From Pine View Farm

April, 2018 archive

And Now for Something Completely Different 0

During some discussion on the radio about the celebration of the 100th anniversary of Leonard Bernstein’s birth, I learned that Leonard Bernstein had written music for Benny Goodman.

This is one of the pieces he wrote.

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Justice Decried 0

Thom explains to a right-wing caller that a legally-obtained, well-founded search warrant is not a violation of civil liberties; indeed, itt is rather the epitome of them. (The conversation gets a bit contentious towards the end, but remains civil.)

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Drinking Liberally Virginia Beach Today 0

When fellowship is needed, join us . . . .

When: Thursday, April 12, 6 p.

Where:
Croc’s 19 Street Bistro
620 19th Street (Map)

Sign up to have your inbox flooded with one or two emails a month here.

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Alice in Blunderland 0

Donald Trump as the Red Queen pointing at Lady Justice saying,

Click for the original image.

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“Not with a Bang, but a Whimper” 0

Dick Polman.

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“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0

Share the politeness.

Two women in their twenties and a young girl suffered gunshot wounds in their legs in West Valley City Wednesday afternoon, and a suspect is now in custody.

(snip)

“He was just passing through and started to shoot,” he said of the suspect. “He shot my wife and my daughter.”

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Ryan’s Derp 0

Reckon he figures he’s done all the damage he could.

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QOTD 0

Lao Tzu:

Nothing is softer or more flexible than water, yet nothing can resist it.

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Now for a Little Eye Candy 0

Another photo from my brother in Virginia’s Northern Neck.

Hawk in tree

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Nor Any Drop To Drink 0

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Facebook Frolics 0

Two men dressed in medical scrubs dragging a man to an MPI (My Personal Information) scanner where a Facebook logo adorns the scanning bed.  One says,

Click for the original image.

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All That Was Old Is New Again 0

Thom explains how Nixon’s odious Southern Strategy led to Donald Trump.

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Extinct 0

Man and woman visiting the

Via Job’s Anger.

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Which Hunt? 0

Juanita Jean corrects some terminology.

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“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0

Boys and their toys . . . .

According to court documents, Smith gave Brymer the airsoft gun after shooting him twice in the back, and Brymer tucked it in his front pocket next to his real handgun.

Brymer then mistook the real gun for the airsoft gun and shot Smith.

Smith was transported to the hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

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QOTD 0

Robert J. Sawyer:

Psychopathy might lurk behind the mask of sanity.

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Recommended Reading 0

I trained as an historian and, through that training and a lifetime of reading history and sociology, I am convinced that the past illuminates the present. Accordingly, I recommend A History of China by William Eberhard, as China is important and most Americans, including me, are woefully ignorant about its history and culture–well, not just ignorant, more like farcically misinformed and bigoted.

I do not claim that it answers every question nor that it is without bias (I don’t know enough about Chinese history to make that claim), but the author’s credentials are impeccable and the book is readable and accessible, having been written for the general reader; it can give perspective to why China is what it is now.

You can get it from Project Gutenberg (easily the most noble of internet projects) and read it with the free FBreader.

Maps of China through its history from Chinahighlights.com illuminate the narrative.

To get a sense in English of day-to-day life in ancient China, you probably can’t do better than Robert van Gulik’s Judge Dee mysteries, which I first encountered in a marvelous little bookshop on 33rd Street across from Madison Round Garden (it’s not at Madison Square any more and it is round) in New York City when I was involved in an extensive training project there in the early ’80s. I’m rereading them now.

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A Picture Is Worth 0

Picture of Donald Trump with the words,

Via PoliticalProf.

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Facebook Frolics, Guinea Pigs Dept. 0

Writing at Psychology Today Blogs, Susan Krauss Whitbourne describes how Facebook profiled its users victims. Here’s a bit of the article:

As part of the expose now coming to light, one study, in particular, has not received a great deal of attention, but in some ways is even more ominous than the Cambridge Analytica story alone. In 2015, Kogan published a scientific article (link is external) with collaborators from well-respected academic institutions as well as his company, and Facebook researchers, in which the claim was made that people of higher social status have fewer international friends. The underlying theory was that people with greater wealth and power don’t need to affiliate with people who aren’t like them; i.e., people from other nations. The authors didn’t seem to think that using data from millions of Facebook data, without their awareness, would constitute an ethical violation. See what you think after reading the details of this paper.

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The Rule of Lawless, Warranted Intrusion Dept. 0

The news is full of stories about what the Mueller investigation’s raid on Michael Cohen’s office and home might portend and I will not speculate. You can find plenty if speculation at legitimate (and, no doubt, illegitimate–see below) news sites.

Nevertheless, I will this teeny contribution from the Atlanta Journal-Constitution’s Jay Bookman regarding the nature of the search warrant (emphasis added):

As the raids demonstrate, attorney-client privilege is not absolute. Under what is known as the crime-fraud exception, prosecutors can ask a judge for permission to seize material and force a lawyer’s testimony after showing that the client had used the attorney to advance a crime or fraud.

(snip)

Such exceptions are rare, however. Judges asked to approve such an exception and grant a search warrant must be convinced of a prima facie case that a crime has occurred and that the lawyer had somehow been involved in the actual commission of that crime. That’s always a high bar for prosecutors to clear, and it no doubt becomes even higher when the client in question is the president of the United States.

In other words, this is no fishing expedition.

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