The Benghazi Talking Points

Steve Hayes wrote an excellent article in the Weekly Standard about the editing of reports describing the terrorist attack in Benghazi, Libya that killed the ambassador and three other Americans. The was obviously done to make the narrative “politically acceptable” to the  administration during a Presidential election campaign. Click on the link if you want to be informed about the story. I expect there will be more information revealed as additional journalists decide they have to put aside their desire to protect President Obama and actually perform as journalists. If you chose to read this postings you will find that I consider the most important question that has not been asked is what did the Commander-In-Chief know and what did he do.   Continue reading

Making America Crazy

Anatomy of an EpidemicPreviously I reviewed the book Overtreated which explains why too much medicine is making us sicker.  Robert Whitaker’s book Anatomy of an Epidemic explains why too much reliance on psychoactive drugs is making us crazier.

This seems like the right time for a book on treatments for mental illness.  With today’s increased public concern about mental illness that leads to violence, evidence that our current treatments may be making the problem worse should worry us all.  On a personal note, I have ties to four people who committed suicide.  All were under doctors’ care when they died and had been for a long time.  That seems hard to accept in the world of modern medicine. Continue reading

Redneck

This is a term that creates a personal emotional response. I’ve heard it referred to describe “ignorant white farmers” who had their lower faces and necks burned red from exposure to the sun while working their fields. Many of my older relatives matched that description, but they were not ignorant. The “intellectuals” who characterized my relatives as “ignorant” would not have a clue how to plant and grow crops while they nourished themselves on food being produced by “rednecks.”

Regardless of my personal reactions, the term has become, according to Wikipedia, to be “…a derogatory slang term…” My relatives were poor, and they probably didn’t keep up with the literature read by “high society.”My observation is that they were hard working people who knew how to grow crops. That knowledge and skills kept the non-productive “intellectuals” from starving. Of course that didn’t stop high society from demeaning the people working in the fields.

Renewable Energy

There were two articles in a recent Denver Post about the wisdom of mandating renewable energy. The first that I’ll mention is titled “A job killer or a job creator” by Allen Best. He mentions that the town of Craig, Colorado was “rocking” with construction of coal-fired power plants. Then the construction crews departed after the Colorado legislature mandated that Colorado must get 20 percent of energy from renewable sources by 2020. That mandate not only reduced the flow of money into the Craig economy; the renewable industry is expected to go to Wyoming and Nebraska to obtain wind resources that are more dependable and cheaper. Continue reading

Copycat

Slate gives a detailed explanation that the origin of this term did not come from “…someone who copies, like a cat, but a jerk prone to imitation.” The article gives references to writers, including Shakespeare, using versions of “copycat.” Constance Harrrison wrote in 1887, “Our boys say you are a copy cat, if you write in anything that’s been already printed.” The term evolved from the word cat being was used in medieval times as an insult based on the idea that cats “…were associated with all sorts of evil and mischief.”

Many Ends of the World

apocolyptic_planet

Craig Childs, who is a commentator on National Public Radio, has written a strange book.  Apocalyptic Planet is primarily a collection of Childs’ extreme treks, each inspired by a different view of what the Earth might become after “the end of the world” as we know it.

Various possible scenarios are represented by Childs’ travels through a desert in Mexico, crumbling mountain glaciers in the Andes, an island remnant of the land bridge that once connected Asia and North America, an arctic research station buried in snow, and other terrains.  The one man-made landscape is a huge corn field of giant plants grown for industrial uses with “leaves so sharp they cut skin and cloth”. Continue reading