Joe Flaherty R.I.P.

 

Writer and performer on SCTV, the Dad character on Freaks and Geeks, the golf tournament heckler in Adam Sandler’s Happy Gilmore, and even occasional lurker here on Ricochet from time to time (appeared as a guest on the flagship podcast too if I remember correctly). When someone makes you laugh so many times throughout your life, it’s difficult to sum up what they mean to you. So just like with John Candy and Norm Macdonald, I’ll never stop watching old clips and remaining grateful for his comedic genius. Here’s but one example of so many. Flaherty as William F. Buckley:

Medicine as an Art Form

 

Photo ID: 368080166 (LookerStudio/Shutterstock)

“This is where science becomes an art.” Whenever a medical doctor says her work verges into artwork my ears perk up. Last summer I was diagnosed with hyperthyroidism, what I came to discover is a common malady. My exceptional endocrinologist immediately eased the symptoms with medicine. But the meds had to be modulated – when and how much to take, was the issue for my body. That’s when I heard the phrase, sometimes, “science becomes an art.”

It’s Time for Adults to Act Like Adults

 

We’ve probably all heard the stories about young adults who graduate from college and proceed to move into their parents’ basements. Supposedly these people can’t make a decent living (since they graduated with useless degrees), so they camp out with mom and dad. Or they’re not quite ready to be fully out on their own. I have no idea about their prospects for the future: will they ever grow up?

photo courtesy of unsplash.com

What Is the Meaning of Justice?

 

Lady Justice at the Shelby County Courthouse in Memphis, Tennessee (Wikimedia Commons)

I realized, as soon I first attended the local precinct meeting of my preferred political party, that practical politics was no place for me. I thought that since I had long been interested in the “big ideas” animating political contests, I would of course like to play a role in that effort. So I dredged up where and when my local party chapter was meeting, and I attended, wrapped in the gauzy notion that I was putting my principles into action.

A War Between Peoples (Part II)

 

Let’s set ourselves back a few years, shall we? Israel is established. It is a home for a population of refugees who’ve just been slaughtered on a world-unprecedented scale. They agree to a division of land, but the overwhelming reaction from the Arab population is to try to exterminate them (yes, “Arab.” The label “Palestinian” didn’t exist as a distinct ethnic group at that time). The fighters include Arab populations from villages and cities throughout the land. This was a peoples’ war then – every Jew was a target – man, woman and child.

The initial plan was to overwhelm Jewish settlements and exterminate their populations. A few places and peoples did not engage in this. Most prominent were the Bedouin and Druze who remain a central part of the State today – although as with any nomadic group in a modern society, the Bedouin have challenges. There was also a prominent village on the coast and Abu Ghosh (both populated, interestingly, by generally ‘less-Arab’ populations). Almost everyplace else – and with everyone else – extermination was the goal of the day. Again, it was a peoples’ war – not a war between armies. Jews near Arab villages were and are routinely attacked and massacred. Those who make the mistake of entering are murdered.

Quote of the Day: Kissinger on China, Diplomacy, or Both

 

Diplomacy was not a bargaining process between multiple sovereign interests but a series of carefully contrived ceremonies in which foreign societies were given the opportunity to affirm their assigned place in the global hierarchy. In keeping with this perspective, in classical China what would now be called “foreign policy” was the province of the Ministry of Rituals, which determined the shades of the tributary relationship, and the Office of Border Affairs, charged with managing relations with nomadic tribes. A Chinese foreign ministry was not established until the mid-nineteenth century, and then perforce to deal with intruders from the West. Even then, officials considered their task the traditional practice of barbarian management, not anything that might be considered Westphalian diplomacy. The new ministry carried the telling title of the “Office for the Management of the Affairs of All Nations,” implying that China was not engaging in interstate diplomacy at all.

World Order, p. 214

Always Listening

 

I rarely use Siri on my phone – mostly to place a call via Bluetooth while driving (I have the Australian woman voice).  A few weeks ago I listened to a podcast that was a long interview with Gina Carano. She was kidding with the podcast hosts about being able to take a punch pretty well because of her fighting career.  When I got home I was telling my wife about it (she was laughing) and suddenly Siri said “calling domestic abuse hotline”.  I immediately cancelled the call, staring at the phone, wondering if someone would call my local 911 reporting the hang up (apparently they didn’t).  After we laughed about it I said “Siri, don’t listen to my conversations”, and my iPad (about 15 feet away) said “OK”.

That’s actually pretty scary stuff.  Phone and iPad were listening and decided all by itself that someone needed some very unwelcome help

American Empire and Antisemitism

 

Until the aftermath of October 7th, 2023, I would have been sure that America, in the balance, was squarely in Israel’s corner and ready and willing to do the right thing to defend the Jewish state. I still feel that America is 70% there, but my confidence has frankly been shaken by the egregious antisemitism displayed on American universities, as well as the unabashed linking of further Abraham Accords progress with Israel’s willingness to negotiate a Palestinian state. (Imagine if, after 9/11, the EU had linked support for America’s war against Afghanistan with political support of the Taliban.) Netanyahu has been strongly against rewarding terrorism with political concessions, and I hope he and Israel continue to stand against it.

We need America to stop using “strategic ambiguity” to walk back her support for allies. When Putin invaded Ukraine, it was clear to me that President Biden’s so-called incompetence was intentional, to capitulate on Afghanistan and Ukraine, partly to reorient toward China, and partly to reconsolidate NATO and make more profitable deals going forward. There was never any intention to help Ukraine “win” against Russia, which is amazingly tragic. The U.S. has been losing on purpose. To a certain extent, Nixon to Carter served a similar purpose. America was on the decline, until mysteriously she resurged in the late 80s, up until the early 2000s.

Daniel Kahneman: An Appreciation

 

The death of Professor Daniel Kahneman last week inspired a set of tributes that surely marked him as one of the most innovative and important thinkers of the past century in the borderland between psychology and economics. Kahneman was awarded the Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences in 2002 and the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2013. His fame stems from two sets of work, both of enormous influence. In the earlier period, Kahneman and his longtime friend, the late Amos Tversky, pioneered a revolution in thinking about how the mind works, chiefly with cognitive biases. Then in 2011, Kahneman published his runaway bestseller, Thinking, Fast and Slow, which explained how everyone uses two different sets of tools to make sensible decisions under conditions of uncertainty.

Their goal in the earlier efforts was nothing less than to dethrone in stages the dominant rational-choice models that had been developed by Ronald Coase and Gary Becker, both Nobel Prize winners and stalwarts of the then-regnant Chicago School of economics, which asserts, with some simplification, that individuals are rational actors who work hard to take efficient, i.e., cost-effective, steps to achieve whatever subjective preferences they seek to maximize.

Please, Thank-You, and the Death of Common Decency

 

Remember when you were a child and your mother reminded you to say “please” when you asked your neighbor for another chocolate chip cookie? And if your “thank-you” wasn’t forthcoming, you’d hear, “Now what do you say”? These reminders were part of a ritual in my family home, and I never questioned them. Eventually I didn’t need to be coaxed, and grew to realize that these words were part of an effort to remind me that it was worthwhile to demonstrate common decency with each other. I just didn’t realize how difficult it would be to continue those rituals in a world consumed with rage.

We live in an age where the most primitive and angry behaviors are demonstrated every day: people are called Nazis, racists, white supremacists. Thugs hit people in the face who are walking on the sidewalk, for no apparent reason. In Israel, the Jews are called out for practicing a non-existent apartheid. On U.S. campuses, pro-Palestinian protestors enthusiastically demonstrate their hatred for Israel and Jews everywhere, and their support of murderers and rapists in the form of Hamas. The ugliness perpetuates the decline of understanding of how humans should minimally treat each other. And it only seems to be getting worse.

A Dyspeptic Easter Meditation

 

There’s an interesting argument in pop culture that evil is apparently repelled only by things they regard as holy. Why are Western communists triggered by Christian or Jewish religious symbols yet not by Muslim or even Aztec objects, human sacrifice notwithstanding? The implied genuflection before they strike is a back handed admission that subjectively at least for Western Marxists, here is the true adversary. – Richard Fernandez

The Biden administration saw fit to use the one-year anniversary of transgender Audrey Hale’s mass murder of Christians and their children to direct the government to celebrate transgenderism on the highest of holy Christian holidays.

When Anomalies Challenge the Model

 

Isaac Asimov once wrote “The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds new discoveries is not ‘Eureka!”(I found it!) but ‘That’s funny. . .’” Inconsistencies lead to investigations which uncover new knowledge.

Space Oddities: The Mysterious Anomalies Challenging Our Understanding of the Universe by Harry Cliff is a book filled with 200 years of these “That’s funny. . .” moments. It shows how weird inconsistencies led to great discoveries.

The book looks at the cutting edge of physics at both ends of the scale, from sub-atomic particle physics to cosmology about the size and origins of the universe. While these topics have been covered in other recent books, Cliff looks at the race for discovery as much as the science itself. It is science as competitive sport (a friendly competition – usually).

The Dismissal of This Woman by the Church

 

Can we talk? I mean really talk.

On the way to last night’s Good Friday service, I received an email. It was like a fiery dart to my heart. I’m pretty sure the writer thought nothing of it, and doesn’t realize the total wrongness of his chosen words and phrases. Total wrongness … I kind of like that phrase.

Anyway, I didn’t share it with my husband until we got home from the service. Without telling him anything about it beforehand, he was taken aback. It was both a surprise and a relief to me. He’s a pretty chill guy, void of emotional intensity unless the topic involves the SF Giants. So, his reaction felt like support … much needed in the moment.

A War Between Peoples

 

I am not a lover of Hamas, but they are entirely truthful about one reality. In their highly questionable casualty claims, they make no distinction between civilians and military deaths. The only distinctions are between women, children and men. To Israeli eyes, this seems like it is simply an attempt to hide their own military deaths. After all, they have done so in the past. However, there is a greater truth behind this categorization. For Hamas, every man in a society is a combatant. Women and children are part of the ‘resistance’ as well, although they belong in a separate category. This same logic justifies their attacks on Jews. Every Jewish man is a combatant and clearly – as women fight as well – so is every Jewish woman. Jewish children are just future combatants. Every Jew is a target.

When You Think You Know What’s Up

 

I think I finally figured it out.

(Yeah, there I go again, thinking I’m the only one who sees what’s really going on.)

I can’t help myself. So, I confess. I doom scroll. Sorry, Mickey Z. I know you regularly advise us to not do that, but I do. And I feel progressively crappier with every subsequent article. Which is why your advice is excellent, but also demonstrates the addictive nature of the human condition.

Wodehouse’s Uncle Fred In The Springtime – Everything That Could Go Wrong…

 

P. G. Wodehouse’s Uncle Fred In The Springtime has all the elements that make his books so much fun: mistaken identities, potty Earls and Dukes, love-stricken young persons who face insurmountable odds to getting married, and endless plot complications that all manage to get solved. It is set in Blandings Castle, where Clarence, the Earl of Emsworth, only seeks peace and quiet to raise his prize-winning pig, The Empress of Blandings. Alas, peace and quiet are the last things he gets in this tale.

It begins with Pongo Twistleton (no one since Charles Dickens is as good at creating characters’ names as Wodehouse) visiting his friend, Horace Davenport, to touch him for 200 pounds. He has a bookie’s enforcer breathing down his neck, and he has to raise the funds to save it. Horace is engaged to Pongo’s sister, Valerie. Unfortunately, while she was vacationing in France, the jealous Horace hired a private investigator, Claude “Mustard” Pott, to tail her. She found out and was justifiably furious, breaking their engagement.

A tale of abuse and more abuse

 

You have heard the story of Nex (Dagny) Benedict, a young girl transitioning to male being bullied in her Oklahoma school.  The original story was that three girls attacked her in the girls lavatory, smashed her head into the ground, she sustained injuries, was taken to the hospital, released, and died the next day.  There was instant blaming and then “story enhancements” associated with a school that allegedly didn’t support LGBTQ++ trans kids, who had created the potential for this attack by requiring kids to use the restroom aligned with their biological gender, and that the school refused to call for an ambulance despite the girl’s inability to even walk following the “attack,” etc.

The media and victim enablers (AKA LGBTQ++ support groups) quickly glommed onto the terror of being bullied by intolerant transphobes. Candlelight vigils were held nationwide in support.  Presidentish Joe Biden and Dr. Jill issued a statement in support of Nex Benedict and all LGBTQ++ people who deserve safe spaces and acceptance.

Abraham Lincoln: A Life

 

I’m delighted to report that my 82nd audiobook, Abraham Lincoln: A Life by Michael Burlingame, was published yesterday on Audible.com. As with all of my titles, if you would like a free review copy, send me a message and I’ll send you a promo code.

This book was published as a two volume set in 1988 and quickly became recognized as a definitive piece of Lincoln scholarship. It’s very well-written and accessible, so the author and his associate Jonathan White decided to abridge it from over a million words to 300,000. It’s still the longest audiobook I’ve ever narrated; it came out to 33 hours. I enjoyed every minute of it. It feels like this is the book I have learned my craft over the past ten years to do.

What a man. What a story. What a book.

100 Days at Sea

 

When I was about five years old, my family left New York to sail for India by ship. My dad was going to be an assistant Naval Attache assigned to the US Embassy in New Delhi for a 2-year assignment.

We left New York on the SS Independence, a passenger liner that entered service in 1951 that plied the New York-to-Mediterranean route. She was certainly not the large type of cruise ships you see crossing the oceans today. Our first stop was the Canary Islands and then on to Naples, Italy.

Beth and Andrew speak with parent activist Alexandra Frank, who shares her own story about what led her to become an “accidental activist,” having experienced the ideological capture of her twin daughters’ private school in Pennsylvania and then experiencing the same thing at their new public school in Massachusetts.

She talks about the inappropriate sexual material being taught to elementary school aged children, about segregating affinity groups, and the influence of radical gender ideology. Frank also discusses how schools’ focus on leftist ideology has led to the deterioration of traditional academics.

Quote of the Day – The Stars and the Sky

 

Canst thou bind the sweet influences of Pleiades, or loose the bands of Orion? Canst thou bring forth Mazzaroth in his season? or canst thou guide Arcturus with his sons? Knowest thou the ordinances of heaven? (Job, 38:31-34) KJV

If the weather is clear, go outside tonight.  Look up at the night sky.  What can you see?