Wednesday, April 23, 2025

Tuesday, April 22, 2025

Perfectly Understandable

 


A Few Books That Changed My Life

 


  • The Holy Bible
  • The Screwtape Letters by C.S. Lewis
  • Man's Search for Meaning by Viktor Frankl
  • A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens
  • Mere Christianity by C. S. Lewis
  • Life with a Star by Jiri Weil
  • Letter From Birmingham Jail by Martin Luther King, Jr.
  • The Warden by Anthony Trollope
  • Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare
  • Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell
  • Animal Farm by George Orwell
  • War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy
  • Fortunes of War by Olivia Manning
  • The Killer Angels by Michael Shaara
  • The Federalist Papers by Alexander Hamilton, James Madson, and John Jay
  • The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck
  • Moby-Dick by Herman Melville
  • Six Crises by Richard Nixon
  • The Forest Ranger by Herbert Kaufman
  • Profiles in Courage by John F. Kennedy
  • Silent Missions by Vernon A. Walters
  • The Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Grahame
  • The Best and the Brightest by David Halberstam
  • Tom Jones by Henry Fielding
  • Churchill by Lord Moran
  • The Last Hurrah by Edwin O'Connor
  • All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque
  • The Insurgents by Fred Kaplan
  • Lincoln and His Generals by T. Harry Williams
  • The First Circle by Alexander Solzhenitsyn
  • Vanity Fair by William Makepeace Thackeray
  • The Spy Who Came in from the Cold by John LeCarré
  • A Moveable Feast by Ernest Hemingway
  • The Effective Executive by Peter F. Drucker
  • The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich by William L. Shirer
  • Radical Chic and Mau-Mauing the Flak Catchers by Tom Wolfe
  • Jayber Crow by Wendell Berry
  • To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee
  • Barchester Towers by Anthony Trollope
  • I, Claudius by Robert Graves
  • Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury
  • The Bonfire of the Vanities by Tom Wolfe
  • Bleak House by Charles Dickens
  • In Search of Excellence by Tom Peters and Robert Waterman
  • The Wall by John Hersey
  • Chronicles of Wasted Time by Malcolm Muggeridge

Big Day

 


Monday, April 21, 2025

Hmm

 


Slow and Silent


The best work is often slow and silent. 

The goal is set, the path determined, and the material assembled.

And, as much as possible, interruptions are reduced and confined.

Another point: you have to keep from getting in front of yourself. Don't jump ahead. Restrict your creativity to the areas in which it is needed and when it is needed.

Beware of excitement since it often is merely an interruption in disguise.

Step by step. Relentless.

Sunday, April 20, 2025

Happy Easter!



[Photo by Bruno van der Kraan at Unsplash]

Saturday, April 19, 2025

Soundtrack

 


Captain MacWhirr

It is your imaginative supervisor who is touchy, overbearing, and difficult to please; but every ship Captain MacWhirr commanded was the floating abode of harmony and peace. It was, in truth, as impossible for him to take a flight of fancy as it would be for a watchmaker to put together a chronometer with nothing except a two-pound hammer and a whip-saw in the way of tools. Yet the uninteresting lives of men so entirely given to the actuality of the bare existence have their mysterious side.

- From Typhoon by Joseph Conrad

Let's Call It "The Dictator"

Yes, Studebaker once had a car named The Dictator.

They changed the name to Commander after 1937.

Good move.

Deportations and the Courts

 Law professor Jonathan Turley gives an update and a possible new tone.

NaNoWriMo



NaNoWriMo is a community for writers.

If your novel seems to be blocked, this may be the solution.


[Photo by Florian Klauer at Unsplash]

In the Pipeline

 


Wednesday, April 16, 2025

Dictatorship of Virtue

 City Journal: Remembering Richard Bernstein's warning about campuses in the 1990s.

Modern Technology: Mind the Gaps



The more I learn about technology and its systems, the more skeptical I become of assumptions about the glorious wisdom those systems will produce.

We need to look for the gaps.

And yes, there are gaps.

Recommendation: Uncharted: How to Navigate the Future by Margaret Heffernan


[Photo by Bruno Figueiredo at Unsplash]

Adios

 Commentary magazine: Meir Y. Soloveichik on "What to Do with a Bad Guest."

Check Your Systems

Unfortunately, most warning systems do not warn us that they can no longer warn us.

- Charles Perrow

Tuesday, April 15, 2025

Ocean

 


Bad Managers and Their Enablers


 

My Substack column asks, "Would you keep an embezzler on your payroll?"


[Photo by Getty Images for Unsplash+]

Drafts

 The first draft was okay. 

No, it was average, but the second draft was much better.

 No, it was trash. 

The third draft seemed to be on mark until I reviewed it again while waiting to go into a meeting and found it had the wrong tone.

Perhaps.

No, tone wasn't the problem. The overall direction was a wrong turn. Had to go.

And so I wrote another draft, this time in long-hand, and that began to click.

Until it didn't, and yet each time I was learning and finally, later that evening, I had a draft that made sense.

I think.

Monday, April 14, 2025

Style Flashback

 


What is Lurking?

 


An odd but important question for any organization is "What are we failing to address right now which, down the road, may strike us as a major oversight?"

A few items I've seen were:

  • The primary assumption regarding the desirability of a program turned out to be false.
  • The time estimates for a key stage were grossly inaccurate.
  • An organizational ally was a vigorous adversary.
  • The sales team was understaffed.
  • The sales pitch was directed at the wrong organizational level.

First Paragraph

 The year began with a day so warm and fine that only the calendar said January. There would be few pleasant moments in 1862, but New Year's Day in Washington, D.C. was one of them. Everyone was out enjoying the sunshine that morning - women in demure bonnets, men wishing they had left their overcoats at home, children dodging and shouting. The dusty streets of the half-built city were filled with people making their way toward the White House, where, by tradition, the president threw open the doors on the first day of each year.

- From Rise to Greatness: Abraham Lincoln and America's Most Perilous Year by David Von Drehle

Sunday, April 13, 2025

Saturday, April 12, 2025

Back By Popular Demand

 


Zach Yadegari

 Jonathan Turley notes the continuing problem with college admissions.

First Paragraph



About no other American have so many words been written as about Abraham Lincoln. Jay Monaghan's Lincoln Bibliography requires 1,079 pages merely to list the books and pamphlets published before 1939, when even the experts lost count. On library shelves the multi-volumed biographies by Nicolay and Hay, Sandburg, and Randall and Current stand cover to cover with Lincoln Never Smoked a Cigarette and Abraham Lincoln on the Coming of the Caterpillar Tractor. Every February sees a fresh flood of Lincoln Day oratory and verse.

- From Lincoln Reconsidered: Essays on the Civil War Era by David Donald (published in 1961.)


[Photo by Kelli Dougal at Unsplash]

Arizona Family

 


Saturday Morning (Perhaps)



The morning will be busy:

Helping my wife, who is recovering from an operation. 

Getting a haircut. 

Dropping by the bookstore mentioned in my recent Substack essay. 

Writing a new essay. 

Working on a novel.

Reading and more reading.

My goal, of course, will be to do what is important and to postpone the rest. As a result, with the exception of the first two items, all of the others are definite possibilities.

[Photo by Jon Tyson at Unsplash]

Consistent Excellence

 A Layman's Blog has been on a roll.

And I'm Afraid He's Right

 Cultural Offering has a prediction.

Rock Star Good

 Nicholas Bate gives us a reminder of a topic he knows well.

Friday, April 11, 2025

Mass Fatherlessness

 


On My List

 


Alert to the Oppression

"Judge no words before the clerks have checked

In their card index by whom they were spoken."

- From the poem "Child of Europe" written by Czeslaw Milosz in 1946

See "The Ambassador of Dreams" by Gary Saul Morson, The New Criterion, April 2025.

Work Habits

 Civil War historian and novelist Shelby Foote often wrote with an old-fashioned dip pen while dressed in his pajamas. 

Both Napoleon Bonaparte and Winston Churchill liked to dictate letters, one letter immediately after another. 

Churchill used ACTION THIS DAY stickers to spur responses to his queries and directives.

Joseph Stalin was an insomniac. Many an officer in the Kremlin got little sleep due to the fear that the phone on his desk might ring at two in the morning.

Benito Mussolini kept an encyclopedia in his office so he could brush up on arcane subjects and impress visitors of his vast knowledge. [Mussolini also had a large office which required that visitors cross a vast space before reaching him.]

Charles de Gaulle, while president of France, often spent weekends in a house that did not have a telephone. Its guardhouse, however, had a phone. Staff needed to consider if they wanted the old man to walk out to the guardhouse to take a call.

Novelist Joseph Heller kept three-by-five cards in his wallet so if he thought of a good idea or line, he could jot it down. He also thought that having the last line of a novel in mind during the writing process helped, but that was not always the case. He kept a card with "I am a cow" during the writing of one novel and never used it.

William Faulkner said, "My own experience has been that the tools I need for my trade are paper, tobacco, food, and a little whiskey."

Thursday, April 10, 2025

Are AI Fears Groundless?


 

City Journal: Brian Chau believes the fears of Artificial Intelligence are groundless because:

The history of innovation offers reason to doubt the safetyists. Every major research field in history has eventually reached a point of diminishing returns, where useful discoveries become increasingly rare. The pattern holds across disciplines—physics, chemistry, and economics—and is visible at a more granular scale, too, from antibiotics to railroads to CPUs. Initial bursts of progress taper off as fields mature, following an economic pattern known as the “S-Curve.”

Execupundit note: I am not assured by this analysis. It strikes me as comparing apples with oranges. "Every major research field in history" does not possess the characteristics of AI.

Let us proceed with the correct assumption that Brian knows far more about the subject than I do. 

What am I missing?


[Photo by Cash Macanaya at Unsplash+]

Bookstore Priorities

Cultural Offering reveals "the scholar's order of search" in a used bookstore.

Bravo!

Timely and Very Interesting

 


Flashback

 


A Zen Mode Day



Back soon.


[Photo by Ray Wyman Jr. at Unsplash]

Wednesday, April 09, 2025

Every Job Can Be Exciting

 


Used Bookstores Are a Key Part of Your Community


 

Having been asked by some very wise people to address this topic, here's a post on "The Charm of Used Bookstores."


[Photo by Getty Images for Unsplash+]

Tuesday, April 08, 2025

Ignoring the Lords of Martha's Vineyard

 UnHerd magazine: Edward Luttwak on "Tariffs Will Awaken the American Dream." An excerpt:

"It was only small-minded people, fixated on the hourly-wage data published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, who noticed that industrial workers who made $30 an hour working on assembly lines did not in fact become foreign-exchange traders earning $3,000 an hour. When their competition-hit factories shut down, rather, they were much more likely to turn up as shopping mall security guards paid $10 an hour."

The Extraordinary Usha Vance

The Free Press has a detailed article on Second Lady Usha Vance, described as "The most impressive person in the job since Abigail Adams."

Monday, April 07, 2025

First Paragraph

The Trans-Siberian Railway is a steel belt that binds two continents. Its nearly 6,000 miles of track link Moscow to Vladivostok; connecting lines run across Europe and down Asia's eastern edge. For more than a century, the Trans-Siberian has attracted travelers who want to journey through some of the world's most remote, and sometimes beautiful, territory: the Ural Mountains, the shores of Lake Baikal, the stunning isolation of the Russian steppe. But when it was completed in 1904, the Trans-Siberian Railway was the stuff of imperial dreams and geopolitical nightmares.

- From The Eurasian Century: Hot Wars, Cold Wars, and the Making of the Modern World by Hal Brands

[Just arrived last night: It looks very good.]

Old School Alumni



Many thanks to Ray, Kurt, Stephen, Chrisserpentinesheldonserpentine, as well as freiherr-von-naarenburg for your kind comments about my Old School post.

We are Old School alumni and will make a difference.


[Photo by Thomas Griggs at Unsplash]

Re-Industrialization

Re-industrialization + reduced immigration require many more "shop" classes in schools and lots of new industrial colleges in lieu of the present mass-production of "social science" graduates for whom ever-more municipal, county, state and federal desk jobs must be provided.

- Edward Luttwak, whose 1993 book, The Endangered American Dream, is worth a re-examination




Apple's Rules for Success

 A Large Regular has Apple's Rules for Success and they're very good.

The idea of putting them on the back of the employee badges is brilliant.

Sunday, April 06, 2025

Saturday, April 05, 2025

Previn and Williams

 


The Great Clarification


 

I've written one Substack post that has attracted a much larger audience than any of the others.

It's time to revisit "The Great Clarification."


[Photo by Getty Images at Unsplash+]

Making the Case Against Social Media

Caution: Very disturbing. 



France's White Hydrogen Windfall

 Forbes: A major clean energy discovery in France

A "little" story that may turn out to be huge.

Social

 Take a few minutes to read and ponder a post at The Hammock Papers.

When you get to the end and realize where it is from, the power will be multiplied.

Short Stories from The Man Who Never Sleeps



You can find it on Amazon.

Friday, April 04, 2025

Rick Georges, RIP

 


I am very sad to report that Rick Georges, The Future Lawyer, blogger, poet, author, and a dear friend, has passed away.

May his wife and family be comforted in this difficult time.

Back By Popular Demand

 


"The Artful Dodgers of Organizations"



My new Substack post is up.

It addresses how people work around as well as within organizations.


[Photo by Ashley Batz at Unsplash]

Greatest Plate Ever

 


A Large Regular found this.




Life's Element

My wife drives a 2003 Honda Element. She loves it. Likes its height plus the fact that the floor is so low that it's easier to get our old dog up and into it.

It's going in today for a paint job.

A super-basic car. I've tried to persuade her to trade it in, but she's not negotiating.

Galapagos Green.

The Eurasian Century

 The new book by Hal Brands. Commentary review here.

On my list.

A Variation of the Marie Kondo Question

A key question of anti-clutter consultant Mari Kondo is whether an item "sparks joy."

I am using a variation: Will completing this task, however minor, spark joy?

Thursday, April 03, 2025

The Power of Bellow

 "And all this will continue. It will simply continue. Another six billion years before the sun explodes. Six billion years of human life! It lames the heart to contemplate such a figure. Six billion years! What will become of us? Of the other species, yes, and of us? How will we ever make it? And when we have to abandon the earth, and leave this solar system for another, what a moving-day that will be. But by then humankind will have become very different. Evolution continues. Olaf Stapleton reckoned that each individual in future ages would be living thousands of years. The future person, a colossal figure, a beautiful green color, with a hand that had evolved into a kit of extraordinary instruments, tools strong and subtle, thumb and forefinger capable of exerting thousands of pounds of pressure. Each mind belonging to a marvelous analytical collective, thinking out its mathematics, its physics as part of a sublime whole. A race of semi-immortal giants, our green descendants, dear kin and brethren, inevitably containing still some of our bitter peculiarities as well as powers of spirit. The scientific revolution was only three hundred years old. Give it a million, give it a billion more. And God? Still hidden, even from this powerful mental brotherhood, still out of reach?"

- From Mr. Sammler's Planet by Saul Bellow, which was published in 1970. 

Bellow is the only novelist to win three National Book Awards [The Adventures of Augie March, Herzog, and Mr. Sammler's Planet.] 

He won the Pulitzer Prize for Humboldt's Gift.

Next on my re-read list will be either Herzog or Ravelstein.

They Knew How to Start TV Dramas in the Sixties

 


Wednesday, April 02, 2025

He Was Doc Holliday

 Cultural Offering called it: the best Val Kilmer movie of all time.

Perfect casting.

An Evergreen Topic: What's Happened to the Liberal Arts?

 


Many Thanks!

I am heartened by the responses to my "Old School" Substack post.

Will it be easy to turn things around? Nope. But few turn-arounds are easy.

Keep in Mind

 "If you treat everyone as though they are hurting, you will be treating the majority of people in the proper manner." 

- Zig Ziglar

Seneca Gets Screen Time

 


The minute I saw this trailer, I began wondering what Rick Georges - FutureLawyer, poet, author of the book below - and thus a Seneca fan - will think of it.



What Happened to Black Swan Europa?



It's a pity that Black Swan Europa is no longer posting.

A good blog about the madness in Europe is needed right now.


[Photo by Stephen Meslin at Unsplash]

Williamson and Ravikant on Human Nature