From Pine View Farm

June, 2022 archive

A Tale of the Trumpling 0

The Washington Post’s Stephanie McCrummen follows an Alice down the Trumpian rabbit hole.

No excerpt or summary can do this report justice.

Just read it. It is–er–disquieting.

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“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0

Yet another responsible gun owner discharges her responsibility.

Yet another child is dead.

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“With Liberty and Justice for Some . . . .” 0

Bryan Clark finds the recent Supreme Court ruling in Shinn v. Martinez Ramirez troubling. Here’s a bit of his article; the rest is at the link.

For the wrongfully convicted, it sets a precedent that shatters the hope that they can get new evidence of innocence examined by a federal court.

And not because the court has weighed the evidence for and against guilt and come to the conclusion that the man is guilty. (The latest court to review the evidence in the case concluded he probably couldn’t be found guilty of anything.)

The court is pushing to execute him because it says the evidence showing he is innocent should not be considered at all.

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Misty Water-Colored Memories 0

The writer of a letter to the editor remembers a different time.

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QOTD 0

Joseph Schumpeter:

The first thing a man will do for his ideals is lie.

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Geeking Out 0

VirtualBox VM of Windows 8 on Ubuntu MATE under the Fluxbox window manager. The wallpaper is from my collection.

Screenshot

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Fundamentals of Fundamentalism 0

At Psychology Today Blogs, Araya Baker explores religious fundamentalism, which he refers to as a “political-religious” movement, as distinct from a purely religious one. He notes that

. . . it is imperative that we understand how religious fundamentalism threatens democracy. This public scholarship is intended to be used as a condensed primer that disassembles the ideology to 1) illustrate how and why it spans all religious doctrines and 2) how it differs from healthy spirituality, so that valid critiques of fundamentalism can pre-empt conflation with anti-theism.

I commend his piece to your attention, particularly for the list of characteristics that he suggests is common to fundamentalist movements, whether they be Christian, Muslim, Hindu, or Buddhist.

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Real Big Men 0

PoliticalProf.

Read the back story here.

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Courting Disaster 0

Dr. Kenneth Krell is concerned that the current Supreme Court, packed with Trumpettes by Donald Trump and Mitch McConnell, poses a clear and present danger to physical health of the populace.

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The Crypto-Con: It’s Electric! 0

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“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0

Beach blanket bango.

And, while we are on the subject of politeness . . . .

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The Common Denominator 0

At The Roanoke Times, Sociologist Theodore Fuller points out that guns are the problem.

Some say that we will never solve the problem of random gun violence until people return to their faith in God. Church attendance is down. People are abandoning their traditional values. So, the problem is that Americans are less Godly than, say, the French, the Germans, the Brits, the Swedes, the Norwegians? Have you checked lately on church attendance rates in Europe? It is much lower than in the United States. No, the problem is not a lack of religion; it is that we have a horribly misguided interpretation of the Second Amendment.

(snip)

We have not always had this distorted interpretation of the Second Amendment. The idea that the Second Amendment means that any Tom, Dick, or Harry has a Constitutional right to purchase any weapon, no matter how deadly, has been sold to the American people by the NRA. And the NRA did not always have this interpretation. They started selling this idea in the 1970s.

To put it bluntly, that’s when the NRA morphed from being primarily a safety organization for hunters to being the marketing agency for merchants of death.

Follow the link for the rest.

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Devolution 0

At the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Tony Norman marvels at the Republican Party’s journey from the party of Lincoln to the party of stinkin’.

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QOTD 0

John Cotton Dana:

Who dares to teach must never cease to learn.

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A Tune for the Times 0

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A Memory Like an Elephant 0

Teacher:  Who knows how many days there are in a year.  Student:  Three hundred and sixty-five, unless you are a Republican--then you don't count January 6th.

Via Job’s Anger.

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Coup, Me? 0

Thom discusses Republicans’ seditious actions. He quotes from a speech by George Washington:

Cunning, ambitious, and unprincipled men will be enabled to subvert the power of the people and to usurp for themselves the reins of government, destroying afterwards the very engines which have lifted them to unjust domination.

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Dis Coarse Discourse 0

Republican Elephant stands in front of picture of school hallway saying,

Via Juanita Jean.

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It’s All about the Algorithm 0

“Social” media isn’t.

For example.

Aside:

As I have said before, the landscape of the internet has changed drastically since the Communications Decency Act was passed almost three decades ago. I agree with Dan Romer in the article at the link. “Social” media outfits that manipulate content so as to attract “eyeballs” and increase “engagement” are not impartial platforms for their users’ statements, unlike, for example, my most excellent hosting provider, which provides me a platform, but does not manipulate my content in any way.

Section 230 of that act sorely needs updating to reflect the reality of today’s internet.

Read more »

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Suffer the Children 0

At the Idaho State Journal, Chris Huston, in a longer article about how, in the fuss over abortion, men are somehow in no way held responsible for their role in unwanted pregnancies, expresses his befuddlement.

It has always baffled me that people who claim to be pro-life often seem to lose interest once the child is born. Restrict abortion? Sure. Support the child (and mother) with post-pregnancy health, education and adoption services? No thanks. My taxes are high enough.

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