From Pine View Farm

March, 2022 archive

All the History that Fits 0

At The Roanoke Times, Richard Sullivan, Jr., envisions a history class free of “divisive concepts” as mandated by Virginia’s Governor Trumpkin.

No excerpt or summary can do his article justice. Just read it.

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A Notion of Immigrants 0

A caller calls out America’s color-coded double standard on granting refuge to refugees.

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War and Mongers of War 0

At the Bangor Daily News, Gordon Weil decodes de code, in this case, Vladimir Putin’s self-styled “justifications” for invading Ukraine. Here’s one little bit; follow the link for the rest.

Russia deserves to control Ukraine, Putin claims. It is really a part of Russia. They speak almost the same language. Tell that to many Canadians . . . .

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Still Rising Again after All These Years 0

The St. Louis Post-Gazette’s Kevin McDermott offers some profiles in cowardice.

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QOTD 0

Max Beerbohm:

He was too much concerned with his own perfection ever to think of admiring any one else.

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The Climates They Are a-Changing 0

It’s March 6 and I had to turn on the AC to remove humidity from the house.

But climate change is a myth.

Also, pigs, wings.

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And Now for a Musical Interlude 0

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The Wall-Eyed Piker 0

The Arizona Republic’s Elvia Diaz points out that Trump’s wall keeps tumbling down, just like everything else (Trump steaks, Trump vodka, Atlantic City casinos, and almost the United States of America) that Donald Trump has been associated with. A snippet:

I’m cracking up over the fact that smugglers have breached Trump’s border wall more than 3,000 times over the past three years.

It’s true. The $15 billion wall, which Trump claimed over and over again that Mexico would pay for, “is no match for a $15 hand saw.”

Even cheaper tools probably would have poked holes in it.

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Vaccine Nation, Mandate Mania Dept. 0

(Short promo at the end.)

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Fright Court 0

Brent Cavanaugh shouts,

Click to view the original image.

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Twits on Twitter 0

Exhibitionist twits.

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“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0

A black army veteran and father of a teen-age son argues that “stand your ground” laws, are, for all practical purposes licenses to kill. Here’s a snippet:

I call them “shoot first laws,” but they’re more commonly advertised by the gun lobby as “stand your ground.” I served in combat, and these laws are more permissive than the rules of engagement I had to observe in Iraq. But that’s the law in Florida — immunity to anyone with a gun who “stands their ground” in public, sometimes without even a judge or jury deciding that the actions were warranted. A juror eventually admitted that it was part of the reason why Trayvon Martin’s killer walked free.

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Lies and Lying Liars 0

Psychologist Christian Hart has studied lies and liars for over a decade. He proposes a three-factor theory to explain when and why persons lie. In the light of the proliferation of perfidy in the polity, methinks his piece is worth a look.

Here are the three factors; follow the link for a discussion of each and the interplay among them.

      1. The perceived utility of lying.
      2. The perceived external disutility risk of lying (the probability and consequences of being detected) is acceptable.

      3. The perceived internal disutility of lying (guilt, regret, shame) is acceptable.

Aside:

It seems to me that, as a corollary, if one is incapable of shame, one might have an infinite capacity for lying.

Not that anyone like that might be in our public lif–oh, never mind.

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QOTD 0

Erasmus:

I doubt if a single individual could be found from the whole of mankind free from some form of insanity. The only difference is one of degree. A man who sees a gourd and takes it for his wife is called insane because this happens to very few people.

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The Desecrator’s Defense 0

Lauren Boebert defends her act of disrespectful desecration. David dissects the dissimulation. (Warning: Short commercial at the end.)

Afterthought:

The casual vile hate-fullness of it all does rather turn one’s stomac–oh, never mind.

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Dis Coarse Discourse 0

Canadian professor of communications Robert Danisch offers a taxonomy of linguistic toxicity, identifying seven rhetorical techniques that foment division and hostility (or, to put it another way, he reveals the Fox News playbook). In introducing his article, he points out that

Research shows that divisive, violent, dehumanizing rhetoric can sanction negative or hateful views that people may otherwise have hidden, and embolden people to act on these.

What’s worse, these seven rhetorical tactics tend to beget one another and inspire a communication cycle in which emotions are amplified and conflict is escalated.

I commend his article to your attention.

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The Crypto-Con, Reprise 0

Another psychologist takes a look at crypto-currency. I find Nigel Barber’s take particularly interesting–he seems to think it may be an “investment mania.” Here’s a bit (emphasis added):

All investment manias have common features. Even the brightest people can succumb to the lure of quick gains with minimal effort. This was apparent in the Madoff Ponzi scheme that mostly targeted wealthy elite investors.

Like the cryptocurrencies of today, buyers had little knowledge of the true value of the investment and were guided mainly by the fact that the market price was rising.

That sort of irrationality leads to some bizarre equivalences. At the height of the tulip mania in Holland from 1636 to 1637, a rare type of bulb was used to purchase a home. In the dot-com boom of 1999, companies with revenues smaller than a corner store had market valuations of billions of dollars.

Follow the link for the rest, especially if you are thinking about “mining” some crypto con.

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The Disinformation Superhighway, Cauldron of Conspiracies Dept. 0

Thom talks with Kelly Weill about why persons fall for conspiracy theories.

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“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0

Yet more random acts of politeness in NRA Paradise . . . .

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The Desecrators 0

Lauren Boebert and Majorie Taylor Greene standing on Beau Biden's grave yelling

Click for the original image.

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