From Pine View Farm

January, 2019 archive

QOTD 0

Georges Clemenceau:

America is the only nation in history which miraculously has gone directly from barbarism to degeneration without the usual interval of civilization.

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Parks and Wreck 0

The San Francisco Chronicle looks at the Trumpling of the national parks. A snippet:

Deciding against a full closure of the parks appears to be an effort to avoid the public outcry that greeted that 2013 shutdown, suggested Jon Jarvis, a former National Park Service director and currently the executive director of UC Berkeley’s Institute for Parks, People, and Diversity. . . .

But that 2013 shutdown, he said, was “a stewardship act”: Without employees on duty to manage and provide stewardship, the parks would be vulnerable. “I think we’re actually seeing that play out now,” he added.

Wildlife has been dining on garbage that normally would be collected and secure — a wildlife buffet that contributed to the decision to close Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks, and raised dangers of human-bear encounters at parks from Yosemite in California to Big Bend in Texas.

Much more disturbing stuff at the link.

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Rand Gestures 0

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Repo Man 0

Caption:  Trump considering using disaster funds from states, Puerto Rico to build his vanity wall.  Donald Trump and two heavily armed soldiers in front of flood-damaged house in Puerto Rico.  Husband in doorway says to wife,

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Extra-Special Bonus QOTD 0

Buzz Burbank:

We have progressed over the last . . . 43 years from “I am not a crook” to “I never worked for Russia . . . .”

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Phoning It In 0

All you folks who just had babies, remember, in just 13 years, you will have a teenager.

An Ohio teenager called 911 Saturday to accuse her father of theft after he took away her cell phone as a disciplinary measure, cops report.

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Fact-Check 0

Couple watching as Donald Trump concludes his speech with

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So Much Winning 0

PoliticalProf.

Mike Littwin has more, and it’s not pretty.

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QOTD 0

William Henry Harrison:

…there is nothing more corrupting, nothing more destructive of the noblest and finest feelings of our nature, than the exercise of unlimited power.

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A Poem, Not by Henry Gibson 0

This poem by Alastair Read was in the preface to a slim volume about DNA which was part of my tenth grade biology class. The class sucke–was less than desirable, as the teacher taught it as if we were college students, which we weren’t.

But I’ve never forgotten the first verse of the poem. (Attribution.)

    Curiosity may have killed the cat; more likely
    the cat was just unlucky, or else curious
    to see what death was like, having no cause
    to go on licking paws, or fathering
    litter on litter of kittens, predictably.

Read more »

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Facebook Frolics 0

Naveed Saleh reports that enthusiasm for Facebook seems to be waning, citing surveys that show more and more persons are taking longer breaks from the Wells Fargo of social media and that a significant number of persons are removing the Facebook app from their smartphones.*

At Psychology Today Blogs, he suggests ten reasons why this might be so. Here’s one; follow the link for the rest.

Thin content. Lots of the content on Facebook is quite thin. How important is it for you to see your second-cousin’s kid standing in front of a limo before prom? Or, another duck-face selfie?

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*Even if you don’t intend to dial back you Facebook usage, not using their smartphone app is a wise choice. It spies on users relentlessly. When I visit Facebook, which I must do once or twice a month as part of outreach efforts for outfits I reach out for–when you do outreach, you have to reach out to where the people are–I use a private browser window, so Facebook cannot continue to spy on me after I’m done with them.

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Cashing in the Schools: The Privatization Scam 0

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Signs of the Times 0

Two men in suits and sunglasses holding signs saying,

In related news, real world consequences of the Trumpian Temper Tantrum are starting to pile up.

Image via Job’s Anger.

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Redaction Action 0

Image of sharpie labeled White House next to a document with multiple words marked out so that all that remains is

Via Job’s Anger.

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The Wall-Eyed Piker Gets It Wrong (Why Am I Not Surprised?) 0

In my local rag, historian Matthew Gabriele points out that, on the historical evidence, walls don’t work, despite Donald Trump’s claims that they do.

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“Compassionate Conservatism” 0

Uh, yeah.

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Russian Impulses 0

Shaun Mullen keeps up with the latest so I don’t have to.

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QOTD 0

Rex Stout:

When two people who want to get along start needing to have things explained, look out.

Stout, Rex, The Father Hunt (New York: Bantam, 1993), p. 97.

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“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0

Play politely.

Morse said that he and the victim often met at the duplex to smoke marijuana and when they did so, they’d play with a gun, according to Lemma.

“What they would typically do is horseplay around with a gun at the location, meaning that they would point it at each other, they would pull the trigger. Most of the time, the gun was unloaded when that occurred,” Lemma said.

The victim was playing with the gun when Morse tried to take it and during the struggle, the gun fired, killing the victim, according to authorities.

Afterthought:

I will not say one way or the other that I have ever had any experience with that evil weed, but I freely admit that I have toyed with other intoxicants (God bless the Scots!). I will say that, had I done so, I would fancy myself not so stupid as to toy with firearms when so doing.

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Going to the Dog 0

Victoria Hugo-Vidal suggests that, since our government is going to the dogs, it might be better if it went to the dog. A snippet:

Because President Dog’s executive orders would be unintelligible to us, since nobody speaks fluent BARK BARK BARK (and in all likelihood the orders would most likely translate to “Let’s go for walkies RIGHT NOW”), if anyone in Congress wanted something done, they would have to pass legislation for it. And they would have to pass it by a veto-proof majority, because while we can certainly dip President Dog’s paw in vegetable-based ink (just in case he licks it off) and point him toward the legislation, we cannot predict if he will stamp his paw on it, or if he will chew it up instead. Congress could not rely on executive actions to accomplish their goals – they would have to do it themselves.

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