Get in touch with your boomer memories

No, not “Boomer Sooner”—Baby Boomer

Over at Keep The Coffee Coming, Kat’s doing pop audioblogging that evokes a lot of Baby Boomer memories—even for folks like me whose most powerful musical memories are classical. Check it out. The Sounds of Silence, A World of Our Own and more.
Oh, and one more thing. Thanks, Kat, for the link to RadioWales (BBC)! Sure, the BBC is still stuck requiring folks to have a proprietary “Real Media” player, but don’t let that little piece of snottiness from the BBC prevent you from checking out this great site! If you like good folk, blues (and all kinds of derivatives), this site is worth hunting down, d/l-ing and installing a Real Player alternative. In fact, I’ll just give you a link to one that works, here. Transparent and (completely unlike Real Player) non-intrusive, non-invasive, Real Alternative is a decent software solution to Real Player’s stinkiness.

See what’s happening at Random Rambling

Some interesting viewpoints and some growth as a writer going on over there at Random Rambling.

Drop on over and comment on one of his posts—particularly the one where he’s asking for reading suggestions in sci-fi. It’s kinda fun for me to see someone’s writing and thinking visibly tighten up as they write more (unlike mine, which remains as prolix and obscurantist as ever, no matter what I try to do to be brief and simple and stay on topic. See what I mean? *LOL*).
Oh, and while you’re at it, why not send other folks by to make sci-fi reading suggestions or just (constructively) comment on one of his posts?
BTW, for those of you who care, he’s one of the good guys. yep. That’s what I said. A devoted coffee drinker. Don’t get me wrong; he’s got his own set of problems. Yep. He likes rap “music”. *shudder*
🙂

A Pervasion of Computers

Hey! A new collective noun: a pervasion of computers. heh

The English Guy has a thought piece up that will… provoke thought (d’oh!). 🙂 “Computers – Pervading Everything

Give it a read. Comment there. Come back here and tell me your thoughts, too.

Remember: someone on some computer somewhere will be watching. So, you had better do this. ‘K?

🙂

ACLU Coverup?

Even Nat Hentoff, of longtime ACLU involvement and support, has written in recent times of ACLU improprieties and hypocrisy, but this?

From Drudge:
American Civil Liberties Union has been shredding documents over repeated objections of its records manager and in conflict with longstanding policies on preservation, disposal of records…
What is the ACLU hiding? Even the New York Slimes is all over this one. (Use bugmenot.com to bypass registration. 🙂
The matter has fueled a dispute at the organization over internal operations, one of several such debates over the last couple of years, and has reignited questions over whether the A.C.L.U.’s own practices are consistent with its public positions…
…Janet Linde, who oversaw the A.C.L.U.’s archives for over a decade until she resigned last month, raised concerns in e-mail messages and memorandums for over two years that officials’ use of shredders in their offices made a mockery of the organization’s policy to supervise document destruction and created potential legal risks.
“It has been shown in many legal cases over the years, including the Enron case, that if a company has an established and documented shredding program they will not be liable if documents at issue in a lawsuit are found to have been destroyed,” Ms. Linde wrote in a 2003 memo. “If, however, the means for unauthorized shredding is present in the office we cannot say that we have made a good faith effort to monitor and document our records disposal process.”
But I certainly trust the ACLU to only shred outdated grocery reciepts and the like. Don’t you?

Funny

*YAWN*

While it’s big news (WOW! A link on Drudge! *LOL*), the BIG STORY in the NYT, today, “Researchers Say Intelligence and Diseases May Be Linked in Ashkenazic Genes” was old hat to some of us who frequently lurk (and infrequently participate) on an online discussion—what? Place? Room? Site? hard to categorize this one—at Jerry Pournelle‘s place. Greg Cochoran, among others, has been answering questions on this topic there for years.
It’s not news, except to the New York Times.
Drop in over there. You may be surprised atthe range of topics dealt with. Arguments aplenty, as long as they are well-reasoned. You may become one of the 150,000 or so regular visitors… maybe even a participant.

Saturday Fodder

Here’s a little Saturday food for thought from a Rod Schaffter email at Chaos Manor (just scroll down)

David Warren came across some excellent observations by Nicolás Gómez Dávila, a Catholic writer from Colombia:

— Democratic parliaments are not places where debate occurs but where popular absolutism registers its edicts.

— Love of the people is an aristocratic calling. The democrat only loves the people at election time.

— The individual shrinks in proportion as the state grows.

— The one who renounces seems weak to the one incapable of renunciation.

— Violence is not necessary to destroy a civilization. Each civilization dies from indifference towards the unique values which created it.

— To have opinions is the best way to escape the obligation of thinking.

— Nothing multiplies the number of fools so much as the example of celebrities.

— The importance of an event is inversely proportional to the space which the newspapers devote to it.

— An individual declares himself a member of some group with the goal of demanding in its name what he is ashamed to claim in his own name.

— The anger of imbeciles is less frightening than their benevolence.

— “To be useful to society” is the ambition, or excuse, of a prostitute.

Chew on those observations for a while…

Take note(s)

NOTE CHANGE: Beginning next Monday, [ed–first performance broadcast Monday, downloads begin to be available Tuesday] the BBC will be offering all 9 of Beethoven’s symphonies for download…

Info at the site:

Download all nine of Beethoven’s symphonies here the day after they are broadcast. All the symphonies are performed by BBC Philharmonic, conducted by Gianandrea Noseda.

Symphonies 1 & 3 will be broadcast on Monday 6th June, and available to download from Tuesday 7th June to Monday 13th June.
Symphonies 2, 4 & 5 will be broadcast on Tuesday 7th June, and available to download from Wednesday 8th June to Tuesday 14th June.
Symphony 6 will be broadcast on Monday 27th June, and available to download from Tuesday 28th June to Monday 4th July.
Symphony 7 will be broadcast on Tuesday 28th June, and available to download from Wednesday 29th June to Tuesday 5th July.
Symphony 8 will be broadcast on Wednesday 29th June, and available to download from Thursday 30th June to Wednesday 6th July.
Symphony 9 will be broadcast on Thursday 30th June, and available to download from Friday 1st July to Thursday 7th July

Always a good idea to hear other interpretations of these works. I have my favs, but I can be surprised by a fresh performance, just like anyone else.

The BBC is still stuck in the 20th Century and requires Real Player for (a rather limited) live listening, rather than adopting a better, more cross-platform streaming solution, so downloading the mp3s after they are made available may be the best option for you. OTOH, here’s a Real Player alternative that works. Transparent and (completely unlike Real Player) non-intrusive, non-invasive, Real Alternative is a decent software solution to Real Player’s stinkiness.

Good eats; great treats. What’s not to like?

Carnival of the Recipes #42 is up at Conservative Friends

Oh man! I already had Christine’s Pancake Soufflé on the schedule for this weekend, and now I’m working through about a month’s worth of new recipes in this Carnival alone!

Go check out the foods of the blogoshere, drool, wipe your face (and change your clothes) and then get out your grocery list, cos it’s gonna be a great ride with the grocery cart after this one!

Of course, don’t neglect my quick n easy quiche recipe. And browse around while you’re at it. There’s bound to be something here that’ll annoy the devil outa you.

🙂

Who’s the real mensch here?

Was Nixon engaging in deepthink realpolitik or just being a real man?

You tell me. As more and more information about Watergate was leaking to the press (notably Bernwood and Steinword), this conversation occurred in the Oval office, according to a taped conversation on Oct. 19, 1972:

Nixon: Well, if they’ve got a leak down at the FBI, why the hell can’t Gray tell us what the hell is left? You know what I mean? …

Haldeman: We know what’s left, and we know who leaked it.

Nixon: Somebody in the FBI?

Haldeman: Yes, sir. Mark Felt. You can’t say anything about this because it will screw up our source and there’s a real concern. Mitchell is the only one who knows about this and he feels strongly that we better not do anything because —

Nixon: Do anything? Never.

So, Nixon knew Felt—the putative “Deep Throat”—had leaked at least some of the information that brought his presidency down when, after Mark Felt retired (1973) and then later was indicted for ordering warrantless searches on the Weather Underground, Nixon testified in his behalf.

Now, you tell me: who’s the real mensch in this story?

I’d give someone a hat tip on this, but the basic facts are long well-known (that Nixon knew Felt was leaking and his testimony in Felt’s behalf).

Meme-ory Lane

UPDATE: Romeocat loves this “meme-ory” tag. I can see why. Her list reminds me of many other childhood memories of my own.
UPDATE #2: Spurs chimes in with… another list I can resonate strongly with. Oh, and Spurs just HAD to add another meme-ory—and it’s one that’ll crack you up… Spurs really got ahead on his blogroll entry rent. 🙂
UPDATE #3: Christine outdoes herself! She posted a collection not only at Morning Coffee and Afternoon Tea, but a different collection at By the Way.
UPDATE #4:

BTW, if you’re not a regular reader of any of the blogs above, browse around their blogs for some good reads. I blogrolled each of these because I read them daily.

Detestable Dan does it again,
(I don’t know what’s up with this guy)
He tags me once more, detestable man,
Just winds one up and lets fly!

Dan Riehl, of Riehl World View, decided the way to end the week was by misspelling the name of my blog (he obviously has no idea how hard it is to get my fingers to type “Riehl”), insulting me and then asking me to participate in what he calls “this Detestable Meme.”

“…Third World Country [SIC] – I know, I didn’t take up some of the memes you sent me. One was even the music meme mentioned in VC’s double whammy post. For saddling me with such tremendous guilt, what better pay back than to return the favor. No need to thank me. Bwahahaha!”

Ever one to fold in the face of such saccharine sweetness and smarmy blandishments (no thanks to Dan, indeed 🙂 I hereby take up the torch he passes on! Anyone singed by the flame can take responsibility for their own burns. That’ll teach you a lesson.

The rules (quoting Dan, with minor edits):

Remove the #1 item from the following list, bump everyone up one place and add your blog’s name in the #5 spot. You need to… actually link to each of the blogs for the link-whorage aspect of this fiendish meme-age to kick in.

Next, select four unsuspecting victims, list and link to them.

Fine

  1. Boudicca’s Voice – With boys like yours, Bou, you just HAVE to do this… for perspective, if nothing else. 🙂
  2. Cathouse Chat‘s Romeocat – What with the move and all, you have all that extra time on your hands for this, right?
  3. Morning Coffee & Afternoon Tea – Christine has to have some interesting answers for this.
  4. Pull My Finger – to paraphrase Dan Riehl, rent’s due on the blogroll, Spurs. 🙂

    Now – the subject of “this Detestable Meme” is Five Things I Miss From My Childhood:

1. The Green Rocking Chair: Sitting in that chair in a day when being five didn’t mean being bundled off to Prison For Kids, Heidi (our Dachsund) in my lap hanging her head over the side to catch some warmth from the floor heater, watching black and white TV. In the evening, the five of us kids would swarm Mother’s lap as she sat in that chair and read us Bible stories.

2. Granddaddy’s Whistling: the guy was a credible bass singer, a competent all-around handyman (was a farmer with foresight: missed the Depression and the Dustbowl by that much by getting abd keeping a job in the post office shortly before both whomped the small OK town he lived in), great company—stories, poetry, fishing, teaching a boy how to hold a paintbrush, use a saw, make a magnet, swing a hammer and much, much more. And boy, could he whistle a tune. Add in Grandmother’s cooking and what more could a boy want in the summer? Oh, yeh. Climbing the redbud tree in his back yard with a matching cousin.

3. My Schwinn: Easily modified from Dan’s listing of a much newer ten-speed bike (Dan must still be in his first childhood for him to remember one of those new-fangled ten-speeds as a fav childhood memory -CORRECTION: Dan’s first was an older model :-). Second hand. Heavy clunker with those old fat tires. Red. One speed, stomp-on-’em brakes. Coasting down the looooong hills to the public library (and slogging that one-speed back up ’em on the way home) riding over squashed frogs there and back in the spring and enjoying the bite of the air and sting of snow in the winter. Hit twice from behind by cars when the drivers just weren’t looking, the second time retired that old bike forever.

4. Dad-Dad’s preaching: Add Granddaddy’s ability to quote page upon page of Sir Walter Scott to Dad-Dad’s sermons and it’s little wonder I grew up with an ear tuned to detect subliterate speech. heh. For a guy from a hardscrabble tobacco farm in the Ozarks whose high school and college education came late, after some years in the Oklahoma boomtown oilfields, Dad-Dad was one of the two most literate men I have ever met (due in large part to one of the most literate women I have ever met: his wife, Me-Ma, who was also his teacher). I still re-read his sermons from time to time when I want to hear clear, honest, good speaking.

5. The Little Red Wagon: Yep. That Little Red Wagon. It wasn’t so much mine as it belonged to all of us—me and my four sibs. We’d load the thing up and off we’d go down the street—wherever. It was a great dump truck for hauling dirt around the back yard when building yet another fort. A handy piece of equipment for my first business venture: gathering (with my older and very grown up and responsible seven-year-old sister to watch our for me) discarded pop bottles from alleys and empty lots in the vicinity of our neighborhood, taking them down to the corner grocery and redeeming them for warm, fuzzy cash. Of course, my sister—and later other sibs—had their share of the loot. And, truth be told, the venture was her idea, anyway, as I recall.

There, now. That wasn’t as hard as I had supposed it might be. Of course, if may have something to do with the way my memories age as I get older. From a distance, they all seem to be surrounded by a slight golden haze… eh? What’s that you say sonny? I cain’t hear ya boy! Speak up… (aehhhh kids these days…)

NOTE: the “five things” above are in no particular order and draw from a deep well. I could easily have listed any of many other five things. Dan even points to one of them in another post on his blog when he mentions Michelle Malkin’s recent spelling bee post. but that’s another tale all its own and belongs in one of my public school rants.

For those rare readers of Whistling in the Light (well, I only post there rarely, so that’s fair), I’ve posted it there, as well.