Category: Uncategorized

  • Building a better Beta world

    This post by Ann Althouse reminded me of something it only touches on by implication, but which is a major reason I tend to loathe politics. From the discussion of the Alphas and the Betas (of Huxley’s Brave New World): Are the Alphas superior? They have to work so hard and wear grey… I’m so…

  • Dangerous to whom?

    Funny that I was just saying the Internet is all messed up, because after reading a post that Glenn Reynolds linked about the Tim Burns congressional race in Pennsylvania, I wanted to know a little more about the candidate, so I clicked on the TimBurnsforCongress.com web site. I can’t see it, because it’s been blocked…

  • All messed up

    While I haven’t seen any news stories about it, today looks like a bad day for the Internet. Google has been down since this morning, with occasional brief periods of being up (although loading very slowly) Blogspot blogs are mostly dysfunctional, as is YouTube. Yahoo has been working though, and so do the non-Blogspot blogs.…

  • Spilling Oil

    Al Fin has an article on natural oil spills. He links to a Science Daily piece on oil seeps in the Gulf of Mexico. ScienceDaily (Jan. 27, 2000) — Twice an Exxon Valdez spill worth of oil seeps into the Gulf of Mexico every year, according to a new study that will be presented January…

  • “we can’t expect to solve our problems if all we do is tear each other down”

    Although I was in the audience watching Barack Obama’s speech yesterday, I was too exhausted last night to write about it. But maybe that’s not fully accurate, now that I’ve slept and I’m not exhausted, I still don’t want to write about it. As I said yesterday, I thought he made some good points about…

  • Too Good Not To Link

    The cost of inaction: Rudd has created a Department of Magnificent Uselessness in response to a crisis that never existed and against which he will take no action. This is absolutely beautiful. Hey Tim, just be thankful you aren’t paying Gavin Schmidt’s salary too.

  • The president’s umbrella policy sucks!

    President Obama is in town today to speak at the University of Michigan’s commencement ceremony. (Something that was hard not to notice, as I live a block and a half from the stadium, and the commotion upset Coco.) I don’t know what it means to true believers in the new One World Religion of Environmentalism,…

  • Wasn’t the buggy whip industry once too big to fail?

    While I don’t know how socialist a country has to become before it stops working, I think we’re fixing to find out pretty soon unless something happens to reverse the tide. But I learned something fascinating in the past couple of days which made me wonder how entrenched a particular well-entrenched technology industry might become…

  • Beaver Nation

    While reading a review of the book Making Haste from Babylon: The Mayflower Pilgrims and Their World: A New History I came across this interesting tit bit (British spelling). Then there’s the year 1620, when the Mayflower landed at Plymouth. Instead of seeing this as the first great turning point in the nation’s colonial history,…

  • breaking from break

    I have found that sometimes the best way to determine whether you’re really sick of something is to “take a break” from it. I haven’t written about politics for the last few days because I am so sick to death of it, and while you might think that taking a break from something you hate…

  • Government Helicopters are turning my dog into a conspiracy theorist!

    Ann Arbor is a college town, and is generally pretty quiet except when there are big football games. That makes this neighborhood a bit of a zoo, but it’s not too bad. However, in the year and ten months I have been here, I have never seen anything quite like what’s going on right now.…

  • Adopt A Loser

    The Democrats appear to be adopting another losing position when it comes to the Banking Bill. With crucial midterm elections nearing, Democrats have lost the advantage they’ve held for years as the party the public trusts to steer the economy. I wonder if that loss of trust has anything to do with the banking bill…

  • “OFF THE PIGS!”

    No, I do not advocate such a thing, but that was a very popular leftist slogan in the late ’60s and early ’70s. There were buttons, posters, songs, and films. Take a look at this vintage 1968 film, and see the kids singing “OFF THE PIGS!” I don’t think anyone was ever prosecuted for using…

  • Questioning the wisdom of genital inconsistency

    They say that a foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds, and while I hate to foolishly insist on consistency, I nonetheless found my consistently foolish inner hobgoblin was activated by Dr. Helen’s PJM insightful piece about society’s very different attitudes toward genital assaults on males as opposed to genital assaults on females. no…

  • The rise and fall of values, according to value!

    Via Katherine Mangu-Ward, I read this fun fact: Regional alcohol prohibition begat national income taxes which begat national prohibition It’s all quite well documented at Smithsonian magazine: The ASL’s [Anti Saloon League’s] state-by-state campaign was reasonably effective, particularly in the South. But in 1913, two events led the organization to adopt a new strategy. First,…

  • Clinging bitterly to my old clunker….

    Here’s something that strikes me as being of interest to very few readers, but I never know…. In my ongoing struggle to make an old clunker laptop (a Dell C600 with an 850MHz CPU) into a modern, fast-running Internet machine, I have been experimenting with different Linux distributions. As I mentioned in an earlier post,…

  • “The Homeless” — a libertarian-communitarian hybrid class with special privileges?

    Yesterday’s post about society’s denial of mental illness drew some very thoughtful comments which reflect the apples-versus-oranges, libertarian-versus-communitarian nature of this debate. I’m not even sure it’s a debate, as people have such widely diverging views which come from different directions. Are these people — those belonging to dysfunctional, unwashed and hallucinatory classes — suffering…

  • Nook e-Reader

    I note that Barnes and Nobel is offering the Nook e-Reader. I wonder if it is safe for children? I wonder what they were thinking? I can just hear the conversations: “Not tonight dear, but the Nook e is fully charged.” Amazon sells them if you have to have a look: Barnes and Noble NOOK…

  • A minor story that didn’t pass my smell test

    When I read this story I suspected there was more to it than was being reported: (04-21) 18:28 PDT Bellingham, Wash. (AP) — Police said a Cost Cutter store employee was punched in the mouth after he confronted a customer about his body odor. Police spokesman Mark Young told The Bellingham Herald that police went…

  • A right to deliberately share a free speech forum?

    As I sit here playing with my wirelessly-networked Linux laptop and perusing the other nineteen networks that are within range of my wireless card, a thought occurred to me. One of the networks is unsecured, which means I could easily get on it. Not that I want to use someone else’s bandwidth, mind you, but…