Seen Riding
WE THE PEOPLEare pissed off!-------------------Gun Store, 1 mile on right.
Beautiful weather, but a very late autumn for color. The trees have had a good year, my wife says: low stress, plenty of water, warmth late.
Sose on Australia
Vikings in America by 1021
Maoist Self-Criticism
Boosters
We got booster Pfizer shots this week. Sore arms, otherwise no big deal. I'm increasingly concerned by the trend of growing per capita breakthrough deaths among populations who are farther and farther from their initial vaccination dates. As a general rule, us older types may have immune systems that need more frequent reminders. If I'm wrong, well, I made the best guess I could.
I'm thinking of getting caught up on other vaccinations, too: tetanus, shingles, maybe even flu. Never having had the flu, as far as I know, I've never been in the habit of giving it much thought.
I continue to spend some time on social media every day spreading what I think is the most reliable information about the relative risks of COVID and COVID vaccine. Most people haven't a clue about probability or risk, it seems. Someone almost invariably responds with an anecdote about a single person's counter-experience, an approach that makes sense only when one is presented with a claim that a particular result is 100% uniform, and can be falsified by a single negative result. The idea of comparing two relatively small risks is quite foreign. A lot of people complain, too, that they can't find absolute answers to questions like "how long will my natural or vaccinated immunity last exactly?" It's like asking, "How many days until I get a particular kind of cancer, and then how many days will I live?" Not that it's an excuse for medical experts (or bureaucrats) who offer paternalizing absolutist pap in the form of ironclad edicts, but sometimes you see what tempts them to snap "Stop arguing about it and just do what I say."
Nevertheless, I'm not an idiot, and I have no plans to enjoy being dictated to by people who have blown their own credibility too many times to count.
Lower Your Expectations
40. Being in the World Without MiseryHuitang said:What has been long neglected cannot be restored immediately.Ills that have been accumulating a long time cannot be cleared away overnight.One cannot enjoy oneself forever.Human emotions cannot be just right.Calamity cannot be avoided by trying to run away from it.Anyone... who has realized these five things can be in the world without misery.
[Zen Lessons: The Art of Leadership, trans. Thomas Cleary (Boston & London: Shambala Pocket Classics), 1993]
The Stoic knows that he cannot change very much at all about the world, and so focuses on the few things that are in his power. These chiefly include whether he becomes upset about things he cannot control, or accepts the world as he finds it and focuses his effort on behaving virtuously. This begins with accepting that death is certain, and he must live courageously in spite of its certainty. (Cf. 'calamity cannot be avoided by trying to run away from it.') It eventually embraces all things that cannot be changed: the bus is late, the supply chains are disrupted, the autumn is short and the cold winter is coming, beloved dogs do not live as long as we do, and neither do our fathers.
Crusader Sword found off Israel
How is this not Satire?
"Dr. Rachel Levine becomes nation's first transgender four-star officer."
Headlines from 1984
RIP Colin Powell
Former Secretary of State Colin Powell has died at age 84. The news reports all mention "COVID complications," as well as the fact that he was fully vaccinated. What's probably more telling is that he was also being treated for multiple myeloma, a cancer of the white blood cells that collapses the immune system. The best vaccine in the world won't help someone whose immune system in kaput.
Who's under the thumb
My old hometown newspaper misses the point of objections to mandates. In this OpEd, it argues that "a ban on mandates is still a mandate." I suppose so, if you want to put it that way, but what's wrong with mandates is not just that they're an exercise of power. There's a big difference between a mandate that ties the hands of a government and one that ties the hands of a citizen. The U.S. Constitution is full of mandates that tie the hands of governments, and thank goodness.
No matter how many COVID mandates Gov. Abbott bans, no individual in Texas is any less free to receive all the vaccines he can get his hands on, provided that the FDA doesn't outlaw them and medical staff don't refuse to administer them. The push for COVID mandates can't be contorted into a blow for freedom or autonomy, unless by "freedom and autonomy" one means the freedom of governments to bully their citizens. If someone is breaking no law, the government shouldn't be able to force him to do anything--and we should be careful what laws we pass.
Employers have more discretion, but even they are limited in some of the ways they're entitled to intrude on their employee's religious and medical decisions. In that arena, though, I'm more inclined, first, to prevent the government from leaning on the employer and, second, to let the employees vote with their feet.
Astonishment on a Ride Through Georgia
I went down to the Stone Mountain Scottish Highland Games this weekend. Friday night was warm, and very little autumn color has occurred there though in other years it is often high color by the weekend of the Stone Games. We camped as always; on Saturday morning a squall blew through hard and fast, and by afternoon the weather was cool and clear.
One of the people around our fire Saturday night was a Canadian singer of Irish traditional music named Michael Kelly. He and I went through a whole host of songs, and to my astonishment he and I knew almost none of the same songs. Wild Rover we both knew, but he had never even heard of Dubliners or Clancy Brothers standards like The Old Orange Flute, or Kelly, the Boy from Killane.
Instead, he knew a whole array of songs I've never heard before. It was akin to discovering that there's a second Bible, or a whole set of Tolkien novels you'd never read.
Looking at his YouTube channel I see that we know a few more of the same songs than we happened to come up with by the fireside, but it's still got a number of songs that may be new to you as they are to me. And of course the echoing joy of will be when he discovers the Clancy Brothers, which a singer of Irish traditional songs will love like finding the first Bible.