So we're all excited to learn that the Justice Department has appointed two investigators to look into the rampant leaks, sometimes derailing critical Top Secret programs, that have recently emerged in a series of articles highly favorable to the Obama administration. However...
Well, look on the bright side. Only one of them has heavily donated to both the Senate and Presidential campaigns of President Obama; while holding an office to which he was appointed by President Obama; in order to take a position for which he will doubtless be paid a fine honorarium by the Justice Department that serves President Obama.
The other guy is just in the pay of the administration. Otherwise, he appears to be independent. Since the Justice Department is theoretically autonomous to a certain degree -- if Eric Holder can be relied upon in this regard -- there should be nothing to worry about.
How not to chat on Facebook
From PJ Media:
Here’s a thought: If you’re a liberal who feels the urge to murder kittens when someone says something nice about Sarah Palin or a conservative who thinks Obama is a mixture of Stalin and Darth Vader and you just can’t shut up about it, maybe you shouldn’t be [Facebook] friends with someone who vehemently disagrees with you. If you are going to be someone’s friend, then you should keep in mind that friends politely disagree. They don’t regularly insult each other, trash other people in the thread, and go off on angry rants. So, just remember what your mother said, “If you can’t say something nice, then shut your ignorant mouth, you loser! I can’t believe I ever had a horrible child like you! You’ll never be a success! Never!” Ok, maybe I’m just assuming that’s how the mothers of people like that talk, but you have to admit that it would explain a lot.
Thoughts on Silence
Here is an interview with a Trappist monk on the virtue he finds in what is popularly called the vow of silence.
When a man and woman meet and fall in love they begin to talk. They talk and talk and talk all day long and can't wait to meet again to talk some more. They talk for hours together, and never tire of talking and so talk late into the night, until they become intimate—and then they don't talk anymore. Neither would describe intimacy as “the sacrifice of words” and a monk is not inclined to speak about his intimacy with God in this way.
A Study in Terrible Judgment
Anyone who happens to be a pedophile should consider any and all procedures that prevent them from acting on their disorder. If you choose to disregard this advice, however, at least don't select a horse ranch in Texas as the best place to carry on.
A Texas father caught a man sexually assaulting his 4-year-old daughter and punched him in the head repeatedly, killing him, authorities said.Well of course he did.
West Point Looks Back
Were you aware that the United States Military Academy's Department of History teaches students to fire 1500s matchlock muskets? Conduct WWI-style trench warfare?
These are some interesting videos. The old lessons become relevant again surprisingly regularly: think of the SF guys in the early days of Afghanistan having not only to ride but to pack horses. Rigging a pack horse is an entirely separate skill set, once well known to the American cavalry.
The lessons of trench warfare can become relevant again quickly, if only for an afternoon: but if it does, remembering the old ways is the difference between surviving the afternoon and not.
These are some interesting videos. The old lessons become relevant again surprisingly regularly: think of the SF guys in the early days of Afghanistan having not only to ride but to pack horses. Rigging a pack horse is an entirely separate skill set, once well known to the American cavalry.
The lessons of trench warfare can become relevant again quickly, if only for an afternoon: but if it does, remembering the old ways is the difference between surviving the afternoon and not.
An Older View of Marriage
I was just reading Ragnhild Johnrud Zorgati's Pluralism in the Middle Ages: Hybrid Identities, Conversion, and Mixed Marriages in Medieval Iberia. There's an interesting passage I wanted to quote to you as it pertains to our occasional discussion of the nature of marriage. We're familiar with Aquinas' natural law view of matrimony, i.e., that view of marriage that takes its form from the nature of humankind.
Aquinas lived in the 13th century, though, and his formulation out of the natural law didn't occur until the writings of Aristotle were restored to the West. It is Aristotle, after all, who puts such an emphasis on "the nature of the thing" in determining questions about ethics and justice (and indeed even physics). Those writings came to the Church out of Spain, especially following the conquest of Toledo in 1085. When the Christians found themselves in possession of the great libraries of Toledo, rather than burn them (as the Mongols did to the libraries in Baghdad and Persia) they set up teams of translators. Many Christians who spoke and read Arabic lived in the city, as well as Jewish scholars who could read multiple languages. Translation from Arabic into Latin and other languages accessible in Europe became a focus of the Crown of Castille, which provided the funding for the efforts led by the Church.
Before that, marriage did not have the natural law reading in the West. It still had a unique character in Christian civilization, though, opposed to the contractual reading. Marriage was a contract in Islam. Dr. Zorgati explains (p. 102):
Unlike the Islamic and Jewish contractual view, the Christian view permitted the two parties who loved each other to come together regardless of their rank in society, but only by their own free choice. Also unlike the contractual views, however, divorce was forbidden. The Love that could unify a man and a woman of different ranks into one flesh was a miracle. None should dare to live in defiance of such a miracle.
Aquinas lived in the 13th century, though, and his formulation out of the natural law didn't occur until the writings of Aristotle were restored to the West. It is Aristotle, after all, who puts such an emphasis on "the nature of the thing" in determining questions about ethics and justice (and indeed even physics). Those writings came to the Church out of Spain, especially following the conquest of Toledo in 1085. When the Christians found themselves in possession of the great libraries of Toledo, rather than burn them (as the Mongols did to the libraries in Baghdad and Persia) they set up teams of translators. Many Christians who spoke and read Arabic lived in the city, as well as Jewish scholars who could read multiple languages. Translation from Arabic into Latin and other languages accessible in Europe became a focus of the Crown of Castille, which provided the funding for the efforts led by the Church.
Before that, marriage did not have the natural law reading in the West. It still had a unique character in Christian civilization, though, opposed to the contractual reading. Marriage was a contract in Islam. Dr. Zorgati explains (p. 102):
According to Charles Donahue, “the most frequently made comparative statement about the Christian law of marriage, on the one hand, and the Islamic [ . . . ] or the Jewish [ . . . ], on the other, is that marriage is a sacrament in Christianity but it is not in Islam or Judaism” (Donahue, 2008, 46). In studies dedicated to Muslim marriages, it is often its contractual nature which is at the forefront. 6 However, the opposition between marriage as contract and marriage as sacrament has to be nuanced. First, there is not one Islamic marriage contract, but many, since different legal schools developed different requirements for the marriage contract, and because people could add individual stipulations to their contracts. Second, although the idea of marriage as a sacrament has roots back to Saint Paul’s letter to the Ephesians, it was first translated into legal doctrine in the twelfth century (Donahue, 2008, 47). According to Islamic law, “marriage is a contract (ʿaqd), established by bilateral agreement” (Ali, 2008, 11). It is a mundane transaction (muʿāmala) which some jurists also saw as an act of worship (ʿibāda) since according to one ḥadīth a married person has fulfilled half of his or her religion (Ali, 2008, 11). Moreover, one of the essential features of the contract is the offer (ījāb) made by the bride’s family and the acceptance (qabūl) of the groom’s family (Ali, 2008, 11– 13). Other important elements are the dower (ṣadāq) and the role played by the guardian and the witnesses, as well as the consent of the contracting parties.The Church's idea ran in contrast to the actual practice of the Christian people: before the 12th century, Christians tended to prefer arranged marriages based on social class and the preservation of the stability of the family. As the Church developed the idea of marriage as a sacrament, though, the sacred character of the bond tended to undermine family authority (Zorgati p. 104):
The insistence of the free consent of the parties must be understood in relation to the developing view that marriage constituted a sacrament. Canonists writing in the decades before Alexander III insisted on the sacramental character of marriage. For example, Peter Lombard established that marriage was one of the seven sacraments of the Church, whereas Hugh of Saint Victor explored the etymology of ‘sacrament’ that he thought corresponded to ‘holy sign’ (sacrum signum). 10 Hence, in addition to the received idea that the relationship between husband and wife was analogous to the relationship between Christ and the Church— a mystery, or sacrament, according to Saint Paul— he saw marriage as a sign of the mutual love between the soul and God. This new idea had, according to Donahue, an impact on the doctrine of free consent in marriage which developed at the same time: “A theology that sees in marriage a sign of the mutual yearning of the soul for God and of God for the soul would tend to emphasize, as Hugh does, the element of choice in marriage, and would tend to exclude the choice of anyone else as being relevant to the question of the formation of marriage” (Donahue, 2008, 54).That's an interesting view, and one that is in contrast with the view that Aquinas came to in the next century. The principal end of matrimony in that view, derived from "the nature of the thing," is filling the need for humanity to reproduce itself across generations: not only to procreate, but to educate and develop children so they are able to sustain themselves and support the greater society of which they are part.
Unlike the Islamic and Jewish contractual view, the Christian view permitted the two parties who loved each other to come together regardless of their rank in society, but only by their own free choice. Also unlike the contractual views, however, divorce was forbidden. The Love that could unify a man and a woman of different ranks into one flesh was a miracle. None should dare to live in defiance of such a miracle.
No idle hands
This pattern is absorbing me as thoroughly as the golden Ring in Frodo's head: day or night, all I want to do lately is crochet it. When I finish a length sufficient for a bedskirt in this thick "bedspread weight" thread, I think I'll start a new one in a very fine thread, to edge the pillowcases with.
With All Due Respect, Have You Gentlemen Lost Your Minds?
InstaPundit approvingly cites Walter Russell Mead:
(I haven't forgotten you, Raven! But still: Bernie Sanders voters moving to Alabama? Madness.)
Air conditioning in warm regions uses far less energy than heating in cold regions.
So if you want to help save the planet, move out of Vermont and get yourself to Alabama where people know how to live in harmony with Mother Gaia. Moving out of New England could be the purest form of environmental activism; your selfish, earth destroying choice of living in Massachusetts in killing us all. And as for Canada, Gaia’s message is clear: shut it down, now. The Germans for their part could help the planet by moving to Spain and Greece; this might also help with Europe’s financial woes.
Am I seriously reading a professor from South Carolina and another from Tennessee suggesting that what we need is for more Yankees to move down South? Is this what you want for the good people of Alabama?Perhaps the blue model politicians whose tax and spend policies are driving businesses and residents out of their states are smarter than they look. They could be green activists, steadily working to save the earth by driving people out of the northeast. We look forward to green activists introducing legislation in Congress to levy new taxes on those whose choice to live in cold states imposes costs on the more virtuous and eco-friendly inhabitants of Texas and South Carolina.It only seems fair. You do care about the planet, don’t you?
(I haven't forgotten you, Raven! But still: Bernie Sanders voters moving to Alabama? Madness.)
RIchard Feynman is my hero
This is from a oft-quoted speech, Feynman's 1974 commencement speech at Cal Tech, but I never can get enough of it:
H/t Maggie's Farm.
This long history of learning how not to fool ourselves — of having utter scientific integrity — is, I’m sorry to say, something that we haven’t specifically included in any particular course that I know of. We just hope you’ve caught on by osmosis.
The first principle is that you must not fool yourself — and you are the easiest person to fool. So you have to be very careful about that. After you’ve not fooled yourself, it’s easy not to fool other scientists. You just have to be honest in a conventional way after that.I far as I can tell, everything Feynman ever wrote is worth reading, especially "Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman!", "What Do You Care What Other People Think?", and "Q.E.D." The first two are reminiscences; the third is one of the best pieces of popularized science I've ever read.
H/t Maggie's Farm.
Instructions from the Bench
The judge in A.W.'s case advocates for how he thinks the matter should be settled.
THE COURT: –You’ve decided to battle, and he comes back. And see, you’re — you — you’re the kind of guy, you don’t want to get into this to settle this, mano y mano. You want to get all these friends who got nothing else to do with their time, in this judge’s opinion, because — my God, I’m a little bit older than you are, and I haven’t got enough time in the day to do all the things I want to do. And I thought by retirement, I would have less to do. I got more! Because everybody knows I’m free! So they all come to me. But you, you are starting a — a conflagration, for lack of a better word, and you’re just letting the thing go recklessly no matter where it goes. I mean, you get some — and I’m going to use word I (ph) — freak somewhere up Oklahoma, got nothing better to do with his time, so he does the nastiest things in the world he can do to this poor gentleman. What right has that guy got to do it?
WALKER: He has no right to do that, Your Honor.
THE COURT: Well, he’s — you incited him.
WALKER: But, your honor, I did not incite him within the Brandenburg standard though.
THE COURT: Forget Bradenburg [sic]. Let’s go by Vaughey right now, and common sense out in the world. But you know, where I grew up in Brooklyn, when that stuff was pulled, it was settled real quickly.
WALKER: I’m not sure what that means, your honor.
THE COURT: –Very quickly. And I’m not going to talk about those ways, but boy, it ended fast. I even can tell you, when I grew up in my community, you wanted to date an Italian girl, you had to get the Italian boy’s permission. But that was the old neighborhoods back in the city. And it was really fair. When someone did something up there to you, your sister, your girlfriend, you got some friends to take them for a ride in the back of the truck.
WALKER: Well, Your Honor, what–
THE COURT: –That ended it. You guys have got this new mechanical stuff out here, the electronic stuff, that you can just ruin somebody without doing anything. But you started it.So, you know, I guess you know what the court in Maryland thinks you should do next. If anyone complains, tell them the judge so instructed you from the bench.
Considering the President's Economic Vision
The ads are already out: President Obama said at a press conference that "the private sector is doing fine." Republicans are playing the clip of those few words, merry in the sense that it demonstrates that the President is out of touch.
Let's consider the remark in context, though, because it's a revealing description of how he thinks about the economy.
What we're left with, then, is the interpretation of the facts. It's pretty clear that the recovery is unusually anemic by historic standards. It's also true that the 4.3 million jobs 'created' haven't made up for the number of jobs lost: when you take account of the number of people who have left the workforce entirely, things look different.
Also, we can see that the private jobs that do exist are objectively worse than the jobs that used to exist. Consider the movement from full-time to part-time jobs by employers -- a way of avoiding having to provide the benefits that have become an expected part of full-time labor in America, and thus a way of paying workers lower total compensation for each hour of work. Or consider the increasing classification of lower-wage jobs as "seasonal" rather than "part-time." A seasonal worker can be paid below minimum wage. And of course, raises and bonuses for lucky workers who do still have full-time jobs are not much forthcoming, while the costs of energy and food are spiking.
All this means that workers are being pinched horribly: many can't find work, and if they can it pays less than it used to pay, especially relative to the costs they encounter. They may now have to buy benefits on the open market, where they are also more expensive. Companies are finding people will take these jobs in spite of the vastly reduced compensation, though, because there are so many people who have no work that the market value of your work is just less than it used to be. Presumably you aren't a worse worker, but you're not worth as much anymore.
This is interpreted as "fine." OK; that's the Republicans' point.
What I find as interesting, though, is the complaint about the shrinking of government. What the President really finds to be out of order is that state and local governments are having to respond to the economic crisis by tightening belts. The main thing he wants to fix is to achieve higher levels of government employment.
The thing is, though, this was a policy decision by the electorates of these states and localities. They can change the laws themselves, if they want to do so. What they decided was that, during hard times when tax revenues are lower, government should spend less. That means cutting some of the nice things that we enjoy government doing -- parks and recreation services, librarians, and so forth -- as well as being more careful with essential services. Perhaps taxes or fees can be raised to pay for these, but if not, services must be more carefully allocated so as to do with less.
If people get tired of this, they can vote to rescind balanced budget amendments. They want it this way; and at various times, 32 states have passed resolutions asking for a Constitutional Convention to require the Federal government to act this way as well.
So what we have here is a stark difference of opinion, among broad sections of the public, about how government should respond to fiscal crises. The President is painting this as a government failure, but in fact it's the state and local governments acting exactly the way their citizens want them to act.
There's another issue behind the decline in government jobs. The failure of Congress to pass a budget for years now has led to tremendous uncertainty; combined with the failure of the so-called "super-committee," even many Federal departments are going to get cut and nobody can be quite sure how big the cuts will be, or whether Congress will finally move to avoid them. Thus, even some Federal departments -- certainly this is true for DOD -- have great uncertainty that is keeping them from starting new projects or hiring new people.
This last is a much clearer case of government failure. Congress has failed as an institution, but not in failing to provide extra goodies for state and local governments to use in dodging the will of their constituents. Congress has failed to do its most basic duty for the good order of the Federal government.
That's the one aspect of the situation the President didn't talk about. He sees a problem where state and local governments are acting appropriately according to the mandate they have received from their citizens; he sees no problem where Congress is blatantly failing to perform its most basic function.
The private sector? Well, whether or not you agree that it's "fine," it should be obvious that it's not of particular interest to him.
Let's consider the remark in context, though, because it's a revealing description of how he thinks about the economy.
The truth of the matter is that, as I said, we created 4.3 million jobs over the last 27 months, over 800,000 just this year alone.
The private sector is doing fine. Where we're seeing weaknesses in our economy have to do with state and local government. Oftentimes cuts initiated by, you know, Governors or mayors who are not getting the kind of help that they have in the past from the federal government and who don't have the same kind of flexibility as the federal government in dealing with fewer revenues coming in.What's really interesting about this set of remarks is not the factual claim, but the interpretation of the facts. The facts cited are roughly correct: for example, government jobs really have declined rapidly during the Obama administration. The reason is roughly what he says it is: lots of state and local governments operate under balanced budget amendments, and aren't free to deficit-spend past their eyeballs, hair, and ten-gallon hat.
What we're left with, then, is the interpretation of the facts. It's pretty clear that the recovery is unusually anemic by historic standards. It's also true that the 4.3 million jobs 'created' haven't made up for the number of jobs lost: when you take account of the number of people who have left the workforce entirely, things look different.
Also, we can see that the private jobs that do exist are objectively worse than the jobs that used to exist. Consider the movement from full-time to part-time jobs by employers -- a way of avoiding having to provide the benefits that have become an expected part of full-time labor in America, and thus a way of paying workers lower total compensation for each hour of work. Or consider the increasing classification of lower-wage jobs as "seasonal" rather than "part-time." A seasonal worker can be paid below minimum wage. And of course, raises and bonuses for lucky workers who do still have full-time jobs are not much forthcoming, while the costs of energy and food are spiking.
All this means that workers are being pinched horribly: many can't find work, and if they can it pays less than it used to pay, especially relative to the costs they encounter. They may now have to buy benefits on the open market, where they are also more expensive. Companies are finding people will take these jobs in spite of the vastly reduced compensation, though, because there are so many people who have no work that the market value of your work is just less than it used to be. Presumably you aren't a worse worker, but you're not worth as much anymore.
This is interpreted as "fine." OK; that's the Republicans' point.
What I find as interesting, though, is the complaint about the shrinking of government. What the President really finds to be out of order is that state and local governments are having to respond to the economic crisis by tightening belts. The main thing he wants to fix is to achieve higher levels of government employment.
The thing is, though, this was a policy decision by the electorates of these states and localities. They can change the laws themselves, if they want to do so. What they decided was that, during hard times when tax revenues are lower, government should spend less. That means cutting some of the nice things that we enjoy government doing -- parks and recreation services, librarians, and so forth -- as well as being more careful with essential services. Perhaps taxes or fees can be raised to pay for these, but if not, services must be more carefully allocated so as to do with less.
If people get tired of this, they can vote to rescind balanced budget amendments. They want it this way; and at various times, 32 states have passed resolutions asking for a Constitutional Convention to require the Federal government to act this way as well.
So what we have here is a stark difference of opinion, among broad sections of the public, about how government should respond to fiscal crises. The President is painting this as a government failure, but in fact it's the state and local governments acting exactly the way their citizens want them to act.
There's another issue behind the decline in government jobs. The failure of Congress to pass a budget for years now has led to tremendous uncertainty; combined with the failure of the so-called "super-committee," even many Federal departments are going to get cut and nobody can be quite sure how big the cuts will be, or whether Congress will finally move to avoid them. Thus, even some Federal departments -- certainly this is true for DOD -- have great uncertainty that is keeping them from starting new projects or hiring new people.
This last is a much clearer case of government failure. Congress has failed as an institution, but not in failing to provide extra goodies for state and local governments to use in dodging the will of their constituents. Congress has failed to do its most basic duty for the good order of the Federal government.
That's the one aspect of the situation the President didn't talk about. He sees a problem where state and local governments are acting appropriately according to the mandate they have received from their citizens; he sees no problem where Congress is blatantly failing to perform its most basic function.
The private sector? Well, whether or not you agree that it's "fine," it should be obvious that it's not of particular interest to him.
Let Me Just Say...
...that I am always surprised by how much energy there is in a big white oak hitting the ground.
Venus transit
My husband found me this spectacular shot of the transit. I forgot to mention in my prior post why people went to such trouble to view the transit every century or so from as many spots on the globe as they could manage. (Captain Cook, for instance, arranged to watch it from the South Pacific.) The purpose was to use the parallax effect to estimate the distance of Venus from the Sun. Astronomers already had a pretty good idea of the relative size of various planetary orbits, but hadn't figured out a way to put an absolute measurement on any of them. Accurate measurements of the timing of the Venus transit from distant spots on Earth permitted a triangulation that yielded not only the distance of Venus from the Sun but also, by extension, the distance of the other planets.
The stages of grief
I can't find a direct link to this video on YouTube, so you just have to click through to the HotAir article, which also has another amusing clip, but it's the Jon Stewart routine that really cracked me up.
Something tells me these guys may not enjoy the rest of 2012.
Something tells me these guys may not enjoy the rest of 2012.
This clip will never get old.
Heh.
Heh.
Authorized. Lock it Down.
"Siri, kill that guy: Drones might get voice controls."
Once again, Shlock Mercenary is ahead of the curve.
Once again, Shlock Mercenary is ahead of the curve.
Sen. Chambliss on SWATting
One of my Senators, Saxby Chambliss, has taken a hand in the SWATting business. I particularly appreciate this part of his letter to Attorney General Holder:
I appreciate your attention to this matter, and I look forward to your response no later than June 29, 2012.What was it they used to say about a mailed fist in a velvet glove?
Trying to Sort out the Numbers on Wisconsin
One of the claims being made about Wisconsin is that it represents a lesson about how money, post Citizens United, is now purchasing elections. That seems like a potentially serious concern no matter where you sit: even if you're entirely sanguine about the effect of money on elections (taking fundraising capacity as a sort of proxy for competence), it makes it hard to draw lessons for the November race because the Romney/Obama contest likely will be on fairly even terms.
However, looking around at the numbers being floated today, I'm not sure what lesson to draw. Here are some things being reported:
1) $63.5M total was spent on the elections, with $22M coming from outside superPACs. Union money amounted to around $5.5M, although the wording of the story makes the precise figure a little unclear. There was an eight-to-one advantage for the Republican candidate for governor over the Democrat.
2) Big Labor spent $21M on the elections. Democrats and their backers spent $23.4M, with "outside groups" who were against Republicans spending $18.6M. I'm not clear from the wording here whether that 18.6M is out of the $23.4, or additional.
3) $44M total was spent on the elections, with Democrats outspending Republicans $23.4M to $20.5M. There was a Democratic advantage even on outside spending, with outside Democrat-leaning money coming to $18.6M to Republican outsiders $15.9M.
There's a big difference in the lessons to learn here, depending on whether story 1 is correct, or story 3 is correct. Story 2 shares some figures with story 3, but that may be simply because they are sharing sources. Until we know what number set is correct, it's hard to judge what the lesson is. It could vary from "having more money is the main thing" to "having more money didn't help."
However, looking around at the numbers being floated today, I'm not sure what lesson to draw. Here are some things being reported:
1) $63.5M total was spent on the elections, with $22M coming from outside superPACs. Union money amounted to around $5.5M, although the wording of the story makes the precise figure a little unclear. There was an eight-to-one advantage for the Republican candidate for governor over the Democrat.
2) Big Labor spent $21M on the elections. Democrats and their backers spent $23.4M, with "outside groups" who were against Republicans spending $18.6M. I'm not clear from the wording here whether that 18.6M is out of the $23.4, or additional.
3) $44M total was spent on the elections, with Democrats outspending Republicans $23.4M to $20.5M. There was a Democratic advantage even on outside spending, with outside Democrat-leaning money coming to $18.6M to Republican outsiders $15.9M.
There's a big difference in the lessons to learn here, depending on whether story 1 is correct, or story 3 is correct. Story 2 shares some figures with story 3, but that may be simply because they are sharing sources. Until we know what number set is correct, it's hard to judge what the lesson is. It could vary from "having more money is the main thing" to "having more money didn't help."
Sweet Mental Revenge
In honor of the Wisconsin recall, a little song by our own Waylon Jennings. There are some lessons in the analogy. Once we were all on the side of the firefighter's unions; once we loved them. Why not? They fought to defend the principle that the firemen who protected us all deserved the best we could give them. Now, well... like the teacher's unions, we find ourselves paying so much for retired members that we can no longer afford to continue the function that originally earned our gratitude and honor.
So here we are.
Here is another version, a little more recent. It makes a nice contrast. Waylon Jennings always wanted the style to change and update with the times; he would have been pleased, I think.
So here we are.
Here is another version, a little more recent. It makes a nice contrast. Waylon Jennings always wanted the style to change and update with the times; he would have been pleased, I think.
Wisconsin blowout
Wisconsin voters spanked big labor today in its efforts to oust Governor Scott Walker and his lieutenant. In the 2010 race between the same candidates, Walker beat Barrett by 5%. Tonight, according to both Fox and MSNBC, the advantage looks to be about 20%, though the L.A. Times is still predicting a "photo finish."
Anno Domini 774
A mysterious source of radiation was captured in tree rings sometime from 774 to 775. Scientists say it wasn't solar flares or supernovae; it's some mystery what it might have been.
I'd just like to note the entry from the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle for that year.
Still, in spite of the occasional entry that contemporary readers are inclined to reject, it's generally a reliable source for information. If they say a red crucifix appeared in the heavens that year, I'd be inclined to consider that as a possible physical description of whatever it is that caused the strangeness in the tree rings.
I'd just like to note the entry from the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle for that year.
This year the Northumbrians banished their king, Alred, from York at Easter-tide; and chose Ethelred, the son of Mull, for their lord, who reigned four winters. This year also appeared in the heavens a red crucifix, after sunset; the Mercians and the men of Kent fought at Otford; and wonderful serpents were seen in the land of the South-Saxons.Now, the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle is a pretty sober document. Most of the entries were made by monks, recording the chief events of the year. However, once in a while one does get a surprising claim -- for example, see the entry for the year A.D. 793, the year the Vikings first appeared in England and plundered the holy island of Lindisfarne.
Still, in spite of the occasional entry that contemporary readers are inclined to reject, it's generally a reliable source for information. If they say a red crucifix appeared in the heavens that year, I'd be inclined to consider that as a possible physical description of whatever it is that caused the strangeness in the tree rings.
Point of Parliamentary Procedure, Lileks:
James Lileks is not happy with the soda ban in NYC. He's also a little irritable about people who refer to sodas as "poison." He has a few examples of the difference between things like d-CON and things like Coca-Cola, and then adds:
The distinction between "poison" and "not poison" is actually pretty hard to draw. Plain water can kill you if you drink too much of it.
Oh but she has a six ounce glass bottle, and now we have redonkulous sizes! Yes. That's true. And I apologize for reviving the word Redonkulous. But if soda is poison, then portion size is irrelevant. The Mr Yuk stickers don’t say “call 911 but only if you drank a lot of bleach. A little is okey-doke, though." So it's not a poison unless you drink huge amounts all the time, which is also true of shampoo and vodka and sugary lemonade little kids sell at card tables on the corner in summer, and motor oil. Right? So it's not poison.Actually, the way d-CON works is through an anticoagulant that my grandmother used to take by prescription for her heart condition. Also, a little chlorine bleach -- two drops per quart of water according to this government-issued pamphlet -- is a useful disinfectant for drinking water in many situations.
The distinction between "poison" and "not poison" is actually pretty hard to draw. Plain water can kill you if you drink too much of it.
Catching Bank Robbers in Colorado
So, on the one hand, they did catch the guy.
On the other hand, the reporter has a good point. What happens if the bank robber decides to open fire, now that you've handcuffed every single adult in the area?
For that matter, what justifies putting chains on free men and women when you know that almost none of them are guilty? The assumption that it is OK to chain people up at the convenience of the state is the sort of thing that strikes me as fundamentally wrong in a free country.
On the other hand, the reporter has a good point. What happens if the bank robber decides to open fire, now that you've handcuffed every single adult in the area?
For that matter, what justifies putting chains on free men and women when you know that almost none of them are guilty? The assumption that it is OK to chain people up at the convenience of the state is the sort of thing that strikes me as fundamentally wrong in a free country.
Venerean transit
Even rarer than a Diamond Jubilee is a transit of Venus across the face of the Sun, which (weather permitting) we should get a chance to see near sundown on Tuesday, June 5. Grab that chance, for you won't likely get another. Like a solar eclipse by the Moon, a transit occurs only on the infrequent occasions when a celestial object passes between the Earth and the Sun just when the slightly tilted planes of the orbits of the Earth and the other body intersect at a "node." In the case of Venus, with its 225-day "year," things line up properly according to a 243-year cycle, during which there are a pair of transits about 8 years apart. Because the last transit occurred in 2004, Earth residents won't see another one until well into the 22nd century. In ordinary years, Venus will pass the Sun as many as 18 solar diameters above or below, casting no shadow. (I don't remember hearing a word about the 2004 transit, do you?)Watching a transit of Venus, like watching a solar eclipse, requires care to avoid eye injury. Most darkened glasses are considered insufficient. The safest and easiest viewing results from watching an image projected through a tiny pinprick in paper. As you can see from the picture, however, the disk of shadow is quite small. Better viewing probably can be found in a planned NASA webcast.
Though the first documented awareness of a visible transit across the face of the Sun was in the 17th century, ancient cultures have tracked the orbit of Venus for millennia. Beginning in about 1200 B.C., Babylonian astronomers noticed the regular patterns of the heavenly bodies and produced star catalogues. By the 7th century B.C., they had produced a careful chart of the risings and settings of Venus over a period of 21 years, perhaps the earliest evidence of an understanding of the periodicity of planetary phenomena. The Babylonians seem to have concentrated on periods and prediction without developing a spatial, geometric model for the movement of the planets. It fell to the Hellenistic Greeks to postulate ideal circular motions. An early 3rd century B.C. astronomer named Aristarchus is said to have been the first to deduce that the Earth spins around its own axis while rotating around the sun. Although his arguments persuaded a 2nd century B.C. Chaldean astronomer named Seleucus, most of the ancient world, including Aristotle and Ptolemy, adopted a geocentric model that persisted for over a thousand years.
The geocentric model was supported by careful observations that permitted surprisingly good predictions of the location and timing of astronomical events. It suffered from two serious drawbacks, however. First, the planets were required to inscribe all kinds of complicated little circles within circles ("epicycles") in order to conform to astronomical observations of periodic retrograde motion. These epicycles were not so much errors as unnecessary complications resulting from adopting an extremely inconvenient point of reference. Copernicus solved the "wheels within wheels" problem in the 16th century A.D. by returning to the heliocentric model that never should have been abandoned in the first place. Unfortunately, his model could not improve on the Ptolemaic predictions because of the second drawback in both systems: the over-simplified assumption that planetary motions were the perfect circles that all right-thinking people considered essential for dignified celestial bodies. As a result, even the more open-minded authorities were slow to jettison the old geocentric model. Johannes Kepler soon solved that problem by figuring out in the early 17th century that the orbits must be elliptical, with the sun at one focus of the ellipse. (At about this same time, Galileo Galilei was using the brand-new telescope to discover that Jupiter had its own moons in orbit around itself, and that Venus showed phases just like the Earth's moon, suggesting that it orbited the sun rather than orbiting the Earth.) It fell to Kepler, with his unprecedented grasp of the mathematical underpinnings of orbital mechanics, to make a successful prediction of a transit of Venus, in 1631, which went a long way toward conferring respectability on the new-fangled model.
- Circle: x2 + y2 = r2
- Ellipse: x2 / a2 + y2 / b2 = 1
- Parabola: x = y2
- Hyperbola: x2 / a2 - y2 / b2 = 1
Diamond Jubilee
The Queen of England celebrates her Diamond Jubilee this weekend, the first since Queen Victoria's. That one occasioned Kipling's Recessional, so recently quoted here. I wish to remind readers of the Hall of the reason why we have cause to love this particular woman. We must never forget...
The author of that piece wrote another famous song. Already Kipling's prophecy has caught that one.
May our British friends have good kings and queens in the years to come. On this occasion, congratulations, ma'am.
....that this queen had the Coldstream Guards play "The Star Spangled Banner" at Buckingham Palace after 9/11; or that she sang it, herself and from memory, at a religious ceremony not long after.Nor should we forget the faithful friendship of Her Majesty's armed forces in the nearly eleven years of war that have followed. Here are some members of those armed forces performing for her on her 85th birthday.
The author of that piece wrote another famous song. Already Kipling's prophecy has caught that one.
May our British friends have good kings and queens in the years to come. On this occasion, congratulations, ma'am.
Mark the Jews
CUNY has an idea.
1) How does CUNY "make its faculty more diverse" by changing how the same set of people are labeled?
2) Why wouldn't Jews want to be clearly labeled? It's not like this is some unheard-of reform that's never been tried before.
Actually, one more question: how do we mark Sammy Davis, Jr.?
Touting a move to make its faculty more diverse, CUNY administrators have broken out Jews into a separate minority group: “White/Jewish.”Two questions:
1) How does CUNY "make its faculty more diverse" by changing how the same set of people are labeled?
2) Why wouldn't Jews want to be clearly labeled? It's not like this is some unheard-of reform that's never been tried before.
Actually, one more question: how do we mark Sammy Davis, Jr.?
Hackers
Can nation-states really produce scarier malware than unaffiliated geeks? While the Iranian nuclear program continues to struggle with the setbacks imposed by Stuxnet, a new and even more imposing program has been discovered infiltrating the Middle East. "Flame" has a number of modules, including this impressive function:
Among Flame’s many modules is one that turns on the internal microphone of an infected machine to secretly record conversations that occur either over Skype or in the computer’s near vicinity; a module that turns Bluetooth-enabled computers into a Bluetooth beacon, which scans for other Bluetooth-enabled devices in the vicinity to siphon names and phone numbers from their contacts folder; and a module that grabs and stores frequent screenshots of activity on the machine, such as instant-messaging and e-mail communications, and sends them via a covert SSL channel to the attackers’ command-and-control servers.I feel we're in a period much like the dawn of the antibiotic age, with doctors stumbling around trying out brand-new strategies to fight naive pathogens. H/t, again, Rocket Science.
Latrines, taboos, vulgarity, and the Internet
Some scholarly articles are unusually rich in detail. Who knew that a medieval cure for bed-wetting was to feed the offender with ground hedgehog, while "among the Dahomeans of West Africa repeat offenders had a live frog attached to their waist to shock them into self-mastery"?
The anthropology of physical elimination is rich. One cited researcher proposes a link between intolerant societies and their marginal control of excretion-borne health threats:
The anthropology of physical elimination is rich. One cited researcher proposes a link between intolerant societies and their marginal control of excretion-borne health threats:
Recently it has even been argued that cross-national differences in closed-mindedness and intolerance are excretion-related: countries with higher levels of parasite stress, associated psychologically with disgust and materially with poor sanitation, are less likely to have robust democracies, individual freedom, equitable distribution of economic resources and gender equality (Thornhill et al., 2009).Another interesting link may be found between the rise of the internet and the decline of robust "latrinalia":
Arguably in the internet age there is little point writing taboo thoughts on bathroom walls: why scribble for a meagre one-at-a-time audience when you can make equally vulgar anonymous comments on a public discussion board or chatroom?H/t Rocket Science.
The hand weaver and the factory maid
AVI's posting of a Steeleye Span song led me, as such things often do, to a YouTube jaunt. Here is a song about the social dislocations of the industrial revolution: a hand-weaving man's girlfriend has become a factory maid who no longer wants to let him into her bedroom at night. It's always been one of my favorite Steeleye Span productions, not only for the way Maddy Pryor alternates with the instruments between the primary and secondary tunes, but for the glorious a cappella ending chorus, with her terrific voice tripled in tracks. The YouTube notes suggest that this is a mashup of at least three traditional songs. The uploader provided appropriate images of looms and fabrics.
Oh, when I was a tailor, I carried my bodkin and shears.
When I was a weaver, I carried my roods and my gear.
My temples also, my smallclothes and reed in my hand.
And wherever I go, there's the jolly bold weaver again.
I'm a hand weaver to me trade; I fell in love with a factory maid.
And if I could but her favor win, I'd stand beside her and weave by steam.
Me father to me scornful said, "How could you marry a factory maid?
When you could have girls fine and gay, dressed like unto the Queen of May?"
"As for your fine girls, I don't care. If I could but enjoy my dear,
I'd stand in the factory all the day, and she and I would keep our shuttles in play."
I went to my love's bedroom door, where oftentimes I had been before.
But I could not speak nor yet get in the pleasant bed where my love lay in.
"How can you say it's a pleasant bed, when nought lies there but a factory maid?"
"A factory lass although she be, blessed is the man that enjoys she."
Oh, pleasant thoughts run through me mind, as I turn down her sheets so fine
And see her two breasts standing so, like two white hills all covered with snow.
The loom goes click and the loom goes clack
The shuttle flies forward and then flies back
The weaver's so bent that he's like to crack
Such a wearisome trade is the weaver's.
The yarn is made into cloth at last
The ends of weft they are made quite fast
The weaver's labors are now all passed
Such a wearisome trade is the weaver's.
Where are the girls? I will tell you plain: The girls have all gone to weave by steam,
And if you'd find them you must rise at dawn, and trudge to the mill in the early morn.
Oh, when I was a tailor, I carried my bodkin and shears.
When I was a weaver, I carried my roods and my gear.
My temples also, my smallclothes and reed in my hand.
And wherever I go, there's the jolly bold weaver again.
I'm a hand weaver to me trade; I fell in love with a factory maid.
And if I could but her favor win, I'd stand beside her and weave by steam.
Me father to me scornful said, "How could you marry a factory maid?
When you could have girls fine and gay, dressed like unto the Queen of May?"
"As for your fine girls, I don't care. If I could but enjoy my dear,
I'd stand in the factory all the day, and she and I would keep our shuttles in play."
I went to my love's bedroom door, where oftentimes I had been before.
But I could not speak nor yet get in the pleasant bed where my love lay in.
"How can you say it's a pleasant bed, when nought lies there but a factory maid?"
"A factory lass although she be, blessed is the man that enjoys she."
Oh, pleasant thoughts run through me mind, as I turn down her sheets so fine
And see her two breasts standing so, like two white hills all covered with snow.
The loom goes click and the loom goes clack
The shuttle flies forward and then flies back
The weaver's so bent that he's like to crack
Such a wearisome trade is the weaver's.
The yarn is made into cloth at last
The ends of weft they are made quite fast
The weaver's labors are now all passed
Such a wearisome trade is the weaver's.
Where are the girls? I will tell you plain: The girls have all gone to weave by steam,
And if you'd find them you must rise at dawn, and trudge to the mill in the early morn.
Union
I survived the wedding festivities and have only to show you all now how lovely my young niece was. My niece the doktah. She's a tiny thing, barely over five feet tall. She had not one single bridezilla moment, but took everything completely in stride, with that 1,000-watt smile going the whole time. There was a terrific Irish band and lots of singing and dancing of jigs.My sister lost (!!) the first ribbon I crocheted for the bride's bouquet, but I made another and brought it with me. The lost one resurfaced today. I figure now my niece has two, which is a good start on a christening outfit.
Killer shoes on the bride:
The Good Old Days
Once upon a time, the CIA used to wage cultural and psychological warfare against communists and other baleful influences. Of course, so did their foes: the USSR had a far more expansive program than is commonly known. They had the insight to fund, not poetry reviews or high-culture magazines, but straight news: and to arrange to provide that news for free in third world countries.
I guess the USSR method has been the more enduring, although it has passed from governments to interstate actors.
I guess the USSR method has been the more enduring, although it has passed from governments to interstate actors.
How the Catholic Bishops Should Fight
This woman has an excellent grasp of the strategic situation.
On the other hand, defiance of the law -- justified because it is a gross violation of the principle of religious freedom, and remains so regardless of the decision of the courts -- forces the government to shut you down. Let the people see armed Federal agents shutting down hospices and nunneries and orphanages. Let the people see that the principle of free birth control and abortion is worth that much to the government.
Withdrawing health insurance (like Franciscan University at Steubenville, Ohio), shutting down schools, closing adoption agencies, soup kitchens or ANYTHING ELSE in "protest" of ObamaCare and the HHS "mandates" is EXACTLY, PRECISELY, TOTALLY and COMPLETELY what the Obama regime wants....
Listen, you fools. YOU DON'T SHUT ANYTHING DOWN. You keep going exactly as you have been, and you force those dirty rotten SOBs to literally storm your hospitals and shut YOU down at gunpoint. And I'm not kidding. Make them physically shut down your hospital by dragging you out at gunpoint. Make them physically shut down your schools. Make them shut down your university by force because you won't cover abortions in your student health plan. Make them physically shut down your soup kitchens. Make them shut down your adoption agencies[.]My sense is that the response to shutting down Catholic hospitals, etc., will be for the government to sigh pitiably and say, "Well, that just goes to show why something as important as hospitals/schools/adoption services can only be entrusted to the government." That's what they wanted anyway: government to have unquestioned and unlimited authority over this sphere of life.
On the other hand, defiance of the law -- justified because it is a gross violation of the principle of religious freedom, and remains so regardless of the decision of the courts -- forces the government to shut you down. Let the people see armed Federal agents shutting down hospices and nunneries and orphanages. Let the people see that the principle of free birth control and abortion is worth that much to the government.
The Kangaroo Stalks at Midnight
Apparently some of those marsupials can have malice aforethought....
A hostile kangaroo launched a savage assault on a mother after spending two days stalking her - then attacked her husband as she recovered in hospital.Now that's an interesting concept, being stalked by a kangaroo. Have they finally gotten rid of all the rifles in Australia, then?
In Defense of Skinner
Mentioned in our recent discussion of A Clockwork Orange, B. F. Skinner is one of the least-beloved figures of modern history. A new article argues that we've got him all wrong.
[His study] turned out to be the crowded basement sanctum of an inveterate tinkerer and gadget guy. Lacking WiFi and Bluetooth in his office, Skinner had jury-rigged strings and all sorts of wooden and cardboard doodads that enabled him to tweak his environment from his desk chair: by hiding the face of a clock he found himself watching, or by turning on a tape recorder that inspired him to organize his thoughts.
Though more advanced in execution, today’s electronic nudges and tweaks are identical in purpose: use what you can control to affect what you can’t. The simple elegance of this concept flips on its head Chomsky’s suggestion that behavior modification treats people as if they were no more intelligent than animals. What distinguishes our intellect from animals’ is not that we can go against our environment—most of us can’t, not in the long run—but rather that we can purposefully alter our environment to shape our behavior in ways we choose.Pause and consider; and then we can discuss.
One thing about history. There's always more of it.
Wikipedia article on the Cristero War. (Because I know nobody has ever heard of this.)
Wikipedia article on the Cristero War. (Because I know nobody has ever heard of this.)
There's No Duck, Though....
You may remember this clever political theory from 2008.
No, I think another rule of Warner Brothers applies to this race: "The Turtle Always Wins."
I presented to an anxiously waiting world a Meta Theory of Recent Presidential Elections, encapsulated by the idea that “Bugs Bunny always beats Daffy Duck.”...
The Bugs-Daffy frame is another way of saying that ever since the dawn of television put the public personalities of candidates front and center, the one who is more comfortable in his or her own skin always prevails against the more uptight, rigid foe.The model has a lot to offer, when you have candidates who basically fit the models. Romney, whatever else he is, is not much like Daffy Duck.
No, I think another rule of Warner Brothers applies to this race: "The Turtle Always Wins."
Memorial Day
On occasions like this, I always feel like it is impossible to say what needs to be said. I am always afraid of leaving unsaid the most important thing, through lack of wit; and my wits are worse this year, for illness and lack of sleep.
So I will trust to music to say what I cannot think to say, and to the judgment of trusted companions.
Via BLACKFIVE:
That last one's not just music, but it's got good history and a pretty solid time-on-target airstrike at the end. That last hit was a little late, but the rest of them are inside the three-second standard.
Horseback Riding
Oh, for goodness sake.
She used to sponsor the equine club for the local high school, until the recession hurt her enough that she couldn't afford to give that much time and money to charity any more. Even so, I can promise you that there are a lot of poor girls from Dawson County who know more about dressage than Ann Romney. Nothing against Mrs. Romney: but I've seen some of them ride.
[Ann Romney's dressage trainer] Mr. Ebeling was at ease with the wealthy women drawn to the sport of dressage, in which horses costing up to seven figures execute pirouettes and other dancelike moves for riders wearing tails and top hats.Well, OK, "up to." Remember those posts about the Dawsonville Pool Room from a little while back? Well, just down the road is Unicorn Valley Farm, run by a nice lady named Carol. She has horses to sell from around eight hundred bucks up to a few thousand, and will break and train them six days a week for you for $720 a month. If you can't afford a horse but still want to learn, she'll cheaply lease you time on one who knows dressage already. If you do that, or if you already own a horse who knows, the price for human beginners is forty bucks a month. For all of these prices, if you don't have that much money but you or your kids know how to shovel out a horse stall, there's a discount.
She used to sponsor the equine club for the local high school, until the recession hurt her enough that she couldn't afford to give that much time and money to charity any more. Even so, I can promise you that there are a lot of poor girls from Dawson County who know more about dressage than Ann Romney. Nothing against Mrs. Romney: but I've seen some of them ride.
The High Feste of Pentecoste
Today is the day to swear again the old oath.
Pentecost is the right day for that message. Before the time of the apostles it had been the feast of firstfruits. If early spring represents the return of fertility, early summer allows us to see the first children that come of that renewed fertility. It is the first nourishment that comes to us after the winter. There remains a long summer ahead before the full harvest -- summer was the hungry time, in the middle ages. Yet here is a first taste of grace, and a promise of greater grace to come.
Arthur did not go on the quest for the Grail, but stayed true to his duty to keep the walls of this world.
Arthur holds to his duty to keep the space in this world in which joy is possible, and trust in the coming of the later grace. So he held Camelot, and the peace of the land and the people, while his knights broke themselves in the wilderness.
[Arthur] charged them never to do outrage nor murder, and always to flee treason; and to give mercy unto him that asked mercy, upon pain of forfeit of their worship and the lordship of king Arthur; and always to do ladies, damsels, and gentlewomen and widows service, to strengthen them in their rights, and never to force them, upon pain of death. Also, that no man fight a duel they knew was wrong, neither for love nor for worldly gain. So unto this were all knights sworn who were of the Table Round, both old and young. "And every yere so were the[y] swome at the high feste of Pentecoste."Pentecost was the day when the Grail Quest began, which destroyed the might of the Round Table. The Grail visited Arthur's table at the feast, and then passed away again. Instead of accepting the grace offered, they quested after it as if they could win it by their own valor and worthiness, and so were destroyed.
Pentecost is the right day for that message. Before the time of the apostles it had been the feast of firstfruits. If early spring represents the return of fertility, early summer allows us to see the first children that come of that renewed fertility. It is the first nourishment that comes to us after the winter. There remains a long summer ahead before the full harvest -- summer was the hungry time, in the middle ages. Yet here is a first taste of grace, and a promise of greater grace to come.
Arthur did not go on the quest for the Grail, but stayed true to his duty to keep the walls of this world.
And therewith the king said: Ah, knight Sir Launcelot, I require thee thou counsel me, for I would that this quest were undone, an it might be Sir, said Sir Launcelot, ye saw yesterday so many worthy knights that then were sworn that they may not leave it in no manner of wise. That wot I well, said the king, but it shall so heavy me at their departing that I wot well there shall no manner of joy remedy me. And then the king and the queen went unto the minster. So anon Launcelot and Gawaine commanded their men to bring their arms. And when they all were armed save their shields and their helms, then they came to their fellowship, which were all ready in the same wise, for to go to the minster to hear their service...
And then they put on their helms and departed, and recommended them all wholly unto the queen; and there was weeping and great sorrow. Then the queen departed into her chamber and held her, so that no man should perceive her great sorrows. When Sir Launcelot missed the queen he went till her chamber, and when she saw him she cried aloud: O Launcelot, Launcelot, ye have betrayed me and put me to the death, for to leave thus my lord.It is a grave question that troubles me every year: is it right to go on the quest, or is it not? Lancelot holds that it is better to die in that quest than in any other fashion. Death is sure to us all, but the suffering of the quest prepares and purifies the spirit, so that it might be a little less unfit for the presence of God.
Arthur holds to his duty to keep the space in this world in which joy is possible, and trust in the coming of the later grace. So he held Camelot, and the peace of the land and the people, while his knights broke themselves in the wilderness.
Ave, gallus gallus
A Smithsonian article traces the 10,000-year-old domestication of these descendants of the dinosaurs by their upstart rivals, the mammals. Modern chickens probably sprang from a northeast Indian red junglefowl, but there may have been a yellow-skinned gray-feathered relative from southern India in the woodpile as well. By 2,000 B.C., chickens had spread to Mesopotamia. Homer does not mention them, but chickens became quite popular with the later Greeks and Romans, who appreciated the handiness of an animal whose slaughter produced just enough meat for a moderate household for a day. Polynesian seafarers may have introduced them to South America in pre-Columbian times. Today, Americans alone eat nine billion chickens a year, while KFC has opened more than 3,000 outlets in mainland China in just the last 25 years.
From Santeria to Jewish mothers to General Tso, this article is encyclopedic. And now I'm inspired to enjoy some of my husband's superb fried chicken, left over from last night, for Sunday dinner. Tomorrow, I hit the road for Philadelphia, there to attend my niece's wedding.
From Santeria to Jewish mothers to General Tso, this article is encyclopedic. And now I'm inspired to enjoy some of my husband's superb fried chicken, left over from last night, for Sunday dinner. Tomorrow, I hit the road for Philadelphia, there to attend my niece's wedding.
Memorial
These pipers are not from a military service but from the intimate, traditional, and highly satisfying memorial service we gave to honor my aunt on Friday. Still, they seem an appropriate image for this weekend. Like Grim, I have been ailing significantly (I hope he doesn't have the ugly bug I caught), and am just now creeping out among the living after a week of needing an hour's nap to recover from every ten minutes spent vertical. I'm getting old. The obituary notices of my contemporaries, or even their children, are starting to come with astounding regularity, another just this weekend. A Memorial weekend indeed.
There's nothing like pipes at a funeral. The snare drum was an indispensable addition as well. We stuck to the King James version of the service, not only to suit my stodgy tastes but in honor of my old-fashioned aunt, who was born in 1915 and never really got used to the modernized Book of Common Prayer. Doris Elizabeth Kilpatrick Watts, R.I.P.
There's nothing like pipes at a funeral. The snare drum was an indispensable addition as well. We stuck to the King James version of the service, not only to suit my stodgy tastes but in honor of my old-fashioned aunt, who was born in 1915 and never really got used to the modernized Book of Common Prayer. Doris Elizabeth Kilpatrick Watts, R.I.P.
Memorial Day Weekend
I want to wish all of you a happy Memorial Day weekend. I continue to be rather ill this weekend, and thus must regret that I am unable to do due honor to those who ought to be remembered. However, my good brothers at BLACKFIVE are busy.
All the best to all of you, as you remember. By coincidence tomorrow is the Feast of Pentecost; I will try to have something for that. Otherwise, you may not see much of me for a few more days.
All the best to all of you, as you remember. By coincidence tomorrow is the Feast of Pentecost; I will try to have something for that. Otherwise, you may not see much of me for a few more days.
A Glimpse of the Death of the Law
There's either a lot to be said about this story, or almost nothing. I'm going to go with the latter because a lot of ink has been spilled on it today, and maybe you should just read it if you haven't so far.
I'll say only three things.
Knowingly falsely sending a SWAT team to someone's house should be prosecuted as attempted murder. The team in this case was apparently entirely professional, and nobody got hurt: but things turn out otherwise so often when such teams are used that we ought to prosecute it as an attempt to kill the target. In the case that someone is actually killed by one of these false reports, it should be prosecuted as premeditated murder.
One of the things I did in the war that I feel best about was that, for a while toward the end of my time there, the intel shop would ask me before executing raids on tribal targets for whom they had actionable intelligence. Very often I could talk them through how the 'informant' proved to be from another tribe with an active beef, while the target of the raid was a highly ranked member of the tribe to be raided. If they could talk us into it, we would detain or kill one of their enemy's key leaders, while also driving a wedge between US forces and their enemy tribe. That was very hard to do, though, and there's no reason to believe it can be replicated here. We really need to rethink whether having so many SWAT teams in America is a good idea, or whether commando-style teams ought to be used for so many purposes. Now that this firewall has been breached, and the tactic has made it here, we need to give careful thought to where, and indeed to whether, such a team is really appropriate.
Finally, Patterico has a screen capture of a message from one of his enemies. Allow me to suggest that the wrong part is bolded.
That is not the worst-case scenario. The worst-case scenario is that you convince ordinary reasonable and rational people that the law can no longer protect decent people, but that the courts have been captured to serve the interests of the wicked. This is a very high-risk strategy, and not only for the people engaged in it.
If it becomes widely used it also represents a potentially fatal risk to the authority of the courts. Jurists and legislators had better find a way to take this threat seriously, and institute controls to prevent their institutions being captured for such purposes.
I'll say only three things.
Knowingly falsely sending a SWAT team to someone's house should be prosecuted as attempted murder. The team in this case was apparently entirely professional, and nobody got hurt: but things turn out otherwise so often when such teams are used that we ought to prosecute it as an attempt to kill the target. In the case that someone is actually killed by one of these false reports, it should be prosecuted as premeditated murder.
One of the things I did in the war that I feel best about was that, for a while toward the end of my time there, the intel shop would ask me before executing raids on tribal targets for whom they had actionable intelligence. Very often I could talk them through how the 'informant' proved to be from another tribe with an active beef, while the target of the raid was a highly ranked member of the tribe to be raided. If they could talk us into it, we would detain or kill one of their enemy's key leaders, while also driving a wedge between US forces and their enemy tribe. That was very hard to do, though, and there's no reason to believe it can be replicated here. We really need to rethink whether having so many SWAT teams in America is a good idea, or whether commando-style teams ought to be used for so many purposes. Now that this firewall has been breached, and the tactic has made it here, we need to give careful thought to where, and indeed to whether, such a team is really appropriate.
Finally, Patterico has a screen capture of a message from one of his enemies. Allow me to suggest that the wrong part is bolded.
That is not the worst-case scenario. The worst-case scenario is that you convince ordinary reasonable and rational people that the law can no longer protect decent people, but that the courts have been captured to serve the interests of the wicked. This is a very high-risk strategy, and not only for the people engaged in it.
If it becomes widely used it also represents a potentially fatal risk to the authority of the courts. Jurists and legislators had better find a way to take this threat seriously, and institute controls to prevent their institutions being captured for such purposes.
Phalanx
The following is a South Korean training video. It shows some remarkable infantry tactics, a kind of update of ancient infantry tactics. South Korean protests get rather unruly, as the video may suggest.
Note the flanking maneuver from 2:33-3:20 or so, where a wing of the enemy is cut off and destroyed (presumably in this case, they would merely be arrested). Also the use of a kind of pure-infantry bounding overwatch from 5:30-7:00. This allows them to advance against significant resistance, including incendiaries, and capture territory while maintaining formation.
Note the flanking maneuver from 2:33-3:20 or so, where a wing of the enemy is cut off and destroyed (presumably in this case, they would merely be arrested). Also the use of a kind of pure-infantry bounding overwatch from 5:30-7:00. This allows them to advance against significant resistance, including incendiaries, and capture territory while maintaining formation.
Malum in Se
Cassandra has a post by this title today, treating some of the abuses currently coming to light. It is starting to seem like there is a new example every day. I hope she is right that people of good will can come together.
The Real Numbers
USA Today has been on this story for years, and they deserve credit for continuing to make the point and bring it back around to our attention every so often. One of the things that a robust journalism should do is bring these kinds of major national issues to our attention when the powerful are trying to hide the scale of the problem.
If you applied corporate accounting rules to Federal spending, we'd see that our current budget deficit is over five trillion dollars a year. To balance the budget at current spending rates, the average American family would need to fork over almost its entire income in Federal tax alone.
That doesn't speak to the state crises, which are not limited to California. This is just the Federal problem.
However, that's just the scale for this year. Look at the bigger picture:
So that's just an extra $137,000 that the average household needs to earn in its lifetime, and things will be ducky. (That is, the $561,000 in 'extra' debt you don't know you have, minus average net worth, which already considers the average $116,000 in ordinary debt.) After you fork that over, you can start getting ahead.
If you applied corporate accounting rules to Federal spending, we'd see that our current budget deficit is over five trillion dollars a year. To balance the budget at current spending rates, the average American family would need to fork over almost its entire income in Federal tax alone.
That doesn't speak to the state crises, which are not limited to California. This is just the Federal problem.
However, that's just the scale for this year. Look at the bigger picture:
Federal debt and retiree commitments equal $561,254 per household. By contrast, an average household owes a combined $116,057 for mortgages, car loans and other debts.Well, so the average American household is $677,000 in debt. What's the average net worth of an American household? It's a lot higher than I would have thought -- $434,000 and change. (The median net worth is much closer to what I would have expected, but there are a certain number of very rich people out there).
So that's just an extra $137,000 that the average household needs to earn in its lifetime, and things will be ducky. (That is, the $561,000 in 'extra' debt you don't know you have, minus average net worth, which already considers the average $116,000 in ordinary debt.) After you fork that over, you can start getting ahead.
Arming Law-Enforcement Drones
A deputy sheriff in Texas has a suggestion: how about we arm drones with rubber bullets and tear gas?
Charles Krauthammer has a response:
Oh, wait, sorry. Mr. Krauthammer's actual wording can be read here.
Charles Krauthammer has a response:
Oh, wait, sorry. Mr. Krauthammer's actual wording can be read here.
The Problem of Disgust
Some time ago we talked about Dr. Martha Nussbaum's thoughts on disgust. We shouldn't allow disgust to be a standard for making laws, she says, because it is an irrational standard, and it leaves us likely to pass unfair laws discriminating against people whom we (irrationally) find disgusting.
Today's example comes from Hustler magazine, which took a photograph of a young conservative journalist named S. E. Cupp and modified it in a way clearly designed to disgust her -- most people would be disgusted by being portrayed this way in public, in any case. The text accompanying the photo clearly label it as not a real photograph of her, so there's probably no legal way to act against the magazine; the text also makes clear that they are doing this to punish her for her political opinions.
It is not only women who are treated this way (although as Hot Air points out, Playboy did much the same thing in 2009). We remember the case of 'Rick Santorum's Google problem,' in which a gay rights activist (and bully) decided to disgust the Santorums by linking their name to a filthy substance associated with homosexual acts. This was also a use of disgust to punish political opinions.
The old saying that 'sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me' isn't entirely false, but it isn't entirely true either. Many people of good will are also of sensitive natures, who see the disgusting things being done and would never want it to be done to them. So, they will stay quiet and keep their heads down -- which is just what the bullies want. S. E. Cupp is surely brave enough to face it down, as Rick Santorum was, but the example of what was done to them will quiet others. Those others have every right to be in the public space as well.
Dr. Nussbaum intended for her idea to have a humane effect on the law and the public space. I cannot agree that the effect will be anything of the sort. If anything, we are already too far in that direction. There ought to be a mechanism for replying to bullies of this sort. We need a strong enough medicine that it convinces them to do what decency would compel, had not they been born without it.
What she's really arguing is that feelings of the type broadly called disgust are often purely irrational, and not therefore good reasons for rules. Why not? A minimum standard for 'a good reason' is that it should be based on reason, which by definition isn't purely irrational. Indeed, most modern thinkers would say it should be purely rational -- but I don't think that's right, for as we've discussed, the ancient notion of reason was able to embrace both the true and the beautiful....
The feeling of disgust does occur in children learning about sex, and also in India when some castes ponder the untouchables, and also in a wide variety of other cases. Some of this may be purely irrational; other things (like the reaction when seeing a person with a serious deformity) has an underlying reason we can grasp (a revulsion of that type might have helped our ancestors avoid a serious disease), but it is one that is irrelevant or useless in modern life. Furthermore, in acting out of disgust of this type, we are failing to treat those people who are 'untouchable' or afflicted with a deformity with the respect due to human beings.
That far, at least, her argument is surely a reasonable one: indeed, it's an argument which is wholly compatible with what the Judeo-Christian ethos that the reviewer is defending. This very principle is what took saints in to live among lepers.The problem with following her approach is that disgust -- pure or otherwise -- is a powerful motivator. It's a thing like pain in that it creates an aversion in the person experiencing it. To license it is to put a powerful weapon in the hands of the kind of bullies that occupy too much of our public space.
Today's example comes from Hustler magazine, which took a photograph of a young conservative journalist named S. E. Cupp and modified it in a way clearly designed to disgust her -- most people would be disgusted by being portrayed this way in public, in any case. The text accompanying the photo clearly label it as not a real photograph of her, so there's probably no legal way to act against the magazine; the text also makes clear that they are doing this to punish her for her political opinions.
It is not only women who are treated this way (although as Hot Air points out, Playboy did much the same thing in 2009). We remember the case of 'Rick Santorum's Google problem,' in which a gay rights activist (and bully) decided to disgust the Santorums by linking their name to a filthy substance associated with homosexual acts. This was also a use of disgust to punish political opinions.
The old saying that 'sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me' isn't entirely false, but it isn't entirely true either. Many people of good will are also of sensitive natures, who see the disgusting things being done and would never want it to be done to them. So, they will stay quiet and keep their heads down -- which is just what the bullies want. S. E. Cupp is surely brave enough to face it down, as Rick Santorum was, but the example of what was done to them will quiet others. Those others have every right to be in the public space as well.
Dr. Nussbaum intended for her idea to have a humane effect on the law and the public space. I cannot agree that the effect will be anything of the sort. If anything, we are already too far in that direction. There ought to be a mechanism for replying to bullies of this sort. We need a strong enough medicine that it convinces them to do what decency would compel, had not they been born without it.
Dawsonville Pool Room Update
FOX News came out to Dawsonville last week to report on the outrageous seizure of the Dawsonville Pool Room. [UPDATE: News video now below the fold to speed page loading times.--Grim]
There are several things that make this a travesty.
1) That the crime has been fully prosecuted, so that the identity of the actual guilty party is known, and restitution ought to be his responsibility accordingly;
2) That the owner of the Dawsonville Pool Room is fully compliant in helping the law enforcement agencies;
3) That he has even been trying to "pay" the "debt," although the fact is that Georgia had licensed the accountant that defrauded the owner (and robbed Georgia of its tax revenues), which means that Georgia bears at least as much responsibility for the "debt" as he does;
4) And thus that therefore Georgia is punishing a man who is, properly speaking, a crime victim. The state ought to protect its citizens when they are victimized by criminals, not exploit them;
and furthermore,
5) That destroying a functional business in the middle of a recession, shuttering its doors under arms and seizing every dime of cash with gun in hand, was a thing better fit for bandits than anyone who would claim to be a man of the law.
Where are the waitresses going to find work now? How is the government going to get its money by killing the goose that lays the golden egg?
UPDATE: This post has been substantially revised from its first version, because I was angry when I wrote the first version. I think substantial anger is justified by this case, but I wish to ensure that I don't lash out at those -- like FOX News -- who are merely bringing attention to the injustice.
There are several things that make this a travesty.
1) That the crime has been fully prosecuted, so that the identity of the actual guilty party is known, and restitution ought to be his responsibility accordingly;
2) That the owner of the Dawsonville Pool Room is fully compliant in helping the law enforcement agencies;
3) That he has even been trying to "pay" the "debt," although the fact is that Georgia had licensed the accountant that defrauded the owner (and robbed Georgia of its tax revenues), which means that Georgia bears at least as much responsibility for the "debt" as he does;
4) And thus that therefore Georgia is punishing a man who is, properly speaking, a crime victim. The state ought to protect its citizens when they are victimized by criminals, not exploit them;
and furthermore,
5) That destroying a functional business in the middle of a recession, shuttering its doors under arms and seizing every dime of cash with gun in hand, was a thing better fit for bandits than anyone who would claim to be a man of the law.
Where are the waitresses going to find work now? How is the government going to get its money by killing the goose that lays the golden egg?
UPDATE: This post has been substantially revised from its first version, because I was angry when I wrote the first version. I think substantial anger is justified by this case, but I wish to ensure that I don't lash out at those -- like FOX News -- who are merely bringing attention to the injustice.
Medieval Spain
This is a remarkable and pleasant documentary, which I encountered while doing some research on the Spanish crusades. I suppose it should be said that it ends on a bad note, but aside from the last five minutes or so, it's a truly enjoyable film. [UPDATE: The movie has been moved below the fold.--Grim]
Part of it quotes the Rule of St. Benedict, which requires monks to sleep with robes and cord-belts about them, so that they are "always ready" to rise and do God's work. Sir Robert Baden-Powell invented a fictional "Knight's Code" for the Boy Scouts, which encoded the principle of semper paratus:
Part of it quotes the Rule of St. Benedict, which requires monks to sleep with robes and cord-belts about them, so that they are "always ready" to rise and do God's work. Sir Robert Baden-Powell invented a fictional "Knight's Code" for the Boy Scouts, which encoded the principle of semper paratus:
Be always ready with your armor on, except when you are taking your rest at night.It turns out that the principle is as well rooted in the monastic tradition as in the knightly one.
Defend the poor, and help them that cannot defend themselves.
Do nothing to hurt or offend anyone alse.
Be prepared to fight in the defense of your country.
At whatever you are working, try to win honor and a name for honesty.
Never break your promise.
Maintain the honor of your country with your life.
Rather die honest than live shamelessly.
Chivalry requires that youth should be trained to perform the most laborious and humble offices with cheerfulness and grace; and to do good unto others.
Recessional
Niall Ferguson wonders after the majesty of a jubilee:
A hundred years ago, the seemingly immortal Emperor Franz Josef was approaching his 82nd birthday. This year Queen Elizabeth II celebrates her Diamond Jubilee, meaning that she has reigned since 1952. A sprightly 86, she has acquired precisely the same air of immortality as the old Habsburg Emperor (to whom she is no doubt distantly related).
Last week I watched an astonishing number of bandsmen in bearskin hats and bright red tunics rehearsing for the jubilee celebrations, which culminate next month. Stuck in the resulting traffic, I had time to ponder why, at a time of deep cuts in defense spending, Britain can still afford the world’s finest military bands.
“Austerity” has become the watchword of David Cameron’s premiership as he grapples with the huge deficits run up by his Labour predecessors. Yet there is nothing austere about the Diamond Jubilee. On June 3, according to the official website, “Up to a thousand boats will muster on the river as the Queen prepares to lead one of the largest flotillas ever seen on the River Thames.”Don't hold it against him that he doesn't cite Kipling. It's a proof of the thing he is worried about that he doesn't know to cite it.
God of our fathers, known of old—
Lord of our far-flung battle line—
Beneath whose awful hand we hold
Dominion over palm and pine—
Lord God of Hosts, be with us yet,
Lest we forget—lest we forget!
The tumult and the shouting dies—
The Captains and the Kings depart—
Still stands Thine ancient sacrifice,
An humble and a contrite heart.
Lord God of Hosts, be with us yet,
Lest we forget—lest we forget!
Far-called our navies melt away—
On dune and headland sinks the fire—
Lo, all our pomp of yesterday
Is one with Nineveh and Tyre!
Judge of the Nations, spare us yet,
Lest we forget—lest we forget!
If, drunk with sight of power, we loose
Wild tongues that have not Thee in awe—
Such boastings as the Gentiles use,
Or lesser breeds without the Law—
Lord God of Hosts, be with us yet,
Lest we forget—lest we forget!
For heathen heart that puts her trust
In reeking tube and iron shard—
All valiant dust that builds on dust,
And guarding calls not Thee to guard.
For frantic boast and foolish word,
Thy Mercy on Thy People, Lord!
Amen.
Talking Blues, Scottish Style, in Australia
The important line is this poem: "Whar Stands Scotland Now? Stands it Whar it Used To? Whar Stands Scotland Now? Stands it Whar it Could Do?"
As to which, I honestly don't know how Scotland came to this. If there was ever a people who seemed to have a hearty national sense for vengeance -- Nemo Me Impune Lacessit! -- surely it was the Scots. If that can be lost, all can be lost.
"The First 9/11"
This is really impressive stuff, WaPo.
Hot Air notices the story. One of their comments asks:
On Sept. 11, 1857, a wagon train from this part of Arkansas met with a gruesome fate in Utah, where most of the travelers were slaughtered by a Mormon militia in an episode known as the Mountain Meadows Massacre. Hundreds of the victims’ descendants still populate these hills and commemorate the killings, which they have come to call “the first 9/11.” Many of the locals grew up hearing denunciations of Mormonism from the pulpit on Sundays, and tales of the massacre from older relatives who considered Mormons “evil.”Wow, those evil Mormons. I guess they were the first terrorists, huh? Well, it turns out -- deep in the article, buried on the second page -- that there's a little backstory that didn't make the first dozen paragraphs.
The massacre was an anomaly for the church, because it was Mormons who were more likely to be targeted in the early days of their religion, which was founded in the 1830s and 1840s.UPDATE:
Hot Air notices the story. One of their comments asks:
"What about the Dorn/Ayers militia from 30 yrs ago?"
That's just crazy talk.
A Precedent for that California Problem
Apparently this massive-debt-default situation has come around before... oddly enough, also in Greece. Medievalists.net has the article (h/t Medieval News). An heir to the disputed throne of Byzantium asked the army assembled for the Fourth Crusade to assist him in claiming that throne. In return, he promised a lavish payment as well as substantial military support during the Crusade.
Soon after becoming Alexos IV, however, it proved that the newly-made emperor could not pay up. So...
Unfortunately, though the debt was recouped, the destruction of Constantinople severely weakened what had been a fortification against Islamic expansion from the East. The Greeks continued to hold sway for another two hundred and fifty years, but never so strongly as they had before. Eventually, the rising Turkish power swept them away.
Soon after becoming Alexos IV, however, it proved that the newly-made emperor could not pay up. So...
The crusaders’ only concern was to extract every penny of the money due to them. When, after mid-November 1203, Alexios IV began to cool in his attitude towards the crusaders and made only token payments to them, the crusading leaders, according to Villehardouin, ‘often sent to him [Alexios IV] and asked him for the payment of the moneys due, as he had covenanted’. Similarly, Robert of Clari records that the crusading leaders twice ‘asked the emperor for their payment’. In early December, after the flow of funds had ceased altogether, the barons finally decided to send envoys to Alexios to ask him to honour their contract, otherwise the crusaders ‘would seek their due by any means they could’. One of the emissaries sent to the imperial palace was Villehardouin. According to his first-hand account, upon admission to the audience chamber, the crusader envoys demanded that the emperor fulfil his commitments to the crusaders. If he failed to do so, the crusaders would ‘strive to obtain their due by all the means they could’. The rank- and-file crusaders were not ignorant of this ultimatum. Robert of Clari records that ‘all the counts and leaders of the army gathered and went to the emperor’s palace and demanded their money at once … [I]f he did not pay them, they would seize so much of his property that they would be paid’.He did not pay, and a little capitalist "creative destruction" followed.
The fiscal catastrophe that dwarfs Greece
What happens when you share a currency with a political unit in a fiscal shambles? No, I don't mean Greece:
So JPMorgan makes a $2 billion mistake -- less than 7 percent of their 2011 earnings -- with their own money, and senators are calling for hearings. The California's governor's office raised its 2012 budget deficit projections -- namely their overspending of public money -- almost 50 percent, from $9.2 billion to $16 billion, an error of almost eight percent of the state's total budget, in four months, yet those same members of Congress remain as silent as a Trappist monk.H/t Maggie's Farm
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