From Pine View Farm

November, 2013 archive

Update from the Wedding Industrial Complex 0

From MarketWatch:

As the cost of attending weddings increases, so does the volume of RSVPs marked “Declines with regret.” Some 43% of Americans say they’ve declined to attend a wedding for financial reasons, according to a new poll by American Consumer Credit Counseling. The average cost of attending a wedding — including expenses like hotel stays, bachelor and bachelorette parties, child care, and party attire — reached roughly $539 this year, up 60% from 2012, according to an American Express survey. Of course, that pales in comparison to the cost of hosting a wedding: $28,400 on average last year, according to wedding website TheKnot.com.

I’m so old, I remember when weddings were to celebrate a marriage, not to pick the guests (and the bride’s and groom’s) pockets.

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Dis Coarse Discourse 0

Via C&L.

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The Lost Cause 2

Leonard Pitts, Jr., visits Gettysburg:

Last month, after exhausting the usual “where are you folks from” patter, the driver of a tour bus in Gettysburg offered this view of the battle that happened there: “Neither side was wrong,” he said. “Both fought for their beliefs.” He seemed not to consider that the Nazis did, too.

It was an attempt at moral equivalence, a pretense that both sides are equally valid, and it is not uncommon. When offered a chance to define what America means, some of us rush from judgment.

As long as the polity continues to behave as if the cause of the Secesh was an honorable cause, the Confederate States of America will continue to win the peace, even as they lost the war, and the Secesh will continue to plague the polity.

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The (Corporate) Welfare State 0

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QOTD 0

Logan Pearsall Smith:

There are few sorrows, however poignant, in which a good income is of no avail.

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The Ratings Game 0

The Orlando Sentinal’s Scott Maxwell wanted to know what persons think of their elected representatives incongruously assembled. Not much, it turns out.

So I thought I’d turn to my fellow Central Floridians for perspective.

On a blustery fall afternoon last week, I visited Lake Eola and chatted with folks — young and old, black and white, liberal and conservative.

(snip)

Asked to rank Congress on a scale of 1 to 10, the average was 1. One person actually said 3, but he was offset by the two who refused to go higher than zero.

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What’s Oleo Is New Again 0

Stephen Mihn recounts the strange history of oleomargarine.

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Parallels 0

Well, maybe not so much.

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“Strike the Debt” 0

Something positive grows from Occupy.

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A Picture Is Worth 0

Flowchart:  Republicans care about you only if you are rich or are a fetus.  Otherwise, otherwise.

Via BartCop.

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Mystery Solved! 0

We have found the whereabouts of Shreddinger’s Cat.

corner of couch used as scratching post.

It’s downstairs even as I type this.

Read more »

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The Pusher Man 0

To quote the Velvet Underground, from the magnificent Velvet Underground with Nico:

I’m waiting for my man
Twenty-six dollars in my hand
Up to Lexington, 1 2 5
Feeling sick and dirty, more dead than alive
I’m waiting for my man.

And the man’s name is . . . “Biggie Pharma.”

(If you doubt me, watch Wheel of Fortune on Monday and don’t zip through the commercials. It’s all drugs all the time.)

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Courting Gridlock 0

Dick Polman nominates Republicans for “Best in Obstruction.” A nugget.

A generation ago, when there was at least a scintilla of comity on Capitol Hill, it was taken for granted that elections had consequences; that when a president won an election (or two), he was entitled to staff the federal judiciary with qualified people of his choosing. The opposition party in the Senate recognized that principle, and honored it. Senate Democrats didn’t routinely weaponize the filibuster; in fact, 15 of the last 19 appointees to the D.C. appeals court were successfully enlisted by Republican presidents.

But those days are over. Sabotage is now routine; dissing the election results is de rigueur. The way it works now is, Republicans concoct bogus reasons to filibuster whoever Obama nominates, just because Obama nominated them. In the partisan Republican trench, his two election wins mean squat.

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QOTD 0

Jean Cocteau:

Mirrors would do well to reflect a little more before sending back images.

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Reversal 0

The Rude One rudely takes on President Obama’s “About Face” (as my local rag styled it) on health no-surance.

Warning: Extremely Rude, but rudely on target.

Also, Dick Polman.

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Accomplices 0

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“I’m Not Racist, but . . . .” Reprise (Updated) (Updated Again) (Yawn. Yet Another Update) 3

Chauncey Devega points out that the image of racists as mouth-breathing sheet-wearning terrorists burning crosses is not only inaccurate, but also a misdirection play distracting from more subtle and insidious “polite” racists.

A nugget:

White supremacy is so much more complex and nuanced than such ironically comforting images. The latter does the practical work of colorblind racism in the post civil rights era by framing white supremacy as something absurd, anachronistic, and an outlier. This is a wonderfully comforting thought for white folks and others. An acceptance of the fact that white supremacy is quotidian, common, and manifests itself in America’s social and political institutions, collective psyche, and a deep sense of white entitlement and white privilege, is verboten for a country which wants to embrace a public narrative of racial progress while denying how far it has yet to go.

In all, for post civil rights America, the “nice” and “polite” racists are a much greater threat, in mass, than the “mean” and “vicious” ones.

I’m a southern boy; I grew up white under Jim Crow.

Some of the nicest, most courteous people I knew as I grew up were as racist as racist could be. They would have never said the n-word in public, maybe not even in private, and certainly not within hearing of a Not White person, but they were certain that the color of their skins made them superior to anyone of a deeper hue and that they were therefore entitled to deference.

The sense of entitlement to–the demand for–deference solely because of skin color is an essential element of racism.

Receiving that deference, including deference to claims of “I’m not racist” in defense of clearly racist actions and statements, is white privilege writ large.

Do read the rest.

Addendum:

And, in more news of the not racist . . .

Addendum-Dee-Dum-Dum:

In reference to the Addendum above . . . .

Addendum-Dee-Doo-Dah

Chauncey Devega points out that it was her own damned fault for being.

You know, if you will admit it, that he is correct.

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Celling Silliness 0

On the streets of New York, and probably everywhere else.

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“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0

Be polite to your spouse.

According to deputies, Michael Boyce initially told investigators that his wife, Alexis Boyce, shot herself in their apartment but his story later changed when he was confronted with more evidence.

He eventually told deputies that he accidentally shot her in the head, Sgt. Mike Ruggiero said late Thursday.

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Twits on Twitter 0

Bankster twits.

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