Reticulator

Oct 232007
 

In the 1750s Benjamin Franklin was in England, in part to petition for redress of grievances — The Pennsylvania Governor considered himself too special to have to pay taxes, even though he was the richest man in the colony. Eventually we had a Revolution — one that had an impact around the world.

Now the egalitarianism that began in that era is coming undone.

From the WSJ

A law President Bush signed last month drew a lot of attention for trying to make college more affordable for many. Less trumpeted were provisions that support the altruists among us.

The law, signed by President Bush last month, appropriates $20 billion to cut interest rates on certain federal student loans and increase grant aid for low-income students over the next five years. But the College Cost Reduction and Access Act also creates an important incentive for all students to enter fields of public service by offering to forgive what could amount to tens of thousands of dollars of school debt per student.

The legislation broadly defines public service to include a wide range of occupations, such as public health, public education, working for a nonprofit organization and serving in law enforcement or as a public-interest lawyer.

In other words, the members of the governing class are too special to have to pay the full costs. They get special government subsidies that the rest of us don’t get.

This is bad on so many levels. It sets up a situation of government vs the people. It shelters a whole class of people who tend to favor higher taxes from knowledge of the impact that the cost of government has ordinary people. It demeans entrepreneurship in the private sector, the sector that supports the increasing costs of government.

We’re seeing this same sort of thing happening in England, now, too.

From Paul Greenberg

There’ll always be an England, so they say. But you might doubt it after reading about the latest controversy in Parliament. To quote David Stringer’s AP dispatch from London: “British lawmakers have been granted the power to move to the head of the line at restaurants, rest rooms and elevators inside the Houses of Parliament, angering those assistants, researchers, janitors and other workers who must stand and wait.”

Oct 232007
 

Breitbart.com tells us that not everyone has yet succumbed to the mania for health and safety. There are still a few “live free or die” types that have not yet been made to submit.

When Daniel Craig was unveiled as the new James Bond actor in October 2005, he was forced to wear a life jacket as he sped through London on a boat up the River Thames

It was somewhat out of keeping for the daredevil fictional British spy, in a press call stunt widely acknowledged as having backfired.

“It’s not his fault. He’s doing what he’s told,” McGregor groaned.

“Today, health and safety are out of control. In Africa, garage attendants smoked as they filled the bikes. I took great pleasure in that.”

Oct 222007
 

Reading this article by George Will is the first time I’ve ever seen good arguments against a presidential line-item veto.  I am not completely convinced, but I am convinced that his are serious objections.   The best way to evaluate his concerns would be to take a look at places where governors have had that power, to see if the effect has been as he describes.  So where does one start with that?

Oct 212007
 

No, not the socks into which he stuffed documents. I’m talking about Socks, the cat.

Hillary dumped an innocent cat when he was no longer politically useful. But she picked up a convicted national security risk, and made him an unofficial adviser to her campaign. Could it be she expects him to be useful? Has he done more for her than Socks did?

0278calico

This is a photo of our Calico Cat, caught sleeping in the dog dish again. That may have been in 2002. She has since died, at about age 16. And more recently, E-Flat, too, has died, also at a very old age, leaving us with no cats at all. (Mittens and Theophrastus died many years ago.) Somewhere in between Calico and E-Flat, Toelpel died. He was a black Lab mutt, a contemporary of Calico. So there are no animals to keep the mice, chipmunks, and whitetail deer at bay. And it’s the time of year when mice are trying to move indoors to winter quarters.

Everytime I become aware of a stray cat that needs adopting, my wife says no, because she is the one who will have to care for it. (Which is true.) But she has left the door open a bit to the possibility of getting another cat if it’s a Tuxedo cat, like Mittens.

socks 385x185 222463a

Well, guess what? Socks, too, is a Tuxedo cat. He’s pretty old by now, but if Betty Currie feels put upon to have him, I know where he could find a good home. He wouldn’t even be required to catch mice, though it would be nice if he could advise us on matters of household security.

I make no such offer if Sandy Burger gets dumped.  I make no such offer to take in Sandy Berger if he gets dumped.  I have a hard enough time as it is finding the papers I need without having to search peoples’ shorts.

Oct 192007
 

I’ve told the Audible.com people that I’d like to sign up, but first they have to fix their wretched web site.   I’ve pretty much run out of books for my MP3 player from our public library’s Netlibrary subscription, other than Pimsleur language recordings.

But it’s too painful.   If I go to their web site and elect to Browse for history books, I get a web page that says “Audible has 1587 history titles with more being added all the time.”   And it displays eight of them, and offers to let me listen to samples.  But there is nary a link by which to browse to look at more than those eight.   To do that, I have to use their complicated search page.  But I don’t want to search.  I want to browse — one handed, with my mouse, not my keyboard.   Most library card catalogs have decent browse functions to provide serendipity almost as good as you can get browsing the stacks.  But audible.com doesn’t get it.   False advertising, I’d say, telling me to “Browse and Discover”, and then provide no means to browse.

Oct 192007
 

slowcemeteryentrance-6346

A slow entrance is fine. I’m in no hurry. But there will be a fast exit, according to St. Paul. (It’s in 1 Corinthians 15. It’s a good thing I looked it up, because I had thought that passage from Handel’s Messiah came from Thessalonians.)

Monday before last, I was riding to the probable site of Isaac McCoy’s Baptist Indian Mission a few miles from here (just outside of Bridgeton, Indiana in Parke County). I was riding into a southwest wind, which is a good way for me to be reminded that I’m getting older, which may be why I read the sign as I did. I rode a ways past it, then rode back to get a photo.

Oct 182007
 

Isn’t this a bit ghoulish? Don’t politicians know how to talk liberal any more?

“In the coming days, Democrats will not back down and we will insist on providing health care coverage to these 10 million children,” said Rep. Rahm Emanuel, an Illinois Democrat.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a California Democrat, after the vote said Congress intends to send Bush another bill in the next two weeks that covers the same number of youngsters.

Health and Human Services Secretary Mike Leavitt said in an interview he was “optimistic” the administration and Congress could work out their differences. The administration’s goal is to sign-up 500,000 more eligible low-income children, he said.

The bill vetoed by Bush would have raised tobacco taxes to provide an extra $35 billion dollars over five years to provide health care for as many as 10 million children, compared to the 6.6 million currently enrolled.

I think they’re arguing over how many ritual child sacrifices will be needed to appease Leviathan.

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