From Pine View Farm

May, 2012 archive

QOTD 0

Eugene O’Neill:

When men make gods, there is no God!

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Religious Immunity 0

Hanlon on the gay-bashers:

This isn’t a discussion about gun laws, tax structure, environmental regulations, or foreign policy. It’s not an issue that legitimately has two sides to it. This is a group of people looking at another and saying “no, you are not as good as the rest of us, you do not get our rights.” It’s using religion as immunity from scrutiny, since if these yahoos weren’t holding up their books they’d long ago have been cast into the fire.

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Everybody Must Get Fracked 0

Next up, Utah:

After the Bush administration in its waning days cynically opened up this region’s natural treasures to oil and gas drilling, Americans everywhere protested, filing thousands of public comments in objection. Even though many had never been to Desolation Canyon, they did not want to be the generation that forfeits our past and our country’s natural beauty for more profits for the petroleum industry and a few more drops in the bucket.

Yet Gasco and the petroleum industry lobby are strong, and their pursuit of profits knows no boundaries. Using their partners in Congress, they’re now tapping into Americans’ frustration over high gasoline prices to pressure President Obama and Interior Secretary Ken Salazar to approve Gasco’s scheme to develop this wild place. Never mind that drilling for natural gas in Desolation Canyon will do nothing to curb the price we pay for oil-based gasoline, which is set on the global marketplace.

Desolation Canyon, Utah

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Mitt the Flip and the Bully Pulpit 2

This week, much of Left Blogistan has taken unholy glee in Mitt the Flip’s short career as a barber. Here is an example.

PoliticalProf thinks that focusing on the details of what happened over four decades ago misses the point. He thinks that the intervening four decades carry a lesson of their own:

Which brings me to what I think is the important thing in the Mitt Romney story: I don’t sense the same evolution in him. He dumped a gay adviser not because the guy was a poor adviser, but because the guy’s homosexuality was a political issue. He has told college students not to expect help paying off loans and has noted that the extremely poor in America aren’t to be worried about because they have a social safety net. His stands on contraception and privacy have alienated him from women … and he seems utterly baffled as to why, claiming that his wife is his adviser on women’s issues and that she says all women are concerned by is jobs, not birth control. He jokes with NASCAR fans about knowing team owners, not fans and drivers.

In other words, I don’t sense that Mitt Romney has made much effort in his life to understand or even empathize with people who aren’t like him.

In a characteristically long and detailed post well-supported with citations, Chauncey Devega also sees and considers an empathy deficit. A nugget:

The policies of the Republican Party are demonstrative of a deep deficit in empathy. The poor are surplus people who are “unproductive,” a “drain” on American society, and who leech off of the rich and “normal” Americans. The social safety net should be destroyed as “entitlements” like Social Security and unemployment insurance, encourage laziness and sloth. Support for hungry children, public education, the unemployed, and the poor should be cut to ensure tax cuts for the rich.

(snip)

Mitt Romney, prep school bully of the weak and vulnerable, corporate raider bully who takes pleasure in terminating employees, nominee of a political party of bullies and “real Americans,” and he who wants to be President of the United States, has made it abundantly clear that empathy is not a public virtue to be cultivated or encouraged.

Read both posts in full. Though conceived and published separately, they complement each other most eerily.

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Who Owns History? (Sticky) 0

Update: I’m going to stick this at the top of the page for a while. Unstuck.

Chauncey Devega of the We Are Respectable Negroes blog wants to purchase a bit of history.

It might be more accurate to say “ransom,” rather than “purchase”:

Read more »

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QOTD 0

Georgia O’Keefe:

I hate flowers – I paint them because they’re cheaper than models and they don’t move.

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TSA Security Theatre 0

It is really all for show.

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The Cult of Apple 0

Honestly, you can’t make this stuff up.

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Seen on the Street 0

JRNYLDY

Read more »

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Cult of Death 0

Truly vile:

An unidentified entrepreneur admits he is trying to profit off Trayvon Martin’s death by selling gun range targets featuring the teen who’s death has sparked a nationwide controversy.

Although Martin’s face does not appear on the paper targets, they feature a hoodie with crosshairs aimed at the chest. A bag of Skittles is tucked in the pocket and a hand is holding a can resembling iced tea.

Via Bob Cesca.

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Wall Streat Weak 0

At Bloomberg, Jonathan Weil considers J. P. Morgan Chase’s gambling losses and Jamie Dimon’s statements about them. A nugget:

But there is more to it than that. Either Dimon misled the public about the gravity of the festering trades during his company’s first-quarter earnings call last month. Or he didn’t know what was happening inside the bowels of his own company. History tells us the latter is the norm for Wall Street bosses, though it’s hard to say which is worse.

Don’t bother asking JPMorgan how it accumulated all these losses. That information is proprietary, as if the taxpayers who bailed out the bank in 2008 don’t have any business knowing. Here’s an idea for a new rule: If a too-big-to-fail bank can’t disclose what its trading desk is doing for fear of blowing itself up, then the bank shouldn’t be allowed to do it.

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The Slippery Slope 0

Excerpt:

I would like to read to you what The Jesus said about homosexuality.

I’d like to but he never said anything about it.

Via Bob Cesca’s Awesome Blog.

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“Freedom Chocolate” 0

In my local rag, Darryl Lease has fun with Michelle Bachmann’s short-lived fling with Swiss citizenship:

As you might expect from the intellectual leader of the tea party movement, Bachmann wasn’t entirely clear about how or why she pursued citizenship in a notoriously socialist country.

The Swiss have universal health care, for crying out loud.

And they’re worse than the French about fighting wars. (I’ve long argued we should rename Swiss cheese “Freedom cheese.” Ditto chocolate.)

Read the rest. It’s quite good fun.

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Facebook Frolics, Sharing Is for Others Dept. 0

Loyal to his Mammon.

Eduardo Saverin, the billionaire co- founder of Facebook Inc. (FB), renounced his U.S. citizenship before an initial public offering that values the social network at as much as $96 billion, a move that may reduce his tax bill.

Facebook plans to raise as much as $11.8 billion through the IPO, the biggest in history for an Internet company. Saverin’s stake is about 4 percent, according to the website Who Owns Facebook. At the high end of the IPO valuation, that would be worth about $3.84 billion. His holdings aren’t listed in Facebook’s regulatory filings.

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QOTD 0

Terry McAuliffe:

Someone who lies about the little things will lie about the big things too.

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The Law of Unintended Consequences. 0

So, what about that whole self-esteem movement thingy?

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Arsenic and Old Plates 0

What’s in your gullet?

Radio Times investigates what’s in our food. From the website:

What is in your chicken? A new study found that chickens were eating feed containing a banned antibiotic and the active ingredients for pain relievers, antihistamines, and antidepressants. There’s been growing concern over the use antibiotics in animal farming. Close to three-fourths of all antibiotics are used for farm animals and this overuse, according to public health experts, is breeding antibiotic resistant bacteria that are a serious threat to human health. The Food and Drug Administration recently asked the livestock industry, drug companies and veterinarians to voluntarily limit their use of antibiotics in agriculture. But many people say this doesn’t go far enough. We’ll look at antibiotics in farming, the recent “pink slime” controversy and other issues around the way we produce our food with MICHAEL POLLAN, author of “Food Rules” and “The Omnivore’s Dilemma.” We’ll also talk with KEEVE NACHMAN, Director for Farming for the Future at Johns Hopkins Center for a Livable Future and one of the authors of the recent chicken feed additive paper.

To listen, follow the link or click here (MP3).

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Facebook Frolics 0

At what point does a Facebook chat become a confession?

Remember, the internet is a public place.

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“Not Just for Breakfast Any More” 0

Wait for it.

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Bobs for Jabs, Reprise 0

The Richmonder rounds up the dollar cost to taxpayers of treating peaceful protesters as if they were invading aliens.

Read it.

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