From Pine View Farm

January, 2012 archive

TSA Security Theatre 0

Thoreau seems to have reached the breaking point.

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A Fox in the Clown Car? 0

Der Spiegel wonders whether Fox News is willing to sacrifice Republican aspirants to the ratings wars. The publication observes that, as soon as someone grabs the front runner flag, Fox tries to capture the flag. A snippet:

Fox News needs sensationalism to maintain its ratings, which is why the Republican candidates cannot expect preferential treatment this year. Because hatred of Obama and the left has become old news, Fox has turned its focus to transforming the Republican primaries into a circus — fueled by Ailes, the Republicans’ shadow leader, who at times wields his power like a dictator.

It’s an interesting read. Follow the link for the rest.

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Facebook Frolics 2

At Psychology Today, Steve Baskin agonizes over “What hath Zuckerberg wrought”? A nugget:

. . . learning how to connect with other humans requires experience with the multitudinous aspects of non-verbal communication. Communicating well is actually an acquired skill that requires practice.

Tweeting, texting and emailing do not provide such practice. Not only are they devoid of the tone and body language necessary for clear communication, but they also lead (I fear) to the pruning of these skills.

As my two or three regular readers know, I am not a fan of Facebook or Twitter. They turn their users into commodities for sale to marketers, while propagating useless idiocy with the same ease with which they propagate useful idiocy–er, information.

Nevertheless, I cannot shake the feeling that, 600 years ago, Baskin would have been agonizing over “What hath Gutenberg wrought.”

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Drinking Liberally Norfolk Wednesday 0

Drinking Liberally is a support group for liberals, where you can realize you are not alone.

When: 6 p., Wednesday, January 11.

Where:
The Public House
1112 Colley Avenue (map)

Details here.

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Developer Magic in Queens. Really? 0

Like Savoir Faire, the touching faith in developer magic is everywhere, even in Queens.

For those of you who have visited New York, how many of you have visited boroughs other than Manhattan?

I have, if you can call having a gig at Sunnyside Yards (which I reached by catching deadheads from Penn Station to the yards), attending a Yankees games (Yankee Stadium is maybe two blocks into the Bronx), or driving through Staten Island and Brooklyn on the way to Amityville (yes, I’ve been to Amityville) “visiting other boroughs.”

Via Atrios.

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Meeting Mitt 0

Anne Laurie tells the tale at Balloon Juice. A nugget:

It was a cold grey pre-spring morning early in 2002, and I was one among the hordes migrating through the Back Bay (subway, commuter rail, and intercity bus) terminal. Suddenly a tall humanoid in an expensively-tailored dark tweed business-capitalist overcoat lunged into my meagre personal space and thrust a dark-gloved hand towards my throat. When I automatically pulled back, he bared his top-quality-dental-hygiene teeth in a primate threat gesture possibly intended to mimic a smile. Two or three much younger, smaller drones in cheap knock-off overcoats immediately rushed over and carefully guided the tall humanoid away from me and towards another potential target. One of the little drones tarried to look back at me, arrange his shiny happy features into a frowny-face, and hiss, “That was Mitt Romney! He’s going to be your next Governor!

There’s no there there.

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A Swamp by Any Other Name Would Smell as Reek 2

Mike Gruss, writing in my local rag, considers the tendency of beseiged companies to change their names to something vaguely latinate and altogether uncommunicative so as to outrun their reputations. He mentions, Philip Morris Altria and Bell Atlantic/NYNEX Verizon (but unaccountably leaves out Southwestern Bell Cingular not-your-father’s AT&T).

Then he focuses on Swampwater, now T/A Xe Academi. A nugget:

Blackwater, once headquartered in Moyock, N.C., is dead, but only kind of. The name still lives in video games and T-shirts and in lawsuits and news stories, but is not the property of the new company. Xe always was viewed as a joke, a transparent attempt to play on America’s short-term memory when we’re more sophisticated than that.

Academi may be a top-notch training school, or it may be a place Arnold Schwarzenegger stopped by in “Total Recall.” No one knows because they’ve never seen the word before.

Then the natural instinct is to be afraid.

Which, given Blackwater’s history and pending lawsuits, might not be a bad thing.

A mercenary by any other name is still a gun for hire.

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Resolved 0

I gave up New Year’s Resolutions years ago, not that I ever took them all too seriously in any case. The resolutions I have found that I keep are the ones I make because the time is right, not because the calendar flips.

I may reconsider after reading Charlie Booker’s list of suggested resolutions at the Guardian. Here’s a sample:

Stop pretending Lady Gaga and Beyoncé are endlessly fascinating.

Look, it’s not that I don’t see their appeal. I just can’t fathom the apparently infinite depth of it. I appreciate they’re both polished entertainers with a neat line in music videos and some very catchy songs, but beyond that – what are you all seeing, precisely? I mean, it’s nice that the openly kooky Lady Gaga inspires her fans not to give in to bullies and the suchlike, but she also inspires them to “put their paws up” and be a bit annoying, which kind of balances it out, really. They’re not Mayan gods.

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QOTD 0

Isaac Asimov:

If knowledge can create problems, it is not through ignorance that we can solve them.

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Dog Whistles–Silent No More 1

Yesterday, Bob Cesca posted that the odious Republican Southern Strategy has returned.

I’m afraid he’s wrong. It never went away.

What’s different in this campaign is that the Republicans are no longer attempting to camouflage it; everyone can hear the dog whistles.

Writing at the Guardian, Teresa Wiltz recounts the almost constant appeals to racism by Republican candidates and concludes, quite rightly, that

Some would call this dogwhistle politicking – the cynical use of code words and phrases to rile up the racist base. That’s what Sarah Palin did back in the 2008 campaign when she famously noted that Barack Obama “is not one of us”. But this goes beyond dogwhistling. These are messages that are coming in loud and clear for all to hear. Gingrich, Santorum and Paul can’t be bothered with prettying things up. It doesn’t matter that they’re spreading lies and misinformation. (For starters, according to the US Census, 59% of food stamp recipients are white, while 28% are black. Poor comes in all colors.)

They just don’t give a flying fig.

Gingrich, Santorum and Paul are using the same playbook as DW Griffith did back in 1915 with Birth of a Nation: painting black folks as the boogeymen.

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“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0

Politeness grows apace in the Old Dominion:

Virginia gun sales surged to a record high in 2011, fueled in part by shoppers buying more firearms in December than ever before.

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“Performance, Feedback, Revision” 0

All rapped up in evolution:

Via Delaware Liberal, which has more, including an explanation of bling.

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Property Rights 0

From the website: Author Elizabeth Dowling Taylor tells the story of Paul Jennings, who served as one of James Madison’s slaves and ultimately purchased his own freedom.

And, I add, that of his wife and children.

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A Picture Is Worth . . . 0

Govt. costs vs savings ratios under Bush and Obama.

Via the Richmonder, who points out

The Republican Party isn’t so much an association of like minded people devoted to promoting a certain political ideological point of view so much as a complex and surprisingly elaborate spider web of lies.

(snip)

I worry about the depth of dishonesty to which Republicans have allowed them to sink. No matter what the issue, large or small, if Republicans meet with a check or challenge from someone who does not agree with them, their very first instinct seems to be to lie, to trample on the letter and spirit of the 8th Commandment. . . . “You shall not bear false witness against your neighbor.”

Follow the link for a catechism of the lies.

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QOTD 0

William McChesney Martin, from the Quotemaster (subscribe here):

Too many of our prejudices are like pyramids upside down. They rest on tiny, trivial incidents, but they spread upward and outward until they fill our minds.

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Football Wizards 1

I made the mistake of turning on an NFL football game (I lasted three minutes–three real minutes, not three football minutes).

It was half-time.

One of the retired jocks on the “fight literacy–keep retired jocks on the air” panel of experts informed me, amazement in his voice, that a player

caught the ball with his hands!

I guess he left his net on the bench.

Furrfu.

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Everybody Must Get Fracked 1

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has promised to deliver water to a northeastern Pennsylvania village where a natural gas driller has been accused of tainting homeowners’ wells with methane and possibly hazardous chemicals, residents said Friday.

Homeowners in Dimock Township have been without a reliable supply of clean water since Cabot Oil & Gas Corp., the Houston-based drilling firm blamed for polluting their aquifer, stopped making daily deliveries more than a month ago.

And, as Atrios points out, the frackers are walking away, leaving the evul fedrul guvmint to pick up the pieces.

Remember, it was the Bushies who exempted the fracking frackers from clean air and water regulations.

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The Politics of Fear 0

At Science 2.0, Hank Campbell reports on a study that may shed some light on why Republicans practice the politics of fear.

Conservatives reacted more strongly to unpleasant images, they fixated on those more quickly and looked longer, while liberals had stronger reactions to and looked longer at pleasant images. Conservatives reacted more to a crashed car while progressives reacted more to a bunny rabbit. Neither is bad, obviously, but certainly different.

“It’s been said that conservatives and liberals don’t see things in the same way,” said Mike Dodd, University of Nebraska-Lincoln (UNL) assistant professor of psychology and the study’s lead author. “These findings make that clear – quite literally.”

Mr. Campbell is careful to point out that, despite the researchers’ attempts to divine some evolutionary cause for this, correlation is not causation; the study does not explain why conservatives are more fearful than liberals (or perhaps it’s the reverse: the fearful are more likely to lean to the right).

It does, however, help explain why the Republicans tend to pitch their appeals to the dark side of human nature. It speaks to their followers.

Follow the link for more details and a desription of the study’s methodology.

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Little Ricky, Crusader Rabid 0

In the Chicago Trib, Steve Chapman considers Little Ricky Santorum’s deep faith in the power of theocratic rule* to save the world. A nugget:

It sounds obvious that when people practice a religion that preaches strong morality and responsible conduct, they will behave better than people who follow their own inclinations. But what is obvious is not always true.

America is a good place to judge the value of faith in promoting virtue. There is a great deal of variation among the 50 states in religious observance — and a great deal of variation in social ills. It turns out that religiosity does not translate into good behavior, and disregard for religion does not go hand-in-hand with vice. Quite the contrary.

Follow the link above to explore the “contrary.” Visit Attytood to explore Little Ricky’s record of public (dis)service.

______________________

*His theocratic rule, natch, not someone else’s.

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Endless War, Lessons Learned Dept. 0

Planning for the next war
Click for a larger image.

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