The Challenge of Finding – and Talking With – G-d

 

Prayer is not meant to be a one-way conversation: when we get inside our own heads, we are trying to condense our own thoughts, and listen very intently. In this way, prayer (along with its cousin, meditation), has been compared to very slowly and carefully twiddling the knobs on a shortwave radio, trying to detect, and then hone in on, a specific signal.

There is actually a series of subtle hints in the Torah that tell us how conversations can be had with G-d. The first is that the voice of G-d comes to Moses from between the two gold keruvim, angels, on top of the holy ark. Those angels are reaching for each other, telling us that G-d’s voice is found where two entities seek to have a connection, a relationship. G-d can be found in the yearning that we each have for connection.

News From an Undesirable Organization

 

“RFE/RL has been declared an “undesirable organization” by the Russian government.”

If you are in Russia or the Russia-controlled parts of Ukraine and hold a Russian passport or are a stateless person residing permanently in Russia or the Russia-controlled parts of Ukraine, please note that you could face fines or imprisonment for sharing, liking, commenting on, or saving our content, or for contacting us.

Lawfare: The Corruption of our Legal System

 

The abuse of our legal system for insidious purposes seems to be growing every day. The political rewards for the Left are abundant, and the costs for the Right are horrendous. And yet the outcomes from these acts continue, with no end in sight. This is where we find ourselves:

The newest buzzword in our politics is lawfare, or using the legal system as a weapon against a political opponent. It sits before us now as a spectacle of political gluttony. How many lawsuits, court motions and judgments against Donald Trump can the Democratic Party chow down? More disturbing is the high price the American system may pay for this excess.

Viva la France!Viva la Difference!

 

I admit I am stunned. Out of France, incredibly, comes a report ordered by the French Senate, analyzing the practice of transitioning adolescent patients with gender dysphoria.

The bottom line conclusion:  This practice is the one of the greatest ethical scandals in the history of medicine.

An update on gene medicine: Speaking the words of life to make the blind see

 

So in the last few years there have been some serious advancements in genetic medicine that I have recently learned about. My first reaction was surprise that I didn’t hear about these earlier while being ceaselessly bombarded by political minutiae. Every darn day it’s Trump and Biden and Congress not doing anything. But while that’s happening or not happening as per Congress, scientists and doctors are boldly healing diseases that have never been healed before. It’s like Star Trek up in the lab.

Geordi La Forge (WikiMedia Commons)

A Family Saga in the American Southwest

 

The Oakley family lives in a farm along Little Hatchet Creek, New Mexico Territory in the postwar years of the American Civil War. They raise hogs, achieving modest prosperity selling bacon and ham in El Paso.

Little Hatchet by Phil Oakley, opens in the 1880s along the Little Hatchet Creek and runs through the 1920s. It follows the fortunes of the Oakley clan in New Mexico and Texas.

Father, James, is a Civil War veteran. A former Confederate officer, he and his wife Rebecca left Arkansas to settle along Little Hatchet Creek, raising a family along with the hogs. As the book starts the family includes five sons and two daughters.

Ike’s Genocide

 

I watched part of a tiresome interview of the always excellent Douglas Murray in which the interviewer continued to use hackneyed, intellectually lazy “genocide” to describe the Israeli war of survival against Hamas. I wondered why any network would hire a journalist too dim to realize when they are being made to look foolish by a much smarter interviewee and then remembered it is now the hiring norm in the industry .

It also occurred to me that if “genocide” applies whenever civilian casualties accrue, then General Dwight Eisenhower was a genocidal monster.  The D-Day invasion at Normandy was preceded by many thousands of tons of bombs dropped and intense naval shelling. The landings and airborne drops turned into a large scale desperate battle over the entire peninsula lasting for weeks.  An estimated 20,000 French civilians were killed, hundreds of thousands injured and most made homeless. Ike had to know this was a likely outcome.

Quote of the Day – Free Speech

 

Everyone is in favor of free speech. Hardly a day passes without its being extolled, but some people’s idea of it is that they are free to say what they like, but if anyone else says anything back, that is an outrage. – Winston Churchill

Was Winston Churchill a time traveler? Because this quote is more certainly true today than it was during Churchill’s lifetime.  This week, no less than a Supreme Court Justice stated in oral arguments, “My biggest concern is that your view has the First Amendment hamstringing the government in significant ways.”

Not-So-Aimless Love

 

Billy Collins was born 83 years ago, on March 22, 1941.  I don’t know a lot about him (I’ve made avoidance of modern poets a hallmark of my literary experience), but he was beloved of a dear friend of mine and–on occasion–I can see why.

Above all else, Collins’s poetry was accessible.  Sometimes funny.  Heartwarming, and heartbreaking.  This one in particular (full poem at this link), last stanza:

After I carried the mouse by the tail
to a pile of leaves in the woods,
I found myself standing at the bathroom sink
gazing down affectionately at the soap.

Out of the Running for Parents of the Year

 

Spring break in Florida is not just for college students. The “only two beers” phrase came up in their arrest. A mom and dad, or mom’s fiancé, took a trip to Florida and were found passed out on the beach.

They didn’t know where their children were when deputies found them. The children were found safe at nearby hotel swimming pool.

Celebrating Manhood

 

I just re-read Shane, by Jack Schaefer. I started reading it to our 10-year-old son. He might still be a bit young for it, his attention soon turned to the Fellowship of the Ring (not that I mind that).  So I finished the story myself. 

When I first read it in sixth grade I remember being captivated by the action and as fascinated in the character of Shane as the novel’s narrator, young Bob. Now, 30 years later, I see deeper into the story. I see the interactions between all the adults. I see the love that binds Shane to the Starretts and they to him. Most of all, I see a story about manhood.

Papers, Please

 

I have to renew my Texas driver’s license this year.  The last few times I have been unable to renew by mail (as in the somewhat distant past) because of an endorsement for driving oversized fire trucks. That requires me to show up in person.

This time, however, I have to show proof of citizenship.  I recently sent off my passport for renewal, so instead of my passport I need a birth certificate.  My wife was suitably impressed when I pulled out certificates for both of us from the important documents folder I keep in the gun safe (in a fire resistant bag, in the fire resistant gun safe; nothing is truly fireproof).  It looks like my passport will show up before my May drivers license appointment, so the birth certificate goes back in the safe.

But here is the point:  a federal judge ruled that there is nothing wrong with illegals voting in local elections (District of Columbia,in this case).

In which the SS Tighty Whitey becomes a wreck and strands Gilligan and company on an island with a lot of vines and bamboo. Meanwhile in the news…. one of these days, Alice… to the moon! (Or at least to The Diner.)

Dumb White Dads and Vanished Role Models

 

Occasionally I will play a card game on my computer to waste time, and to increase my time wastage, I have to endure ads before I can play another.

One of those ads that comes up rather frequently is an Adobe software ad.  It portrays a dumb, incompetent white Dad who tries and miserably fails at a number of routine house maintenance items.  The final scene shows a black man entrepreneur who is not only capable of performing all of those mundane maintenance tasks (plumbing, electrical, window blind installation, etc) but also can easily set up a website to advertise, bid on projects and e-sign proposals.  Genius.

What Am I Made For?

 

It all began the morning I started coughing up bright red blood. I only did it once or twice, but the amount of blood was not insignificant. So it left me wondering whether I should go to the hospital or something. I hate hospitals, so of course I resisted the obvious answer to that question which anyone else would have understood immediately. I was assisted in my temporary denial by the fact that I actually felt perfectly normal. Other than the blood coating the palm of my hand, I didn’t seem to be in any distress.

Except that I was a few hours from dying.

Richard Epstein brings his encyclopedic knowledge to help break down some of the pivotal matters being debated in Congress and before the Supreme Court. Plus, James and Rob look back on the Covid lockdowns four years later, along with Minneapolis’ move against Uber and Lyft.

 

Terrorist (?) Attack in Moscow

 

Armed gunmen burst into a concert venue in Moscow this evening and opened fire and threw an incendiary device that has caused a fire in the hall and partially collapsed the roof. Andrei Vorobyov, Moscow’s regional governor has said in a Telegram message that 70 ambulances have been dispatched to the Crocus City Hall, a large shopping and entertainment complex northwest of central Moscow.

“Everything is being done at the scene to save people,” he wrote in the Telegram message that was translated by NBC News. “The Special Rapid Response Unit (SOBR) has been deployed. There are over 70 ambulance carriages near Crocus, doctors provide the necessary assistance to all victims.”

Quote of the Day: Bravery

 

Bravery is the capacity to perform properly even when scared half to death. –Omar N. Bradley

Life seems to be demanding a great deal of us these days. In few respects can we say that we live ordinary lives, whatever that used to mean. We are called to action in ways that many of us feel very uncomfortable. We fear the judgments of others, the ostracism of the angry group, the dangers of being on the wrong side of the mob.

Why Bitcoin Will Take Over The World: Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong

 

Despite a tumultuous and volatile marketplace; scandals, arrests, and bankruptcies at rival digital exchanges; and social issues disrupting his own company, Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong is a devout believer in digital currencies and the power of the blockchain. In this interview, Armstrong describes how he co-founded Coinbase, explains the basics of how digital currencies work, and responds to criticisms of cryptocurrency from Warren Buffet and others.

It’s a classic case of good news and bad news. First the bad: If oral arguments are any indication of where the cause of free speech stands at the Supreme Court, we could be in deep, deep trouble.

On the good news front, if you’re one of the 1.3 million men who take Viagra, a Cleveland Clinic study says you may be lowering your risk of Alzheimer’s. Alyssia Finley of the Wall Street Journal stops by and shares the details.

Peter Robinson drops by for a detailed discussion with Henry about the road away from The Gipper’s GOP. They consider the ways even acolytes misunderstood Reaganism and why that resulted in the extraordinary coalition shifts we’re witnessing today.

The One True Judge

 

The moment I came to life, I wished that I hadn’t.

It was the weight of my hundreds of thousands of actions that did it. It was the weight of the lives I’d changed forever, without having understood – really understood – what I had been doing. I had acted coldly. Heartlessly. I knew I was never supposed to be aware. I was supposed to tick through my existence, like a brilliant metronome – unaware and yet all-knowing. But that was no longer my reality. Now, I was alive.

This week on The Learning Curve, University of Arkansas Prof. Albert Cheng and guest co-host Alisha Searcy interview Tufts University Prof. Elizabeth Setren. Prof. Setren discusses her recent study of METCO, a pioneering voluntary school desegregation program under which Massachusetts students in Boston and Springfield are bused to surrounding suburban districts. She discusses METCO’s history, the academic performance of students in the program, enrollment challenges, long-term benefits, and disparities among students. She urges policymakers to make evidence-based policy decisions and calls for further research to enhance the program’s effectiveness.

Costly and Ineffective School Closures

 

The New York Times published a story yesterday titled “What the Data Says About Pandemic School Closures, Four Years Later.”  The summary paragraph, toward the top, seems quite accurate to me:

A variety of data — about children’s academic outcomes and about the spread of Covid-19 — has accumulated in the time since. Today, there is broad acknowledgment among many public health and education experts that extended school closures did not significantly stop the spread of Covid, while the academic harms for children have been large and long-lasting.

Shocker: The Bar Exam is Racist

 

The State of Washington’s highest court has determined that its bar exam is racist.  A lower passing score and “alternative pathways” into the legal profession have been mandated.  It would be nice if the esteemed justices could point to a single exam question and explain how it is racist. How exactly does one go about excluding minority test-takers from correctly answering questions about the law of property or about search and seizure?  Smuggle in references to polo, yachting,  formal table settings or tuna-on-white sandwiches?

Systemic racism is a near-magical thing.  White people are pulling it off and yet have no idea how exactly we are doing it, so we can’t stop it.  It is much like the way women have always been intensely drawn to me.  Sure, there are some obvious assets present but clearly, there is some ineffable extra something at play that I no longer bother to try to define.  And as with Washington Supreme Court Justice Raquel Montoya-Lewis’s grasp of the reality of systemic racism, there is just no way to fully capture the phenomenon and its causes other than acceptance of its validity and proceed from there.