew Bible originated in the 6th century B.C., because Hebrew writing was thought to stretch back no further. But the newly deciphered Hebrew text is about four centuries older... "It indicates that the Kingdom of Israel already existed in the 10th century B.C. and that at least some of the biblical texts were written hundreds of years before the dates presented in current research," said Gershon Galil, a professor of Biblical Studies at the University of Haifa in Israel, who deciphered the ancient text.
The writing was discovered more than a year ago on a pottery shard dug up during excavations at Khirbet Qeiyafa, near Israel's Elah valley...
the downward spiral
VDH:
People took the candidate (Obama) at his word of bipartisanship, fiscal seriousness, and centrism, and from day one got instead shady Cabinet nominations of tax cheats and lobbyists, indifference to congressional corruption,... a whiny monotony of "Bush did it" for a year, a 1,000-page healthcare monstrosity, fiscal insanity, serial appeasement of enemies with conscious neglect of old allies, and on and on. No hope, less change...read it all
(ed: don't forget the policy of "opacity is transparency".)
...how ironic — Obama was elected as a reaction to Bush's mistakes of deficit spending and big-ticket new entitlements that nullified his otherwise effective anti-terrorism war; instead, he took what people liked about Bush and ridiculed them, while trumping Bush's spending that had turned so many off.
Labels:
leftism,
president hussein
Monday, January 18, 2010
now that's utopian thinking!
The third PJTV link for today says "there's a lot more than just money to "spread around." "
Labels:
leftism,
president hussein,
sick sad world
Obama's America?
Someone should inform Matthews & Obama, et al., that America does not belong to Obama, especially beyond 2010.
R.L. Simon expands:
R.L. Simon expands:
...the disconnect between the citizens and the leadership in our country is greater than I can ever remember it. It’s bordering on the surreal... The whole relationship between the governors and the governed is being called into question by people drunk on their ideology, much of which they have forgotten or may not even exist in any coherent form in the first place. We are at an extraordinary moment.
Labels:
msm,
president hussein,
tv and movies
Sunday, January 17, 2010
css mess
tonight i tried again to fix the css styles on this blog's template so that the text would fit better inside the curvy graphics i added. now it looks okay on my computer, please let me know whether or not it looks okay on yours...
Saturday, January 16, 2010
danny glover
vodkapundit calls him "the pat robertson of the left". after the rantings of others like:shouldn't that be "just another pat robertson of the left"?
Labels:
leftism,
msm,
random thoughts,
sick sad world
poll numbers
They don't fool most of the people most of the time any more:
67% of likely U.S. voters believe the news media have too much power and influence over government decisions... Just 8% think the media have too little power and influence...
Only 20% of all voters say most reporters try to offer unbiased coverage of a political campaign. 72% say most reporters try to help the candidate they want to win.
Just before the November 2008 presidential election, 68% of voters said most reporters try to help the candidate they want to win, and 51% believed they were trying to help Democrat Barack Obama. Just 7% thought they were trying to help his Republican opponent, John McCain.
Labels:
leftism,
msm,
politics,
tv and movies
conservative ideals are better
read the whole article, but some of its key points are:
"Given the horrendous mess that Obama and his liberal minions are making, there are signs that the American people might finally be coming to their senses. An increasing number realize that the utopian dream of fairness and equality (of misery) toward which the liberals have been driving us for a century is in actuality a gigantic nightmare that will destroy the American way of life. Perhaps the people will be ready shortly to throw the bums out, abandon statism and start over. If so, conservatives must be ready to lead that counter-revolution."
"In the 110 years since 1900 we have had 19 Presidents — eleven Republicans and eight Democrats. The Democrat Presidents have ranged in philosophy from moderately liberal (Kennedy) to ultra-leftist (Wilson, FDR, Johnson, Obama) with the average far closer to the extreme left than the moderate center. The Republican Presidents, on the other hand, varied from center-leftish (Teddy, Hoover, Nixon and the Bushes) to strongly right (Coolidge, Reagan) with the average definitely closer to the center than the right. This does not strike me as strong evidence of our country's supposed center-right orientation."
"Here are three specific goals that I suggest be the main objectives when our turn comes again:
- Role of Government. Shrink the New Deal/Great Society/Obamania-inspired gargantuan government that is choking freedom out of American life.
- Defeat Islamic Fundamentalism. Reduce, and hopefully remove the scourge of Islamic fundamentalism as a threat to... the World.
- Recapture the culture... The basic goal is to restore (a reasonable facsimile of) the traditional culture that permeated American life from the 18th to the 20th century. Start on the long path toward delegitimizing the pornographic, anti-family, anti-religious, egalitarian, multicultural, environmentally wacky, anti-achievement, socialistic cesspool that passes for culture in America today.
liberal ideas are harmless
...until people start taking them seriously and putting them into practice."
"If we wish to really help the Haitians, or the people of any third world country, we should first get it into our minds that we can respect them as individual persons created in the image of God while at the same time recognizing that they're trapped in a culture that is devastating their potential. The worst thing we can do, perhaps, is to "respect" a culture that eats its people alive."
Labels:
leftism,
sick sad world
Friday, January 15, 2010
ultra-mega-salad-shooter-5000
this time it's not from ronco (yet)...
Labels:
random links,
random thoughts,
science
Wednesday, January 13, 2010
speaking truth to power, occasionally
Mark Steyn:
Few industries congratulate themselves on their "courage" and "bravery" more incessantly than artists and journalists — at least when it comes to plays about a gay Jesus, or joining the all-star singalong for Rock Against Bush. But it's easy to be provocative with people who can't be provoked. Faced with an opportunity to demonstrate real courage, the arts and the media shrivel up like a bunch of dying pansies.
Labels:
leftism,
msm,
tv and movies
funny bit
someone else's kid asked:
My friend K doesn't have a blog, but she should because she occasionally sends me e-mails like this one:Daughter: “What is that black stuff on the bagel?”I e-mailed her back, "Were you eating bagels or beagles?"
Mommy: “Those are poppy seeds.”
Daughter: “I thought puppies came from dogs!”
Labels:
humor - real and alleged,
random thoughts
Friday, January 08, 2010
dey haz spelin ishooz
airlyn tikt ajunt: "whas' ur naim?"
osama bin laden: "osama bin laden"
airlyn tikt ajunt: (typin "o-b-a-m-a s-i-n l-o-n-d-o-n") . . .
teeyesay komputorz: "s ok 2 fli"
airlyn tikt ajunt: "heerz ur bordin pas, obama"
osama bin laden: "k thx boom... er, i meen bai."
osama bin laden: "osama bin laden"
airlyn tikt ajunt: (typin "o-b-a-m-a s-i-n l-o-n-d-o-n") . . .
teeyesay komputorz: "s ok 2 fli"
airlyn tikt ajunt: "heerz ur bordin pas, obama"
osama bin laden: "k thx boom... er, i meen bai."
Labels:
computer/tech,
islam,
sick sad world
Thursday, January 07, 2010
Wednesday, January 06, 2010
from bad to worse to worse
This story needs no commentary:
TOKYO – Tsutomu Yamaguchi, the only person officially recognized as a survivor of both the Hiroshima and Nagasaki atomic bombings at the end of World War II, has died at age 93.This detail does though:
Yamaguchi was in Hiroshima on a business trip for his shipbuilding company on Aug. 6, 1945, when a U.S. B-29 dropped an atomic bomb on the city. He suffered serious burns to his upper body and spent the night in the city.
He then returned to his hometown of Nagasaki, about 300 kilometers (190 miles) to the southwest, which suffered a second U.S. atomic bomb attack three days later.
Last month he was visited in the hospital by filmmaker James Cameron, director of "Titanic" and "Avatar," who is considering making a movie about the bombings, according to the Mainichi.What then is the most accurate term for Mr. Cameron's desire to profit from the deaths of others: vulture, graverobber, or ghoul?
Labels:
sick sad world,
tv and movies
Tuesday, January 05, 2010
humans, bodies, & humans' bodies
via dustbury, again:
Since I think about this kind of thing a lot (too much, probably), I'd agree with this view from both theological and personal viewpoints. As smart as my dad is, he doesn't seem to think about these things, which only now seems unfortunate as he struggles with the advancing weaknesses of Parkinson's...My personal philosophy is that I am the driver of my body-vehicle, not the vehicle itself. That’s what has made aging easier for me than it was before I really grasped that idea. Like a car, my body ages, but I, the driver inside, am the same age I ever was — I am ageless. My dreams brought this home to me this morning because in my dreams I am never any younger or older than about 30. That means something to me and, as I step into the final phase of my time on this planet, it’s a comfort.I hadn’t thought about this before, but my own dream experience is similar: unless it’s spelled out early on that it’s the childhood version of me, there’s no real indication of my age in any of my dreams. Certainly the infirmities of age don’t play any role therein.
As for driver vs. vehicle, this sounds something like C. S. Lewis: “You don’t have a soul. You are a Soul. You have a body.” And there are worse things in life than sounding something like C. S. Lewis, whether or not you subscribe to Lewis’ particular faith.
Monday, January 04, 2010
year end review
on our annual corporate internal review system, it's difficult for me to fill in the "goals for next year" blank, because:
1) our company is being sold, so the review will (probably) never be seen again,
2) i have no company-related goals, and
3) i don't speak corporatese.
1) our company is being sold, so the review will (probably) never be seen again,
2) i have no company-related goals, and
3) i don't speak corporatese.
humans, nature, & human nature
dustbury vents (and i edit):
What is with this idiotic notion that Nature is good and Mankind is bad? Fact is, Nature is cruel, even demonstrably vicious, and Mankind is, uh, more kind than not. That's why Mankind has prospered and proliferated. DUH. Consider this: Christianity is the biggest ever departure from Nature. Its central premise is that we all matter. Odd. Wrong? Perhaps. But absolutely right in human terms. It has led to the extension of human thought, lifespans, and a kind of beauty and accomplishment no other culture has ever dreamed of. No other kind of human philosophy has produced such sheer gorgeousness. Now we are being asked to regard ourselves as vile, a scientifically verifiable pollution on the face of the earth, something akin to the AIDS virus...
We've been lulled into this delusion, I suspect, partly because we've been instructed to regard Nature as the repository of all beauty: anything we might produce ourselves must pale in comparison to the wonders of, well, just about anything that is recognized as life...
But this isn't the only bill of goods we've been sold:
In a world with few inescapable consequences, we bridle at the thousand tiny course corrections, the constant nudging that kept most of us on the straight and narrow path. We yawn at things that used to cause us a healthy sense of alarm. The "God of today" is a tolerant, undemanding, comfortable God who thinks we're all special just as we are... But somewhere deep down, I think we know better. I think we sense that we are glossing over the faint whiff of moral rot...
Saturday, January 02, 2010
a new psalm
I've posted Psalm 107 for several Thanksgivings now (in several versions):
But I read another Psalm last night that might become my annual New Year's post, the first half of Psalm 37:
But I read another Psalm last night that might become my annual New Year's post, the first half of Psalm 37:
1 Do not fret because of evildoers,
Be not envious toward wrongdoers.
2 For they will wither quickly like the grass
And fade like the green herb.
3 Trust in the LORD and do good;
Dwell in the land and cultivate faithfulness.
4 Delight yourself in the LORD;
And He will give you the desires of your heart.
5 Commit your way to the LORD,
Trust also in Him, and He will do it.
6 He will bring forth your righteousness as the light
And your judgment as the noonday.
7 Rest in the LORD and wait patiently for Him;
Do not fret because of him who prospers in his way,
Because of the man who carries out wicked schemes.
8 Cease from anger and forsake wrath;
Do not fret; it leads only to evildoing.
9 For evildoers will be cut off,
But those who wait for the LORD, they will inherit the land.
10 Yet a little while and the wicked man will be no more;
And you will look carefully for his place and he will not be there.
11 But the humble will inherit the land
And will delight themselves in abundant prosperity.
12 The wicked plots against the righteous
And gnashes at him with his teeth.
13 The Lord laughs at him,
For He sees his day is coming.
14 The wicked have drawn the sword and bent their bow
To cast down the afflicted and the needy,
To slay those who are upright in conduct.
15 Their sword will enter their own heart,
And their bows will be broken.
16 Better is the little of the righteous
Than the abundance of many wicked.
17 For the arms of the wicked will be broken,
But the LORD sustains the righteous.
18 The LORD knows the days of the blameless,
And their inheritance will be forever.
19 They will not be ashamed in the time of evil,
And in the days of famine they will have abundance.
20 But the wicked will perish;
And the enemies of the LORD will be like the glory of the pastures,
They vanish--like smoke they vanish away.
Be not envious toward wrongdoers.
2 For they will wither quickly like the grass
And fade like the green herb.
3 Trust in the LORD and do good;
Dwell in the land and cultivate faithfulness.
4 Delight yourself in the LORD;
And He will give you the desires of your heart.
5 Commit your way to the LORD,
Trust also in Him, and He will do it.
6 He will bring forth your righteousness as the light
And your judgment as the noonday.
7 Rest in the LORD and wait patiently for Him;
Do not fret because of him who prospers in his way,
Because of the man who carries out wicked schemes.
8 Cease from anger and forsake wrath;
Do not fret; it leads only to evildoing.
9 For evildoers will be cut off,
But those who wait for the LORD, they will inherit the land.
10 Yet a little while and the wicked man will be no more;
And you will look carefully for his place and he will not be there.
11 But the humble will inherit the land
And will delight themselves in abundant prosperity.
12 The wicked plots against the righteous
And gnashes at him with his teeth.
13 The Lord laughs at him,
For He sees his day is coming.
14 The wicked have drawn the sword and bent their bow
To cast down the afflicted and the needy,
To slay those who are upright in conduct.
15 Their sword will enter their own heart,
And their bows will be broken.
16 Better is the little of the righteous
Than the abundance of many wicked.
17 For the arms of the wicked will be broken,
But the LORD sustains the righteous.
18 The LORD knows the days of the blameless,
And their inheritance will be forever.
19 They will not be ashamed in the time of evil,
And in the days of famine they will have abundance.
20 But the wicked will perish;
And the enemies of the LORD will be like the glory of the pastures,
They vanish--like smoke they vanish away.
Friday, January 01, 2010
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