I couldn’t just barely meet the standards, because that would have given them ammunition to use against me. I had to crush the standards. And I did. I could easily do 100 push-ups in two minutes; got maximum scores on land navigation tests and always sprinted the entire course; and aced 12-mile road marches carrying 55-pound rucksacks (10 pounds more than the requirement). I weighed 120 pounds.Now I know Sam, so I believe every word of that. What I think, though, is that she makes a great case for accepting her as an exception to an ordinary rule against women in the combat arms. All rules need exceptions, for the same reason that logical proofs don't really apply to physical things. There are going to be exceptional cases, and the rules should be weak enough to make room for things to be what they are.
Exceptions and Rules
Plato's Parmenides V: The Tell
I've been trying to figure out how to approach the rest of the dialogue. This is where Parmenides is given the ability to speak most directly and plainly, and for himself. For that reason, I am disinclined to add a layer of summary or explication; maybe the best thing is to encounter it directly, with all that has been said before as support.
It's too long to quote, though, and probably will benefit from extended discussion. So let's try it this way: read it yourselves, encountering it directly. Ask any questions you have in the comments to this post. Then let's tackle it in three or four sessions next week.
Phil Sheridan Can Order What He Wants
A St. Patrick's Day Feast, VII: Rifles
A Germanic Interlude
We interrupt today's Celtic feasting for an attempted conversation between and Old English speaker and an Old Norse speaker, to see if in fact they were mutually intelligible languages.
A St. Patrick’s Day Feast, III
A St. Patrick's Day Feast, II
Rio Grande
Now today is the right day to watch The Quiet Man, if you can. It is one of the greatest good movies ever made. But the Warner Bro's didn't think it could make any money, a movie about Irish Americans and Irishmen.
So they told John Ford and John Wayne that they had to make another movie, a cavalry movie, to fund their Irish movie. It turned out to make more by far than the very successful Rio Grande.
There's a small matter of fitness: can you ride like the ancient Romans?
Extended Waylon
Sovereign Crime
Your government, at the state and federal level, the FBI, government agencies can be in on the scam. That is the realization slowly being accepted by millions of Americans.We have technologies that can identify dead voters the moment they cast a ballot. We can identify people who are out-of-state, voted twice, are underage, live in a vacant lot or a UPS or FedEx postal box. We can even show a photo of that vacant lot so you can see where your fake neighbor claims to live.Literally, the second their ballot is counted, they can be flagged as a likely fraud.Yes, we can deploy that technology today....The question is, if the government is pretty much in on the election fraud, does it really matter?
It is important to note, however, that the government is not the sovereign. It may be that they have forgotten who the sovereign really is.
“Seeing as How it’s Near the 17th of March...”
A hand extended in honor of St. Patrick’s Day.
Not to spoil the fun, but the opening joke in that clip is immediately relevant to the Parmenides post below.
Plato's Parmenides IV: The Setup
These, Socrates, said Parmenides, are a few, and only a few of thedifficulties in which we are involved if ideas really are and we determineeach one of them to be an absolute unity. He who hears what may besaid against them will deny the very existence of them-and even ifthey do exist, he will say that they must of necessity be unknownto man; and he will seem to have reason on his side, and as we wereremarking just now, will be very difficult to convince; a man mustbe gifted with very considerable ability before he can learn thateverything has a class and an absolute essence; and still more remarkablewill he be who discovers all these things for himself, and havingthoroughly investigated them is able to teach them to others.I agree with you, Parmenides, said Socrates; and what you say is verymuch to my mind.And yet, Socrates, said Parmenides, if a man, fixing his attentionon these and the like difficulties, does away with ideas of thingsand will not admit that every individual thing has its own determinateidea which is always one and the same, he will have nothing on whichhis mind can rest; and so he will utterly destroy the power of reasoning,as you seem to me to have particularly noted.
I mean, for example, that in the case of this very hypothesis of Zeno'sabout the many, you should inquire not only what will be the consequencesto the many in relation to themselves and to the one, and to the onein relation to itself and the many, on the hypothesis of the beingof the many, but also what will be the consequences to the one andthe many in their relation to themselves and to each other, on theopposite hypothesis. Or, again, if likeness is or is not, what willbe the consequences in either of these cases to the subjects of thehypothesis, and to other things, in relation both to themselves andto one another, and so of unlikeness; and the same holds good of motionand rest, of generation and destruction, and even of being and not-being.In a word, when you suppose anything to be or not to be, or to bein any way affected, you must look at the consequences in relationto the thing itself, and to any other things which you choose-to eachof them singly, to more than one, and to all; and so of other things,you must look at them in relation to themselves and to anything elsewhich you suppose either to be or not to be, if you would train yourselfperfectly and see the real truth.
That, Parmenides, is a tremendous business of which you speak, andI do not quite understand you; will you take some hypothesis and gothrough the steps?-then I shall apprehend you better.That, Socrates, is a serious task to impose on a man of my years.
Politicizing the Military
I don't know how much attention this stuff gets, but it really is both stupid and illegal. It's not just the praetorian guard stuff they're pulling with the National Guard deployment to DC, either. This weekend there were several stunts in which military personnel and leadership deployed as political weapons against American citizens who disagree with the current government.
Illegal:
Here's the military publication cited in that last. The conduct is not illegal because the publication says so; the publication says so because it's illegal. The general officer who signed that document is none other than our current Secretary of Defense, Lloyd Austin, currently overseeing what increasingly looks like an opportunity to purge right-wing views from the military.
The leadership, at least, has internalized that it is their job to parrot political support for the administration and mock its enemies. The fact that this is illegal will only matter if laws are still being enforced -- well, I mean, obviously they would be against you. It does seem like the lesson of the last few years, though, is that the FBI and the DOJ work for the political establishment: they exist to excuse their crimes, but punish their enemies. Has the military legal sphere fallen as well? Signs point to "yes."
"Get right before you get left, boomer." From an official USMC account. A lot of those Boomers were Marines too, and they fought a harder war in Vietnam than we ever faced.
What About Confession? What Do You Think Confession's For?
When Catholics receive Communion, they must strive to do so “worthily,” meaning they have repented of their sins and desire to live in keeping with the teachings of the Catholic Church. In the Bible, the apostle Paul warns of grave consequences for those who take Communion unworthily. But Naumann is also worried about the message Biden communicates to other Catholics when he takes Communion while continuing to support abortion rights: “Whether he intends it or not, he’s basically saying to people, ‘You can be a good Catholic and do similar things,’” [Archbishop] Naumann told me.
Boo
It’s been a minute since a singer could get away with calling himself “Stonewall Jackson,” but I remember hearing this on the radio.

