Bio

Farm boy. Attorney. Five children, eight grandchildren (God's gift to grandparents).  Lifelong Mormon.

Heroes:  C. S. Lewis and G. K. Chesterton.

Love golf (much more than it loves me). Avid reader.  Recently e-published a book on Mormon culture.


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tabula rasa
Name:
tabula rasa
Hometown:
Salt Lake City
Joined:
Jun 9, 2010

Recent Comments

tabula rasa

I thought the Democrats were the party of science?  

Senator Sheldon Whitehouse did his own version of this rant on the Senate floor yesterday.

Is there anyone here who can apologize on behalf of Rhode Island?

Edited 12 minutes ago
tabula rasa

You can put me in the same camp as Schrodinger's Cat.

For a supposedly rational people, it's baffling why 60% of Americans consider it morally OK to have a child out of wedlock.  Social science hasn't proven many things, but it has shown beyond all doubt that, on average, kids raised in single-parent have have much higher chances of experiencing a broad range of negative life experiences (including much higher poverty rates).

Totally aside from religion, one can only wonder why making a decision so deleterious to another human being is empty of moral implications for sixty percent of us.  I would call it a moral failure of the highest order.

Sigh!

Edited 9 minutes ago
tabula rasa

Query:  Would it have been a problem for my 501(c)(4) application if I disclosed that my group prayed that the good Lord would temper the plagues of Egypt and remove other great pestilences from the earth, including the IRS?

tabula rasa

BrentB67: Fun stuff.

Perhaps a less ambitious plan for the short run:

There is a bill in Congress to begin the process to admit Puerto Rico as a state. The thinking goes that if we are going to legalize 11M+ illegal alien criminals why can't we make 4M citizens a state.

The U.S. Flag is very beutiful and symmetric with 50 stars. Texas will bow out of the Union to be replaced by Puerto Rico thus saving the expense of changing the flat. · 5 hours ago

Edited 3 hours ago

If Texas gets to leave, then Utah, Wyoming, Oklahoma, and Idaho should be allowed to accompany ya'll.  Obama got 25%, 28%, 33%, and 33% respectively.  I think we've proven our conservative bona fides.  

They can make 46 stars look good, and our five would look good in a circular pattern (maybe we could join Israel and go with a six-pointed star). With Israel, the population of our new country would be about 42-43 million.  I think we'd be able to punch well above our weight.

Edited 19 hours ago
tabula rasa

EstoniaKat

tabula rasa: You've not heard to the thousands and thousands of olive oil poisonings all over Europe?  Public health crisis.

Being the devil's advocate here, how old is that olive oil in your jug at the restaurant? Days, weeks, months ... years? · 5 hours ago

If it were my restaurant, it would be fresh:  because I have the greatest incentive to (1) get customers to come back and (2) to not make them sick.  This is not a problem that requires EU regulations to solve.

I also trust that cooks in good restaurants won't spit in the soup.  That too is a "problem" that doesn't require government intervention.

tabula rasa

Remember John Dean's comment to Nixon?:  "a cancer is growing on the presidency." (I paraphrase).

Watergate was a true scandal and the cover-up demonstrated the existence of a cancer.  

I think the cancer on the Obama presidency is just as profound for the reasons KC has articulated.  Obama likely didn't order any of this, but he allowed a cancerous environment to grow in his administration.

I hope the Republicans don't move on impeachment unless the evidence is overwhelming.  That lacking, they shouldn't do it because it will give Obama the power to condemn those insane Republicans, thus making the Republican overreach the issue instead of the administration's sins.

If the result of all this is (1) neutering the Obama administration's ability to get bad legislation through Congress and (2) destroying a Clinton run in 2016, you can color me ecstatic.

Edited on May 20, 2013 at 5:10pm
tabula rasa

You've not heard to the thousands and thousands of olive oil poisonings all over Europe?  Public health crisis.  People are hurting--government must move.

Judith's story could just as easily run in the Onion, and everyone would have laughed at the irony of making fun of silly and useless regulation and bureaucracy.

tabula rasa

My great-uncle taught history in my little rural high school (he was on the cusp of retirement) .  At this point, I don't actually remember what was taught (I think we mostly shot the bull a lot), but I do know that no history was taught.

In his case, there was nothing ideological about it.  He was just plain lazy and did not want to bother with teaching or grading exams.  He wanted a smooth glide path to actual retirement.  If there was ever a case for testing to assure some teaching is taking place, he is the poster teacher.

But at least he subscribed to the "first do no harm" rule.  He didn't cause me to hate history.

tabula rasa

A worthy recipient.

tabula rasa

Melanie Phillips:

“Progressive opinion interpreted the concept of liberty at the heart of liberalism to mean license—thus destroying the moral rules that make freedom a virtue within constraints that prevent harm to others.  Onto license it then spliced the doctrine of equality.  The result was a toxic combination of egalitarianism and permissiveness:  a marriage between the old left and the new nihilism.” (The World Turned Upside Down)

tabula rasa

Eric Wallace

What other songs or artists do you find to be ridiculously overplayed?· · 1 hour ago

Pachelbel's Canon. Every #*%!-damn wedding or other shmaltzy occasion, it's the way poseurs show off their culture to justify the reception where they'll get trashed and strip naked for the chicken dance.

I agree.  It's a beautiful piece of music.  You know it's overexposed when genius becomes trite.l

tabula rasa
Spin: Trink, if you don't like Miami Vice, just say so... · 1 hour ago

The cancellation of Miami Vice may have given a break to our overworked ears, but think of the other tragedy:  my entire wardrobe of pastel muscle shirts  and white pants immediately became obsolete.

miami vice
Edited on May 18, 2013 at 5:13pm
tabula rasa

Indaba: 

I do not like the loss of religion but mainly for its music, fun and sharing. Here in Canada, the churches are so anti business and its all about the poor. There was a time when my family business was so underwater with debt, that the poorest person had far more net worth than me. · 13 hours ago

This is a fact that the leftist mind seems unable to grasp.  Those government jobs they have are funded by taxes paid by businesses like yours that struggled and made it, or the little lefties are now working for you, resenting your success, but don't ask them to stay five minutes longer.

tabula rasa

Here's a relatively modern invention that has had a profound positive effect on mankind: eyeglasses.  At about age 15, I had to get glasses for nearsightedness.  I'm now of a certain age and have bifocals.

Were it not for these inventions, I would have viewed life for over forty years as though I were in fog.  They seem so simple, but they've dramatically improved people's lives.

tabula rasa

AUMom: 

Tomorrow, AUDad and AUDaughter will join the family trek of seven cemeteries for Decoration Day. A quaint custom, still practiced in small towns, is the cleaning of the cemeteries where your dear departed are buried.

I prefer real books to ebooks. I like the heft of a book. Feeling seems to give it weight as well as importance. I realize this is a personal preference. 

Ditto to both.  My parents always called it Decoration Day.  We still visit four different cemeteries.

I own a Kindle and use it, but--if we're talking about a book that's more than just mind candy--I like real books.  Kindles are good when you travel (so you don't have to take your whole library).

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