ACF Critic Series #7: Teachout “On Dangerous Ground”

 

Terry Teachout and I continued our series on noir movies and also meet each other in the flesh for the first time. Listen and share, friends–we talk about Nicholas Ray’s On Dangerous Ground, about the touch of greatness in Robert Ryan’s portrayal of justice turning to loneliness and, eventually, cruelty–about Ida Lupino’s remarkable portrayal of realism and innocence mixed together–Ward Bond’s equally compelling turn as a father mad for revenge, driven to the limits of humanity–and, of course, Bernard Hermann’s impressively Romantic score, which adds a solid depth to characterization, enough to give an American story the tragic depth it needs. We also talk about the loss of innocence of WWII and how American movies took a turn for the tragic, becoming less lovely, but more beautiful, in the process.

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Book Review: The Secret World

 

It is sometimes said spying is the second oldest profession. “The Secret World: A History of Intelligence,” by Christopher Andrew underscores the claim. It is a history of spying from the earliest days to the present.

Andrew starts with the first recorded accounts of spying, related in the Bible. He finished with the role of intelligence in the War on Terror. He attempts to cover all significant intelligence operations between those boundaries.

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The Virtue in Jeff Bezos’ $2 Billion Fund to Help Preschoolers and the Homeless

 

The $2 billion Bezos Day One fund might do a great job at helping the homeless and educating preschoolers from low-income families. Or it might be a bust. It’s obviously too early to make any sort of reasonable prediction about whether Jeff and MacKenzie Bezos will succeed as a philanthropists.

For critics, however, all that is pretty much beside the point. The effort is inherently “morally complicated.” Some see it as a tax dodge on the Amazon founder’s $160 billion fortune. They would prefer — in the name of “democratic accountability” or some such — for Uncle Sam to somehow grab a big chunk of that massive wealth to fund government efforts to help preschoolers and the homeless. (As if Bezos’ efforts wouldn’t be accountable to the democratic process that produces laws and regulations or accountable to parents who voluntarily choose to enroll their kids.)

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Price Gouging Is Not Evil

 

I watched a clip on the news yesterday concerning price gouging. The Attorney General of North Carolina was telling us how many reports of gouging they were receiving, what the penalties are, and how they are going to prosecute gougers. This shows a lack of understanding about the role of prices in determining the most efficient use of scarce resources.

If during a crisis, prices are allowed to rise, people won’t horde as much. They will only buy what they really need. If prices aren’t allowed to rise, there will be shortages. People that need gas won’t get it, while others will have filled every gas can they can find, “just in case.”

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Friday Roundup

 

Every week, I try to round up a few stories that might have been missed in the crush of a non-stop news cycle. This week will be a little lighter than usual, thanks to a root canal I spent the whole morning doing. While I was enjoying that experience, I listened to the latest Remnant podcast with Jonah Goldberg and my favorite Senator, Ben Sasse. I also got most of the way through the latest Commentary podcast, and enjoyed listening to JPod giving other people a hard time instead of me for a change.

 

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Twitter

 

View original artwork here.

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On Surveys and Monkeys

 

I had about 170 responses to my survey, most of which came from Ricochet. But unless I fork over $40, they will only let me see 100 responses. I’m a cheapskate, plus I got guns to buy, so I ain’t forkin’ it over. Still, some folks have asked to see the results of the first 100 responses, so here they are.

For those of you bad at math, since there are exactly 100 responses, the percentage and the number for each choice are…the same. But the third column has Arizona Patriot’s predictions.

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Leftists Are the Party of Pagan Weather Gods, Not Science

 

Earlier this week, the Washington Post ran an opinion piece titled “Another hurricane is about to batter our coast. Trump is complicit.” The gist of the article is that Trump has shown a bad attitude about Obama’s climate regulations and that is why the weather gods are sending a hurricane to punish America.

What kind of people believe that the mindset of a leader affects weather? It is certainly not any person of science. I did some research and it seems the idea of vengeful weather gods is the beliefs of Pagans. Checking with Witchipedia.com, the Leftists’ deity is Adad (Master of the Earth who is a Mesopotamian Storm God responsible for the destructive and regenerative powers of nature).

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Median Household Income. The Truth. Nothing But the Truth. The Whole Truth. And the Statistics

 

There is a great vignette in the book Moneyball, illustrating the gulf between what actually happens on a baseball field and what the statistics reflect. Imagine the following situation…

Two outs. Runner on third. The pitcher throws his best pitch, fools the batter who hits a lazy fly ball towards right-center field. But the right fielder is a guy like Albert Belle — all bat, no range, no glove. The Belle-ish outfielder can’t get there and the lazy fly ball drops in for a clean single and the runner scores from third.

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Underwhelming Swamp Draining Plans

 

Senator Ben Sasse (R–Corn) came out today with a column in USA Today where he outlines his new plan to Drain the Swamp. He starts off his article with a bipartisan attack on the DC swamp culture and he’s just barely scratching the surface. He points out a few examples from each party of corrupt behavior. (To be fair, a full accounting would take several books.) Then he lays out the bills he’s planning to introduce to fix DC’s ethical problems. I’m normally a fan of the Senator, but after reading the article my first thought was “That’s it? That’s all you’ve got?”

Let’s break down the plan. He splits the descriptions into two groups: Three bills that “drain the swamp once-and-for-all” and two that “stop feeding the swamp creatures.”

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Bad Hiring Practices

 

I posted these recollections on a forum that’s oriented toward mechanics and car guys, and the responses have been interesting, to say the least.

It’s been many years since I managed a large printing facility in San Antonio. We had a large work force (for the industry) and paid top dollar in the area for equipment operators, mechanics, and warehouse workers. Every time we had even a janitor position open we would get 20+ applications, in addition to people who just walked in and applied for any openings.

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Forecasting the Senate

 

Wednesday night, Nate Silver’s FiveThirtyEight released their much anticipated Senate model, forecasting the results of November’s election. According to Nate Silver, it’s basically the same thing as the House model, except it looks at Senate seats.

As with the House model, there are three versions: Lite, Classic, and Deluxe (represented on their website with burger icons). The Lite version is just based on polling. The Classic adds “fundamentals” (historical trends, fundraising, etc.), and the Deluxe adds expert ratings. (The three levels matter more in the Congressional model where there are fewer polls for individual districts.)

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What the NY Times Misses About Poverty

 

It’s an affecting story. Matthew Desmond, writing in the New York Times Magazine, profiles Vanessa Solivan, a poor single mother raising three children. Vanessa works as a home health aide, yet she and her three teen children are often reduced to sleeping in her car, a 2004 Chrysler Pacifica. In the morning, she takes her two daughters and one son to her mother’s house to wash and get ready for school. Vanessa has diabetes. Her work brings in between $10 and $14 per hour depending upon the health coverage of the mostly elderly patients she cares for. But because of her responsibilities to her children, Vanessa works only 20 to 30 hours per week. That doesn’t provide enough to keep this family of four above the poverty line.

Yes, Vanessa gets government benefits. Between the Earned Income Tax Credit and child credits, she received $5000 from Uncle Sam last year. She also gets SNAP (food stamps), but when one of her daughters qualified for SSI last year due to a disability and began receiving $766 per month, the family’s SNAP assistance was reduced from $544 to $234 per month.

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On Acting Presidential and Other Security Blankets

 

One reason for the discomfort (to put it mildly for some) regarding the carriage and demeanor of the 45th President of the United States has been the loss of security we have come to expect from the occupant of the Oval Officeacting “presidential.”

Following the 2004 Presidential Election, the American Psychological Association (APA) found that 27% of Americans primarily chose their candidate on the basis of presentation, personality, likeability and character (Sadie F. Dingfelder, “A Presidential Personality”, American Psychological Association, Vol. 35, No.10). For a significantly greater percentage, these considerations were notable factors in the casting of votes. And so politicians, taking their cue from decades of mass media/pop media-political culture shaping, invested considerable resources in “imaging” presidential qualities according to the media-guided expectations of the populace.

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Heroes Among Us

 

I struggle to write about the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001. It is such a monumental moment that I fear my feeble attempt to describe it would be like trying to replicate the Sistine Chapel with crayons in a spiral notebook. But like most Americans alive that day, I remember vividly where I was and how my chest tightened when I realized the enormity of what I was witnessing. That feeling returns on the occasions when I read and hear about the lives lost in the fight to protect this nation from its enemies. Each story is a model of selfless sacrifice for the freedom of our fellow Americans.

We learn about our war heroes in school: ordinary men and women who join a fight for the existence of a nation that affords a blanket of security and the opportunity to wake up each morning with a new day of freedom. They were farmers and militiamen who came together to defeat a great British army; they were young men sent overseas to fight tyranny and the worst evils in Europe and later the fight against Communism. More recently young men and women are in the heat of the desert, fighting a war that someone born 17 years ago today could join without ever not knowing our nation at war. These patriots, along with the our police, firefighters, and emergency responders put aside their safety so we can be safe going about our day-to-day lives.

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Goldberg vs. Reno: it is Goldberg for the Win!

 

Jonah Goldberg doesn’t need me to defend him, but since we had two posts on this subject already (found here and here), I thought it was worth my time to read the entire R.R. Reno review.

The review was terrible. Frankly, I expected Mr. Reno to hold himself to a higher standard than he achieved in his review of Jonah Goldberg’s book. Goldberg responded to the review on Twitter by laughing at it. I thought I might give a longer response. Let’s start right at the top.

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