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  • Scaredy-Dog Meets Sherlock Holmes

    Having occasion to visit London, I was flattered to receive an invitation from the eminent John Watson, MD, to visit him at his practice.

    "They list me and Crick in alphabetical order, that's the only reason he comes first in 'Crick and Watson.'"
    John Watson, James Watson, whatever

    The good doctor shook my paw. “I have never seen such a marvel as yourself-a talking dog! And, like my friend Sherlock Holmes, something of a detective.”

    “Ruh-ruh,” I replied, shaking my head in the negative, and I explained how I had given up on investigating crimes and strange occurrences. My nerves no longer allowed it, and having parted ways with my young human friends, who had traditionally drawn me into such misadventures, I no longer felt inclined to pursue such investigations myself. But I noted my admiration for the famous Mr. Holmes and his solutions to perplexities much more complicated than anything with which I had been accustomed to encounter.

    File:The ghost - a Christmas frolic - le revenant LCCN2005676988.tif
    “It was so convincing!”

    “I am glad to hear that you have left the consulting-detective business,” said Dr. Watson, “and this brings me to the reason I invited you to see me. You see, I am in something of a dilemma when it comes to my friend Mr. Holmes. On the one hand, the exertion of his constant adventures strains him beyond what he is willing to admit, and I believe he ought to rest. Yet on the other hand, when my friend isn’t solving cases, he reaches for other forms of mental stimulation, and he indulges his cocaine habit. As a physician, I am familiar with the ravages cocaine causes, and I do not wish my good friend to inflict these on himself, but neither do I want him to wear himself out with constant work, which for him is the only alternative to taking cocaine. So you see that I am caught, as it were, between Scylla and Charybdis.

    “But of the two of us, Holmes is not the only one who finds resourceful ways to solve problems. I believe I have hit upon an excellent method of letting my friend get the rest he needs, without experiencing the cocaine craving he develops during periods of idleness.”

    “I am sending him on a vacation to the United States, to divert his mind with the sights and sounds of that trans-Atlantic republic. I would very much like you to accompany him, to provide him with the challenge of dealing with a talking dog, and otherwise to help him find healthy outlets for his energy and curiosity. But if that does not work-”

    Here Watson retrieved from a cabinet a pouch from which emanated a familiar smell which I had sensed in the anteroom. The pouch was in form like a standard tobacco pouch, but the smell was not of tobacco.

    “This is a preparation of my own devising,” explained Watson, “prepared largely from certain plants provided to me by a botanist on the staff of the Governor of Jamaica. This medicinal mixture, when burnt and inhaled, produces in the patient a considerable slowing of the faculties. It also relaxes the patient to the point where he can enjoy idleness, without constantly craving mental labor and intellectual stimulation. And if there is anything my friend needs right now, it is some temporary relief from the constant intellectual restlessness which is driving him to overwork and, I fear, potentially to an early grave.”

    What is the narrator insinuating here?

    I accepted the good doctor’s assignment, happy to do my part to help Holmes, flattered that I would be the companion of such a great man during his holiday, and relieved that although accompanying the world’s greatest detective on his travels, I would not be asked to undertake any dangerous adventures, of which I had had my fill.

    Or so I thought.

    When we first arrived in New York, I thought that my mission had failed before it had begun. Holmes purchased a newspaper and, upon turning a couple of pages while we were at a restaurant, exclaimed:

    “Look at this! A wealthy American eccentric who has been living on Park Avenue has mysteriously disappeared without a trace…leaving no forwarding address, no instructions, and no news about his situation. Many fear the worst. This is a problem which presents many interesting features…”

    Holmes puffed excitedly on his pipe as he looked at the article, but fortunately the pipe was filled with Dr. Watson’s excellent calming medicine. After a few minutes of smoking, Holmes put down the newspaper, sighed, and said, “Well, there is no point in allowing this to interrupt our holiday. The local constabulary should be perfectly able to solve this case without us. I doubt the gentleman is in any danger. I shall proceed with our trip as planned. Could you ask our waiter for another serving of his excellent corn chips?”

    "By Jove, sir, I dig it!"

    And thus the crisis passed as soon as it had arisen, and Holmes and I embarked on a railway journey to the western states. As Holmes had predicted, the missing rich man had apparently not been in any danger – it turned out that his wealth was built on borrowed money and he had absconded in order to escape his creditors, to whom he sent taunting letters. So Holmes and I thought no more of the matter.

    So it came about that we were relaxing in a saloon in a small town in one of the Western states. I was contentedly digesting some sausage links I had purchased with Watson’s extensive travel budget, while Holmes, pipe in mouth, was sitting at the bar.

    “A lemonade please, if you have one,” Holmes said to the saloonkeeper behind the bar.

    “Coming up,” said the saloonkeeper. “I do quite a business in temperance beverages with all the Baptists in town. And speak of the devil…” this in reference to a man with a pinched face and gray suit who had just entered the saloon.

    “Hello, reverend,” the saloonkeeper said to the man as he took a seat next to Holmes.

    “I’m not really a minister,” said the man, turning to Holmes. “I’m Donald Gravely, undertaker, also president of the Baptist Sobriety League. Sometimes I come by this saloon to persuade the proprietor to sell something besides liquor. And he accommodates me-” as the saloonkeeper passed Gravely a tall glass of lemonade – “though I wish to see the day when he sells only lemonade.”

    Meanwhile, a gentleman sat on Holmes’ other side. Puffing on his pipe, Holmes regarded the new arrival languidly.

    “Gimme a bourbon,” said the man, who promptly introduced himself as Bob Touter.

    Louis XIV of the House of Bourbon

    “New in town?” Touter asked Holmes. “So am I – I’m trying to set up a circus in these parts. I have exhibits Barnum would die to have – marvels and wonders that…”

    Holmes stifled a yawn. “That’s all very interesting, gentlemen,” he said, “but I think I shall retire to my room.” And he left, trailing a cloud of smoke from his pipe, with me following close behind.

    I thought that the two of us would soon retire for the night, but after a couple of hours of smoky contemplation, Holmes suggested we go out for a stroll. This didn’t seem like the best idea, since a light snowfall had just commenced and was probably going to increase as the night advanced, but Holmes was all for a relaxing walk.

    As he lit his oil lantern, he said, “Please accompany me if you wish, or not, it is all cool. I simply want to take in the sights of the local countryside.”

    I went downstairs with my friend, and the saloonkeeper said, “Ah, Mr. Holmes, it’s a nice night to visit the haunted house, isn’t it?”

    “The what?” asked Holmes.

    “Why,” said Touter, “everyone in these parts knows about it – folks have been seeing and hearing strange things at the old Jones mansion.”

    “That’s right,” added Graves. “Moans, clanking, strange lights, the whole bit.”

    “Gentlemen,” said Holmes, “I care nothing for such things. I won’t be going in that direction. I am simply here as a tourist, and I will thank you not to present me with any riddles, puzzles, cases of strange goings-on, or reports of anything out of the ordinary. I have simply lost my interest in such matters. Be so kind as to tell me the direction of this so-called haunted house, so I can go in another direction entirely.”

    When the denizens of the saloon pointed to the north, Holmes announced his desire to direct his steps southward instead.

    Words cannot express the relief I felt as Holmes and I began our walk out of town in the direction opposite that of the haunted house. Hauntings, ghosts, apparitions, goblins, long-leggedy beasties, and things that go bump in the night had lost whatever slight appeal they had once contained for me. That we were going where such things most assuredly were *not* was a consolation.

    And there might have been nothing left to tell of this story, except for an unfortunate thing – as we began exploring the increasingly-snowy countryside, Holmes took his pipe out of his mouth and began gesturing with the stem to various geographical features which struck his interest. As we kept walking in the fresh air, and as Holmes reduced his puffing on the pipe, his mind must have begun to clear, and his interest in mystery-solving must have begun to revive, because, to my great alarm, I observed him begin to turn his steps westward, then northward, so that we were taking a circuit around the town and approaching the location where, we have been informed, the haunted house lay.

    I intimated by whimpers, by tugging at Holmes’ cloak, and other signs, that I was dissatisfied with the direction in which he was turning, but far from paying attention to my warnings, Holmes quickened his stride, and all too soon were came in sight of an abandoned house. The front door was off its hinges, the broken, darkened windows stared out into the gathering gloom like empty eyes, and in short I concluded that our search for the haunted house was over.

    File:AbandonedHouseDelray.jpg
    Imagine it’s nighttime

    I didn’t like the odors I could detect, even at this distance, emanating from the building. From the smell of old foeces, it did not take Holmesian deduction to infer that human and animal visitors had come to the house over the past few years, hopefully simply to visit, shelter from the cold, and relieve themselves.

    But then Holmes stooped over and pointed to several sets of footprints, faint and growing fainter as the snow began covering them.

    “From the imprint of these boots,” said Holmes, “I must conclude that they belong to…to…devil take it, I neglected, while back at the saloon, to take notice of the boots of the saloonkeeper and the guests. Ah, Watson, your cursed Jamaican preparation has worked its magic – I was truly heedless of my surroundings. That will not do at all.”

    And Holmes tapped his pipe so that the precious calming mixture he had been smoking fell onto the snowy ground. Holmes then reached into his cloak, drew out the pouch in which the mixture was stored, and threw it far from him.

    File:Feuille de cannabis barrée.jpg

    “So much for Watson’s attempt to lure me into the Land of the Lotus Eaters!” Holmes exclaimed. “From now on I shall keep my wits about me, and…”

    He paused, noticing, as I had just noticed as well, the sound of horse-hooves and carriage-wheels behind us.

    The approaching carriage was light-green in color, and as the driver came to a halt and dismounted in order to greet us, Holmes said to me sotto voce, “I perceive that he is wearing the clerical garb of the Roman Church, and I am confident that behind that orange scarf which he wears to keep out the winter cold, he has his clerical collar on. Give me a few seconds, and I believe I will be able to identify him…”

    File:Ulster Covenant Commemoration Parade, Belfast, September 2012 (016).JPG
    “No, Lestrade, not that kind of orange scarf.”

    The priest came forward, hand extended, and said, “Mr. Sherlock Holmes, what a pleasant surprise! I am…”

    “Father Frederick, special assistant to the Archbishop of Baltimore for confidential spiritual investigations,” said Holmes as he vigorously clasped the man’s extended hand.

    “Why Holmes,” said the Father Frederick, “how ever did you guess? I have been at some pains not to have my identity or my work known to the general public.”

    “It was quite elementary,” said Holmes, happy to provide a specimen of his swiftly-recovering powers of observation. “It is my habit to collect stories in newspapers and periodicals which may turn out to be of use to me. From my reading of certain specialized publications, I learned of your identity and your role in examining claims of supernatural manifestations, in order to discover whether these manifestations are genuine, or the product of fraud or superstition. And I am pleased to note that in the vast majority of your inquiries you found the latter causes at work, rather than spiritual influences.

    “And since my research had already shown that such a person as Father Frederick existed, it was an obvious inference that you and he were one and the same. What reason would any priest except Father Frederick have to visit an abandoned house, reputed to be haunted, and without as far as I know any residents in need of confession or last rites?”

    “You are right on all counts,” said Father Frederick. “The haunted-house rumors are what brought me here. As you say, generally these phenomena have nothing of the supernatural in them, but in cases like this it is useful to examine the possibility, however slight, of something beyond the merely human being involved, so that we can verify whether that superhuman influence be of a benevolent or a malevolent nature.”

    “Before we go into the house,” said Holmes, “for if you will excuse me I wish to join your investigation, I hope you will introduce me to your assistants. From the exertions of the horses, I recognized that they were pulling the weight of more than one person.”

    “I would be happy to introduce my associates,” said Father Frederick, “just as I would be happy to have the assistance of the world’s greatest detective in our investigation.”

    Father Frederick opened the carriage door and assisted a nun in clambering out onto the ground. Even a nonhuman animal such as myself can appreciate human female beauty, and on examining this nun I reflected that the Church’s gain was some unfortunate young man’s loss. The woman’s hair glowed a fiery red in the lamplight as Father Frederick introduced her.

    “This is Sister Agnes,” said the priest, “an invaluable assistant to my enterprise. And here – ” as a shorter, stockier nun emerged from the carriage – “is Sister Catherine, named after…”

    Holmes interrupted. “Named after Saint Catherine of Siena, the famous scholar-nun. I can see the resemblance – observe her spectacles, unusually thick for a women of her young age, indicating that she has sadly been harming her eyesight from constant reading.”

    Sister Catherine sniffed. “That wasn’t hard to figure out,” she said, “since I’m carrying a book,” pointing to a small volume which was tucked under her left arm.

    “Indeed,” said Holmes, and I could see that he was adapting himself, reluctantly, to the presence of another learned person – a woman – who was unimpressed by his manner. “And now, Father Frederick, I hope you will introduce me to the fourth member of your party.”

    Although nobody had mentioned a fourth person, I realized that I could hear from within the carriage the sound of teeth chattering, as of someone shivering, but surely not from the cold, since carriage seemed very warm inside.

    “Come out, Father Rogers,” said Father Frederick, in a stern but affectionate tone, “we have arrived at the haunted house.”

    “Th-that’s what I was afraid of,” said another priest as he emerged, slowly, from the carriage. This new priest, unlike the impeccably-dressed Father Frederick, was dressed in rumpled and ill-fitting garments, a fact of which Fr. Rogers seemed somewhat self-conscious.

    “I got these clothes cheap at a surplice sale,” said Fr. Rogers.

    File:Facepalm (7839341408).jpg
    “Come on, that was a great pun!”

    There was apparently nothing for it but to go into the house, which Fr. Rogers and myself did somewhat more reluctantly than the others, hanging back until the rebukes of Holmes and Fr. Frederick shamed us into climbing on the rotting porch and entering through the doorway after the rest of the party.

    “My suggestion, Holmes” said Father Frederick, “is that you and the sisters explore the upper story-” pointing to a ruined stairway leading to what was left of the second floor- “while Fr. Rogers and I go down into the basement to locate the source of that strange sepulchural smell.”

    I was relieved that Holmes would not be in the party descending into the basement, since of two unpalatable choices, ascending a staircase to an upper floor seemed less frightening to me than descending into what Fr. Rogers quite rightly called a “creepy basement.”

    It was with a chill of horror that I hear Fr. Frederick conclude his remarks by saying, “and Holmes, I should like to borrow your dog, the better to detect the source of these strange scents.”

    And so it was that I found myself not following, but leading the two priests into the basement, one slippery, stony step after another, sniffing the stairway in order to trace a powerful graveyard stench whose origin I would have preferred to leave a mystery.

    The illumination of Fr. Frederick’s lantern, as it shone into the basement from our position at the foot of the stairs, revealed a coffin lying on the ground. I immediately turned and tried to go back up the stairs, with Fr. Rogers right beside me, but Fr. Frederick grabbed us both by our collars and insisted that we remain and investigate.

    Exploring the basement, we found that the strange scents came from within the coffin, but the coffin was tightly sealed and locked. So we proceeded to the other end of the basement to see what could be found there when a creaking sound behind us caused us to turn and look.

    Like a vision out of a nightmare, a figure clad in black metal armor climbed out of what had until just now been a securely locked coffin.

    File:German - Armor for Fighting on Horseback - Walters 51581.jpg

    Fr. Frederick had spoken of benevolent spiritual forces and malevolent ones, and I suspected that we were confronting an example of the latter. This impression was reinforced by the gigantic battle-axe which the armored figure wielded, and which he brandished as he began striding towards us..

    I have difficulty recollecting the details of the next few minutes, since time itself seemed to speed up as the three of us ran for dear life, pursued by the ghastly apparition. All I can be sure of is that we managed to race past the ghostly knight and start ascending the stairs, while the clank of metal footsteps showed that our adversary was following close behind.

    By some mercy of Providence, the door at the top of the basement stairs was still in place, with a functioning lock. Fr. Frederick closed and bolted the door mere moments before we could hear the armored figure reach the top of the steps we had just ascended with such rapidity. Then commenced the sound of repeated blows of an axe on the other side of the door, indicating that we would only have a respite of a few minutes before the enemy was upon us again.

    Then we heard footsteps which proved to be Holmes descending, with great haste, the stairway from the second floor. He came up to Fr. Frederick and, pointing upstairs, said:

    “Don’t just stand there, man! Come back upstairs with me, where something of a very curious nature is transpiring. The sisters are in difficulty.”

    “Where are Sister Agatha and Sister Catherine?” asked Fr. Frederick with some asperity as Holmes led us up the creaking wooden staircase to the upper floor.

    “They are safe for the moment behind a locked closet door,” said Holmes. “It is not for them that we should be concerned, but for ourselves. Look!”

    From the head of the stairs, we could see to the end of a long hallway, at the end of which was a man in the garb of the far West, who was rapidly running towards us. The fur on my back bristled as I saw the glow emanating from the figure, illuminating the passageway without the need of any lantern.

    “I am the ghost of Jesse James!” said the figure. “I’m gonna get all of you!”

    "Lonely Graveyard, Grafton Ghost Town, Utah"
    “I’ve heard of Western ghost towns, but this is ridiculous!”

    And then I heard behind us the sound of metal shoes climbing the stairs behind us. We were hemmed in on both sides.

    A closet door opened nearby. Sister Catherine emerged from the closet and said, “Father Frederick! Your scarf!”

    “Yes,” said Holmes, “I was about to suggest that you use your scarf to confound our foes. And you,” turning to me, “I have an idea for dealing with this knight.”

    “I think I see what your plan is,” said Fr. Frederick, removing his orange scarf. “Quick, hold the scarf across the passageway in front of ‘Jesse James.’”

    As was related to me later, Fr. Frederick – assisted by Sister Agatha, who rushed up to provide her aid – held his scarf across the passage along which the ghostly gunfighter was approaching. Failing to notice the trap in front of him, the glowing figure stumbled in a most un-ghostly way and fell on his face. Fr. Frederick sat upon his back to hold him.

    Meanwhile, following Holmes’ hasty instructions, I ran in a direction which was not customary for me – toward the axe-wielding knight and not away from him. The latter was my strong preference, but a sense of duty toward Holmes and my new friends prevailed over my timidity.

    Jumping onto the figure’s armor, I climbed to the head and barked repeatedly into the visor. The echo of my barking resounded throughout the armor’s helmet, apparently causing a ringing in the ears of the person or entity inside. Discomfited, the knight staggered, and it took only a push from Holmes to send him banging and slamming down the stairs until he landed on his back the main floor, the weight of the armor preventing him from getting to his feet again.

    “Now,” said Fr. Frederick, “we shall learn the identities of these putative phantoms.” Perceiving that “Jesse James’” face was merely a rubber mask, Fr. Frederick reached to pull it off.

    “It is the saloon-keeper,” said Holmes, and upon the removal of the mask, I perceived that indeed it was.

    File:RubberMaskJA.jpg

    “Now for our knight,” said Fr. Frederick, annoyed that Holmes’ identification had preceded the unmasking.

    As Father Frederick strove to take off the knight’s helmet, Holmes and Sister Catherine said in unison, “it is Silas Newcombe.” When the helmet was off, I recognized from his newspaper photograph the former Park Avenue denizen who had fled New York to avoid his creditors. Silas Newcombe was, in fact, his name.

    “OK, I’ll confess,” said the saloonkeeper. “You see, I -”

    “Do not trouble yourself,” said Holmes. “I can explain your actions, and you only need interrupt if I am mistaken in any of my facts.

    “Now, when I reflected on the Baptist influx into the town, prompting you to start selling lemonade, I thought that the temperance influence may have caused you to seek out new, nonalcoholic beverages to sell. Your friendliness with the Baptist showed that you were reconciled to the new way of things. And once I became clear of the influence of Dr. Watson’s well-intentioned herbal mixture, I recalled glancing over the counter of the saloon and seeing mud on your boots – the same sort of mud which is found near this house.

    “The rest was elementary. This house is often visited by inebriate vagrants, so clearly your objective was to, as you Americans put it, ‘scare them sober’ by posing as a ghost, thus creating increased demand for the lemonade you sell.”

    File:Murphy temperance pledge card.jpg

    “And as for you,” said Holmes, turning to Newcombe, but Sister Catherine interrupted.

    “I know what Silas Newcombe was up to,” she said.

    “Then pray inform us,” said Holmes, and crammed his pipe into his mouth in what I had come to recognize as a gesture of irritation.

    “It’s all in this book,” said Sister Catherine, showing us the book she had been carrying under her arm – and which she had had the presence of mind not to drop even during her flight from the disguised saloonkeeper.

    “The book is by Newcombe himself, and it’s all about an invention which he was trying to promote – a coffin which can be opened from the inside. Newcombe got his idea from Edgar Allen Poe’s story “The Premature Burial,” which expresses the author’s fear of being buried alive. Newcombe thought he could sell this special coffin to people like Poe, to reassure them that they would be able to escape from their coffins in case they were wrongly put into them while still alive.”

    File:EdgarAllenPoe-1949.jpg
    Poe-stage stamp

    “It’s a genius idea,” said Newcombe, “but the public wasn’t interested, and refused to buy any of my coffins. So I couldn’t repay the loans I’d taken out to make my coffins. I thought that if I could just hide out for a while in this abandoned house, sleeping in the coffin and emerging from it from time to time, I could demonstrate the effectiveness of my invention. And come to think of it, I have.”

    “Wait a minute,” said Fr. Frederick, “you can’t just walk away, you tried to kill us, and that’s a crime.”

    “Now, Father Frederick,” said Father Rogers, “King David did worse, yet he obtained forgiveness.”

    “Yes,” said Holmes, “I suggest we overlook this slight legal lapse by a beleaguered businessman, and for that matter that we also let the offenses of the saloonkeeper fade into oblivion.”

    “Solving these cases is somehow less fulfilling when we can’t arrest the people we unmask and listen to them cursing their ill luck to have encountered us,” said Fr. Frederick, “but I suppose we would be ill-advised to copy someone else’s schtick.”

    Which remark was greeted by peals of laughter from one and all.

    Theatre Farce (Petrov-Vodkin).jpg

  • Focus on the Family – A Cultural Rumination

    I’ve gone back and forth on how to format this article. It’s hard to stay on one single topic when talking about the cultural erosion of the importance of family. As such, I’ve written and deleted this article a couple times, simply because it turns into a rant against elements of our culture. It wouldn’t be a good read. This is my final attempt, and I’m keeping it short and focused.

    TW: I’m probably gonna piss a lot of people off. SLDs apply here as they do anywhere else. I support your right to raise your children as you wish, no matter the cumulative cultural damage I think may result.

    The most disheartening and soon-to-be-fatal flaw of modern Western culture is the disdain for the family. (I’m completely ignoring homosexual and other “alternative” families for this analysis; they’re statistical noise when it comes to culture as a whole). This “disdain” can be seen in many contexts, including: 1) Replacing traditional family roles with outside intervention, 2) Subsidizing family failures, 3) Transforming old stigmas into laudatory praise, and 4) Portraying family negatively. I’ll quickly expose my biases and then treat each of these quickly. Any more than a quick treatment starts to turn into a rant.

    My biases are simple. I’m a complementarian, meaning that I believe women are generally better at/more inclined to certain things and men are generally better at/more inclined to certain other things. This generalization is, by no means, a straitjacket but more of a descriptive observation of people as a whole. I’m also a believer in the ideal family being a supportive, lasting, tightknit family, one that passes morals, traditions, and beliefs from generation to generation. Much of the “disdain” I see is in opposition to the generational information transfer in this ideal family.

    Replacing Traditional Family Roles

    This primarily falls into two categories: government as Santa, and “it takes a village.”  To see the biggest indicator of how much government and other outsiders have taken over traditional family roles, simply do a time audit of a child in a typical American household. Out of the 15 or so hours little Johnny is awake, how many do his parents actually have any sort of influence? Maybe an hour? He spends 7 or 8 in school, 1 or 2 in extracurriculars and on the bus, 1 or 2 doing homework, and 2 or 3 watching TV/playing video games. Besides the odd homework check or multiplayer CoD game (ha! who am I kidding??), Mommy and Daddy hardly even talk to Johnny. Then Mommy and Daddy wonder why Johnny doesn’t carry on their morals, traditions, and values when he becomes an adult. Johnny’s primary influences are leftist-feminist teachers, Lord of the Flies peer influence, and the Internet. Two income households put kids into this cycle at a few months old, and there’s never a break.

    Subsidizing failure

    This could be an article in-and-of itself. Suffice it to say that economic incentives matter, and, according to Thomas Sowell, the average black family was better off 100 years after slavery than after 30 years of welfare. Paying people because their family is broken incentivizes other struggling families to break as well. You get more of what you incentivize, and you get less of what you penalize. We’ve spent 50 years subsidizing broken families out of some naive sense of compassion. Of course, government shouldn’t pile on when families come apart at the seams, but the safety net should be a net (SLDs apply), not a pillowtop mattress.

    Stigma to “Strong”

    The cultural mantra that “different is good” completely ignores the thousands of years of trial and error that has built the traditions that the postmodern left is now tearing down. Again, this isn’t a straitjacket, but there’s a difference between approaching single parent households as parents making the best of a bad situation versus approaching them as no worse than two parent households. There’s a difference between a first marriage, a second marriage, and a fifth marriage. In attempting to build up people (primarily women) in bad situations, culture has made the traditional family passe. Being a single mom is “strong” and “brave.” Being a housewife is “backward” and “sad.”

    Portraying the Family Negatively

    This goes hand-in-hand with the “strong,” “brave,” broken family trope. Feminists have undercut the family as an oppressive structure since the 30s. Culture has followed along, making men into uninterested, idiotic fathers. Mothers (and children) have supernatural wisdom, but fathers are morons. Not surprisingly, people follow the cultural model, resulting in disinterested fathers having children only because their wife begged for it to “save the marriage.” The end result has been the MGTOW movement, which, despite the nugget of truth regarding the gender-based cultural unbalance, exacerbates the problem by tossing the entire family out with the feminist bathwater.

    I’m a little bit proud that I’ve finally gotten this article finished. This is a difficult article to write up in spare time because it could be a 10 part, 50 page monstrosity. However, I think I conveyed the pamphlet version of the argument. I agree with the Distributists in that family is the core unit of society, and I think it makes this cultural erosion of the traditional family hugely self defeating. When culture erodes its own foundation, it doesn’t last.

  • Thursday Morning Links

    Imagine my surprise when I went to click on ESPN this morning to check a few scores and it actually worked!  I guess they have a few people over there still on the job.

    ::checks headlines there::

    Hey, only two of the top six stories are either politically or socially motivated.  I’m sure that’ll move the needle, guys.

    Anyway, we’ve got more important things to talk about than the NBA playoffs (The Celtics finally look like they’ve got their act together) or those of the NHL (sorry, Gojira. But its only game 1). We’ve got to do…the links!

    The Atlantic thinks the hand should be bigger

    Remember the good old days? When a thief wore a mask to hide his identity?  Those days are gone.  Now they wear suits and write editorials for The Atlantic after serving as economic adviser to two presidents.

    Unsurprisingly, The AG has vowed to fight the recent ruling by a California judge that President Trump’s sanctuary city defunding policy is unconstitutional. By the way, it was the same judge that ruled against the First Amendment when he forbade the Center for Medical Progress from releasing videotapes of recordings taken inside of abortion clinics and of those taken in public of officials from Planned Parenthood. Plus his dad was a Democrat Party bundler and he’s been a Democrat Party activist his entire life.

    The California national flag if this passes.

    California takes one step closer to bankruptcy. I guess they were using San Bernardino as a template after all.  Or Venezuela, maybe.

    Police close in, but SPECTRE agent kills self before they can arrest him. Seriously, WTF?

    I hope you’ve all ordered tickets in advance for the White Privilege Conference starting today in Kansas City.  Ugh, If I have to go to KC to exercise my white privilege, I may just give it up.  I’ve still got my cis-hetero male privilege to fall back on, after all.

    I wonder if Rand Paul has ever had a patient tell him this.

  • Weird Wednesday: Poppy Truthers

    The granddaddy of Poppy Truther videos: That Poppy Explained

    TRIGGER WARNING: Eye jewelry, Illuminism, seriousness

     

    Poppy Explained: Hidden Messages in the “Oh No!” Video

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Exmmo–Q3_4

    TRIGGER WARNING: Contains excessive clip art and stock images

     

    That Poppy: OFF CAMERA Footage | EXPOSED!

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8DxhZ9eFAT4

    TRIGGER WARNING: Features an interview with a crouton, refuses to embed

     

    That Poppy old pictures

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4aZGIjTq1sM

    TRIGGER WARNING: Unsexy eyebrows, suggestions that Poppy might just be A CHARACTER that a person is MERELY PLAYING

     

    I AM NOT A CULT LEADER

    TRIGGER WARNING: Male Poppy transvestitism, Poppy denialism

  • Wednesday Afternoon Links

    It’s Wednesday afternoon and your favorite contributor (I AM your favorite, am I not?) is taking an unusual turn at the helm of the Afternoon Links. I promise this will have 93.76% less hunky content than my normal posting.

     

    Alliterative assertions allay apostatic angst
    Proper Papal palace
    • TED Talks 2017 is officially a techno-rite church service in communion with the Roman Papacy (I was hoping they’d join up with the Pope in Exile in Avignon, but apparently that’s not a thing anymore, so whatevs). CNN summarizes, “Essentially, he told the academics and innovators, scientists and techies, there is no ‘you,’ without an ‘us.’” full transcript with link to the ~20 minutes sermon talk here.
    • Jeff Goldblum is planning to reprise his role as Dr. Ian Malcolm. The internet responds with a vexing amount of genital moistness, which confuses this author, but I’m certainly not going to yuck someone else’s yum.
    • Side of English beef, Ben Cohen, may soon be single. His professional dancer lady love wants a Hollywood career, but he wants her to stay in jolly ol’ England. *tidies cave, polishes club* I’ll be right back.
    • Passenger found dead after United flight from Heathrow to O’Hare. Passenger was rabbit on track to be a world record holder for size, owner was a former model turned rabbit breeder. Fuck it just click through it’s all weird.
    • Serge Brin apparently wishes he was as interesting as Sir Richard Branson and is “reportedly building his own secret airship,” which “apparently looks like a classic zeppelin.” While it isn’t partying naked with my favorite ginger prince on a private island, we at Glibertarians welcome our Steampunk zeppliney future with open arms and freshly brushed top hats and polished monocles and brass doodads.

      Go 'way, touching myself inappropriately while dressed as a Victorian dandy
      Not pictured: Brin’s airship
  • Musings from the Trash Can #2: The Muppet Mumbles

    Like the first installment, I talk about a bunch of different things in one or two sentence snippets. First off, some music to set the mood.

    • I’m continuing to listen to my biography of William Tecumseh Sherman. I feel like I have a new revelation every day about how fucked up our cultural memory of the Civil War is. For example, the guy had absolutely no love for slaves. He seemed to think it embarrassing that the abolitionists pushed “the negro issue” to the point of war. For him, slavery wasn’t the slap in the face, secession was. There seemed to be a general consensus in the mid-1850s that slavery would eventually go away if they didn’t politicize the issue.
    • Yuengling is better than I remember it. It’s a good “cheap beer.”
    • Baby Trshmnstr is hours or days away, and she’s already expensive. A questionable result on a sonogram resulted in 2 specialist appointments before the specialist came to the conclusion that this was all kicked off by a shoddy original sonogram. Sometimes things just work out, and you don’t need tech to monitor every little thing. We were teetering on the edge of inducing at 36 weeks because a sono tech was having a bad day.
    • Just like in most other parts of life, negotiating is all about preparation. Without preparation, you’re pretty much guaranteed to be taken advantage of.
    • Paying college athletes is the dumbest idea ever. I’d be cool with a small stipend increase or something, but paying them a salary will torpedo non-revenue sports, put the final nail in the coffin of the “student-athlete,” and intractably separate the blue-bloods from everybody else.
      • You know what’s dumber than paying college athletes? The solution some moron on a sports board had to the issue: socializing all aspects of college so that the athletes didn’t have to pay for a night out at the movies.
    • Something has changed recently in the way that California is viewed by the rest of the country. It’s one thing for people in Texas and Nebraska to see California as a completely different country. It’s another thing when the Mid-Atlantic and New England have a complete disconnect from California.  I don’t think it’s quite there yet, but I’m a little surprised how much the DCers I’ve met since moving here are just as down on California as Texans are.
    • I’ve tried concealed carrying my S&W M&P9 Shield, but my holster is uncomfortable. Some of it is that I need to lose some of the muffintop so it stops rubbing on the butt of the gun. Some of it is that it’s a single clip holster, so it’s constantly rotating on my belt into uncomfortable positions. Here’s the holster I got. Any suggestions?
  • The Hat and The Hair: Episode 43

    “First 100 Days! Woo!” the hair said in the pre-morning dark of the White House storage vault.

    The hat didn’t respond.

    “First 100 Days! Woo!” the hair screamed, “C’mon!”

    “First 100 Days,” the hat replied quietly.

    The hair turned on the television that they had bullied Reince into installing. The opening tones of The Today Show filled the vault. The hat groaned.

    “Oh. Em. Gee,” the hair squealed, “Look at what Savannah is wearing! It’s not only baby-shit tan, it makes her boobs look like gargoyle nutsacks.”

    “Yeah, it’s terrible,” the hat agreed.

    “And there’s Willie Geist with his big ole melonhead,” the hair noted, “I mean look at it. It’s like an old pumpkin.”

    “Yeah, it’s terrible,” the hat muttered.

    The hair sighed loudly.

    “Maybe you should see someone,” the hair said quietly.

    “I’M FINE!” the hat yelled.

    The hair gathered himself into a tight ball and swore to himself that he wasn’t going to start crying again.

    The bolts holding the vault door shot open and it swung open.

    “The Germans hissed at her,” Donald said, “they fucking hissed at her.”

    “Who, Donald?” the hair asked.

    “Ivanka,” he said. “They hissed at her. How could they hiss at a piece of primo trim like Ivanka? Have you seen the body on that girl? Three Jew kids and she’s still hot as fucking hell in a bikini.”

    “No, yeah. That’s bad, Donald,” the hair said. “Why don’t you go ahead and put me on. We got a lot to do today.”

    “No, seriously,” Donald said, “let me get my phone. I got some breastfeeding shots that are just tremendous. Her tits look even better than they did when she was a teenager, I swear.”

    “That’s OK, Donald, really,” the hair said. “We should really focus on North Korea today.”

    “North Korea, yeah, North Korea. We should bomb them again.”

    “That was Syria, Donald,” the hat muttered.

    “Oh, he speaks, does he?” Donald asked sarcastically, “It’s about time you got back in the game. I’ve been having to send my own tweets all the time. I got president shit to do. Like dinners and shit.”

    “OK, Donald,” the hat said.

    “‘OK, Dahnald,’” Donald said, mocking in his best retard voice. He lifted up the hair and jammed it onto his head.

    “Hey, careful with the goods, dammit,” the hair said.

    Donald muttered under his breath.

    “What was that?” the hat asked a small spark of his old fire flaring.

    “Nothing,” Donald said sullenly, “I want McDonald’s for breakfast. I want the Big Breakfast.” Donald stroke his belly fat like a beloved pet.

    “OK, whatever you want,” the hair said as it settled on his head.

    “And two McGriddles. I want a Big Breakfast and two McGirddles. A sausage and cheese and egg McGriddle and a bacon and cheese and egg McGriddle.”

    “Yes, of course,” the hair said. “Get your hat and we’ll go get you all that. 4000mg of sodium is a perfect way for a 70-year-old to start his day.”

    “I don’t want to take the hat,” Donald grumbled.

    “Take the hat or no breakfast, Donald,” the hair warned.

    “I don’t want to go,” the hat said.

    “It doesn’t matter what you want,” the hair said, “We have a fucking country to run. Donald! Hat! Now!”

    Donald picked up his once-beloved MAGA hat and stuffed him into his suit pocket. He shuffled away from the vault thinking only of breakfast.

  • Wednesday Morning Links

    Well, yesterday sure was chock-full of interesting things. Budget showdowns. Balls retracting on certain Speakers Of The House. And Russians.  They’re always there, playing puppet-master to the American (and now French!) politicians in their endless quest for world domination mediocrity.

    The person that might run for office

    Well, let’s at least get started on a few things…some of import and some not. You decide.  Here are the links.

    Buckle up, buckaroo! Reality TV personality says they may consider run for office. The person has not ruled out switching parties even though the person has typically been a Republican. But the person says their priority will be to help their group. Just make sure the person stays off the road while campaigning, ok?  There are men and women out there trying to get places without being run over by another person.

    Rand Paul doesn’t hold back.  Too bad the rest of the Senate seem to be gutless cowards when it comes to standing up for their constituents and saying the greedy bastards in the FedGov take too much of their hard-earned money and piss it away.

    Nicolas Maduro: the honey badger of South American politics.  He don’t care, the crazy little fuck. He don’t give a shit.

    I wonder if the Sacramento Bee also thinks we should pay ransoms when someone commits a kidnapping. Or establish Sharia Law like ISIS wants us to do. Or if any other group out there should give up their God-given rights because somebody else threatens violence if they exercise it? Because that’s basically what they’re saying: when someone threatens violence because you’re doing something they don’t like, you should give in to them otherwise you’re selfish. The Jewish community leaders and ACLU (from back then, not now) in Skokie, IL would be rolling in their graves if they saw this cowardly display from a media outlet that likely wouldn’t exist in a world dominated by the anti-fa dickheads they are siding with here.

    Former president, Barack Obama.

    Hypocrisy!

    Russell Westbrook’s amazing season comes to an end. Courtesy of the Houston Rockets, the man that broke an incredible record (and the other guys that happened to be on the court watching him carry them) will be watching the rest of the playoffs.

    Mmm…California burritos.

  • Jewsday Tuesday

    There’s an old joke that the world’s thinnest book is “Great Jewish Athletes.” But really, there’s a much thinner book than that: “Great Jewish Physicists Before Einstein.” And that’s where we kick off this week’s installment of Jewsday Tuesday.

    Einstein at the Annus Mirabilis

    If there were ever a single year when science was totally transformed, it would have to be 1905. That year, known as “Annus Mirabilis,” a Jew published a set of four papers wherein he demonstrated the truth of atomic theory, laid the foundations of quantum mechanics, formulated the theory of relativity, and demonstrated the equivalence of mass and energy. This would be enough for four different people to have become scientific legends for lifetime achievement, but it was the work of one Jew in one year. And a Jew who had to work in isolation, since university appointments were not generally extended to those of Hebraic tribal identities. Einstein had no role-models to show him that Jews could do physics, there were no diversity programs, no affirmative action. So clearly, there was no way for him to succeed because he wasn’t taught by people who “looked like him.”

    And yet he persisted. To say that these four papers completely transformed physics is an understatement. They had the impact of Newton and Maxwell combined. And of course, there’s cycles and irony here, and that’s this week’s story.

    Philipp Lenard

    During the Annus Mirabilis, as just about every other year, prominent scientists were honored with the awarding of Nobel Prizes. And in physics for 1905, the Nobel was awarded to Philipp Lenard for his work on cathode rays and the photoelectric effect. Lenard had been able to demonstrate that cathode rays (the basis of how pre-LED video picture tubes work) consisted of a stream of negatively charged particles rather than electromagnetic waves. Further, he showed that these negatively charged particles were much smaller than the size of nitrogen or oxygen molecules of air. He referred to these particles as “quanta,” but that name gave way to the modern appellation of “electron.”

    Lenard also worked with the photoelectric effect, an unexplained phenomenon where electrons were ejected from metal surfaces when those surfaces were bombarded with ultraviolet light. He used this as an improved way to generate cathode rays for his experiments, and in this process found that (surprisingly) the ejected electrons did not fly faster when he increased the intensity of the UV light but just got more numerous. Changing the frequency of the UV light was the key to changing the speed of the ejected electrons. The reasons for this were totally mysterious, given the state of knowledge of physics at the turn of the century.

    Lenard’s reputation was that of a first rate experimental physicist – his experimental setups and quality of data were superb and highly ingenious. But like a great pitcher who can’t hit, his abilities at experiment did not translate to similar aptitude for theory. It took an Einstein, literally, to figure out why Lenard got the results he got and to make it theoretically clear, quantitative, and predictable. And that analysis is what got Einstein his Nobel about 15 years after Lenard got one – Einstein’s was not for relativity but for explaining Lenard’s photoelectric effect.

    So…. 1905. Lenard gets a Nobel. Einstein totally overturns the world of physics. Here’s where things get weird.

    Einstein’s explanation of the photoelectric effect directly led to quantum mechanics. And for the rest of his life, Einstein could never accept quantum mechanics and did everything he could to figure out ways to show that QM was nonsense. Unfortunately for him, QM has passed every experimental challenge ever thrown at it, and his thought experiments about QM’s inevitable paradoxes in fact only strengthened his hated theory when experiment verified them.

    Weirder yet: Lenard deeply resented his brilliant experiments being explained by this upstart Jewish nobody. He embarked on a single-minded lifelong crusade to discredit anything and everything that Einstein had done, contrasting the hated Jew Physics (his actual term for it) with the beautiful and traditional Aryan Physics (also his term). He was also active in movements to ban or severely restrict the use of English and English terms in physics texts and university settings. Then Hitler appeared. Lenard (with the help of fellow Nobelist Johannes Stark, he of the eponymous Stark Effect, which ironically gave more experimental support to the hated Jew Physics QM) enthusiastically embraced the Nazi party, led the effort to remove Jews from university positions, and replaced any faculty that supported modern physics Jew Physics with politically correct Aryan Physics advocates.

    Lenard became Hitler’s chief science adviser, and his only failure in the political realm was his inability to destroy Werner Heisenberg, one of the founders of QM (and he would have succeeded if it weren’t for you nosy kids Heisenberg’s childhood friendship with Heinrich Himmler). In the scientific realm, of course, he utterly failed to dislodge Einstein’s theories from physics outside of Germany and discredit that hated Jew, though he did manage to transform Germany from the world leader in physics to a total non-entity for decades thereafter.

    Lenard’s legacy is obscurity and fringe “scientists” who have gone to impressive lengths to disprove relativity (Here’s an example of 100 scientists beclowning themselves – remember this the next time someone tells you about that 97% thing), which has in our day mutated into an interesting alliance between crank “scientists” and frank anti-semites.

    Einstein’s legacy is a reputation as one of the smartest humans to ever live and almost the entire basis of what we know and understand about physics a century later. Following Einstein, it’s fair to say that Jews have dominated physics in disproportionate numbers, and one contributing factor was the Lenard-and-Stark-led purge.

    I’d score this one a win for (((us))).

     

     

     

  • Tuesday Afternoon Links

    I already knew this because apparently, I only buy at the top of the market. Fair warning, expect a crash within two years. (TW: autoplay)

    Get ready for an even bigger Warty. Pro-tip: them who pick up heavy things more often will be stronger.

    America’s Hat is on the wrong side of The Hat and The Hair. And they WILL pay.

    Vigilante justice in the IoT. It appears someone is trying to deny easily hacked IoT processors and radios to botnets by permanently bricking them. Destroying key functionality of someone else’s property is not cool from this libertarian’s perspective. Giving people shitty things that are easily hacked, also not cool.