Daily Archives: February 6, 2010

Climate Scientist to Colleagues: Don’t Dismiss Climategate

February 6, 2010
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Climate Scientist to Colleagues: Don’t Dismiss Climategate

The 13th Annual Energy & Environment Conference, held in Phoenix Feb. 1-3, isn’t the sort of place where global warming “deniers” are exactly welcome. In fact, by my observations, the skeptical caucus at the event consisted entirely of: James M. Taylor, a senior fellow for environment policy at The Heartland Institute; Keith Lockitch, a fellow of the Ayn Rand Center for Individual Rights; and me. All the other attendees spent their time discussing how the U.S. government — or, even better, a “global government” — needs to compel us all to live “greener” lives through schemes like cap-and-trade. Environmentalists are a bossy and power-hungry lot. Lockitch gave a presentation arguing free-market economies are better positioned than socialist societies to deal with any severe weather events caused by climate change — and was called a “denier” and compared to a shill for “Big Tobacco” for his trouble. Taylor got off a little easier, receiving only scoffs and curious-to-annoyed glances for asking inconvenient questions. But that’s not to say we were the only people to question the assumptions of the attendees who believe the “science is settled” on global warming. Perhaps the greatest challenge came from one of their own — renowned climate scientist William Sprigg — who urged

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TCM Thrillers (February 8 – 14)

February 6, 2010
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TCM Thrillers (February 8 – 14)

This week: * Monday—Gregory Peck gets beached, Burt Lancaster gets benched. * Tuesday—William Holden wants out. * Wednesday—Peter Finch is as mad as … well, you know. * Thursday—Victor Mature must decide which is worse, tribal insularity or hungry dinosaurs. * Friday—Clark Gable converts Hedy Lamarr to baseball. * Saturday—Jack Nicholson gets too nosey and nearly loses it—his nose, that is. * Sunday—Richard Widmark gets the point—a dozen times. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Monday—February 8th 3:15 AM—On the Beach (1959) After a nuclear war, U.S. sailors stationed in Australia deal with the end of civilization. Cast: Gregory Peck, Ava Gardner, Fred Astaire. Dir: Stanley Kramer. BW-134 mins, TV-PG, CC, Letterbox Format 6:00 PM—Seven Days in May (1964) An American military officer discovers his superiors are planning a military coup. Cast: Kirk Douglas, Burt Lancaster, Fredric March. Dir: John Frankenheimer. BW-118 mins, TV-14, CC, Letterbox Format ———- Tuesday—February 9th 5:00 AM—Poltergeist (1982) Evil spirits abduct a suburban family’s daughter causing chaos and havoc. Cast: Craig T. Nelson, Beatrice Straight, Dominique Dunne. Dir: Tobe Hooper. C-115 mins, TV-MA, CC, Letterbox Format 10:00 PM—Stalag 17 (1953) A cynical serviceman in a World War II POW camp has to prove he’s not an informer. Cast: William Holden,

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The Narrative that Drives American Politics Is Sustained by Culture

February 6, 2010
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The Narrative that Drives American Politics Is Sustained by Culture

In an almost excellent article at the Weekly Standard, Jeff Bergner tells us that the only way Republicans can govern is if they challenge and change the overarching narrative that drives politics.  I say almost, because he unfortunately does what most political commentators on the right do: They acknowledge the powerful influence shaping characteristics of cultural influence professions , but they imply by neglect that these professions will always favor The Narrative of the left. In this paragraph early in the piece he obviously gets how powerful the influences of these professions are on the basic beliefs of Americans on the nature of the American experiment: That The Narrative should move many Republicans as well as Democrats is hardly surprising. It is, after all, pervasive. This is the story presented to children at school by teachers and textbooks all across the nation. And, while the left-leaning American professoriate may think of itself as contrarian or skeptical, it operates in lockstep to offer The Narrative as the official view on virtually every college campus. It is reinforced at every turn by the print and electronic media, in the arts, and in every mainstream avenue of American culture. Granted the title of

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Satirical Mysteries from James Powell

February 6, 2010
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Satirical Mysteries from James Powell

A Pocketful of Noses: Stories of One Ganelon or Another by James Powell Crippen & Landru Publishers Paper: 221 pages ISBN (cloth): 978-1-932009-36-1 … (paper): 978-1-932009-37-8 $42.00 (cloth) … $17.00 (paper) James Powell has hit upon a wonderful conceit: following the changing fortunes of a family of detectives from one generation to the next. In so doing, he can exploit the various modalities into which crime fiction has developed over the past century. Thus we have Ambrose Ganelon the First, the founder of the Ganelon Detective Agency in the tiny Mediterranean principality of San Sebastiano, thwarting criminals using armchair detection methods in the mid-19th century á la Poe’s Dupin; Ambrose the Second employing the scientific methods of Sherlock Holmes at the turn of the century; Ambrose the Third using the two-fisted approach of Chandler and Hammett in the early-20th century — but as for Ambrose the Fourth, he has been forced by straitening circumstance into operating in a manner that is uniquely his own. Powell’s Ambrose Ganelon stories now number nearly three dozen, 12 of which have been collected here. And a fine assortment they are as they take us from one well-imagined historical environment to another — with emphasis

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"Culture is the expression of the guiding philosophy of the day."—Murray Rothbard

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