Wednesday, 30 April 2008
Posted by: Old Grouch in
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Ace tells you all you need to know about how the media is spinning the Obama-Wright kerfuffle:
Meanwhile, in an alternate universe, Adolf Hitler is “distancing†himself from Josef Goebbels, telling the German media that despite Goebbels’ long-time position as Minister of Propaganda, the anti-semitic Goebbels “habt sprechen fur mich nicht†and that he no longer wants any questions about Goebbels’ loose talk about a “Final Solution.˜Now you can skip the news and watch baseball.
UPDATE 080430 23:50 (and category changed): Rachel Lucas:
I’ve been watching some of the anchors and pundits talking about this and half the time it’s like watching SNL. Because they cannot possibly be serious with some of the sh*t they are saying, such as Obama has done the honorable thing and it’s time to move on from this “distractionâ€. LOL.First they respect you. Then they suspect you. Next, they’re upset with you. Finally, they laugh at you. And at that point, you’ve lost.
Posted by: Old Grouch in
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Jerry Pournelle raises some points:
The easy way to make ethanol is to import sugar from Brazil and use that. Of course we don't and won't do that.More:
The easy way to bring oil prices down is to drill offshore and on the North Slope. Of course we don't do that.
The easy way to bring electricity prices down (you can make fertilizer with electricity) is to build nuclear power plants, expensive but cheap compared to wars. Of course we won't do that.
I'd rather send 5 billion to Kansas than 10 billion to the Saudis. And I'd a heap rather send $50 billion to the Midwest than a trillion to the Middle East. Heck, I'd rather send a trillion to the Midwest than to the Middle East.We can start by asking why no one– the candidates, the Congress, or the MSM– seems to want to make this part of the discussion.
At one time we were paying people not to grow crops. It was called the soil bank. Perhaps it is time to grow fuels on it?
But that takes fertilizer.
Nuclear power can fix nitrogen for fertilizer. I'd a heap rather invest a trillion in nuclear power plants than send that trillion to the Saudis.
I also note that there is plenty of oil in these United States, but we would rather sell the nation to the Saudis than drill in Alaska and off shore including out next to where the Cubans are drilling in the Gulf of Mexico. Does any of that make sense?
Now the discussion can begin.
Or maybe we should ask this (from a Pournelle reader):
Can any referee besides foaming revolutionary mobs blow a whistle at this point?
The discussion is here, with real numbers. Read it.
(Via: IP, whose complete entry is also worth your time.)
Posted by: Old Grouch in
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50,000 pounds of ribs go up in smoke in highway truck fire
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I got an amusing set of contextual ads the first time I pulled this story up. (YMMV):
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10 Rules to Cut Belly Fat
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Posted by: Old Grouch in
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Tuesday, 29 April 2008
In Grand Theft Auto IV:
At least as impressive as the city’s virtual topography is the range of the game’s audio and music production, delivered through an entire dial’s worth of radio stations available in almost any of the dozens of different cars, trucks and motorcycles a player can steal. From the jazz channel (billed as “music from when America was coolâ€) through the salsa, alt-rock, jazz, metal and multiple reggae and hip-hop stations, Lazlow Jones, Ivan Pavlovich and the rest of Rockstar’s audio team demonstrate a musical erudition beyond anything heard before in a video game. The biggest problem with the game’s extensive subway system is that there’s no music underground. (Too bad there are no iPods to nab.)
The game’s roster of radio hosts runs from Karl Lagerfeld to Iggy Pop and DJ Green Lantern. It is not faint praise to point out that at times, simply driving around the city listening to the radio — seguing from “Moanin’ †by Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers to the Isley Brothers’ “Footsteps in the Dark†to “The Crack House†by Fat Joe featuring Lil Wayne — can be as enjoyable as anything the game has to offer. - The New York Times
HT (and link via): The Daily Swarm, via Jeff Schmidt’s comment at Hear2.0
Posted by: Old Grouch in
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“Covering†the story without actually telling it:
I mentioned on March 18, when the Wright affair was first in the news, that the [New York] Times had not reported the “God damn America†quote in its news sections. (The only time it had appeared in the paper at that point was in a Bill Kristol column.) Then, on March 26, I pointed it out again, although by that time it had also been mentioned in a Maureen Dowd column. Now, I should say that it has been mentioned again in the paper — over the weekend, in an editorial condemning the North Carolina Republican Party for its Wright ad... OK, that's three mentions on the editorial page. But the news pages of the Times still have a clean record — they have never reported Wright's original “God damn America†quote.One guess.
So what do they do today? - Byron York at The Corner [links in original - o.g.]
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Really a bush, but around here they grow tree-size.
Posted by: Old Grouch in
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Via: C.G. Hill
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Monday, 28 April 2008
In the summer of 1863, Robert E. Lee led an ill-advised incursion into Pennsylvania. His army was defeated at Gettysburg, and thence afterward Lee beat a fighting retreat until the South lost the Civil War. One hundred and forty-five years later, the South--or what has become the South-Southwest--has won another kind of Civil War.“Hey boys, did you save your Confederate money like I told-ja? ’Cause it looks like the South’s finally gonna rise! Yee-haw!â€
It has transformed the sensibility of the country. It is setting the agenda for our political, social and religious mores--in Pennsylvania and everywhere else....which is why this year’s Presidential choices are two leftys and a RINO, right? Oh well, for the sake of argument, continue...
This thought, which has been recurring to me regularly over the years as I've watched the Southernization of our national politics at the hands of(cue scary music...)
the GOP and its evangelical base,(Okay, what would you expect him to say, “transnational progressives and Gramscian socialists?†Come on, it’s Newsweek!)
surfaced again when I read a New York Times storyWell, there’s your problem...
today. The article was about an “American Idol†contestant--apparently quite talented--who was eliminated after she sang the title song from “Jesus Christ Superstar.â€Dear Michael, “After†!= “because,†although the Times might like you to confuse them.
When it debuted 38 years ago, the rock opera was considered controversial for its rather arch portrayal of a doubt-wracked, very human Jesus, but the music was so good and the lyrics so clever that it quickly became a huge hit. In the delicate balance of forces that have always defined American tastes--nativism and yahooism...and bitterness. Don't forget bitterness!
versus eagerness for the new and openness to innovation--art, or at least high craft, it seemed, had triumphed. But our national common denominator of taste is so altered today that the blasphemous dimension of “Jesus Christ Superstar†now trumps the artistic part....at least, for readers of the New York Times. See above.
And somehow, no one is surprised. Our reactionWhaddaya mean, “Our?†You got a mouse in your typewriter?
is more like, “Why would she risk singing a song like that?â€...in what’s been, so far, a futile attempt to get away from all those damyankees
In part this is a triumph of demographics. As John Micklethwait and Adrian Wooldridge observed in their 2004 book, “The Right Nation: Conservative Power in America,†the nation's population center has been “moving south and west at a rate of three feet an hour, five miles a year.â€
Another author, Anatol Lieven, in his 2005 book “America Right or Wrong: An Anatomy of American Nationalism,†describes how the “radical nationalismâ€as opposed to non-radical, EU-style nationalism? Or maybe peaceful, cooperative Iranian nationalism?
that has so dominated the nation's discourse since 9/11except for Newsweek, National Public Radio, The New York Times, the alphabet networks, MSNBC, the Democrat party, etc., etc...
traces its origins to the demographic makeup and mores of the South and much of the West and Southern Midwest--in other words, what we know today as Red State America. This region was heavily settled by Scots-Irish immigrants--the same ethnic mix King James I sent to Northern Ireland to clear out the native Celtic Catholics. After succeeding at that,“Succeeding?†Guess that’s why all those former-IRA people are now part of the British government.
they then settled the American Frontier, suffering Indian raids and fighting for their lives every step of the way....and did a great job of it, too. Now we’ve got the country, while the Indians run the casinos and are exempt from federal taxes. Win/win!
And the Southern frontiersmen never got over their hatred of the East Coast elites...or their liking of bagpipe music. Horrible, just horrible...
...and a belief in the morality and nobility of defying them.And it’s fun, too.
Their champion was the Indian-fighter Andrew Jackson. The outcome was that a substantial portion of the new nation developed, over many generations, a rather savage, unsophisticated set of mores.“A man’s word is his bond.†“Never start a fight, but if you find yourself in one, fight to win.†Stuff like that...
Traditionally, it has been balanced by a more diplomatic, communitarian Yankee sensibility from the Northeast and upper Midwest. But that latter sensibility has been losing ground in population numbers--and cultural weight.“’bout time, too... by crackee!â€
The coarsened sensibility that this now-dominant Southernism and frontierism has brought to our national dialogue is unmistakable.to readers of The New York Times. See above.
We must endure “lapel-pin politics†that elevates the shallowest sort of faux jingoismas opposed to... real jingoism? Wotthehel is that supposed to mean?
over who’s got a better plan for Iraq and Afghanistan. We have re-imported creationism into our political dialogue (in the form of “intelligent designâ€)....which is so uncontroversial
Hillary Clinton panders shamelessly to Roman Catholics,When she’s not pandering shamlessly to anybody else who might vote for her. (It’s called “running for office.â€)
who have allied with(Cue more scary music)
Southern Protestant evangelicalsAieeee!
on questions of morality, with anti-abortionism serving as the main bridge.because it's such a... um... settled issue
Barack Obama seems to be so leery of being identified as an urban Northern liberalI can’t imagine why. Look at all that the urban northern Liberals have given us.
that he's running away from the most obvious explanation of his association with the Rev. Jeremiah Wright and former Weatherman Bill Ayers: after Obama graduated from college he became an inner-city organizer in Chicago, and they were natural allies for someone in a situation like that.Yep. Wouldn’t want to draw any conclusions. “Lie down with dogs, get up with fleas,†another of those “unsophisticated mores,†I guess.
We routinely demonize organizations like the United Nationsdeservedly. See Bolton.
that we desperately needWhaddaya mean... oh, forget it.
and which are critical to missions like nation-building in Afghanistan.Because they’ve done so well in Africa, Bosnia, and Palestine.
On foreign policy, the realism and internationalism of the Eastern elitist tradition“Sure, we can make a deal with North Korea. No problem!â€
once kept the Southern-frontier warrior culture and Wilsonian messianismHey, “He kept us out of war!†Also, he was a Democrat. Just watch it!
in check. Now the latter two, in toxic combination, have taken over our national dialogue, and the Easterners are running for the hills.Attention all Easterners: Hills ----> thataway.
In Texas in particular, Lievena Brit who hangs out around east coast.think tanks, and is therefore qualified to expound on all things Texan
writes, we can see “the mingling of the Southern and Western traditions†that made its first appearance during Jackson's presidency, and which today so defines our current politics, culture, and foreign policy....except for the Presidential candidates, most of Congress, Hollywood, and the State Department
Indeed, George W. Bush himself may embody this national trend best.Warning: Preposterousity Zone Ahead!
In Bush there seems little trace left of the Eastern WASP sensibility into which he was born and educated, and which explains so much of his father's far more moderate presidency. The younger Bush went to Andover, Yale and Harvard, but he rebelled against the ethos he learned there. The transformation is complete, right down to the Texas accent that no one else in his family seems to have. Bush is a Jacksonian pod person.!!!
None of this is quite as simple as the triumph of the South, of course. “I’m suspicious of that argument,†says Gaines M. Foster of Louisiana State University, author of “Ghosts of the Confederacy: Defeat, the Lost Cause, and the Emergence of the New South, 1865-1913.†“The Civil War was essentially about preserving slavery and acquiring independence. And the South lost both of those things. And gave them up.†Beyond that, the Old South is gone with the wind in other ways, having suffered a hybridization from Northern and Midwestern influences. “At least one of four people in the South were not born here.Yep, runnin’ from those damyankees
Even ‘Southern’ is now a fuzzy term,†Foster told me. And as Mike Huckabee demonstrated when he failed to spread his appeal beyond his Southern base, there is such a thing as too Southern....as opposed to Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton. Oh wait, you mean Southern and Republican...
Polls show that at least as many Americans think Barack Obama shares their values as John McCain.IMHO, not good news for either candidate.
Still, something deep and basic has changed in our country. After watching the recent, excellent (despite some historical inaccuracies) series “John Adams†on HBO, I dipped back into the Adams-Jefferson letters. Two things occurred to me: one, party politics was just as vicious back then, in its earliest days, as it is today. Nothing new there. What does seem foreign to us today is the dedication to free thought and, even more, free moral choice that so dominated the correspondence between those two great minds.Why, look at the American university: No “free thought†there. (At least, not if you want to graduate. Whoops!)
When Jefferson, in his letter of May 5, 1817, condemned the “den of the priesthood†and “protestant popedomâ€Hey, wait a minute. Are the Catholics supposed to be good guys, or not? I’m confused!
represented by Massachusetts’ state-supported church, he was speaking for both of them--the North and South poles of the revolution. Yet John McCain, even with the GOP nomination in hand, would never dare repeat his brave but politically foolhardy condemnation of the religious right in 2000 as “agents of intolerance.†Why? Because we have become an intolerant nation, and that's what gets you elected.Or maybe it’s just that he’s pissed off so many people that he needs every vote he has left.
Another expert on the mores of the South, author Michael Lind,...who also hangs out at an east coast think tank.
notes this change is also attributable to the rise of the mass media and the eclipsing of the patrician culture that produced both Adams and Jefferson. “Both the New England Yankee and the old Southern colonel are gone,†he says. “It’s a battle between folk cultures, and it seems the Jacksonian is the more dominant.†It's not a clear-cut victory, but the South has won the day.
Hey Mike, if you want to hook up with Quebec...
Posted by: Old Grouch in
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Also: Discussion here at Volokh.com. I suggest that anyone who plans to address the “burdens†imposed by this law visit the Indiana Secretary of State’s Voter ID Information Page first. The law was written with an eye to previous court challenges, and IMO does a pretty good job of handling most objections.
Elsewhere (Via Volokh):
Election Law Blog: Initial Thoughts on the Supreme Court's Opinion in Crawford, the Indiana Voter Identification Case
Posted by: Old Grouch in
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