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Saturday, November 30, 2024

Houses Divided

 Most of the houses in my neighborhood are white-light houses, and I have to admit they are lovely, but I was raised in a colored-light family, and I am raising Tom and Jack to be colored-light men, too. They do not take a lot of convincing on this. Boys are naturally colored lighters.

- Michael Kelly. "The Nine Days of Tom and Jack," Washington Post, December 12, 2001

[It was a sad day in the life of the nation and journalism when Michael Kelly passed away.]

Friday, November 29, 2024

#2 Pencil!

 Althouse has a clip of Mike Rowe talking to Joe Rogan about a #2 pencil.

I have never encountered a discussion of a #2 pencil that I didn't like.

Unusual Reads



  • Never Cry Wolf by Farley Mowat
  • Legionnaire by Simon Murray
  • Goodbye to All That by Robert Graves
  • Into Africa by Martin Dugard
  • The Flame Trees of Thika by Elspeth Huxley

[Photo by M. Zonderling at Unsplash]

Thursday, November 28, 2024

Wednesday, November 27, 2024

Business Travel with a New Attitude

My new Substack post is up.

Read it before you go to the airport.

The Good Old Days

 We have had a Gang of Thieves infesting this Town since you left it. The thursday after you went away Shaw and James went into the woods and in the day time the best saddle was stolen out of the Barn closset. The same Night mr Cary had his best Horse stolen and mr Smith who lives on mrs Rows place had his taken the same night and last Sunday morning James came Running in to inform me that his Stables had been attempted, and his Lock broken, but being doubly secured the villan could not effect his purpose. He tried the Coach house door and split of a peice of the door, but could not get the Bar out. He went on to mr Adams's at Milton and stole his Horse. A Traveller lodged at Marches Tavern on saturday night, who got up in the Night Rob'd the House of various articles of wearing Apparal and made of. We Suppose that he was the person who attempted our stables and that he belongs to a Gang. They are in pursuit of him.

- Abigail Adams to John Adams on "Decbr 4th 1792" - taken from My Dearest Friend: Letters of Abigail and John Adams, edited by Margaret A. Hogan and C. James Taylor

[The town was Quincy, Massachusetts.]

10 Rules for Thanksgiving

 


I wrote this post several years ago and it is now an Execupundit tradition:

  1. Thou shalt not discuss politics at the dinner. There is next to no chance that you'll convert anyone and any hard feelings that are generated may last long after the pumpkin pie is finished. Why spoil a good meal?

  2. Thou shalt limit discussion of The Big Game. This is mainly directed at the men who choose to argue plays, records, and coaches while their wives stare longingly at the silverware. The sharp silverware.

  3. Thou shalt say nice things about every dish. Including the bizarre one with Jello and marshmallows.

  4. Thou shalt be especially kind to anyone who may feel left out. Some Thanksgiving guests are tag-alongs or, as we say in the business world, "new to the organization." Make a point of drawing them in.

  5. Thou shalt be wary of gossip. After all, do you know what they say when you leave the room? Remember the old saying: All of the brothers are valiant and all of the sisters are virtuous.

  6. Thou shalt not hog the white or dark meat. We know you're on Atkins but that's no excuse.

  7. Thou shalt think mightily before going back for seconds. Especially if that means waddling back for seconds.

  8. Thou shalt not get drunk. Strong drink improves neither your wit nor your discretion. Give everyone else a gift by remaining sober.

  9. Thou shalt be cheerful. This is not a therapy session. This is not the moment to recount all of the mistakes in your life or to get back at Uncle Bo for the wisecrack he made at your high school graduation. This is a time for Rule #10.

  10. Thou shalt be thankful. You're above ground and functioning in an extraordinary place at an extraordinary time. Many people paid a very heavy price (and I'm not talking about groceries) to give you this day. Take some time to think of them and to express gratitude to your friends and relatives. Above all, give special thanks to the divine power who blesses you in innumerable ways.

[Photo by Joseph Gonzalez at Unsplash]

Feeling and Reason

To the modernist claim that scientific and scholarly knowledge seeks objectivity by distancing itself from the emotions, Plato would probably have replied that such a separation of knowledge from feeling cannot yield anything like true knowledge. Certainly, reason must free itself from the thrall of the passions, but not from the exquisite and essential subtlety of the feeling/valuing component of the mind, a component which is an absolutely necessary part of authentic human reason.

- Jacob Needleman, The American Soul: Rediscovering the Wisdom of the Founders

Monday, November 25, 2024

Among the Most Warlike of Creatures

 Ants are among the most warlike of creatures. Their foreign policy has been described as "restless aggression, territorial conquest, and genocidal annihilation of neighboring colonies whenever possible. If ants had nuclear weapons, they probably would end the world in a week."

- Bert Hollbroder and Edward O. Wilson, Journey to the Ants: A Story of Scientific Exploration, quoted in Strategy: A History by Lawrence Freedman

A Hero's Diary

In 1918, Isaac Imes, my great uncle, served with the Marines in France during World War I.

In 2024, I am reading the diary he wrote while in the trenches.

Life can be a Twilight Zone episode.

Fake Indians

 "A 2011 investigation by the American Bar Association found there were roughly ten times as many association-accredited law school graduates who identified as Native American in their college and professional documents as there were Native American lawyers identified by the U.S. Census. Digging deeper into the sources of this discrepancy, the bar association concluded that a distressingly high number of those who professionally identified as Native American seemed to have no substantive ties to any specific Indigenous tribe or culture, no apparent ancestor on the Dawes Rolls, and so on - just like [Senator Elizabeth] Warren."

- Musa Al-Gharbi, We Have Never Been Woke: The Cultural Contradictions of a New Elite

Don't hold your breath awaiting any accountability for these ruses.

Churches as Matchmakers

 Amber Noel on "The Ministry of Matchmaking."

This is a good idea. I am planning a Substack essay on the subject.

Sunday, November 24, 2024

Find Something Beautiful Today

 


[Photo by Aaron Burden at Unsplash]

Saturday, November 23, 2024

Fascinating and Bold


 

I started reading this book today. Very thought-provoking. Deserves a wide audience.

Rejection

We have read your manuscript with boundless delight. If we were to publish your paper, it would be impossible for us to publish any work of lower standard. And as it is unthinkable that in the next thousand years we shall see its equal, we are, to our regret, etc.

- Rejection slip from a Chinese economics journal, quoted in the Financial Times

Take a Shakespeare Pledge

Nudged by Cultural Offering and Jim Harrison, I am taking a Shakespeare Pledge.

I pledge that between Thanksgiving and Christmas, I will read at least two of Shakespeare's plays.

Will you join me?

"Top Public Policy Programs Have Almost No Conservative Faculty"

 Remember when a justification for diversity programs was that they would produce viewpoint diversity?

Well, the word didn't reach the top public policy schools.

Farming and Our National Soul


My Substack essay on the loss of farming culture is up.

Core message: We need values-based family farms as a counterbalance to the cities.

[BTW: My goal is to have 110 subscribers by the end of the month. Subscriptions are free. Paid subscriptions, of course, are appreciated, honored, and worshiped.]


[Photo by Scott Spencer Pugh at Unsplash]

Friday, November 22, 2024

Less Can Be More


Harvard Business Review in 2016: When companies ban emailing and get more done.


[Photo by Ray Shrewsbury at Unsplash.]

I've Made a Career Out of Being Outside the Frame

 It's difficult to see the picture when you're inside the frame.

- R. S. Trapp

The Thanksgiving Pie Debate


 The debate is on.

There is the standard pumpkin pie: a true essential for Thanksgiving.

But then things become trickier: pecan, apple, chocolate cream, cherry, lemon, coconut cream, and some more exotic flavors such as Key Lime.

And that brings to mind the highly debatable question of rankings:

  1. French Silk/Chocolate Cream
  2. Pumpkin
  3. Pecan
  4. Lemon 
  5. Apple
  6. Cherry
  7. Key Lime
  8. Boston Creme Pie
It's easier to discuss nuclear war.


Continuing Update: Apologies also to the fans of peach, banana cream, strawberry, and blueberry pie.

[Photo by Preslie Hirsch at Unsplash]

"What the hell was this guy doing on the street?"

City Journal has an article on the latest knife attacks in New York City and the nitwitted policies that facilitated them.

An excerpt:

The answer is simple: bad policies. In 2020, New York State’s bail and discovery reforms took effect. The bail reform made it so that nearly all accused criminals in the state would be released pretrial rather than held in detention, and it did so while strengthening the prohibition on judges considering public-safety risk when making release decisions. The discovery reform amounted to a massive unfunded compliance burden on prosecutors, which has led to skyrocketing dismissal rates. The following year, Alvin Bragg, who campaigned on promises to cut incarceration, bring fewer cases, and enact broad non-prosecution policies, was elected as Manhattan D.A.

The Great Disconnect

 After Babel: Katherine Johnson Martinko explores "How Parents Can Fight Back Against the Digital Deluge of Life."

An excerpt:

"It wasn't just about watching him It was about being alert to his little bids for connection, the frequent times when he looked over to make eye contact or wave or smile at me. He wanted to know I was present, mentally as well as physically. He needed to know that he was more important than my phone."

Tuesday, November 19, 2024

Elon, Vivek, and the DOGE


My Substack essay on how Elon and Vivek can keep the DOGE from going astray is up.

Please read, share, and consider subscribing.

Courage's Territories


There may be a territory between physical courage and moral courage.

I am exploring the subject in a new workshop that will be rolled out this month.

The initial question is whether that territory exists. 

The PLUM Report



If you want to get a quick sense of the size of the federal government, check out the PLUM data on the PLUM Report page and then keep clicking through the agencies.


[Photo by Tycho Attsma at Unsplash]

Monday, November 18, 2024

The Man Who Never Sleeps


Kindness, thy name is Nicholas Bate, an Oxford-based deep-thinking consultant and author who is a constant inspiration.

[Photo by Nikita Ti at Unsplash]

The Largest Home Library on Reddit

Cultural Offering has the video. It is amazing.

I thought I had a fair number of books. Not so. 

When it comes to book collecting, I am a towering castle of sloth.

"The Profundity of Evil"

 The New Criterion: Douglas Murray dissects the "banality of evil" argument that Hannah Arendt made in Eichmann in Jerusalem. An excerpt:

Yet scholarship since Arendt’s book has not just countered her interpretation but should in fact have buried it. In 2011, the historian and philosopher Bettina Stangneth brought out a book in Germany titled Eichmann vor Jerusalem (the English edition, Eichmann Before Jerusalem, came out in 2014). It is a devastating work, most of all for the reputation of Hannah Arendt. For it shows beyond any doubt how, for the few days she attended the trial, Arendt was actually fooled by Eichmann. He played her. For Eichmann—
contra Arendt’s claim—not only knew what he was doing, but was even deeply, sincerely proud of it.

But the Masochists' Numbers Are Still High

 Article in The Chronicle of Higher Education on November 1, 2024: 

"Where Are the White Students?" 

Subtitle: "Their numbers are dropping faster than any other group's."

Could it be that the atmosphere at many colleges is not a welcoming one?

Sunday, November 17, 2024

Find Something Beautiful Today



[Photo of Arizona's state bird, the Cactus Wren, by Carol Lee at Unsplash]

Saturday, November 16, 2024

The Tom Wolfe Model

 Wolfe insists that writers replace the hoary old saw “write what you know” with “write about what you find,” since in fact few people know much of anything until and unless they go out and learn it. His advice — or better, exhortation, was: leave the house, gather information, and apply reportorial techniques to fiction; i.e. invent stories that explain the real world. Don’t think of fiction as fantasy; far from it. The whole enterprise stands or falls based on your story’s plausibility, which is to say, its conformity to observed reality. Bonfire of the Vanities was so successful because everyone who knows anything about New York knew that the portrait was dead-on accurate.

Read the rest of Michael Anton's 2022 essay.

Seven Ways to Transform HR

My new Substack post is up.

Check it out.

A Tale of Our Times

"Sometimes you need a weirdo to tell you that things have gotten weird. Your normal friends, neighbors, and coworkers won't tell you."

- Aaron Kunin, professor of English, Pomona College, quoted in "When a Department Self-Destructs" by Emma Pettit in The Chronicle of Higher Education, November 1, 2024

True

 A study of economics usually reveals that the best time to buy anything is last year.

- Marty Allen

Friday, November 15, 2024

When You Look Beneath the Surface

 You can find some very troubling things when you look beneath the surface of:

Thursday, November 14, 2024

Which is a Noble Thing

"Being so long in the lowest form, I gained an immense advantage over the cleverer boys. I got into my bones the essential structure of the basic British sentence, which is a noble thing. Naturally, I am in favor of teaching boys English, and then I would allow the clever ones to learn Latin as an honor, and Greek as a treat."

- Winston Churchill

A Powerful Change of Scenery

 Because I was in a strange place, and was undisturbed, and I didn't plan on making great progress, and the temperature was right, the lighting was great, and an assortment of ideas suddenly decided to come together, the decision to jot down notes in a shoe shop while my wife shopped for shoes was one of my most productive decisions in weeks.

We'll have to do this more often.

On My Desk

My current projects include a very interesting workshop for a nonprofit, an important proposal for an outfit in D.C., a book project, and coaching assignments.

And a leaf blower for my desk.

The best time of the year.

Oh yes! Today I am meeting with an old rogue of an attorney who has retired in Fountain Hills, Arizona. He has violated the Never Retire Rule but will be forgiven.

Wednesday, November 13, 2024

Pournelle's Iron Law of Bureaucracy



Novelist and scholar Jerry Pournelle created the Iron Law of Bureaucracy.

He began by noting that there are two groups in organizations. 

The first is dedicated to achieving the goals of the organization.

The second is dedicated to the organization itself.

The Iron Law is that "in every case the second group will gain and keep control of the organization. It will write the rules, and control promotions within the organization."


[Photo by the blowup at Unsplash]

Tuesday, November 12, 2024

"The Soda Jerk Had a Mood Ring"

My new Substack column is up. This one's on intergenerational lingo.

Check it out and take the quiz.

Self-Mastery

The light overcomes the heavy;

the still overcomes the frantic.

The wise never forget their dignity;

though surrounded by dazzling sights,

they remain calm and unmoved.

- Lao Tzu 

Revolutionary Times

 New York Post: Martin Gurri on the great clarification. An excerpt:

In the last four years, the progressive establishment, centered around the Biden administration and the federal bureaucracy but including the news media, academia, Hollywood and most of our dominant institutions, erected structures of control without precedent in American history.

Americans Behind the Wheel

 I later found out that the English, who don't have nearly as much ground to cover, tend to view the American approach to highway travel as somewhere between baffling and pathological. A couple of years after I got out of college, some English friends of mine were given a ride from northern Spain to Paris by an American we all knew, and to their astonishment he drove straight through without stopping. They came to the conclusion that he was suffering from a latent death wish. I informed them that our mutual friend had merely driven from northern Spain to Paris the way any red-blooded American boy would drive from northern Spain to Paris: he made good time.

- Calvin Trillin, Travels with Alice

Conquer Your Stage Fright

 My new Substack column is up on conquering stage fright.

Check it out and - shameless plug - spread the word.


Monday, November 11, 2024

Books for Veterans

 


  • On the Border with Crook by John Gregory Bourke
  • Homage to Catalonia by George Orwell
  • Grant Takes Command by Bruce Catton
  • Goodbye to All That by Robert Graves
  • Reveille in Washington by Margaret Leech
  • Goodbye Darkness by William Manchester
  • Legionnaire by Simon Murray
  • Quartered Safe Out Here by George MacDonald Fraser

[Photo by Annie Spratt at Unsplash]

Veterans Day

 


[Photo by Max Sulik at Unsplash]


I Often Remember Some of the Finest People I've Ever Known


U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Command






Find Something Beautiful Today


 

[Photo by NOAA at Unsplash]

Saturday, November 09, 2024

First Paragraph

 As a child I lived in Lewis Carroll's house in Guilford. My father, whom I adored, was a Gaelic-speaking highlander, a classical scholar, and a bigoted agnostic. One day he discovered that I had started going to church secretly.

- From Confessions of an Advertising Man by David Ogilvy

On My List



He wrote "Clockers" - one of the most powerful novels of our time. It's on my re-read list.

Don't Miss Out on My Substack

Here's my most recent post on Viewpoint Diversity and Freedom of Expression

My goal is to get at least 100 Substack subscribers by December 31.

Free subscribers, of course, are welcome but one of the advantages of a paid subscription is my posts never go behind a paywall.

[And paid subscribers are highly honored.]

FYI: A very interesting post on Stage Fright is in the pipeline.

When Amazon Looked for Investors

 Against that meager start, Bezos would tell investors he projected $74 million in sales by 2000 if things went moderately well, and $114 million in sales if they went much better than expected. (Actual net sales in 2000: $1.64 billion.) Bezos also predicted the company would be moderately profitable by that time (net loss in 2000: $1.4 billion). He wanted to value the fledgling firm at $6 million - an aggressive valuation that he had seemingly picked out of thin air. And he told investors the same thing he told his parents: the company had a 70 percent chance of failing.

- From The Everything Store: Jeff Bezos and the Age of Amazon by Brad Stone

Hmm

 


Friday, November 08, 2024

Viewpoint Diversity on Campus


My Substack on Viewpoint Diversity on Campus is out.

Please check it out and spread the word!


[Photo by Chris Yoder]

First Paragraph

Sociologist Pierre Bourdieu grew up in a peripheral region of France, the son of a postal worker and a homemaker. His origins led him to be dismissed and looked down on in many of his early encounters with elite institutions. These encounters inculcated a sense of alienation and resentment toward mainstream elites that persisted throughout Bourdieu's life in spite of his later success. He emerged as a pugilistic public intellectual, and one of the most trenchant analysts of the ways that elites and elite aspirants jockeyed for status, influence, wealth, and power. His work exposed and catalogued the ways elites reproduced and justified their social position (and the inequalities entailed thereby) - often while claiming to be altruistic or pursuing the "greater good." Bourdieu's work plays an important role in shaping the arguments of this book. It will therefore be useful to highlight a few core elements of his thought to set the stage for what follows.

- From We Have Never Been Woke: The Cultural Contradictions of a New Elite by Musa al-Gharbi

Possible Appointments in the Trump Administration

 Always a fascinating process.

The question is: Who will be Trump's Harry Hopkins? 

Or his Daniel Patrick Moynihan?

Thursday, November 07, 2024

The Men Begin to Speak Up

 Quillette: Claire Lehmann on "The Revenge of the Silent Male Voter." An excerpt:

If we take a macro perspective, we see that such young men have never known a culture in which males are not routinely described as "problematic," "toxic," or "oppressive." Going to university, and working at modern companies, they live in a world of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion policies - many of which promote an insidious and pervasive form of anti-male discrimination. Yet to talk about it in public invites social ostracism. To criticize DEI is to risk being called a Nazi.

Wednesday, November 06, 2024

First Paragraph

 In the early 1970s, an industrious advertising executive named Julie Ray became fascinated with an unconventional public-school program for gifted children in Houston, Texas. Her son was among the first students enrolled in what would later be called the Vanguard program, which stoked creativity and independence in its students and nurtured expansive, outside-the-box thinking. Ray grew so enamored with the curriculum and the community of enthusiastic teachers and parents that she set out to research similar schools around the state with an eye toward writing a book about Texas's fledgling gifted-education movement.

- From The Everything Store: Jeff Bezos and the Age of Amazon by Brad Stone

Trump's Victory Over the Oh-So-Clever


President Trump's win in both the Electoral College and the popular vote represents far more than a victory over Kamala Harris.

It is a victory over a biased news media, a government that is far too cozy with Big Tech and hostile to the First Amendment, a bureaucracy that tells us that obviously porous borders are secure, and a smug elite that pulls off behind-the-scenes stunts and thinks we'll believe whatever oh-so-smoothly-worded press releases they happen to issue.

Their plan was to push Joe Biden aside and win by nominating a pliable and untested candidate who was Not Donald Trump.

They overlooked Trump's secret, the reason why a huge and diverse coalition decided to back him: 

He's Not One of Them.


Tuesday, November 05, 2024

Change the Elections

I have no clear information on how the presidential election will turn out, but I'd dearly love to see these simple changes in the future:

  1. Election Day should be a national holiday. Voting together strengthens the sense of community.
  2. Voters should be required to show identification.
  3. People who cannot get to the polls can apply for and receive absentee ballots.
  4. Other than the absentee ballots, there will be no mail-in voting.
  5. Voting should be done on simple paper ballots.
  6. Barring an emergency, the results should be tabulated and released on the evening of Election Day.

This is Big

 Cultural Offering notes some inside news coverage from The Onion News Network.

A Good Day to Read a Novel



Cal Newport has some wise advice to reduce stress on Election Day:

 After you vote, unplug.


[Photo by Enes Gundogdu at Unsplash]

Election Day!!!



Stay cool. We will survive.

[Photo by Time Mossholder at Unsplash]

Monday, November 04, 2024

The Decline of Reading


 




One of the great but largely uncovered scandals of our time. 

In the name of accountability, the names of the charlatans who pushed the so-called improvements should be publicized.



Crazy Presidential Elections

 Commentary magazine in September 2024: 

John Podhoretz gives a review of our crazy presidential elections. An excerpt:

But I would argue that nearly every presidential race in my lifetime—I’m 63, and so this is the 16th I’ve been alive for—was the most unprecedented in American history up to that moment. I can think of only three—1984, 1988, and 1996—that have followed relatively conventional patterns and whose outcomes viewed from a historical remove appear to have been set even before the candidates began to contest against each other.

Films for Students of Power

 


  • "The Lives of Others"
  • "Lawrence of Arabia"
  • "Schindler's List"
  • "1984" [Richard Burton version]
  • "Margin Call"
  • "A Man for All Seasons"
  • "The Lion in Winter"
  • "Shoah"

Team Math


A team is not simply the sum total of its members. It is also the extra pluses and minuses that occur when those people are working together. All of us have known great individual performers who are terrible when they have to work together.

The combination, be it for good or bad, is always a different creature.

Never forget that.

When Considering Predictions

 A prophet is not someone with special visions, just someone blind to most of what others see.

- Nassim Nicholas Taleb

Sunday, November 03, 2024

Find Something Beautiful Today

 



[Photo by Rustyness at Unsplash]

Saturday, November 02, 2024

The Brunacini Way

 My new Substack post on an extraordinary fire chief is up.

Check it out and spread the word.

And remember: Prevent harm - Survive - Be nice.

Political Truth

"You're losing politically if you're telling people to not believe what their eyes are seeing."

- Senator John Fetterman

Political Pandering in Arizona

 Jonathan Turley weighs in on a possible prosecution of Trump for his remarks about Liz Cheney.

"Whatever Happens, Love Thy Neighbor"

 The Free Press: Larissa Phillips describes an attitude change while living in upstate New York. An excerpt:

But nothing is constant, even political feelings. By the time Biden announced his candidacy, I’d been living upstate for 10 years. A decade of farming had made me less aloof, because farming entails emergencies, and so often my neighbors were there to help. It’s hard to care where someone stands on politics when they race to your house to save a dying lamb. When their wife helps search for your runaway dogs. When they deliver and stack 50 hay bales within hours of your asking for it, and afterward make pleasant chitchat. This is the gift of living in a rural area: I keep finding reasons to see my political adversaries as human.

Friday, November 01, 2024

The Slant

"I said, I was running for 19 months. When Ross Perot ran in 1992 for 10 months, he did 34 live interviews on the national networks. I did 4 in 19 months. And your network never let me on a single time. You’re only telling one side of the story.”

- Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. talking with an ABC anchor

Are You for Real?

 A group of people are chatting on a terrace. Most of them are fit and attractive. The conversation flows smoothly. There is some bantering about a vacation spot in Italy.

Unless particularly astute in such matters, most individuals would not be able to identify which members of the party are human and which are "artificials" - expensive robots that can pass as humans under most circumstances. It can be risky to make such distinctions since there are human + robot couples as well as human + human ones and no one wants to give offense. 

This practice started in Japan in 2035 and quickly spread to much of the rest of the world.

I believe our society will reach this stage.


The Hordes and the Farm

 As my wife dealt with the hordes of trick or treaters, the dog and I watched "Clarkson's Farm" in an adjoining room.

I got the better part of that deal.