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November 30, 2007

Inside the Postmodern Skeptic Tank

One Cosmos at his best. How does the Left see what it sees?

One of the key ideas of Orthodoxy is that we require a stable framework in order to think productively and deeply about reality, and that certain frameworks (Chesterton would say one framework) have been given to us from "on high," so to speak, in order to accomplish this. Naturally, the "radical" opposes this constraint on his freedom, but freedom in itself is not freeing, any more than progress in itself is progressive; without limits, or boundary conditions, the former is "nothingness" or "lostness," while the latter is just pointless change, drift, or entropy.

This reminds me of the distinction Polanyi drew between what he called the open society and the free society. He used the practice of science to illustrate the difference, pointing out that a truly free society does not merely consist of everyone believing whatever they want. Science, for example, is a free and spontaneous intellectual order that is nevertheless based on a distinctive set of beliefs about the world, through which the diverse actions of individual scientists are coordinated. Like the cells in your body, individual scientists independently go about their business, and yet, progress is made because their activities are channeled by the pursuit of real truth.

In contrast, in a merely "open" society, there is no such thing as transcendent truth: perception is reality and everyone is free to think and do as he pleases, with no objective standard by which to judge it. This kind of "bad freedom" eventually ramifies into the cognitively pathological situation we now see on the left, especially as it manifests in its purest form in academia (the liberal arts, not the sciences, except to the extent that science devolves into metaphysical scientism).

Ah, feminism

Ladies, this should make your blood boil.

Funny, looking elsewhere there's no end of information.

These people have no shame- none of them.

November 28, 2007

The fall of Camelot

How did we get where we are today? From whence did we come? Neptunus Lex hazards a guess...

Forty-four years ago last week, Sarajevo came to Dallas and the boy king of Camelot stood in the footsteps of Archduke Ferdinand. Rather than igniting a world-wide conflagration, when Lee Harvey Oswald fired those three shots from the sixth floor of the Texas Schoolhouse Depository he ignited what was to become the American culture war - a war whose volleys echo to this day.

Partisans of the handsome young president and his glamorous bride saw in him the manifestation of all their aspirations and prayers. His murder on the streets of Dallas sent them searching for an enemy to blame. They found it in Oliver Stone-style conspiratorial visions of an America divided by race and class, gender and age. They found in it a reason to hate themselves - or at least, to hate those among them who did not share their vision of the America-that-ought-to-be.

The truth was, as ever, hiding in plain view - effectively, as it turns out.

RTWT of course

November 26, 2007

More fun in Paris

AP reports "youths" firing "buckshot" at police in Paris, France. Dang Methodists!

via the godfather

November 21, 2007

What's my accent?

What American accent do you have?
Your Result: The Midland
 

"You have a Midland accent" is just another way of saying "you don't have an accent." You probably are from the Midland (Pennsylvania, southern Ohio, southern Indiana, southern Illinois, and Missouri) but then for all we know you could be from Florida or Charleston or one of those big southern cities like Atlanta or Dallas. You have a good voice for TV and radio.

Boston
 
The West
 
The Northeast
 
The Inland North
 
Philadelphia
 
North Central
 
The South
 
What American accent do you have?
Quiz Created on GoToQuiz

I have to admit this surprised me, ya'll...

Pr0n gone wild

An Army of Ron Jeremies?

November 20, 2007

He Hayts Him

Which 2008 candidate do you hate the most?

The candidate you like least is Democrat Dennis Kucinich. He is pro-choice, opposes the death penalty, is in favor of No Child Left Behind, opposes building a border fence, opposes Iran sanctions, opposes a troop surge for Iraq, wants universal healthcare, is in favor of banning assault weapons -- this guy is your worst nightmare!

Take the quiz at Buttafly.com

Yup.

November 16, 2007

Whack!

Syrian Smackdown!

As you know, these voters are a bunch of people misled and numbed by the proselytizing, generalized, deceptive, romanticized discourse, which promises them black-eyed virgins and boys in Paradise, and such things. This discourse merely postpones the resolution of their problems - instead of resolving them today, let's resolve them in a billion years. This is escapism into the future. That's one thing. If those voters had managed to get a job and a visa to America, none of them would have voted, and nobody would have watched your show. You would be fired from Al-Jazeera and would be left jobless.

h/t Jules

November 14, 2007

Remember Iraq?

Things are getting better? Well, duh!

It’s a mystery. What caused that drop in violence? After enumerating the many indisputable indicators of less death, less violence, AP opines:

The reasons for the violence drop are less clear.

U.S. commanders cite the surge of nearly 30,000 troops sent by President Bush earlier this year. They also cite a change in tactics, moving more troops out of large camps and into neighborhoods to keep extremists from returning.

“The surge gave us combat fire to reach out and touch the enemy,” said Maj. Gen. Rick Lynch, commander of U.S. troops along Baghdad’s southern rim. “We’ve denied the enemy those sanctuaries, and we couldn’t have done that without the surge.”

But the surge’s success was also due to a revolt against al-Qaida by some Sunni Arabs — first in Anbar province and later in Baghdad. Fearing al-Qaida’s brutal tactics, many fighters from rival insurgent groups such as the Islamic Army in Iraq began cooperating with U.S. forces to drive the extremists from their neighborhoods and villages.

Noticed that did you?

Alternative fuels

A rational discussion.

What about so-called green alternatives like electric cars, hydrogen fueled cars or biofuels? Can they compete with these alternative oil supplies? Let's start with bioethanol produced from corn. Bioethanol is almost as contentious a fuel as petroleum. Since ethanol is a refined fuel, the easier comparison is with the price of gasoline. The Energy Information Administration (EIA) notes even as oil prices have climbed, the price of a gallon of ethanol produced in the U.S. has generally been higher than the price of a gallon of unleaded gasoline. Also, one must take into account the how plowing up additional land to produce biofuel crops affects the natural environment and growing concerns about the effect of biofuels on the price of food. The EIA notes that if oil prices fall to below $50 per barrel that cellulosic ethanol based on current technologies will not be cost competitive.

What about the much-ballyhooed hydrogen economy? The idea is that cars would run on fuel cells that would burn hydrogen and emit only water vapor. But where will the hydrogen come from? Ideally it would be produced by electrolysis—splitting water molecules using electricity. As engineer Robert Zubrin notes, however, hydrogen currently costs about $100 per kilogram and a kilogram of hydrogen contains about as much energy as a gallon of gasoline. Other sources of hydrogen include methane or even coal which have all the environmental downsides discussed above. Besides why waste perfectly good electricity to make hydrogen which will be used to make more electricity in fuel cells to propel automobiles? Why not use electricity directly?

Read the whole thing; the outlook is changing.

via The Blogger of the Year

November 07, 2007

Islamonazi DOES work

Know your enemy.

h/t David Bernstein

Muttonhead Quail Movement

Volokh Conspiracy:

The Muttonhead Quail Movement:

"[P]ossibly the most unfortunate spell-check blunder I've ever seen," reports a Reuters editor. The error: A line in a May 14, 2007 Reuters story about Pakistan, "The opposition blames the government and the pro-government Muttonhead Quail Movement (MQM), which runs Karachi, for the violence." In reality, "MQM does not stand for Muttonhead Quail Movement, but Muttahida Quami Movement."

My inner European


Your Inner European is Irish!

Sprited and boisterous!

You drink everyone under the table.

Erin go brah!

November 06, 2007

More WoW madness

I'm So Sick

Zombies!

It could happen...

via Rand Simberg

November 05, 2007

Warcraft Rock

Ace of Spades house band!

November 02, 2007

Hell freezes over

I never thought I'd ever say these words but...

Long Live Sarkozy!

November 01, 2007

The New Barbarians

A link in the comments at a post at The Belmont Club sends you to a fascinating analysis of how we might learn from history-

Much has been said over the past few years about the novelty of the security challenges now facing the United States. In what is still the most popular version of events, history started on 9/11, when “everything changed.” The global jihadist movement is an unexpected offshoot of the encounter between Western-driven modernization processes, now of global scale in the 21st century, and an Islamic world still struggling with the legacy of the 20th. One result of this encounter is a decentralized web of mobile, marauding Islamist terrorist organizations capable of complex attacks, highly adaptable in structure, often indistinguishable from the broader Muslim communities that succor or tolerate them, and reasonably skilled at public relations (at least with regard to those communities). In the worst scenario, al-Qaeda or one of its affiliates may use weapons of mass destruction against the United States or its allies, marking the only time since Westphalia that a substate actor can credibly threaten the vital interests of not only a state, but of the strongest state in the international system. If that’s not novelty, nothing is.

That there is something new about this threat is undeniable. Substate actors with global reach and the technical skill of modern apocalyptical terrorists bear almost no resemblance to the main challenges to international security during the past several centuries, which were characterized by more or less rule-based competition among well-defined states. Another difference stands out, too: The modern state system enforced a separation of church and state on the international level with its doctrine of cuius regio, eius religio. Its 17th-century founders learned the lessons of the Thirty Years War and determined not to let the passions of religious disagreement inflame the necessities of political order. Today’s salafi warriors mean to destroy that separation utterly, a separation that even the Ottoman Empire, the seat of the Caliphate, came to accept in practice over time.

So there is novelty in our midst, but as this latter example suggests, only in comparison with what we generally call modernity. If we look at pre-modern history we find that the al-Qaeda menace does not appear so novel after all. Most pre-modern great powers—empires, they are commonly called—faced an obstinate and in some cases deadly menace from “barbarians.” In some ways, al-Qaeda and its franchises are the planetary-scale barbarians of the 21st century.

My use of “barbarian” implies no necessary moral judgment, but only objectively specifies small groups composed often of nomads and arranged in tribes rather than hierarchically structured states. Barbarians were also uncivilized—again, not in a moral but in a literal sense—because they did not live in cities. They preferred instead a highly mobile lifestyle based on pastoralism to the settled agriculture that enabled urban life. Think of Rome facing the Goths, and especially the highly mobile Huns, Vandals and Alans between the 3rd and 5th centuries; China under the Ming dynasty (14th–17th centuries) struggling to contain the persistent threat of the Mongols from the north; the Ottoman Empire being devastated in the 14th century by Central Asian hordes led by Tamerlane; 13th-century Russia invaded by the Mongols.

Be sure to read in full- the writer presents some possibilities that seem to offer hope.

Coffee alert

Royal band plays appropriate theme music for Saudi's visit...

Smack!

10 - er - 15 reasons to hate the cellphone industry. I completely agree.

via The King