Politics, culture, business, and technology

I also blog at ChicagoBoyz.



Selected Posts:
Dancing for the Boa Constrictor
Koestler on Nuance
A Look into the Abyss
Hospital Automation
Made in America
Politicians Behaving Badly
Critics and Doers
Foundations of Bigotry?
Bonhoeffer and Iraq
Misvaluing Manufacturing
Journalism's Nuremberg?
No Steak for You!
An Academic Bubble?
Repent Now
Enemies of Civilization
Molly & the Media
Misquantifying Terrorism
Education or Indoctrination?
Dark Satanic Mills
Political Violence Superheated 'steem
PC and Pearl Harbor
Veterans' Day Musings
Arming Airline Pilots
Pups for Peace
Baghdad on the Rhine

Book Reviews:
Forging a Rebel
The Logic of Failure
The Innovator's Solution
They Made America
On the Rails: A Woman's Journey

Links:
arts & letters daily
natalie solent
critical mass
john bruce
joanne jacobs
number 2 pencil
LGF
instapundit
roger l simon
common sense and wonder
sheila o'malley
invisible adjunct
red bird rising
academic game
rachel lucas
betsy's page
one hand clapping
a schoolyard blog
joy of knitting
lead and gold
damian penny
annika's journal
little miss attila
no credentials
university diaries
trying to grok
a constrained vision
victory soap
business pundit
right reason
quid nomen illius?
sister toldjah
the anchoress
reflecting light
neo-neocon
dr sanity
shrinkwrapped
all things beautiful
dean esmay
jotzel
brand mantra
economics unbound
maxedoutmama
dr melissa
dr helen
right on the left coast
chapomatic
digital Rules
spogbolt
college affordability
the energy blog
tinkerty tonk
meryl yourish
kesher talk
assistant village idiot
evolving excellence
neptunus lex
the daily brief
roger scruton
bookworm room
villainous company
lean blog

site feed

A link to a website, either in this sidebar or in the text of a post, does not necessarily imply agreement with opinions or factual representations contained in that website.





























 
Archives
<< current













 
An occasional web magazine.


For more information or to contact us, click here.

E-mails may be published, with or without editing, unless otherwise requested.




























PHOTON COURIER
 
Friday, April 17, 2009  
ARROGANCE

The meldown of old-media credibility continues. Here we have a CNN reporter, covering a "tea party" event, who instead of conducting a normal interview with a participant, debates him, quite rudely (IMNSHO) and in a manner that makes it very clear where her own preferences lie. Be sure to read this unbelievable interchange and, if you have time, also watch the video.

In addition to the obvious lack of objectivity, note also the primitive quality of her arguments..."you're eligible for a $400 (stimulus payment, I presume she means)," and "did you know that the state of Lincoln gets fifty billion dollars out of these stimulus -- that's fifty billion dollars for this state, sir!" Heck, why not make it five hundred billion and then you'll really have an unbeatable proposition!

continued at Chicago Boyz.


9:16 PM

Thursday, April 16, 2009  
WORTHWHILE READING AND VIEWING

Cassandra writes about a visit to Sainte-Chapelle in Paris, and about lots of other things, too.

Be sure to click on the first link (the one that says "I stepped into a miracle")..if you have Quicktime installed, you will find yourself in the middle of Sainte-Chapelle and can look around in all directions. Use the arrow keys and the shift and control keys for navigation.


8:21 PM

Wednesday, April 15, 2009  
GOON SQUAD

Then there was the sound of glass shattering. A window was broken by more opponents outside. As the situation escalated, Tancredo left. Those who went to hear him speak were clearly upset. "Obviously there wasn't a point," one attendee said. "He wasn't going to be allowed to speak."

"Protesters" shut down a speech by former Congressman Tom Tancredo at the University of North Carolina--Chapel Hill. (More coverage here.)

I am reminded of something that Laurie Zoloth, a campus Jewish leader, said after observing political thuggery at San Francisco State University:

This is the Weimar republic with Brownshirts it cannot control.

There is a definite Fascist tinge to much of the activity and belief structure of today's "progressive" movement. Political violence and intimidation are being increasingly normalized in academia, and will inevitably spread to other parts of our society.

See my goon squad thread; also be afraid: the rise of political violence and intimidation in America

cross-posted at Chicago Boyz.


11:58 AM

Tuesday, April 14, 2009  
WORTHWHILE READING

Politicians have been quick to denounce the "greed" of businesspeople, and have generally been supported in this by the media. There has much less discussion of the lust for power, clearly a dominant factor in the lives of many who pursue political careers. Post with extensive discussion by Shannon, at Chicago Boyz.


4:53 AM

Monday, April 13, 2009  
THE BLIND HORN'S HATE



From Hamburg to Chile, via Cape Horn, aboard the 4-masted bark Peking, in 1929.

(The title of this post is from Kipling's poem L'Envoi)

Herman Melville, reflecting on his voyage around Cape Horn as a crewman aboard the sailing warship United States:

But how could we reach our long-promised homes without encountering Cape Horn? by what possibility avoid it? And though some ships have weathered it without these perils, yet by far the greater part must encounter them. Lucky it is that it comes about midway in the homeward-bound passage, so that the sailors have time to prepare for it, and time to recover from it after it is astern.

But, sailor or landsman, there is some sort of a Cape Horn for all. Boys! beware of it; prepare for it in time. Gray-beards! thank God it is passed. And ye lucky livers, to whom, by some rare fatality, your Cape Horns are placid as Lake Lemans, flatter not yourselves that good luck is judgment and discretion; for all the yolk in your eggs, you might have foundered and gone down, had the Spirit of the Cape said the word.


(from his book White Jacket)

link via PowerLine.


3:03 PM

 
REGULATING ABSOLUTELY EVERYTHING

The state of Pennsylvania shuts down the sale of home-baked pies at churches.


5:22 AM

Saturday, April 11, 2009  
GREAT LIBRARIES OF THE WORLD

In 2006, Sheila O'Malley posted a beautiful collection of library photographs.

Here are some more great library pictures at Reflecting Light.


2:55 PM

 
WORTH PONDERING

There are two passions which have a powerful influence in the affairs of men. These are ambition and avarice--the love of power and the love of money. Separately, each of these has great force in prompting men to action; but, when united in view of the same object, they have, in many minds, the most violent effects.

--Benjamin Franklin

cross-posted at Chicago Boyz.

Previous Worth Pondering



7:05 AM

 
OBAMA, AHMADINEJAD, AND THE IRANIAN PEOPLE

A young Iranian blogger reacts to Obama's overtures toward the regime with what Michael Ledeen calls "an elegant mixture of sadness and pride":

…people have been tortured on the charges of having connections with the United States. Some have been silent thinking you will come to their rescue. At least Bush had the honesty to separate this regime from the people. How easy you play with the people card. Please do not talk about our people anymore. Engage the regime and leave us alone. We will free Iran, even when you are helping this occupying regime…

via Jonathan at Chicago Boyz.


6:58 AM

Friday, April 10, 2009  
OBAMA, IRAN, NORTH KOREA, AND THE BOMB

The Obama administration's defense budget imposes serious cuts on missile defense programs, most notably on the Airborne Ballistic Laser program, which was intended to shoot down missiles early in their trajectory.

Meanwhile, Joe Biden tells Israel not to launch a strike on Iran's nuclear facilities. The Obama/Biden administration has of course made it pretty clear that it does not plan to take any form of military action against Iran's nuclear weapons and ballistic missile programs.

At the same time, Obama's overtures to Iran appear to have further ncreased that regime's self-confidence and its contempt for America.

Let's see: Slow down or stop the deployment of defensive capabilities. Make it clear that we will not military interfere with Iran's nuclear programs and will attempt to prevent our allies from doing so. (This attitude presumably also applies to North Korea.) Act in a way that emboldens rogue regimes and encourages them to believe that America is being run by people of total naivite.

What a great recipe for national security.

5:44 AM

Wednesday, April 08, 2009  
A ROSE BY ANY OTHER NAME

...would it really smell as sweet?

Maybe not.

(via Kathy Shaidle)


6:22 AM

Tuesday, April 07, 2009  
CPSIA RALLY REPORT

Walter Olson reports on the April 1 rally, which was held to focus attention on the need for changes in this misbegotten legislation.

If you believe that entrepreneurship is important to the American economy and the American spirit, this is an issue you should be concerned with.


2:50 PM

Monday, April 06, 2009  
DEADLY NAIVITE

Jeffrey Goldberg, reporting in the Atlantic on an interview with Israel's new prime minister:

"The Obama presidency has two great missions: fixing the economy, and preventing Iran from gaining nuclear weapons,” Netanyahu told me. He said the Iranian nuclear challenge represents a "hinge of history" and added that "Western civilization" will have failed if Iran is allowed to develop nuclear weapons.

In unusually blunt language, Netanyahu said of the Iranian leadership, "You don’t want a messianic apocalyptic cult controlling atomic bombs. When the wide-eyed believer gets hold of the reins of power and the weapons of mass death, then the entire world should start worrying, and that is what is happening in Iran."


Unfortunately, our current leadership in Washington does not see this issue with anywhere near the clarity that Netanyahu does...indeed, Obama seems more upset by American nuclear weapons than by the prospect of nuclear weapons in the hands of the Iranian regime. The same is true of a substantial number of Americans, especially those who consider themselves to be political "progressives" and who work in the media and in academia.

Ralph Peters: One of the most consistently disheartening experiences an adult can have today is to listen to the endless attempts by our intellectuals and intelligence professionals to explain religious terrorism in clinical terms, assigning rational motives to men who have moved irrevocably beyond reason. We suffer under layers of intellectual asymmetries that hinder us from an intuititive recognition of our enemies.

Paul Reynaud--who became Prime Minister of France just two months before the German invasion of 1940--incisively explained what was at stake at that point in time, and why it was so much greater than what had been at stake in 1914: People think Hitler is like Kaiser Wilhelm. The old gentleman only wanted to take Alsace-Lorraine from us. But Hitler is Genghis Khan.

Obama and his acolytes seem to think we are dealing with Kaiser Wilhelm-like figures in Iran and North Korea. It is a shallow and dangerously naive way of looking at the world.

Why do people who are highly educated, and often fairly intelligent, so often fail at comprehending and predicting the behavior of thugs and fanatics?

continued at Chicago Boyz

6:51 AM

Sunday, April 05, 2009  
JUST UNBELIEVABLE

Bill Keller, executive editor of the NYT:

"Saving the New York Times now ranks with saving Darfur as a high-minded cause."

The sad thing is, he's probably right about the way things are perceived among the (large) segment of NYT readers who are obsessively concerned about being viewed as "high-minded."

(via Roger Simon)


6:30 PM

Friday, April 03, 2009  
OBAMA AND THE AUTO INDUSTRY

Neo-Neocon has an interesting post and discussion.

See also three bankers and a campaign aide walk into an auto industry... at Lean Blog.

cross-posted at Chicago Boyz.


6:39 AM

Thursday, April 02, 2009  
WORTHWHILE READING

Jamie Dimon's letter to J P Morgan shareholders. The first 13 pages are devoted specifically to J P Morgan's own performance; pages 14-23 are a thoughtful analysis of the causes of the current economic crisis, together with suggestions for minimization of such problems in the future.

Tom Brown of Bankstocks.com says:

You may or may not agree with all Jamie's ideas; either way, they are, in my view, the best blueprint for an overhaul of the regulatory system I've yet seen. Jamie's thoughts are certainly worth taking seriously: the White House and Congress would do the country a huge favor if they took some time out from their daily huffing and puffing and gave some serious thought to what he has to say.


7:16 PM

 
THE TRUTH ABOUT THEDA BARA

Robert Avrech has an interesting profile of the silent-film star.


6:02 AM

Wednesday, April 01, 2009  
REGULATING ABSOLUTELY EVERYTHING

California is looking at banning black cars; also, a whole range of dark shades.

After reading this news, The Anchoress says she is feeling a little bit like King Arthur in the last scene of Camelot, "someday you will tell your children about the mythical land of America, where people were basically free to do whatever they liked, express themselves freely, dare to dream…"


11:54 AM

 
NEEDED: MORE PUBLIC-SPIRITED PIGS

A letter has recently come to light in which T S Eliot explains his rejection of Orwell's Animal Farm manuscript.


10:02 AM

Monday, March 30, 2009  
WSJ ON CPSIA

Today’s WSJ has an editorial on the malign effects of the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act–specifically, its impact on children’s books.

The CPSIA issue should be of great concern to everyone who values entrepreneurship and the ability of individuals to create and thrive outside of large, credential-obsessed bureaucracies. It is disappointing that the conservative/libertarian blogosphere hasn’t been more aggressive in publicizing the problems with this legislation.

Link via Shopfloor

cross-posted at Chicago Boyz


8:17 AM

Sunday, March 29, 2009  
RECENT READING

Bitter Waters: Life and Work in Stalin’s Russia
by Gennady Andreev-Khomiakov

A fascinating look at the Soviet economic system in the 1930s, as viewed from the front lines of that system. My review at Chicago Boyz.


8:15 PM

Saturday, March 28, 2009  
BLAM! SOCK! POW!

Tom Brown isn't very impressed with Vikram Pandit's letter to Citigroup shareholders.

Nassim Taleb thinks the Nobel-prize-winning economist Myron Scholes should stop making recommendations about economic policy.


6:25 AM

Thursday, March 26, 2009  
REMINDER--CPSIA RALLY APRIL 1

Just a reminder about the rally to educate Congress about the harm being done by the poorly-thought-out Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act.

Just in case anyone needs some extra incentive to come to DC, the National Cherry Blossom Festival should be in full swing. Peak bloom date this year is projected as April 1--April 4.

cross-posted at Chicago Boyz.


11:26 AM

 
WORTHWHILE READING

Khaled Abu Toameh writes about anti-Israel sentiment at American universities:

During a recent visit to several university campuses in the U.S., I discovered that there is more sympathy for Hamas there than there is in Ramallah.

Listening to some students and professors on these campuses, for a moment I thought I was sitting opposite a Hamas spokesman or a would-be-suicide bomber.

I was told, for instance, that Israel has no right to exist, that Israel’s “apartheid system” is worse than the one that existed in South Africa and that Operation Cast Lead was launched only because Hamas was beginning to show signs that it was interested in making peace and not because of the rockets that the Islamic movement was launching at Israeli communities.


Ralph Peters writes about Obama's foreign policy performance over the last two months.

(links via PowerLine)

UPDATE: Daniel Henninger on the Democratic Party's war on business:

True socialists at least think about markets so they can criticize them. The Democratic Party's leadership doesn't stir to even that level of engagement. In the House, Senate and some corners of the Obama White House, the party is acting as if the marketplace was the world of an alien tribe, which it has to control through intimidation or demands for protective tribute (read: campaign contributions).


6:36 AM

Wednesday, March 25, 2009  
A LETTER OF RESIGNATION

...from AIG executive Jake DeSantis.

cross-posted at Chicago Boyz.


9:37 AM

Tuesday, March 24, 2009  
Manufacturing, the Ivy League, Jarvis Cutting Tools, and Toyota

Bill Waddell argues that American government and business suffer from excessive dominance by people from a small number of "elite" colleges and prep schools.

In the comments, Costikyan Jarvis--who runs a family-owned manufacturing business--defends the value of the Harvard Executive Education program which he attended:

Today, Bill responds to Costikyan's response.

This interesting discussion continues at Evolving Excellence.

cross-posted at Chicago Boyz.


8:17 AM

Sunday, March 22, 2009  
FREE THOUGHT?

Not at the University of Delaware, apparently. See my post at Chicago Boyz.


7:00 AM

 
JUST UNBELIEVABLE

Read about what you have to do if you want to operate a food cart in downtown Toronto.

And don't even think about trying to sell hot dogs and/or sausages.

"I have a problem with hot dogs from a health point of view and from a diversity point of view," said the official who has been placed in charge of making such decisions. So if he has a problem with hot dogs, and you live in or visit Toronto, then you have a problem with hot dogs.

From A People's Tragedy: The Russian Revolution 1891-1924, by Orlando Figes:

Indeed, from the perspective of the individual, it could be said that the single greatest difference between Russia and the West, both under Tsarism and Communism, was that in Western Europe citizens were generally free to do as they pleased so long as their activities had not been specifically prohibited by the state, while the people of Russia were not free to do anything unless the state had given them specific permission to do it.

via Kathy Shaidle


6:11 AM

Friday, March 20, 2009  
AIG BONUSES

Thoughts and a discussion at Chicago Boyz.

UPDATE: See also this.


6:08 AM

Thursday, March 19, 2009  
APRIL FOOLS DAY IS COMING

...and so is the rally to inform Congress about the damage being created by the poorly-thought-out provisions of the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act. More about the CPSIA here, here, and here.

Even if you’re not in the toy business, or a science kit manufacturer, or a children’s clothing maker, or a thrift shop owner, or a homecrafter, you should care about this issue.

April 1, Washington, DC. Please attend if you possibly can.

Cross-posted at Chicago Boyz.

5:57 AM

 
This page is powered by Blogger.