From Pine View Farm

January, 2015 archive

Hacking the Cra-Cra 0

Bernadette Kinlaw slings some slang at my local rag.

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Facebook Frolics 0

Ari Kohen gets zucked.

For all I know, they’ve done that to me, but I can’t be bothered to log into the Zuckerborg and check.

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Simple Explanations Appeal to Simple Minds 0

Gary Younge reminds us that events are not that simple, however much some may want them to be.

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“Known Associates” 0

Eugene Robinson has a suggestion for Republicans:

Here’s some advice for House Majority Whip Steve Scalise that also applies to the Republican Party in general: If you don’t want to be associated in any way with white supremacists and neo-Nazis, then stay away from them.

Follow the link for his explanation.

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“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0

Stairway to politeness:

The captain (in the Fire Dept.–ed.), whose name was not released, was in a stairwell of the East Cambridge fire station at 175 Cambridge St. on an administrative task Tuesday when he was removing a personal firearm and holster from his jacket pocket in an attempt to attach it to his belt, according to Assistant Chief Gerard E. Mahoney. The gun, which he was licensed to carry, accidentally fired, hitting the captain in his hip area, Mahoney said.

According to the report, he wasn’t supposed to be packing at work.

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QOTD 0

Mark Udall:

It’s tough to know the value of water until it’s gone.

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Watch What They Do, Not What They Say 0

(Link fixed.)

Trevor Timm finds a contradiction. A nugget (emphasis added):

As politicians drape themselves in the flag of free speech and freedom of the press in response to the tragic murder of Charlie Hebdo cartoonists, they’ve also quickly moved to stifle the same rights they claim to love. . . .

This is an entirely predictable response – as civil liberties advocates noted shortly after Wednesday’s tragic attack, the threat of terrorism has led to draconian laws all over the world over the last decade – but this time around, the speed and breadth by which politicians praised free speech out of one side of their mouths, while moving to curtail rights out of the other, has been quite breathtaking.

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Fantasy Worlds 2

One of the saddest sights in the American political landscape is a Republican of good will who tries to pretend that a vestige remains of his fantasy “traditional” Republicanism. One such is Wisconsin’s Austin Given, who laments in part

If only the RNC had not implemented the Southern Strategy, Republicans might still be the party of civil rights. If state’s rights conservatives had not infected the party founded to stop them, Republicans would be fighting for minority rights, not majority comfort and supremacy.

Real Republicans recognize the party’s cancer. The growing state’s rights conservative movement has mutated the Republican message from empowering individuals to overpowering them.

Do read the rest. His faith in the existence of “real Republicans” somehow separate and apart from the actions of the Republican Party is touching and sweet in a sad puppy dog way.

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“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0

A polite look . . .

A 20-year-old man was accidentally killed on Saturday afternoon when he and an acquaintance were looking at a gun in a Baton Rouge home’s storage room, according to police.

The two men were in a home in the 4900 block of Jefferson Avenue when the gun went off around 12:30 p.m., said Cpl. L’Jean McKneely, a Baton Rouge Police spokesman. A single bullet struck the 20-year-old in the chest, and he died at the scene, according to McKneely.

. . . and another gun that went off on its ownsome.

Perhaps we have reached the gunularity.

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The Snaring Economy 0

The “sharing economy” loses another early supporter.

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Same Coin. Two Sides. 0

Trudy Rubin.

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Facebook Frolics 0

Frolics de mortuus.

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DragonQuest 0

My local rag reports on the Navy’s effort to keep the fleet of unreliable, outdated “Sea Dragon” choppers in service because it’s all they got. It details the inertia of bureaucracy, one of the most powerful forces in organizational behavior, whether, mind you, the organization in question is public or private.

The most recent story tells of an officer who died in a crash at sea. Here’s a bit:

Not long after joining his Norfolk-based squadron in 2010, he began to question the decision. Something wasn’t right. Months later, after he took over as the division officer in charge of maintenance, he began to realize the depth of the problems. The aging helicopters weren’t getting the care they needed. Maintenance protocols were being skipped. Replacement parts were scarce, and when they were available, it was usually because they had been plucked from another Sea Dragon. At any given time, only a few of the squadron’s helicopters were ready to fly.

Whenever Wes tried to correct the problems, he felt as if he was bucking a chain of command that had grown accustomed to business as usual. He learned that a 20-something-year-old lieutenant has only so much power. Finally, a little more than a year ago, Wes told Nicole he was ready to get out. Maybe he could fly for the Coast Guard, he suggested.

Read the whole series, and, as you do, remember that the first response of any organization to criticism is to circle the wagons and protect their own. In this way, the Navy is no different from GM is no different from Sony is no different from Honda is no different from–well, you get the idea.

The impulse of any organization is always to protect its members, because, hey! they are our friends and coworkers and we know they didn’t mean anyone any harm, so any harm must have been an accident and stuff happens and we’re all good guys here because we know each other and play golf at the same clubs and are trying to do good jobs and don’t intentions count?

Aside:

My local rag may not be the best local rag and they are hurting like many other local rags (Damn you, Craig’s List), but they try. That’s one reason I pay for delivery; I could read it online, but I pay for print. If I could, I’d pay more papers for print, but I can’t. It’s up to you to support your own local rag.

I will not forget that they were the only newspaper in Virginia to oppose “Massive Resistance.”

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QOTD 0

Will Durant:

Most of us spend too much time on the last twenty-four hours and too little on the last six thousand years.

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And Now for Something Completely Different 0

Via The Oregonian.

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Selfie Incrimination 0

More stuff you couldn’t make up.

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A New Twist on “Blame the Victim” 0

Honest to Pete, you can’t make this stuff up.

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Facebook Frolics 0

“Unliked” by the Gray Lady.

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Banner Year 0

Teabaggers holding

And, natch, race has nothing to do with it.

Via Job’s Anger.

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Everybody Must Get Fracked 0

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