3.11.2024 – if taxes go up

if taxes go up,
I’ll live, if democracy …
it goes down? I won’t!

Based on the line, “I used to be a middle-of-the-road Republican. Nowadays, I think of myself as a Scoop Jackson Democrat — and my views have barely shifted. If my taxes go up, I’ll live. If my democracy goes down, I won’t.

As expressed by Bret Stephens, an Opinion columnist for The Times, writing about foreign policy, domestic politics and cultural issues, writing in the weekly column, The Conversation (with Gail Collins) titled And the Award for Best Performance at the State of the Union Goes to … March 11, 2024 in the New York Times.

3.10.2024 – on the level sand

on the level sand
between the sea and land … what
shall I build or write

Based on poem XLV. Smooth between sea and land in More Poems by A.E. Houseman, (New York, Alfred Knopf, 1936)

Smooth between sea and land
Is laid the yellow sand,
And here through summer days
The seed of Adam plays.

Here the child comes to found
His unremaining mound,
And the grown lad to score
Two names upon the shore.

Here, on the level sand,
Between the sea and land,
What shall I build or write
Against the fall of night?

Tell me of runes to grave
That hold the bursting wave,
Or bastions to design
For longer date than mine.

Shall it be Troy or Rome
I fence against the foam,
Or my own name, to stay
When I depart for aye?

Nothing: too near at hand,
Planing the figured sand,
Effacing clean and fast
Cities not built to last
And charms devised in vain,
Pours the confounding main.

3.9.2024 – at times seems there are

at times seems there are
no national principles
just partisan ones

I recently read the New York Times Opinion Essay, This Prophetic Academic Now Foresees the West’s Defeat by Christopher Caldwell.

Mr. Caldwell is a contributing Opinion writer and the author of “The Age of Entitlement: America Since the Sixties.”

The “Prophetic Academic” in the headline is one Emmanuel Todd, who is, according to Wikipedia, a French historian, anthropologist, demographer, sociologist and political scientist at the National Institute of Demographic Studies (INED) in Paris. His research examines the different family structures around the world and their relationship with beliefs, ideologies, political systems, and historical events.

The article itself was interesting in its gloom and doom for the United States and it had many interesting points, it was one short paragraph that had me take notice.

Mr. Caldwell writes that Mr. Todd has said:

Fighting a war based on values requires good values. At a bare minimum it requires an agreement on the values being spread, and the United States is further from such agreement than it has ever been in its history — further, even, than it was on the eve of the Civil War. At times it seems there are no national principles, only partisan ones, with each side convinced that the other is trying not just to run the government but also to capture the state.

At times it seems there are no national principles, only partisan ones, with each side convinced that the other is trying not just to run the government but also to capture the state.

At times it seems there are no national principles, only partisan ones.

I grew up in a time there WHERE principles that transcended politics.

At my Church there were both Republicans and Democrats as members of the congregation.

Can’t see that much today it seems.

I cannot imagine two sides of the same party being members in the same Church let alone, opposite parties.

Well, for a least one party one section of the Church.

(According to Pew Research More than eight-in-ten of this one group of voters who attend religious services frequently (85%) voted for this one feller in the most recent election.)

Mr. Caldwell also writes that Mr. Todd says: “… educational progress has brought educational decline, because it has led to the disappearance of those values that favor education.”

I don’t know quite what to do with this.

I had to read a few times to get to the understand the point.

It reminds of something John Cleese once said along the lines of you to have be smarter than you can be to understand how stupid you really are.

You have to have national principles to understand just how fair we have fallen from having national principles.

You have to have values, shared values to understand just how fair we have fallen from having any shared values.

And that’s where we are.

Hard to see any comeback.

3.8.2024 – vexatious world of

vexatious world of
people were whole world, would not
enjoy it at all

If the vexatious world of people were the whole world, I would not enjoy it at all.

But it is only a small, though noisy, part of the whole; and I find the natural world as engaging and as innocent as it ever was.

When I get sick of what men do, I have only to walk a few steps in another direction to see what spiders do.

Or what the weather does.

This sustains me very well indeed, and I have no complaints.

From a letter to Carrie A. Wilson, May 1, 1951 in the Letters of EB White ( New York : Harper Collins, 2006)

Port Royal Sound to Broad River – South Carolina

3.7.2024 – reconnecting us

reconnecting us
simpler, more joyful times are
spirited back to life

In the article, Don’t mention the war … and the rest: the trouble with bringing back Fawlty Towers by Brian Logan in the Guardian, works towards the point of why and the problems inherent in revivals of classic comedy.

Comedy that is so often discussed and then closed off, “They couldn’t do that today.”

And if they try to do it today, how would some of the comedy be made politically correct.

As I write, the Department of Veteran’s Affairs are and are not in the process of removing the famous Life Magazine photo of the Sailor Kissing the Girl in White on VE day (by Alfred Eisenstaedt who said he notice the sailor and saw the Nurse and hoped for the best) as the photo is of forced perhaps unwanted contact.

I don’t know what to say about that but I digress.

I was struck by the line in the article where Mr. Logan wrote:

What they made clear is that these theatrical jaunts down memory lane aren’t primarily about making us laugh.

They’re about nostalgia,

about reconnecting us with our younger selves.

What you lose of the surprise on which comedy depends,

you gain in the golden glow of recollection as simpler,

more joyful times are spirited back to life.

I can relate to this statement as I DO have a younger self that had a pretty good time on earth and I can get a golden glow recollecting simpler more joyful.

I have to understand that not everyone does.

Just one more way I have been lucky in this lifetime.