Links Archives

Things Heard: e171v1

Good morning. Well, there were a zillion links declaring bin Laden was killed. I’m not linking any of that. If you didn’t know, you can come out from under that rock and peek around at the wide world (before going back in). In the meantime … links?

  1. Two responses regading the “Fight of the Century Hayek/Keynes” video. Here and here.
  2. Let’s hope the OBL thing doesn’t distract us from continueing events, like this. More on that here.
  3. Oh, but it’s stimulus spending.
  4. Baseball and an amazing catch, by neither a fan nor a player.
  5. ‘Dem good old days. Reprised here.
  6. Sappers.
  7. Foreign policy screwup, what? 500, by the Obama White House.
  8. Heh.
  9. Pascha (Easter) artwork.
  10. More pathological lying from the White House.
  11. Segregation … here too?
  12. She’s one of my favorite actresses too.
  13. The dimming of the liberal intellectual establishment observed.

Friday Link Wrap-up

Question: What government program costs us 7 times what NASA does?
Answer: The department of Improper Payments.

Question: In a study looking at data from over 50 years, towards which political party does the NY Times lean? 
Answer: Well, do you really have to ask? And it’s more about what stories are covered than about bias within stories.

Question: Why do movements like pro-democracy or the Tea Party seem to balloon overnight?
Answer: The "Preference Cascade".

Question: What are 5 truths about Planned Parenthood that you’re not likely to hear in the media?
Answer: Read them here.

Question: How could you defend the use of sola Scriptura, "Scripture alone", to someone who objects on the basis that humans are fallible, so you just can’t be sure what is Scripture?
Answer: C. Michael Patton has a good response.

Question: Has Paul Krugman ever flip-flopped on an issue for politics’ sake? Not a little quibble, but on really substantial stuff?
Answer: Oh yeah, he has.

Question: Has Nancy Pelosi ever flip-flopped on an issue for politics’ sake?
Answer: Well, she blamed high gas prices on "two oil men in the White House" before. Wonder who she’s blaming now.

Question: Is Syria, a country that is killing its own citizens for protesting the government, really being considered for a seat on the UN Human Rights Council?
Answer: Oh yeah, it is. And the UN is divided on whether it should even investigate their recent human rights abuses.

Question: Was Stanley Ann Dunham punished with a baby.
Answer: No, the baby (Barack Obama) was not a punishment, even though Barack’s campaign rhetoric would tend to suggest otherwise.

Question: Has Hamas moderated, since it had to take on political leadership and run the Palestinians?
Answer: Oh no, it hasn’t.

Question: Did Fox News push the whole "birther" issue the most?
Answer: Oh no, they didn’t.

Question: Does Europe want us Yanks, with our neo-con aggression, out of their backyard?
Answer: According to this Norwegian liberal, oh no, they don’t.

Question: Shouldn’t the federal government be a limited one?
Answer: Click for a larger image.

Things Heard: e170v5

Good morning. So, what do y’all prefer, normal (~ a sentence or fragment), brief (one-two words), or extended comments with my links? Or should I more regularly mix it up?

  1. CZ factory. I noted before I’m thinking of picking up a 9mm pistol … some reviews put the CZ and Bereta at the top of their list.
  2. Purple. Not purple
  3. Unhappy with a former President, noted here and here. “Unhappy” may be putting it a bit mildly.
  4. Praise for a former President.
  5. A faith journey.
  6. Touch the sky.
  7. A prediction on the future of liberalism
  8. Our current President and relations with the press.
  9. Environment or redistribution?
  10. About them big oil profits.
  11. Smash! Bang! Booom!
  12. Are you too amazed CBS would play this?
  13. SpaceX and its future.
  14. One perspective on the Catholic position on contraception and abortion.

Things Heard: e170v4

Good morning. Well, yesterday I went for brevity. Today, the reverse.

  1. Well, a book suggested for reading on healthcare. It seems obvious to me at least that two of the thesis noted at the start are correct, that governemnt invovlement in healthcare over the last century is the primary cause of the cost increases … and that the notion that the government can spend my money more wisely than I is indeed the crux of the ideological divide. I think that last part misses the other half of the “my money” division … in which the reason in which the left thinks that the “rich” should be taxed at whatever rate they can manage is because they believe the rich came by their money dishonestly. If they felt that the rich got their money through their talents and hard work … they’d be less inclined to tax them differently than anyone else.
  2. Oil. Hmm, Obama is shutting down yet more domestic drilling and exploration. I think this is like the other week where Mr Obama in his budget rebuttal to Mr Ryan stated clearly in the opening that we can’t solve our problems by cutting out waste … and his of the four primary means at which he offered to attack our deficit one of the primary ones was (you guessed it) cutting out waste. And, now that gas prices are high he decides the solution is cutting down on the domestic supply as aggressively as he can manage and going after “waste and fraud” in the oil industry. This has been said before and had little effect. If the Democrats want to claim he’s a really smart guy. What is their evidence? ‘Cause he keeps doing really really stupid things.
  3. Birtherism? Why now? asks Mr Schraub (as a side note when I read this I’m confused as to whom the “pathological liar” is meant to be, it could be interpreted as either Trump or Obama. I’d go with both). Why did he prolong this. I think he thought it was to his advantage. Why turn now? But for the question of how? Here’s a suggestion, it’s part of the Rush plan done the Obama way.
  4. On that topic, it is claimed “everywhere” (that is lots and lots of people) claim this won’t turn any “birther’s” opinion cause it “wasn’t based on reality anyway.” This one turned, and I’d have to say I think the polls about the numbers of the “birthers” in the GOP are likely way off. Take a straw poll of your GOP friends. See if 1 in 3 or 1 in 2 is a reasonable number … not by any count of mine (and I suspect yours too). And here’s why that’s a dead issue anyhow.
  5. Here’s a question for the AGW crowd. Why do you believe the firm accuracy of those models (which basically are computer aided story telling) when important new effects keep turning up? I think the “A” part of AGW is a religious not scientific belief for that crowd. Show me the basis for your belief if it is not. This is science not personal religious encounters after all. Show me the data. 
  6. Talking truth to power about education. I think the absolute statement that education can’t help the, well, stupid among us isn’t exactly right. I can help a little The question is one of cost/benefit. Education is not what separates a Mr Witten from a Mr Biden (or take any other publicly known moron) in intellectual acuity. I’d asked this before. What benefit do we (or he) reap from bringing the reading level of an intellectually incurious individual from 4th to 6th grade reading level or teaching him geometry. It takes great effort by our educators. What is the benefit? Here’s another point on education. Remember the (real) lesson from the Tuskegee airmen movie. The way to raise people up is not to lower standards, but the reverse. If you want to raise educational levels … set higher standards that need to be met. It’s kinda just that simple.
  7. Two on car tech, lasers in the engine and the an X-prize car goes to the tunnels. I wonder if they’re going to market anytime soon on that latter. That might replace my Insight, which by the way with its new MIMA installed took its first semi-long road trip this week. I got 85mpg for the 300 miles … 80 on the way out (on wet roads in the rain!) and 94 (!) on the way back (with a 20mph tail wind). 

Things Heard: e170v3

Good morning. A (mostly) one word edition.

  1. Hell.
  2. Reprised.
  3. Debt.
  4. Crops.
  5. Purple.
  6. Faux-coding.
  7. Soteriology. Actually, Ms Theodoris raises a point of question for the Penal Substutionary crowd. That is, if there was no ressurrection, how would that have affected his penal substitution? Would you still be in sin and why?
  8. Paschal-flashmob.
  9. Drone-warfare.
  10. Ideology.
  11. Carbon.
  12. P90.

Things Heard: e170v1n2

Good, err, whatever.

  1. Revisiting the St. Gregory Palamas/Barlaam debate from a Western angle. That is to say, the essence/energies, uhm, thing.
  2. A kerfuffle in the philosopher’s corner of the blogosphere, i.e., the Synthese problem.
  3. Homophobia … not, or so says someone with a bit more skin in the game than I.
  4. That decline in education.
  5. Ooh, a closet Lenin/Stalin fan.
  6. What strikes me as theodicy done wrong.
  7. This years “carbon hypocrite” gold medal winner.
  8. 60 minutes at the Holy mountain.
  9. Apparently economics, in Mr Krugman’s view, doesn’t apply to some commercial transactions.
  10. What distinguishes Syria and Libya, for the White House and policy? Some grist for that argument.
  11. A coming crises?
  12. Groceries and education.
  13. Mr Obama and, uhm, torture … defend and deflect (now that he’s no longer running).
  14. Who is close to the truth, pig or rat? I’ll go with the pig.
  15. Finally, a non-trivial religion/separation Constitutional case.
  16. Zooom.
  17. Prayer … and remarks regarding its efficacy.
  18. Some good links here.

Rusty Nails (SCO v. 33)

University Ghost Towns?
Will the 21st century bring with it an end to conventional education?

What schooling is for many is a 12- or 16-year sentence wherein young people are penned up, talked at, cajoled, quizzed, and tested, for the most part on facts and figures that can now be retrieved in seconds with a handheld device.

###

Convoluted Gun Laws
Or how changing a rifle grip can turn you into a felon.

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Women won’t carry guns because it isn’t fashionable?

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Women will carry a gun because you don’t want to corner a cat

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A Mozart Hoedown?

Friday Link Wrap-up

Kenyans have been winning marathons all over the world. The Dutch have decided to try and keep them out by only giving 1% of the prize money to any foreigners who win the Utrech Marathon. I don’t think that’s racism, but I do believe it’s wrong anyway.

Don’t bet your life on outrageous claims by proponents of embryonic stem cell research. Someone  has, though.

Civility Watch: The Left has been sending death threats to the eeevil Koch brothers. The wrong Koch brothers.

Civility Watch 2: Who said, "Civility is the last refuge of scoundrels" and "Let’s not be civil"? (And said it in the same paper that blamed the Giffords shooting on incivility from Republicans.)

Civility Watch 3: If a Republican had said this, he would have been called "racist" or "Islamophobic". But a member of the Obama administration said it, so no outcry.

Do iPads cause unemployment? Does Jesse Jackson, Jr. think we should have banned cars to keep the buggy builders in business?

Hanging a small cross inside your company van is a firing offense in the UK, apparently.

A death panel in Canada pronounced their sentence on a baby in Ontario by saying that life support should be removed, against the parents’ wishes. Instead, they brought him to a country that, so far, does not have a fully socialized system (that would be America), and the child did so well that he was weaned off the ventilator and is now back home.  It’s still touch and go, I imagine, but critics said he’d never get off mechanical breathing. Way to go, baby Joseph! (Which begs the question; if the US goes fully socialized, where will Canadians go for good health care?)

And finally, the same old song. (Click for a larger image.)

Things Heard: e169v4

Good morning.

  1. Oh, I wrote about the Hymn of Cassia the other night. Here’s an clip in English and not Greek.
  2. For those who like the “where’s the library/bathroom at?” joke.
  3. Cinema.
  4. Yah, that’s a likely suspect. Or not.
  5. Rich or not? My suspiscion is that they don’t feel rich because perceive themselves (likely rightly) as running in the same hamster wheel as they did when they were making far less.
  6. Book borrowing coming to the kindle?
  7. Anti-war movement?
  8. And some targeted questions for Mr Obama’s supporters. This is the point of the Loyal opposition vs party in power. The questions raised are to be answered by those proposing policy. So …. answer, em!
  9. If a Corporation did this or a private individual … they/he’d be facing jail time. Why does the White House not even face censure?
  10. A bike that is more than a little weird.
  11. Stupid AGW proponents tricks.
  12. A new suggestion from the White House. Good idea or not? Why?
  13. CFLs in the news, here and here.
  14. Big fat Greek (Orthodox) Pascha (Easter).

Things Heard: e169v3

Good morning.

  1. Weight loss and the bike.
  2. I don’t get the “why” of the relevance of this.
  3. For the first time, the birther movement’s point is finally made clear.
  4. Boots on the ground (soon?) in Libya?
  5. Teaching maths.
  6. Two on abortion, numbers and Wisconsin.
  7. One of my favorite hyms of the Lenten/Paschal cycle.
  8. Simon Not-Peter and the Resurrection.
  9. Progressive women doing bad bad things.
  10. On that “weather is getting worse” meme, which has the distinctive charactaristic of being wrong.
  11. The utility of a gang, err, pack of wolves.
  12. The “best”? Seriously! Wow. So the “death panel” team thinks this is a good move? Riiiight.
  13. No.

Things Heard: e169v2

Good morning.

  1. The whole “there are no no good faith arguments for X” is … what logical fallacy? Because it certainly smells like one.
  2. I’d like to see a rational liberal response to this question (more here). I suppose the counter question might be, why is it wrong to bring a gang of people with vuvuzelas to an Obama rally?
  3. This is not unrelated.
  4. Diabolical (?) treatment of Christians.
  5. Something of a role reversal indeed.
  6. Will things flip in Afghanistan?
  7. Hoooonk.
  8. Absent a public very prominent apology from the White House, Mr Obama is an ass.
  9. Verse, for Holy Week.
  10. Dreams of the urban cyclist … with a lady in a red dress?
  11. Someone wonders whence the personal and business debt? Check interest rates, I’d think.
  12. So, would you recommend this or something in 9mm (like the 92FS)?
  13. Catholic epsicopal scandals noted.
  14. Baikonur and space.
  15. Some philosophy.
  16. And … a history lesson.

Things Heard: e169v1

Good morning.

  1. Evil and strategic imagination.
  2. The corruption of secret knowledge.
  3. You just can’t say that dude, I guess.
  4. Thanking the President? More here.
  5. Libya. Here and here. So, if regime change is the goal now … but not 4 weeks ago. What changed?
  6. Green stimulus … green in the sense of graft.
  7. Climate predictions disapparating, to borrow a Potter-ish term.
  8. The decline and fall?
  9. Lining them up and knocking them down.
  10. Mr Obama and signing statements.
  11. Some verse.
  12. The physics of the bike ride.
  13. I too like their music.
  14. Considering the “for whom” and secondary education.
  15. “We need a better ruling class” … without considering that the rulers we have are a product of our society and the particular nature of our electoral process.

Things Heard: e168v5

Good morning.

  1. I’m confused by the phrase “cap Medicare at GDP + x%”, because taken at face value that caps it at all we earn plus some. That’s no cap.
  2. Letters from a farmer.
  3. Stupidity in Illinois.
  4. The fantasy of Mr Krugman, the RSS lede line, “privatization doesn’t reduce costs” … you know except for usually it does. Or is that “making it public means cost is no longer a consideration” somehow on his planet doesn’t mean costs increase. 
  5. Still not reading Ms Delsol, Unlearned Lessons being quite the primer on a secular defense of human exceptionalism.
  6. Past slogans coming back to bite?
  7. Da big bike race in May, after Amstel Gold this weekend, “la doyenne” is the next.
  8. Contra Ms Rand.
  9. Hmm. I thought Christ was to judge at the final day … not steve.
  10. More on Minsk.
  11. Watching the watchers.
  12. The word for our future.
  13. Although I’m looking for my next car, more fuel efficient than the last, price is a consideration.
  14. Duh.

Things Heard: e168v4

Good morning.

  1. A curious mix of data.
  2. Silly writers, confused that slavery entails “no open cell door”.
  3. White house transparency, not. Yet another broken promise.
  4. Which leads me to a question, what would this man have to do for those of you who voted for Mr Obama to vote for a Pawlenty or Romney instead? Commit rape? Drop an atom bomb? What!?
  5. Becoming an expert.
  6. So, besides pedophiles … to what market is this product targeted?
  7. Drop the drinking age?
  8. Talking about health care.
  9. More on the Minsk bombing.
  10. Smarter routing.
  11. Mr Obama’s recent speech. Some remarks on that here.
  12. And a highlight of the difference between his and Mr Ryan’s proposal.
  13. On soteriology.
  14. Haiti and infrastructure.

Things Heard: e168v3

Good morning.

  1. Pick 10, what would be in your list of ten? 
  2. No no no no. Schools are accountable to parents, not the other way around.
  3. “Obama doesn’t seem to stand for anything in particular” … doesn’t that define “pragmatism” as your overarching political meme?
  4. Marijuana and energy.
  5. A consequence of avoiding detention and denial … “just kill ’em” becomes the only alternative. Ooops. Or was that intentional?
  6. More on that here (for you North-East Coasters, something to fill your time with on the weekend).
  7. Evil and the fairy tale.
  8. More on the Minsk bombing.
  9. Islam (moderate), reform or PR?
  10. What’s your graph look like? Mine’s not a bell curve. Or if you insist, the mean is at 0.
  11. Honesty and taxes … a correlation examined.
  12. Exactly! Heh.
  13. Wealth distributions.
  14. Surprised to agree with Mr Paul.
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