From Pine View Farm

June, 2020 archive

QOTD 0

Nick Tosches:

Mortality applies to every aspect of life. The fear of death is the driving fear of life.

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A Tune for the Times 0

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The Climates They Are a-Changing 0

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Immunity Impunity 0

Black father having

Via Job’s Anger.

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Sacrificial Lambs 0

Solomon Jones wonders, in view of the Dullsa in Tulsa, what lengths Donald Trump will go to in order to get what he wants. (Hint: The answer is “any.”)

A nugget:

But in the days since Trump’s sparsely attended political rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, I am convinced that there is no “us” in Trump’s vision of the world. There is only Trump. Everyone else is a tool to be used for Trump’s own personal gain. How else to explain Trump’s attempt to put thousands of his most staunch supporters into an enclosed arena where they could contract and spread a deadly virus that’s already killed upwards of 120,000 Americans?

In my view, that’s a frightening reflection of Trump’s actual persona. If he could risk the very lives of his most loyal followers by using them as extras in his attempt to mount a political comeback, what would he do to the rest of us for his own personal gain?

(Misplet wrod correxted.)

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Yet Another Step . . . 0

. . . down the the path to pariah, as I have been predicting.

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Rule of Lawless 0

Persons in hazmat suits from a truck labeled

Click for the original image.

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The Persistence of the Peculiar Institution 0

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QOTD 0

Kerry Greenwood:

A moment’s acquaintance was enough to convince her that Mrs. Freeman would not know anything that she did not want to know.

Greenwood, Kerry, The Green Mill Murder (Scottsdale, AZ: Poisoned Pen Press, 2007), p. 31.

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Stories of the Fall 0

Der Spiegel interviews two economists, Angus Deaton and Anne Case, in an attempt to figure out what the COVID-19 pandemic has revealed about health care in the United States.

They are not optimistic.

Here’s a bit:

DER SPIEGEL: Is it possible to identify the point when things started to go wrong in the U.S.?

Deaton: One great question to ask is: Why doesn’t America have a strong federal welfare state with health care like other European countries do? One answer is the issue of race. In the middle of the 20th century, it was the southern senators of the Democratic party who blocked any consideration of publicly funded health care. People don’t like to pay for services that go to people that don’t look like them, especially when they are black.

It’s a tough read, but a worthwhile one.

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Little Shop of Horrors 0

Woman says to clerk in bookstore,

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“Reconstruction Required” 0

At Psychology Today Blogs, Lawrence Samuel argues persuasively that American school textbooks present an unbalanced view of American history and of black persons’ role in and contributions to it.

I’m not going to try to excerpt or summarize his piece; it has too many moving parts. Just go read it for yourself.

Addendum:

That was certainly the case with my elementary and high school text books at my all-white schools under Jim Crow. Realizing that as I got a broader view in college was one of the factors that led me to pursue a degree in history with a focus on U. S. Southern.

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Going Postal 0

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“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0

Be polite to our animal friends.

A woman living in the home told officers she was asleep when a loud noise awakened her and she found her dog, Lefty, lying in the floor in a pool of blood. The woman described Shuttleworth as “very intoxicated” and said he told her he shot the dog because it had an accident in the house earlier in the day which she had cleaned.

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The Voter Fraud Fraud 0

The voter fraudsters aren’t who Republicans want you to think they are.

Business Insider’s Tom Lobianco reports that Mike and Karen Pence have once again used the Indiana governor’s mansion as their home address to vote absentee in their home state. Which is probably news to Eric Holcomb, the Hoosier State’s governor since January 9, 2017.

The report goes on to explain that, through some strange Alice-through-the-Looking-Glass reasoning, this is apparently legal in Indiana because that was their last residence of record in the state. Or something.

Aside:

Many years ago, in my road warrior days, I was sitting in the bar of my favorite hotel in Chicago. At a table close to me, three young whippersnappers in three-piece suits from what was then called the Sears Tower, which was about two blocks away, were discussing impending layoffs at their outfit.

Finally, one of them, as he took a sip (or maybe it was a gulp) of his whiskey, said, “Well, I know one thing. I’m never going back to Indiana.”

I think I now understand why.

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Still Rising Again after All These Years 0

“Base” desires.

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QOTD 0

Lou Ferrigno:

Computers can bully us. A slow and unreliable system will bring even the toughest soul to their knees as they find themselves completely defenseless against the erratic whims of their rogue machine.

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Testing Flailure, Reprise 0

Two men at the

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“Bad Apples” 0

Writing at the Minneapolis Star-Tribune, Elijah Todd-Walden finds that the “few bad apples” notion regarding rogue cops is of little comfort. A snippet:

Time and time again, those “bad apples” have been granted impunity to continue to tarnish the name of the police and taint the trust of the community, especially with black and brown Americans. Derek Chauvin had 18 complaints filed against him before he killed George Floyd, only two of which were closed “with discipline.”

Perhaps the most apt comment I’ve heard about “the few bad apples on the police force” theory of police brutality came in a recent episode of The Bob Cesca Show (I can’t remember precisely which one).

Suppose, asked one of the participants, that, after a pilot flew an airliner into the side of a mountain, the airline announced that it was just one of a few bad apples among its crews?

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Tales of the Trumpling: Snapshots of Trickle-Down Trumpery 0

Young teens Trumpled while running a family errand.

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