It’s Never Too Early To Start Planning

It’s Never Too Early To Start Planning

Mr. Completely has set up the dates for the fifth annual Gun Blogger Rendezvous!

The official dates for Gun Blogger Rendezvous V are
Thursday, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday,
September 9th, 10
th, 11th, and 12th.

I’ve made every one so far, I intend to make this one.

Edited to add: True Blue Sam points to this YouTube video Derek did covering what you missed last year if you didn’t attend:

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zWxVvZUpT1Q&hl=en_US&fs=1&rel=0&w=480&h=385]

Quote of the Day – Health Care Edition

Quote of the Day – Health Care Edition

From segment 1 of Peter Robinson’s NRO Uncommon Knowledge interview of Paul Rahe about his book Soft Despotism, Democracy’s Drift: Montesquieu, Rousseau, Tocqueville, and the Modern Prospect.

Robinson: Paul let me ask you a question. You said that President Obama’s underlying intention is to cut health care costs. Do you believe that, or do – not so much with regard to President Obama personally as to the entire political impetus behind the health care legislation – or do you believe that there actually is a statist impulse in Washington that wishes to see the State expand for the sake of State expansion? Are they simply stumbling into this mistakenly? Or do they know what they’re doing and want it?

Rahe: They know what they’re doing and they want it.

Let me see if I can put it this way. We are all in the grips of the meddling impulse. If I were to say to you that you were a busybody you might say to me “surely not.” And I would say to you “ask your children.” And everyone’s children would say that the parent is a busybody because we all feel that impulse. That is to say that we all feel that we know better than other people. (Sometimes we really do!) The more educated people become – when you give them Ph.D’s, the more expertise they have – the more you have inflated their sense of the right to interfere in the lives of other people. So the Progressive impulse goes back to the 1870’s and the 1880’s and the establishment of major research universities on the German model in the United States.

The function of these institutions is to produce people who can successfully meddle in other people’s lives.

Robinson: And in Barack Obama we have . . .

Rahe: The representative of that class. The perfect representative of that class.

This is a fascinating interview.

Another excerpt:

Rahe: (Montesquieu) comes up with a political typology into republics, monarchies and despotisms, and monarchies are governments where you have a king, but his power is limited in one fashion or another – usually by a nobility. Despotism is unlimited power, and these operate on the basis of psychological principles. What drives a despotism is terror. What drives a monarchy is the sense of honor, the love of honor that elicits a certain kind of behavior from people. What’s required in a republic is virtue. That’s hard to achieve, because you have to train people in virtue and it doesn’t come naturally or easy to us to prefer the public interest over the private interest.

No indeed. And when the system stops teaching honor and virtue? When it, in fact, denigrates them both?

Give ‘Em Hell, Bill

Give ‘Em Hell, Bill!

This t-shirt notwithstanding, Bill Whittle’s latest Afterburner installment is an inspiring piece indeed.

Spread it around, would you?

UPDATE: However, reader Ken reminds us in the comments that simply throwing out the Democrats isn’t going to fix anything:

Yeeeeaaaaaahhhh, but the idea of hangin’ our hats on 2010/2012 puts me in mind of a comment from a post at Jaded Haven. Quoted in part: the subject of Daphne’s post “…is prepared to learn that he must leave it to Republicans to move the progressive agenda at a pace at which it can be absorbed.”

In your heart, you know he’s right.

Yeah, I do.

Quote of the Day – Working Edition

Quote of the Day – Working Edition

We’ve declared war on work. As a society – all of us. It’s a civil war, it’s a cold war, really. We didn’t set out to do it, and we didn’t twist our mustache in some Machiavellian way, but we’ve done it. And we’ve waged this war on at least four fronts. Certainly in Hollywood. The way we portray working people on TV? It’s laughable. If there’s a plumber, he’s 300 pounds and he has a giant butt-crack, admit it. You’ve seen it all the time, that’s what plumbers look like, right? We turn ’em into heroes or we turn ’em into punchlines. That’s what TV does. We try hard on Dirty Jobs not to do that, which is why I do the work and I don’t cheat.

We’ve waged this war on Madison Avenue. So many of the commercials that come out there in the way of a message, what’s really being said? Life would be better if you could work a little less. If you didn’t have to work so hard. If you could get home a little earlier, if you could retire a little faster, if you could punch out a little sooner. It’s all in there, over and over, again and again.

Washington? I can’t even begin to talk about the deals and policies in place that affect the bottom-line reality of the available jobs ’cause I don’t really know. I just know that that’s a front in this war.

And right here, guys; Silicon Valley. How many people have an iPhone on ’em right now? How many people have their Blackberries? We’re plugged in, we’re connected. I would never suggest for a second that something bad has come out of the tech revolution. Good grief, not to this crowd. But I would suggest that innovation without imitation is a complete waste of time. And nobody celebrates imitation the way Dirty Jobs guys know it has to be done. Your iPhone without those people making the same interface, the same circuitry, the same board over and over – all that, that’s what makes it equally as possible as the genius that goes inside of it.

And so we’ve got this new tool box. Our tools today don’t look like shovels and picks, they look like the stuff we walk around with. And so the collective effect of all of that has been this marginalization of lots and lots of jobs.

Mike Rowe from his speech at TED.

And I’m reminded of this old, old joke:

5,000 years ago, Moses said:
“Load up your camels, pick up your shovels, mount your asses,
and I will lead you to the promised land.”

5,000 years later, Franklin D. Roosevelt said:
“Lay down your shovels, sit on your asses, light up a Camel,
this IS the promised land.”

Anagnorisis and Peripeteia

Perusing the archives at Jaded Haven I stumbled upon this TED video of Mike Rowe of the Discovery Channel’s Dirty Jobs. Not for the weak of stomach, but worth, as she says, your twenty minutes. Hang on through the first five.

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IRVdiHu1VCc?rel=0]
I do believe Mike Rowe would kick Wolf Blitzer’s ass in Jeopardy.

As a result of his work on Dirty Jobs, Rowe has become a “trade activist” – someone who is actively campaigning to restore the traditional trades to a position of respect in American culture. His site is MikeRoweWORKS.com. View his mission video here.

UPDATE:  9/30/13 – Mike Rowe gives the background story about this talk:

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QK2ftLU8Ibg?rel=0]

My Favorite Living Philosopher: Thomas Sowell

Recently John Hawkins published his choices for the 40 Best Political Quotes of 2009. Of those 40, five were by Thomas Sowell. Nobody else came close. Just yesterday I was perusing my personal file of collected quotes and noticed that Dr. Sowell was heavily represented there as well. Here are some of my favorites:

One of the common failings among honorable people is a failure to appreciate how thoroughly dishonorable some other people can be, and how dangerous it is to trust them.

What is wrong with America, in the eyes of the intelligentsia? The same things that are right with America in the eyes of others.

If one word rings out, and echoes around the world, when America is mentioned, that word is Freedom. But what does freedom mean?

It means that hundreds of millions of ordinary human beings live their lives as they see fit — regardless of what their betters think. That is fine, unless you see yourself as one of their betters, as so many intellectuals do…

As we celebrate both our country’s independence and our individual independence on the Fourth of July, we should never forget that this independence is galling to those who want us to be dependent on them.

If people are free to do as they wish, they are almost certain not to do as we wish. That is why Utopian planners end up as despots, whether at the national level or at the level of the local ‘redevelopment’ agency.

The fact that academics are overwhelmingly of the political left is perfectly consistent with their assumption that third parties — especially third parties like themselves — should be controlling the decisions of other people who have first-hand knowledge and experience.

It is hard to imagine a more stupid or more dangerous way of making decisions than by putting those decisions in the hands of people who pay no price for being wrong.

Much of the social history of the Western world over the past three decades has involved replacing what worked with what sounded good.

The most fundamental fact about the ideas of the political left is that they do not work. Therefore we should not be surprised to find the left concentrated in institutions where ideas do not have to work in order to survive.

Socialism in general has a record of failure so blatant that only an intellectual could ignore or evade it.

Liberals seem to assume that, if you don’t believe in their particular political solutions, then you don’t really care about the people that they claim to want to help.

It is amazing that people who think we cannot afford to pay for doctors, hospitals, and medication somehow think that we can afford to pay for doctors, hospitals, medication and a government bureaucracy to administer it.

The next time some academics tell you how important diversity is, ask how many Republicans there are in their sociology department.

Mistakes can be corrected by those who pay attention to facts but dogmatism will not be corrected by those who are wedded to a vision.

A recently reprinted memoir by Frederick Douglass (1818-1895) has footnotes explaining what words like ‘arraigned,’ ‘curried’ and ‘exculpate’ meant, and explaining who Job was. In other words, this man who was born a slave and never went to school educated himself to the point where his words now have to be explained to today’s expensively under-educated generation.

There is really nothing very mysterious about why our public schools are failures. When you select the poorest quality college students to be public school teachers, give them iron-clad tenure, a captive audience, and pay them according to seniority rather than performance, why should the results be surprising?

Ours may become the first civilization destroyed, not by the power of our enemies, but by the ignorance of our teachers and the dangerous nonsense they are teaching our children. In an age of artificial intelligence, they are creating artificial stupidity.

In a democracy, we have always had to worry about the ignorance of the uneducated. Today we have to worry about the ignorance of people with college degrees.

The problem isn’t that Johnny can’t read. The problem isn’t even that Johnny can’t think. The problem is that Johnny doesn’t know what thinking is; he confuses it with feeling.

Too much of what is called “education” is little more than an expensive isolation from reality.

What ‘multiculturalism’ boils down to is that you can praise any culture in the world except Western culture – and you cannot blame any culture in the world except Western culture.

The first lesson of economics is scarcity: There is never enough of anything to satisfy all those who want it. The first lesson of politics is to disregard the first lesson of economics.

Stopping illegal immigration would mean that wages would have to rise to a level where Americans would want the jobs currently taken by illegal aliens.

The big divide in this country is not between Democrats and Republicans, or women and men, but between talkers and doers. Talkers are usually more articulate than doers, since talk is their specialty.

Freedom has cost too much blood and agony to be relinquished at the cheap price of rhetoric.

Like a baseball game, wars are not over till they are over. Wars don’t run on a clock like football. No previous generation was so hopelessly unrealistic that this had to be explained to them.

What is ominous is the ease with which some people go from saying that they don’t like something to saying that the government should forbid it. When you go down that road, don’t expect freedom to survive very long.

Not bad from someone who is trained to be an economist. And Dr. Sowell has a suggested reading list. My pile of “need to read” books just got taller.

Detroit has Been the Perfect Laboratory . . .

“Detroit has Been the Perfect Laboratory . . .

. . . for Leftist policies at work for nearly half a century. It’s the perfect vision of the Left’s Utopia that this administration sees.”

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1hhJ_49leBw&hl=en_US&fs=1&rel=0&w=640&h=385]
Sweet bleeding jeebus. Detroit looks like a goddamned war zone.

Quote of the Day – Fine Rant Edition

My Boomershoot buddy emailed me a link to this one; Jaded Haven, The Cant of Thieves:

I do believe the remnant landscapes of true America, ones that still marginally graced my existence through a sixties childhood, are a thing of the past. The cant of thieves now dominates our times. Men and woman have forgotten their faces, the history of our people has been reduced to nothing, there is no pride in our forefather’s wisdom, sacrifice or common sense. We live like animals, succored on airwaves and tweets, disposable goods and the graft of elected vultures that we’ve elevated to iconic status. Historical ignorance has become a point of pride in the man on the street.

Our lives skim the surface, searching for depth in the fleeting adulation of our collection of goods, wives and bank balances. God lies in a Mercedes-Benz, a velvet Ivy league degree or a great set of tanned, plastic tits.

READ. IT. ALL. I am reminded of Alexander Solzhenitsyn:

In a state of psychological weakness, weapons become a burden for the capitulating side. To defend oneself, one must also be ready to die; there is little such readiness in a society raised in the cult of material well-being. Nothing is left, then, but concessions, attempts to gain time and betrayal.

Damn, but I love a well-crafted rant. Daphne hits one out of the park.