The Queen Of The World and I like Maximum Security* and have our money where our mouth is. The track looks really sloppy, but he runs well on sloppy tracks. We're not the only ones - he's the favorite at 4-1.
* Me, liking security? Duh.
UPDATE 4 May 2019 18:54: Yay, Maximum Security. He was on sale in December for $16,000 (!!!) and just won the $3M purse. I wish I tossed a couple bucks on Country House at 65-1 who came in second. Yowza.
UPDATE 4 May 2019 19:15: Oh good grief - the claim of foul against Maximum Security is nothing but sour grapes. There's no way that Maximum Security impeded Country House. And Country House's owner was a (ahem) Maximum Douchebag when he was interviewed.
UPDATE 4 May 2019 19:22: It looks like Maximum Douchebag was successful. I call foul - it sure doesn't look like a foul to me (heck, Maximum Security was ahead the whole race). There's no way you can say that Country House "won" the Kentucky Derby.
On the plus side, at least I'm not a bookie, having to pay off all those 65-1 bets.
UPDATE 4 May 2019 20:58: Holy cow, Facebook and Twitter are blowing up over this. It's becoming the George Brett Pine Tar incident of horse racing. People will be talking about this for the next fifty years. The Derby folks clearly are not smart enough to know that they need to protect their brand from ultra competitive participants. Country House's owner threw a Hail Mary pass, and there was no downside to him in doing so. There sure was a downside for the Derby folks in letting him get away with it. Boy, howdy.
Saturday, May 4, 2019
Lukas Nelson & Promise of the Real - Carolina
Yes, he's the son of that other Nelson fellow. Growing up in his father's shadow hasn't seemed to hurt Lucas Nelson, though. He's become quite a songwriter - writing a bunch of the soundtrack for the remake of A Star Is Born, and he and his band regularly tour backing Neil Young.
This song is just fun.
Carolina
This song is just fun.
Carolina
Lord I love you Carolina
I like you beach and your beer
I park my bus up on the levee
Next to a sandy pier
I like your waves and your women
I like to dance all night
If my baby doesn't love me
I'm going to Carolina tonight
Carolina
Carolina
If my baby doesn't love me
I'm going to Carolina tonight
I'll give her two more hours
To let her clear her head
I'm gonna roll me up a number
Waiting naked in bed
I'll take my Texas time
Because I'm feeling alright
Well, if my baby doesn't love me
I'm going to Carolina tonight
Carolina
Carolina
If my baby doesn't love me
I'm going to Carolina tonight
Carolina
Carolina
Carolina
Carolina
Carolina
Carolina
Well, if my baby doesn't love me
I'm going to Carolina tonight
Friday, May 3, 2019
Magic Dick and the Legendary Rhythm & Blues Revue - Whammer Jammer
I hadn't known that Magic Dick Salwitz had a patent on a harmonica design (the "Magic Harmonica").
Must read on the culture wars
Aesop has some insights that are a must read. It's the first defense of Hollywood in the culture war (from our side) that I can remember, and he states his case well. Predictably some readers take issue with his arguments, and he follows up here. This is the pull-quote:
You get the culture you build and nurture, and that's what gets you the civilization amidst which you (and generations yet unborn) will live.
TANSTAAFL.
Anyone cheering pulling down the Parthenon and burning Notre Dame is a Visigoth, no matter how they dress it up.
Anyone who can't find $10 once in a blue moon to see a good flick is sure as hell not going to man the barricades and put their own life on the line when a cultural conflagration opens up in earnest. It's like saying I won't pay for a seawall now, but come the day, I'll take a sandbag down to the shore to stop the tsunami.The part about India and China being long term irrelevant to Hollywood's bottom line was pretty interesting, and another thing I heard first from Aesop.
This is important stuff. We do well to challenge our own prejudices before the other side does.
Thursday, May 2, 2019
RIP Peter Mayhew
Actor Peter Mayhew, who played Chewbacca in the Star Wars movies, died today at age 74. British by birth, he lived in Texas and with his lovely wife was very active in animal rescue, volunteering at a Rhodesian Ridgeback rescue in their community.
He was a good friend to many and will be missed.
He was a good friend to many and will be missed.
Youtube loses $70B in market cap
Pull quote: "You know what made Youtube great? Youtubers."
And yet Youtube is getting rid of (or at least de-monitizing) lots of conservative voices. While the pelt of Alex Jones' wookie suit may be luxurious indeed, he had a ton of followers and a lot of ad revenue for Youtube. Not anymore. Multiply by all the other folks who have been banned/shadow banned/de-monitized, and you're talking real revenue.
It's sort of a "growth by subtraction" strategy. Sure, this makes the Left happy, but it's not like they spend any more time or money (ad clicks) at Youtube. Folks on the other side? They spend less time and clicks at Youtube.
Tagged under The decline of the Progressive West because, well, you know.
Wednesday, May 1, 2019
Congratulations to Peter Grant
Now a US Citizen.
Of course it happened when I was off-line traveling. If you haven't already, go leave him some commenty love.
Of course it happened when I was off-line traveling. If you haven't already, go leave him some commenty love.
Back now
The Queen Of The World and I are back from seeing Mom for her birthday. Her memory is pretty much gone, as the dementia takes its toll, but the QOTW has a particular way of holding conversations with her that Mom really likes. A lot of what Mom says doesn't make much sense, but the QOTW keeps the conversation going. I don't think that anyone else does that, and Mom really likes her for it.
After taking care of Mom's affairs, we took some time to do a little sight seeing. Albuquerque is a dramatic location, and we hiked out to see the petroglyphs. Climbing up from Boca Negra we saw this:
We went to Santa Fe to put flowers on Dad's grave. The VA cemetery there is beautiful, and Dad liked to say that he would have a million dollar view. He does.
But it was a pretty emotionally draining trip. I get the sense that my visits to Albuquerque will wind down over the next couple years: Mom is declining, and while still in good health for a 90 year old, the end will be delayed but not forever. There's still more to show the QOTW, though. Maybe I can get her out to the Balloon Festival which is a sight to see.
Blogging will get back to a more regular schedule now.
After taking care of Mom's affairs, we took some time to do a little sight seeing. Albuquerque is a dramatic location, and we hiked out to see the petroglyphs. Climbing up from Boca Negra we saw this:
We went to Santa Fe to put flowers on Dad's grave. The VA cemetery there is beautiful, and Dad liked to say that he would have a million dollar view. He does.
But it was a pretty emotionally draining trip. I get the sense that my visits to Albuquerque will wind down over the next couple years: Mom is declining, and while still in good health for a 90 year old, the end will be delayed but not forever. There's still more to show the QOTW, though. Maybe I can get her out to the Balloon Festival which is a sight to see.
Blogging will get back to a more regular schedule now.
Saturday, April 27, 2019
Thursday, April 25, 2019
ATF flouts 5th Amendment
I guess that chewing at the Second isn't enough:
A US judge gave the cops permission to force people's fingers onto seized iPhones to see who could unlock them, a newly unsealed search warrant has revealed.
Specifically, Judge Judith Dein, of the federal district court of Massachusetts, gave agents from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) the right to press Robert Brito-Pina's fingers on any iPhone found in his apartment in Boston. The bloke was suspected to be trafficking guns, hence the application for a search warrant. In fact, anyone nabbed at the property would be forced to use their fingers to unlock any cellphones seized at the home, according to the court filing.No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a Grand Jury, except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the Militia, when in actual service in time of War or public danger; nor shall any person be subject for the same offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb; nor shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself, nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.
Heck, why not let them waterboard everyone?
This is why you should never use your fingerprint (or face) to unlock your phone:
This is why you should never use your fingerprint (or face) to unlock your phone:
What is notable about the warrant, surfaced this week by Law360, is that law enforcement is drawing a clear distinction between forcing someone to place their fingers on a phone to unlock it and forcing them to give officers the passcode to unlock it. The first is physical; the second is mental, and brings with it both Fourth and Fifth Amendment issues.
Wednesday, April 24, 2019
737 Max incidents hit Boeing's bottom line
Boeing misses its 1Q earnings target:
Following the multiple Boeing 737 MAX crashes, analysts were very closely watching what Boeing would report for its Q1 earnings, and more importantly what it would forecast for the rest of the year. Moments ago Boeing did not disappoint, or rather it did, when it reported an across the board miss with both revenues and EPS coming in far below expectations and profits tumbled, while as a result of the limbo left in the aftermath of the 737 MAX fiasco, the company announced it would suspend it annual forecast while putting its stock buyback on indefinite hold.The lack of guidance on future earnings is really interesting. The implication is that they don't yet know the scope of their safety fixes or how they will be received by their customers.
Apple facial recognition goes haywire, teen gets wrongly accused of shoplifting
Apple is being sued for $1B:
And now Bah has an arrest record and Apple is defending itself against an enormous lawsuit. Hey, at least their software didn't kill anyone.
This is why I won't get into a self-driving car. The code was written by snotty programmers who think they know way more than they actually do about how the world works.
Ousmane Bah, 18, filed suit against Cook & Co this week after he was falsely identified as a shoplifter by, it is claimed, a facial recognition system Apple is apparently using in its stores.
Bah was wrongly accused by the cops of nicking gear from Apple's posh shops across the US East Coast, even in cities he claims never to have visited, due to Apple's technology incorrectly fingering him as the culprit, we're told.
The teen's legal complaint [PDF] states that last year the college student received a letter out of the blue summoning him to a Boston court on an allegation of theft. He was accused of stealing multiple Apple Pencils – a $99 tool used for the iPad Pro – from an Apple Store in the Massachusetts city, adding up to over $1,200 in swag.
At the time of the alleged crime, on May 31, 2018, Bah was attending his senior prom in Manhattan, and had never even been to Boston before.Worse, the photo included in his arrest warrant doesn't look like him. Facial recognition has been plagued with errors, particularly with non-caucasians. I don't know exactly why this is, but it has been a persistent complaint for several years. Apple is said to use facial recognition in its stores to detect shoplifting. When Bah had been (incorrectly) identified as a shoplifter in one store, the store personnel took his driver's permit and used his name and address information to update their database. His permit did not have a photo on it, and so now someone else's picture is associated with him.
And now Bah has an arrest record and Apple is defending itself against an enormous lawsuit. Hey, at least their software didn't kill anyone.
This is why I won't get into a self-driving car. The code was written by snotty programmers who think they know way more than they actually do about how the world works.
Tuesday, April 23, 2019
The Socialist religion in one picture
I don't think that I want to fly on a Boeing 737 Max
There is a great analysis of the 737 Max failures at IEEE:
There's no redundancy.
There's no redundancy.
There's no redundancy.
There's no redundancy.
Holy cow, this is the dumbest design I've ever heard of, and I'm not even an aeronautical engineer. This smells of "we found this out late in testing and had outsourced software developers write us some code in a hurry to fix it". I don't know if that's how things happened but I've seen this more than once or twice in my career.
There's no redundancy.
There's no redundancy.
There's no redundancy.
Larger engines were critical to the design, because that's how you get efficiency (read: lowest fuel cost). The old airframe (fuselage and wings) were critical to the design because if you do a major change to the plane then the FAA certification is no longer valid and you need to (very expensively) re-certify the plane.The engines on the original 737 had a fan diameter (that of the intake blades on the engine) of just 100 centimeters (40 inches); those planned for the 737 Max have 176 cm. That’s a centerline difference of well over 30 cm (a foot), and you couldn’t “ovalize” the intake enough to hang the new engines beneath the wing without scraping the ground.The solution was to extend the engine up and well in front of the wing. However, doing so also meant that the centerline of the engine’s thrust changed. Now, when the pilots applied power to the engine, the aircraft would have a significant propensity to “pitch up,” or raise its nose.
In the 737 Max, the engine nacelles themselves can, at high angles of attack, work as a wing and produce lift. And the lift they produce is well ahead of the wing’s center of lift, meaning the nacelles will cause the 737 Max at a high angle of attack to go to a higher angle of attack. This is aerodynamic malpractice of the worst kind.This is really, really bad. Consider a plane that is about to stall. One approach (especially with large, powerful engines) is to apply power to increase air speed. On the 737 Max, this will cause the nose to pitch up and bring on the stall. The design is inherently unstable in this situation.
This sounds sensible, although kludgy. The problem is that the Elevator Feel Computer has a really powerful actuator; pilots will struggle to overcome it and push the nose down. It seems that this wasn't a bug, but a feature of the design. But here's the crux of the problem:Let’s review what the MCAS does: It pushes the nose of the plane down when the system thinks the plane might exceed its angle-of-attack limits; it does so to avoid an aerodynamic stall. Boeing put MCAS into the 737 Max because the larger engines and their placement make a stall more likely in a 737 Max than in previous 737 models.When MCAS senses that the angle of attack is too high, it commands the aircraft’s trim system (the system that makes the plane go up or down) to lower the nose. It also does something else: Indirectly, via something Boeing calls the “Elevator Feel Computer,” it pushes the pilot’s control columns (the things the pilots pull or push on to raise or lower the aircraft’s nose) downward.
There's no redundancy. Let me elaborate on that:In the 737 Max, only one of the flight management computers is active at a time—either the pilot’s computer or the copilot’s computer. And the active computer takes inputs only from the sensors on its own side of the aircraft.When the two computers disagree, the solution for the humans in the cockpit is to look across the control panel to see what the other instruments are saying and then sort it out. In the Boeing system, the flight management computer does not “look across” at the other instruments. It believes only the instruments on its side. It doesn’t go old-school. It’s modern. It’s software.This means is that if a particular angle-of-attack sensor goes haywire—which happens all the time in a machine that alternates from one extreme environment to another, vibrating and shaking all the way—the flight management computer just believes it.
There's no redundancy.
There's no redundancy.
There's no redundancy.
There's no redundancy.
There's no redundancy.It gets even worse. There are several other instruments that can be used to determine things like angle of attack, either directly or indirectly, such as the pitot tubes, the artificial horizons, etc. All of these things would be cross-checked by a human pilot to quickly diagnose a faulty angle-of-attack sensor.In a pinch, a human pilot could just look out the windshield to confirm visually and directly that, no, the aircraft is not pitched up dangerously. That’s the ultimate check and should go directly to the pilot’s ultimate sovereignty. Unfortunately, the current implementation of MCAS denies that sovereignty. It denies the pilots the ability to respond to what’s before their own eyes.Like someone with narcissistic personality disorder, MCAS gaslights the pilots. And it turns out badly for everyone. “Raise the nose, HAL.” “I’m sorry, Dave, I’m afraid I can’t do that.”
There's no redundancy.
There's no redundancy.
There's no redundancy.
So Boeing produced a dynamically unstable airframe, the 737 Max. That is big strike No. 1. Boeing then tried to mask the 737’s dynamic instability with a software system. Big strike No. 2. Finally, the software relied on systems known for their propensity to fail (angle-of-attack indicators) and did not appear to include even rudimentary provisions to cross-check the outputs of the angle-of-attack sensor against other sensors, or even the other angle-of-attack sensor. Big strike No. 3.None of the above should have passed muster. None of the above should have passed the “OK” pencil of the most junior engineering staff, much less a DER.That’s not a big strike. That’s a political, social, economic, and technical sin.
This is a long and detailed article and I've only excerpted key bits. You should really read the whole thing because the situation is simply horrifying. Boeing has destroyed their reputation.
I've written many, many, many times about design issues in Airbus' flight control software,, where the pilots become confused or the software freaks out and people die. I always liked flying Boeing because their reputation that "the pilot is always in charge" was my strong preference - my whole career has been dealing with software failure, and my imagination is too active to ever be comfortable on an Airbus plane.
Well that has all changed after 737 Max. It's not just that the pilot can't fly the plane now, it's this:
That’s because the major selling point of the 737 Max is that it is just a 737, and any pilot who has flown other 737s can fly a 737 Max without expensive training, without recertification, without another type of rating. Airlines—Southwest is a prominent example—tend to go for one “standard” airplane. They want to have one airplane that all their pilots can fly because that makes both pilots and airplanes fungible, maximizing flexibility and minimizing costs.It all comes down to money, and in this case, MCAS was the way for both Boeing and its customers to keep the money flowing in the right direction. The necessity to insist that the 737 Max was no different in flying characteristics, no different in systems, from any other 737 was the key to the 737 Max’s fleet fungibility. That’s probably also the reason why the documentation about the MCAS system was kept on the down-low.
And so the pilots on the fatal flights couldn't figure out how to get out of the situation because Boeing intentionally did not tell them. Allegedly. This one will have to go through the courts but this very well may end up being the most expensive design mistake in history.
Monday, April 22, 2019
Get ready for "Earth Day"
Just remember that the predictions made on Earth Day have been wrong - actually spectacularly wrong - for 50 years:
“By the year 2000, if present trends continue, we will be using up crude oil at such a rate … that there won’t be any more crude oil,” ecologist Kenneth Watt warned around the time of the first Earth Day event. “You’ll drive up to the pump and say, ‘Fill ’er up, buddy,’ and he’ll say, ‘I am very sorry, there isn’t any.'” Watt also warned of global cooling and nitrogen buildup rendering all of the planet’s land unusable.None of it happened. Instead, here's what we got that was the exact opposite of the predictions:
- The USA is set to become the world's biggest oil producer
- The EPA reports emissions of the 6 pollutants they track (ozone, carbon monoxide, lead, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen dioxide, and particulates) have dropped by an aggregate 77% since 1970.
- World hunger has dropped precipitously, to the point where just two countries now experience persistent hunger and malnutrition. Those countries are North Korea and Venezuela, and their situations have nothing to do with climate change.
- For the first time ever there are less than a billion people worldwide who do not have access to electricity.
Along the way we've heard predictions shift from catastrophic global cooling to catastrophic global warming. None of the predictions have come true.
But there's good money in being an environmentalist, shaking down gullible liberals for "green" contributions. I mean cash, of course. So expect to hear more of this sort of nonsense this upcoming Earth Day. The Usual Suspects® have to keep the gravy train coming.
Sunday, April 21, 2019
Handel's "Messiah": the music that might not have been
While we usually hear The Messiah played around Christmas, Handel originally wrote it (and it was first performed) for Easter. But the music very well might never have been written at all. You see, the young Handel was a bit of a hot head and got into a duel in 1704:
But the Spirit must have moved Handel, because there is more triumph in a single word - the Amen chorus - than in just about any music I know. The finale (about 6:30 into this recording) precisely captures that feeling of awe, and triumph, and joy to be in this world that I remember from those Easter Sundays years ago.
Worthy Is The Lamb (Revelations 5:12 - 14, music by George Frederic Handel)
That might have been it for Herr Handel, 38 years before his masterpiece. And even then, it was claimed that is wasn't even his masterpiece. Handel wrote the entire score in just 24 days, while staying at the grand country estate of a patron, Charles Jennens. Jennens liked to dabble in the arts, and adapted the text of the Bible for the piece. He said in a letter to a friend that Handel wrote some "pretty music" for "his" (Jennens') piece. All righty, then.Scholars speculate that [Johann] Mattheson requested Handel to fill in as conductor while Mattheson sang. After Mattheson performed his part on stage he went to return to the conductor’s seat at the harpsichord. But Handel would not move.Johann MatthesonIt’s said that the two argued over who should be in the conductor’s seat – Mattheson, being the composer, wanted control, yet Handel refused to leave the post. Mattheson suggested that the two take their quarrel outside. And so, right outside of the theater, the hot-headed young composers drew their swords and conducted, instead, a duel. A detailed account of the duel cannot be found, yet one prevailing report suggests that Handel was nearly killed by a sword thrust from Mattheson. The thrust went right for his heart, but, thankfully, ran into a large metal button on his coat, which prevented Handel’s death. As the duel came to a close, the two composers miraculously reconciled and became life-long friends. They maintained correspondence even after Handel moved to London to live out the rest of his stellar career.
But the Spirit must have moved Handel, because there is more triumph in a single word - the Amen chorus - than in just about any music I know. The finale (about 6:30 into this recording) precisely captures that feeling of awe, and triumph, and joy to be in this world that I remember from those Easter Sundays years ago.
Worthy Is The Lamb (Revelations 5:12 - 14, music by George Frederic Handel)
Worthy is the Lamb that was slain,
and hath redeemed us to God by his blood,
to receive power, and riches, and wisdom, and strength, and honour,
and glory, and blessing.
Blessing and honour, glory and power, be unto Him
that sitteth upon the throne, and unto the Lamb, for ever and ever.
Amen
Saturday, April 20, 2019
Eric Church - Like Jesus Does
Out of the crooked timber that is Man, nothing straight was ever built.Bless me, Father, for I have been a Dumb Ass. It's happened over and over again, throughout all my years on Planet Earth. I fear that this will continue throughout the rest of my days.
- Immanuel Kant
But I'm lucky that I have The Queen Of The World. No matter what the next Dumbassery, she is there as this world's manifestation of the gift of Grace for me. She is the Lighthouse that always provides me a beacon in the dark. It's quite amazing, really.
But she carries me, when my sins make me heavy,Easter is an old, old holy day. It dates back to when christianity was just a tiny group of believers in a vast and unfriendly Roman Empire. And yet it took over that empire despite the long odds. I think that the reason is that from the very beginning, the story told by the christian church was about Grace.
And she loves me like Jesus does.
None of us is as strong as we would like; all of us need that Grace to keep us from sinking, at least from time to time. That gift of Grace took the Roman Empire by storm, and is one that I see here today. The Queen Of The World shows it to me. It's the gift she gives not when I deserve it, but when I don't deserve it. And therein lies its power.
Yeah, she knows the man I ain't,That's a precious gift to me. It is in those moments that the spirit of Easter surrounds me. It may even be that I'm a Dumb Ass as much as I am because I like that moment of Grace from her. In a sense, it's always Easter here at Castle Borepatch, thanks to The Queen Of The World.
She forgives me when I can't
Always thought she'd give up on me one day,This Easter weekend you are as lucky as I am. Well you don't have The Queen Of The World so you're not quite as lucky as I am, but you have that gift of Grace. That gift doesn't give up on you some day because you've been a Dumb Ass once too many times. That gift carries you when you when your sins make you heavy. That gift forgives you when you can't. We're surrounded by Grace, if we'll just open our eyes. Songs like this tell us some of the places to look, if we dare.
Wash her hands of me, leave me staring down some runway,
Yeah, I thank God each night, and twice on Sunday,
That she loves me like Jesus does.
Dare.
She Loves Me Like Jesus Does (Songwriters: Casey Beathard, Monty Criswell)
I'm a long gone Waylon song on vinyl,
I'm a backroad sinner at a tent revival,
She believes in me like she believes her bible,
And loves me like Jesus does.
I'm a lead foot leaning on a suped up Chevy,
I'm a good ol' boy, drinking whiskey and rye on the levee,
But she carries me, when my sins make me heavy,
And she loves me like Jesus does.
All the crazy in my dreams,
Both my broken wings,
Every single piece of everything I am,
Yeah, she knows the man I ain't,
She forgives me when I can't,
That devil man, he don't stand a chance,
Cause she loves me like Jesus does.
Always thought she'd give up on me one day,
Wash her hands of me, leave me staring down some runway,
But, I thank God each night, and twice on Sunday,
That she loves me like Jesus does.
All the crazy in my dreams,
And both my broken wings,
Every single piece of who I am,
Yeah, she knows the man I ain't,
She forgives me when I can't,
And the devil man, no, he don't have a prayer.
Cause she loves me like Jesus does
Yeah, she knows the man I ain't,
She forgives me when I can't,
That devil man, he don't stand a chance,
Cause she loves me like Jesus does.
I'm a long gone Waylon song on vinyl
I'm a lucky man. The Queen Of The World is there to give me that gift of Grace when I need it. Even when I don't deserve it - especially when I don't deserve it. She reminds me of what this weekend is all about. That's a neat trick, right there.
Grace is something you can never get but can only be given. There's no way to earn it or deserve it or bring it about any more than you can deserve the taste of raspberries and cream or earn good looks or bring about your own birth.
...
A crucial eccentricity of the Christian faith is the assertion that people are saved by grace. There's nothing you have to do. There's nothing you have to do. There's nothing you have to do.
...
There's only one catch. Like any other gift, the gift of grace can only be yours if you'll reach out and take it.
- Frederick Buechner, Beyond Words: Daily Readings in the ABC's of Faith
Friday, April 19, 2019
The wilderness of Faith
To be commanded to love God at all, let alone in the wilderness, is like being commanded to be well when we are sick, to sing for joy when we are dying of thirst, to run when our legs are broken. But this is the first and great commandment nonetheless. Even in the wilderness - especially in the wilderness - you shall love Him.
- Frederick Buechner, A Room Called Remember
Good Friday is when the early community of the Apostles first entered the wilderness of faith. Scattered and in hiding, their world was shattered into a million shards. For most of them, it would not be the last time.
What we know now - and what in later times they knew better than we - is that the Wilderness is where the first and great commandment is found. Saint Peter ended his days in the Rome of Nero, on the cross. It was an agonizing end - an end the Romans fully intended to be agonizing - and the first of many persecutions that christians would suffer in that empire. But Peter knew - he had seen - what is found in the Wilderness. It is the Faith that conquers the world.
What we know now - and what in later times they knew better than we - is that the Wilderness is where the first and great commandment is found. Saint Peter ended his days in the Rome of Nero, on the cross. It was an agonizing end - an end the Romans fully intended to be agonizing - and the first of many persecutions that christians would suffer in that empire. But Peter knew - he had seen - what is found in the Wilderness. It is the Faith that conquers the world.
The love for equals is a human thing--of friend for friend, brother for brother. It is to love what is loving and lovely. The world smiles. The love for the less fortunate is a beautiful thing--the love for those who suffer, for those who are poor, the sick, the failures, the unlovely. This is compassion, and it touches the heart of the world. The love for the more fortunate is a rare thing--to love those who succeed where we fail, to rejoice without envy with those who rejoice, the love of the poor for the rich, of the black man for the white man. The world is always bewildered by its saints. And then there is the love for the enemy--love for the one who does not love you but mocks, threatens, and inflicts pain. The tortured's love for the torturer. This is God's love. It conquers the world.
- Frederick Buechner, The Magnificent Defeat
Why can't the government provide healthcare and the "Green New Deal"?
You can learn everything you need to know about the counter-productiveness of handing power to the government by reading this: Canadian woman fined for not holding escalator handrail finally gets case before Supreme Court:
Apply that exact calculus to the public school system, or the Veteran's Affairs Department, or to just about everything government does. Heck, even the military which is about the best we can point to for government actually doing what it is supposed to. The book Embrace The Suck captures the failure of everything government from the point of view of the Grunts.
And remember, the military's goal is a lot easier than the goals of any of the rest of the Fed.Gov. The other departments have to try to build something that works, while the military has to kill people and break their stuff. Dangerous, sure. But a lot easier to understand and accomplish.
And to return to the original point of this rant: even if the Green New Deal weren't a wasteland of bone headed and counter productive boondoggles, the government couldn't implement it anyway. The people who would need to do it are too busy handcuffing hardened criminals like Ms. Kosoian for the dastardly crime of ignoring their Betters.
This post is tagged with the labels fascists, police state, and government cockups because, well, you know.
UPDATE 19 April 2019 14:31: Of course, Sal the Agorist has something apropos:
A Canadian woman fined for failing to hold on to an escalator handrail in 2009 has finally reached the Supreme Court in her search for justice.
Bela Kosoian was using the subway in Laval near Montreal in 2009 when a police officer told her to respect a warning sign, in French, saying "Caution, hold the handrail", CTV News reported.
She argued with the officer that the pictogram was advice rather than the law, but the officer promptly handcuffed her, detained her for half an hour and slapped her with a $100 fine for failing to take advantage of escalator safety features and a further $320 for refusing to identify herself.
Kosoian was acquitted in 2012 but decided to sue the police and transport authority. She lost twice in Quebec before the Supreme Court of Canada took up the case.[blink] [blink]
So some jack-booted fascist thug got all Respect mah authoritah on her, and the redress requires the Supreme damn Court. No doubt the Police Officer is still on the force, if he hasn't since retired on a hefty pension. There was almost certainly no unpleasant consequences for his use of handcuffs and detainment over a trifle.
Apply that exact calculus to the public school system, or the Veteran's Affairs Department, or to just about everything government does. Heck, even the military which is about the best we can point to for government actually doing what it is supposed to. The book Embrace The Suck captures the failure of everything government from the point of view of the Grunts.
And remember, the military's goal is a lot easier than the goals of any of the rest of the Fed.Gov. The other departments have to try to build something that works, while the military has to kill people and break their stuff. Dangerous, sure. But a lot easier to understand and accomplish.
And to return to the original point of this rant: even if the Green New Deal weren't a wasteland of bone headed and counter productive boondoggles, the government couldn't implement it anyway. The people who would need to do it are too busy handcuffing hardened criminals like Ms. Kosoian for the dastardly crime of ignoring their Betters.
This post is tagged with the labels fascists, police state, and government cockups because, well, you know.
UPDATE 19 April 2019 14:31: Of course, Sal the Agorist has something apropos:
— Sal the Agorist (@SallyMayweather) April 19, 2019
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