Fausta's blog

Faustam fortuna adiuvat
The official blog of Fausta's Blog Talk Radio show.

Thursday, August 31, 2006

The Duke rape case, and today's articles from Maria

Witness for the Prosecution? The New York Times is still victimizing innocent Dukies:
The accuser first claimed rape while in the process of being involuntarily committed to a mental-health/drug facility as a danger to herself or others. Soon after her release to the hospital for a rape exam, she recanted the charge. Then she re-recanted and offered a succession of wildly inconsistent stories.
Durham in Wonderland and Liestoppers are covering the case.

Speaking of the NYT, Villanous Company's on timeswatch

At the blogs
Check or Checkmate? Death by Cop on the Global Stage

Today's articles from Maria
THE SIMON WIESENTHAL CENTER & THE WORLD TRADE CENTER SURVIVOR'S NETWORK ARE PROUD TO ANNOUNCE: A GROUNDBREAKING PANEL DISCUSSION COMMEMORATING THE FIFTH ANNIVERSARY OF THE WORLD TRADE CENTER DISASTER, Wednesday, September 6, 2006, 5:30 pm. Click on the link for more information.

THE WILL TO WIN: DOES THE WEST STILL HAVE IT?

History Claims Her Artwork, but She Wants It Back

Mark Steyn: Homeland security can't get over the pump

A book review: INSIDE: LIFE BEHIND BARS IN AMERICA

Kool-Aid drinking Republicans
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In a lighter mode:
5 things to like at the Princeton Plainsboro Teaching Hospital
, a.k.a the setting for House, M.D.
1. Hugh Laurie: great actor, looks good when scruffy.
2. Each episode has a beginning, a middle, and an end.
3. The weird medical conditions you fervently wish you'll never even come near.
4. The local flavor:
Brian Singer must have been reading about the Princeton Hospital's move to Plainsboro.
The "hospital" building in the titles is the rear facade of the Frist Student Union on the PU campus.
They show nice views of Lake Carnegie.
5. It's filmed in LA, so we're not stuck with traffic delays here in town. Heavens knows we were stuck in traffic when these guys were in town.

The new season starts next Tuesday September 5 at 8PM.

In other showbiz news, Clive Owen's on the cover of GQ.
Update More showbiz: All of the sudden I feel old, very old.

Wednesday, August 30, 2006

The definitive words on three stories:

Hitchens: Plame Out

Dorothy Rabinowitz on JonBenet

Sigmund, Carl and Alfred on Hurricane Relief, Part One, Part Two, and Part Three.

Bonus: Maxed-Out-Mama on Violence vs. Reason

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On conversation

The hypothesis on why men's lives are more difficult nowadays post is still bringing comments, and yesterday Rocket Girl said,
this post reminded me of an article in Maclean's (a Canadian news/current events magazine) a while ago in which the person being interviewed suggested that people like Oprah are responsible for the death of conversation, particularly in terms of the way men and women relate to each other. I think there is more than a little truth to it.
The article is Q&A with essayist and author Stephen Miller, Kenneth Whyte's interview with Stephen Miller, author of Conversation: A History of a Declining Art.

Miller believes that conversation, not talk, but face-to-face conversation, is good for you. In Hume's words,
it's good for your psyche, you're going to be more stable, steady, and you also get more pleasure out of life.
There are many impediments to good conversation these days:
1. we're flooded with electronic interruptions
2. families don't feel it's necessary to have dinner together, when the dinner table's the one place where most of us learn how to converse
3. many people can't seem to differentiate confrontation from conversation
4. we're all trying to come out ahead rather than listen.

Not that this is new: back in the 18th century, Swift was complaining "Good conversation is not to be expected in much company, because few listen, and there is continual interruption".

While Miller talks about the "Oprah-ization of conversation", where
SM: . . . And then people have to get away from this notion that conversation is autobiographical and you support somebody for their view of life. No, it's not autobiographical. When you go to the conversable world you leave your personal, your inner life, somewhere else. That's hard for people. We live in a world where everybody is psychological, and so I think a lot of women in particular see conversation as, you say something and then the other person . . . you share something and the other person is supportive.

KW: Supportive, yes. It's like the Oprah-ization of conversation.
SM:
Absolutely. I think it makes conversation impossible, because when people use the word "share" -- after all when you share some food with someone the person isn't supposed to say, "Oh, thanks for giving me this pie, but it's terrible, I don't like it" -- it just casts a blanket of excessive politeness on the conversation, and then disagreement is seen as a personal attack.
Oprah certainly doesn't bear the load by herself. Before Oprah there was Sally Jessie, and Donahue, and others. Nowadays we have truly awful programs like Survivor, The Apprentice, The Real World, Big Brother, and The Surreal Life where horrible, dysfunctional people come out ahead by being truly obnoxious. One can even find a horrible person, such as Omarossa, from one program (The Apprentice), in another program (The Surreal Life).

I watched for the first time the Surreal Life on VH1 while on the treadmill yesterday and I needed a shower afterwards, least of all from the excercise - even when I only watched for a few minutes. It is one dirty, awful show. The Omarossa woman treated one of the housemates, named Janice, most despicably. I can only hope the whole thing was staged. That is the kind of programming teen-oriented channels like VH1 are serving nowadays. Update: Just as I was posting, Maria sent this article on MTV's legacy of glorifying for a young audience the eternal adolescence of the cheap, the vulgar, and the flashy over the good, the true, and the beautiful.

Indeed, programming like that is yet another reason why parents should never give up conversing with their children. In the dreadful-no-man's (and woman's) land of "reality TV", only the Rolloffs stand out as nice people conversing with each other.

Political chat shows have done their part in the desintegration of conversation. I don't know if many of you remember the old David Brinkley show on ABC on Sunday mornings, but Sam Donaldson, Coky Roberts and George Will managed to converse with each other and with other people week after week without resorting to the verbal WorldWideWrestling-type of abuse one finds in most political programs. Stephanopolous simply doesn't have the depth of a skill conversationalist.

Which I why I've become recently addicted to The Sanity Squad's weekly installments. The (Sane) Fab Four (yes, go ahead, groan), Pat Santy, "Siggy" of Sigmund, Carl and Alfred, "Neo" of neo-neocon, and Shrinkwrapped manage to converse about the issues of the week in a way that manages to bring sense to the news.

David Brinkley would approve, even when the (Sane) Fab 4 are not physically in the same room at the same time, and it's taken four shrinks to come out with a good conversation.

Another thing about a good conversation is that it doesn't necessarily have to be a long conversation. You can converse for five minutes and enjoy a challenging, pleasant exchange of ideas with an interesting person, and you can be bored into making imaginary to-do lists when talking to a drone that carries on for hours.

One good setting for conversation with new people is a good book group. By good, I mean a group that focuses on discussing the book itself, and not your feelings about a book. With some books, such as Lolita, is it near-impossible not to, but there are many interesting books out there, as long as you stay away from chick-lit.

I'm glad September's around the corner. Book group's starting again.

Update, Friday, September 1 Survivor strategy
Ultimately, though, these shows are about more than the tackier aspect of popular entertainment. They are about the surrounding culture. The therapeutic ethos of recent years has encouraged each of us to get every thought off our chest, lest we suffer from the ordeal of civility. Think of all of those college orientation games in which freshmen are urged to be utterly honest about their feelings toward people of other races, religions and sexual orientations; those "trust building" exercises that are supposed to encourage open communication among business colleagues; those tell-all memoirs that dominate the best-seller lists; those day-time talk shows that spew personal family details; those grief counselors who flock to disaster sites and instruct victims to talk about their feelings over and over.

We mock the "repressed" denizens of 1950s America or Victorian England for keeping their feelings to themselves. But as Mr. DeGraff notes, there is a "dark side" to human psyches. We cannot root out the possibility of race-based loyalties from our innermost thoughts. But we need not encourage them either. And we can surely suggest that some things are better left unsaid.
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The bacteria of stupidity, and today's articles from Maria

The bacteria of stupidity
According to the Jerusalem Post yesterday, Mr. Hamad told his fellow Palestinians to dismiss Israel's responsibility for the growing state of anarchy and lawlessness in the Gaza Strip. He said it was time for the Palestinians to embark on a soul-searching process to see where they erred. "We're always afraid to talk about our mistakes. We're used to blaming our mistakes on others. What is the relationship between the chaos, anarchy, lawlessness, indiscriminate murders, theft of land, family rivalries, transgression on public lands and unorganized traffic and the occupation? We are still trapped by the mentality of conspiracy theories -- one that has limited our capability to think."

I pray for this man's safety after he said such a sensible thing in such a lunatic place. But what takes his comments beyond a brave, local wisdom to a shrewd global insight was his epigrammatic conclusion: "We have all been attacked by the bacteria of stupidity." "We have lost our sense of direction and we don't know where we're headed."
Dr. Sanity posted on this the other day. Here's a missive from the infected: Full Text of Pres. Ahmadinejad's Letter to German Chancellor
I have no intention of arguing about the Holocaust. But, does it not stand to reason that some victorious countries of World War II intended to create an alibi on the basis of which they could continue keeping the defeated nations of World War II indebted to them. Their purpose has been to weaken their morale and their inspiration in order to obstruct their progress and power. In addition to the people of Germany, the peoples of the Middle East have also borne the brunt of the Holocaust. By raising the necessity of settling the survivors of the Holocaust in the land of Palestine, they have created a permanent threat in the Middle East in order to rob the people of the region of the opportunities to achieve progress. The collective conscience of the world is indignant over the daily atrocities by the Zionist occupiers, destruction of homes and farms, killing of children, assassinations and bombardments.
After reading that, one wants for a hot washcloth and lots of antibacterial soap. As Maria put it, "Only Mike WALLACE can truly enjoy reading of this 'gem'!"

And people wonder why homeschooling is taking root: California's forced conversions
In case you missed the stunning news, Schwarzenegger has signed a new law that effectively tosses out all sexual moral conduct codes at colleges, private and Christian schools, daycare centers and other so-called educational facilities across the state.

The law requires all businesses and groups receiving any form of state funding - even if it's a grant for one student - to condone homosexuality, bisexuality, transsexuality and God knows what else.

There are no exceptions - not for other religious beliefs, not for personal moral convictions, not for health reasons, not even for the possession of something increasingly rare in the Golden State, common sense.
Random thoughts on the passing scene, from Dr. Sowell.

The obituary for Vladimir Tretchikoff

John Batchelor's radio show is going on hiatus. While I very very rarely listened to it since it starts at about the same time I go to bed, it'll be sorely missed. I hope he guests on Kudlow.

The Math Was Complex, the Intentions, Strikingly Simple

CNN.com to replay 9/11 attacks coverage

What is history for?

At the blogs
A Mom and her blog has a picture of the calm before Ernesto.

The ACLU protests the blessing of a school.

More blogging later.

Tuesday, August 29, 2006

Winning the anti-American hearts and minds

At Al-Jazeera: Winning Arab hearts and minds (emphasis added)
Someone else in the Americas seems to have the secret formula for achieving that goal; much more quickly and cheaply.

Hugo Chavez, the Venezuelan president, found himself at the centre of Middle Eastern politics when he announced that he was withdrawing his most senior diplomat from Israel, the Venezuelan charge d'affaires in Tel Aviv. Not for something Israel did to his country, but for what it does to Palestinians and Lebanese thousands of miles away.
For that, Hugo, the charismatic-leader-helping-the-poor-offering-free-health-care-education-adult-literacy-and-job-training-initiatives-that-help-millions-of [insert country name here]tm du jour, is being awarded his appropriate place in the souvenir shop:
In Gaza and Ramallah in the Palestinian Territories I am told that next to Arafat's and Che Guevara's posters, a new poster of Chavez is being added.
At least we're clear as to what it takes to win some anti-American hearts and minds.

Al-Jazeera knows that anti-Americanism sells and wants you to believe that
This solidarity with Arab causes is widely shared by most Venezuelans, and also by most Latin Americans, especially the poor. Many marched in the streets of Caracas and other cities in Venezuela - as well as in Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay, Colombia and elsewhere - to show solidarity with the Lebanese and Palestinians in their plight
But not so fast:
Whatever the consequence of Chavez's uncompromising position with Israel, it is evident that it embarrassed Arab leaders, as none of them cut or even downgraded ties with Israel despite all the massacres its army has committed in Lebanon and Palestine.
And then there's the matter of Hugo's closeness with a few pesky Persians
They surely do not like his closeness to Iran, which is seen by many as trying to spread its influence over the Middle East.
As indeed it does: last April 15 I quoted Majlis Speaker Gholam-Ali Haddad-Adel (article from the Islamic Republic News Agengy no longer on line) who,
Pointing to strategic position of Iran and Venezuela in the region, he said, "Venezuela can play a role to link Iran with Latin American states while Iran can also be a good mediator for Venezuela's more connection with the Islamic world and the Middle East."
The Al-Jazeera article concludes by saying that Hugo's popular with the Arab guy-in-the-street and asks "Would there be a "Chavez of Arabia" just like the legendary "Lawrence of Arabia"?"

We'll find out soon enough.

For now we have to settle with watching Hugo's billion-dollar grand tour canvassing for Venezuela's seat on the UN Security Council, where it would definitely impede sanctions against Iran's soon-to-be available nuclear weapons. Hugo's just left Malasia (whose former PM was just saying that something has to be done against the United States); terrorist-sponsor Syria's the next stop.

Just last week Hugo was visiting Fidel for a second time. As Elephants in Academia said,
A clandestine dash to Havana on the eve of his five-day trip to China with no published photos suggests that Mr. Chavez thought Mr. Castro might well not be alive on his return--and that Mr. Castro was in no condition to be photographed
While mercifully we were spared images such as these, I fully expect Leftists everywhere to blame Castro's demise on Pres. Bush.

Too bad Hugo doesn't fly commercial airlines. He'd have enough award miles to buy a complete set of Louis Vuittton luggage.

In another part of the world, government-owned France2 news has been flooding the airwaves with Katrina coverage: for the past three evenings it has dedicated over 1/2 hr of air time to Katrina. Last evening's was time for Nelle ORLEANS /QUARTIERS PAUVRES (New Orleans: THE POOR NEIGHBORHOODS, in French, 18 mins into the program).

The publisher of Le Monde, Jean-Marie Colombani, who on September 2001 had the "We're All Americans Now" editorial, has been misquoted repeatedly by those who believe that America squandered the world's sympathy after the Septembet 11 attack. In that editorial Colombani specifically said But the reality is perhaps also that of an America whose own cynicism has caught up with. . . Might it not then have been America itself that created this demon? The myth of squandered sympathy is simply that: a myth.

France2 in particular is relying on Katrina, a story a year old and 5,000 miles away because:
1. It's cheap and easy: send a correspondent to drive around the place and use stock footage. It sure beats going to where the action actually is like these three guys have done.
2. It feeds the anti-Bush rethoric. No hurricane ever did any damage until Bush came along.
3. It segues on the global warming angle. Hurricanes didn't exist prior to global warming.
4. It tells any Frenchmen that might be contemplating leaving France in search of economically greener horizons that the USA is a flooded hell-hole.
5. It diverts attention from serious endemic problems in France, such as
As Fred Barnes said the other day, "The last time the French did right with the US was when Lafayette came over".

Don't expect otherwise.

After all, Hugo and Jacques share a common vision, and the French wanted to know the secret to winning seven elections in a row.

Ponder that when you hear news about French troops helping out with the peacekeeping.

Update Please vote for this post at Real Clear Politics.
Thank you.

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Monday, August 28, 2006

Quinceanera's sorrows

******* FULL SPOILERS AHEAD *******

Quinceañera is a movie that a lot of people are going to hate, each person for a different reason, while missing the entire cultural subtext altogether:
1. Mexicans would see it as glorifying two teens who've made the worst mistakes they could make.
2. Gays won't like the gay characters.
3. People against illegal immigration will be questioning the immigration status
and at the same time the general public would have missed half the picture. It's as if Titanic had told the story of how the ship sailed right past the iceberg.

First, the good: Emily Rios as Magdalena and Chalo Gonzalez as her great-uncle Tomas are excellent. Jesse Garcia as Carlos delivers an outstanding, award-worthy performance.

And now for the rest:
The movie's in English and Spanish with English subtitles. I went to the matinee on a rainy afternoon and not one person in the sparse audience other than myself understood what was going on: they chuckled at inappropriate times. While the subtitles were accurate, the actors' delivery gave the dialogue meaning, which those not fluent in Spanish missed.

The entire movie takes place in Echo Park, LA, an up and coming area. Like the neighborhood, the Mexican people in the movie - all bilingual - are starting to break through to middle-class status. Magdalena's boyfriend's taking advanced placement exams and his parents expect him to go to college. Her cousin Eileen, the first quinceañera in the movie, comes from a family that can afford a beautiful new gown designed and sewn by Emily's elegant and talented mother, and arrives to her party in a Hummer limo. Magdalena's great uncle Tomas, who sells chaparrado in the neighborhood, has been living in Echo Park for 28 years on a property that's sold to a gay couple who are restoring their newly-purchased home.

Magdalena's father is the pastor of a small community church. He also works as a security guard and her mother wears scrubs so I assume she works as a healthcare worker. The family has only two children.

What this would mean in the real world is that
a. The pastor of a small church like that, along with his family, would be under intense pressure and scrutiny to lead exemplary lives. Magdalena's pregnancy would have been a disaster because the father would have lost all credibility as pastor. One very important reason why Evangelical churches have taken root in Latin America is that their pastors strive to live exemplary lives: they're out to show that they are better than the Catholic church. This is not a moot issue.
b. The small family size is a rarity and means that the parents have abstained from having more children, most probably for financial reasons, i.e., so the family can get ahead.
c. Magdalena's pregnancy would be calamitous from the religious and economic standpoint, but also as a failure of their parenting. Her parents would realize every day that it'd mean that she's going to drop out of school, possibly never to graduate, working in low-paying jobs forever, struggling to get child support from a man who didn't even have intercourse with her. The movie doesn't touch on what a bitter disappointment it would represent in the long term.
There is not one word coming out from Magdalena's family as to whether the two teens should be forced to marry.

Apparently the movie also has the title Echo Park, and Magdalena's pregnancy echos that of thousands of single Mexican girls in similar circumstances who are sentencing themselves to lives of penury.

Clearly, while Mexican teenage girls have very high pregnancy rates, Magdalena's not the average Mexican girl.

Neither is her cousin Carlos, who gets seduced by his great-uncle Tomas's landlords, Gary and James, both of which wear wedding bands. After Carlos has an affair with Gary, Tomas gets served with an eviction notice. At least the movie shows the calamitous effect this has on Tomas.

Carlos, who sports the tats and clothes of a gang member, apparently dropped the gang when he dropped out of high school (or possibly the gang expelled him for being gay?). The movie shows that Carlos's father threw him out of their home for being gay, which is exactly what would have happened in real life. While Carlos talks of getting a job in show biz, he loses his real job at the car wash by vandalizing James's car (the police never show up so one's led to believe that James never called them - most unlikely, for sure). Carlos's prospects are as grim as Magdalena's, and would have been equally dismaying to his successful parents.

To his credit, Jesse Garcia's outstanding portrayal of Carlos manages to bring out great humanity and depth of feeling to what otherwise would have been a slacker and petty criminal.

Injecting surrealism to the scene, Magdalena doesn't even get pregnant the usual way, giving ocassion for her religious father's acceptance of the "miracle", but also to her boyfriend's suggestion that "if it's a boy we can name him Jesus" (a joke that went lost in the audience, since Jesus was pronounced in Spanish), not that that prevented him from skipping town.

The happy ending has Magdalena wearing a new maternity gown, Carlos escorting her, as they promenade out of a Hummer to Magdalena's quinceanero while the Triumphal March plays on. While the ending couldn't possibly be more contrived and ironic, the NYT bought the whole multi-culti enchilada
But it believes in its characters enough to leave you feeling that they will not only survive but also flourish.
What I would like to see is Treintañera, with an exhausted, world-weary 30-yr-old Magdalena trying to come up with the resources needed to celebrate her 15-yr-old's birthday. For now, all that Carlos and Magdalena can celebrate at this point is regaining the acceptance of their parents. Let's hope that will help them in the future.

Only those blinded by the "dazzling, multicultural diversity of the vibrant, inclusive, robust, colorful" Echo Park neighborhood will buy into the story of how these two intelligent, appealing teens set themselves up to lifetimes of sorrows in spite of their families' best efforts.

Other links: Official website
Quinceañera: Just Dishonest Propaganda
Quinceanera Quackery
Quinceanera - Poster Boy

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Update: In a lighter vein, Geoffrey Chaucer looks at Serpentes on a Shippe! (spoylerez)

Birds on parade, how-to-videos, and today's articles from Maria

Hitchens's bird
Hitchens Gives the Finger to Maher's Audience for 'Frivolous' Jeering of Bush

More birds: Maynard vlogging
Steve has it.

Way to go, Jack!
Keifer gets the Emmy. Jack's campaigning.

Via Not Exactly Rocket Science, Gene Simmons hails Israeli soldier

People of taste will have to hire large people in overcoats to stand in front of the ads and block them from view. (h/t: Francis Porretto, who just joined Reform Club)

Today's articles from Maria:
The Cult of Soros

YouTube, Not me

How to Kill a Westerner

Why Britain Stopped the Terror Plot

Back to the basics: What the modern day feminist movement can learn from the suffragists
Radical feminists have forgotten the roots of feminism. They have distorted the term so much that many young women shy away from it, refusing to label themselves as feminists. They have reduced "women's issues" to an incessant debate over reproductive rights, complaining about fictional forms of oppression ad nauseam in the process.

Worst of all, throughout all their complaining, the feminist movement ignores the plight of women around the world. Feminists from Hillary Clinton to Code Pink have even gone so far as to say that Iraqi women were better off under Saddam Hussein. Better off under an oppressive dictator? That hardly sounds like a voice of justice and equality for women.
Treat inmates with respect, prison staff are urged...

Soviet Ghosts Haunt the World Council of Churches

First Saint Christopher, now Pluto: Pluto gets the boot

How open borders turn Americans into roadkill

Press release: http://www.prweb.com/releases/2006/8/prweb426068.htm

My father had a mild form of aphasia: Can she see it in his eyes?

Via Beth, Careers and Marriage

A recipe: Salmon cakes

How-to video time!
Salud! How to make a Balsamic Vinegar Martini
Good manners whie eating bait: How to eat sushi
I can't have any, but here's How to make naan bread
Yet another reason to have bare wood floors: How to clean coffee from a carpet

Update
SPECIAL THANKS TO TOMMY FOR FIXING THE RSS LINK!!
Hurah for Tommy!

Update 2
What, no Katrina post or items?
Nope.

Friday, August 25, 2006

"The blog is fried" grieving process

I got up this morning, checked the stats for http://faustasblog.com and found over 7,000 visitors yesterday, a new record, and 300 by 7AM. So I did a post and then when I went to view the blog itself, I found these words of doom:


BANDWITH LIMIT EXCEEDED

The server is temporarily unable to service your request due to the site owner reaching his/her bandwidth limit. Please try again later.




Apache/1.3.37 Server at http://www.faustasblog.com/ Port80
The grieving process started at exactly 8:15AM:


Denial and shock: At first, it may be difficult for you to accept the death
It can't be! Just when I'm starting to get good volume! And I had 53 good comments on one post yesterday! No! No!

Anger: During this stage the most common question asked is "why me?".
Actually, this stage went more like this: AAAARRGHHH!!
$^#&% &%&$*!!! &*%&$* Blogger!!
When given some social support and respect . . .
In a panic, I email several friends who turned out to be at least as clueless as myself. I called another friend who actually makes a living on computer stuff and who turned out to be the same. Then I emailed The Cotillion ladies, and was invited to post there. I reposted the post that got all the traffic this week, A hypotheses on why men's lives are more difficult nowadays.
. . . you will eventually become less angry and able to move into the next stage of grieving.

Bargaining: Many students try to bargain with some sort of diety.
I emailed blogger. Read through the Blogger site to see
1. what the bandwith limits are
2. how to increase them.
Found absolutely nothing. What kind of idiots are they? Shouldn't the purpose of a free site be to entice people to actually buy the product? Is Google making so much money they don't need to SELL??
[See update below]

Guilt: You may find yourself feeling guilty for things you did or didn't do prior to the loss. Forgive yourself. Accept your humanness.
Went to typepad and opened new blog. Should have done it earlier. Reposted the post I had done on Blogger.


Depression: You may at first experience a sense of great loss.
The whole thing is FRIED! FRIED!


Loneliness: As you go through changes in your social life because of the loss, you may feel lonely and afraid.
And all those visitors will never come back! And my links! And the meter! Noooo!


Acceptance: Acceptance does not mean happiness. Instead you accept and deal with the reality of the situation.
So now I'll have to tell everybody about the new address. Peachy.


Hope: Eventually you will reach a point where remembering will be less painful and you can begin to look ahead to the future and more good times.
I"ll blog some more. . . on Monday.


(crossposted at The Cotillion)



UPDATE, Saturday August 26: SmadaNek enlightens the clueless:
Fausta,
The bandwidth limit is imposed by your web hosting provider, not Blogger.
They usually impose either hourly and daily limits, depending on how much you signed up to purchase.
Forgive me, Blogger, for I have sinned.

Update: Don't miss The Carnival


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My brother and The Anchoress

When my brother and I were little my brother was given one of those toys that safety regulations have relegated to the Antiques Shows of history: a splendid set of carpenters' tools - real tools, only in 1:2 scale - in a wood case. Among the tools included were a real hammer, chisel and a small wood saw. (In case you're wondering, we thrived and our fingers and toes remained intact, thank you). We used to live in a house with a front porch, and a few steps bordered by a ledge where Mom planted some flowers, that faced the front lawn.

One day I was playing in the front yard while my brother, who at the time was not old enough to go to school yet, was in the porch sawing a small wood board with his new saw. All of a sudden I tripped, fell down, and busted my upper lip and scraped my face and arm on the ledge. My brother witnessed the whole thing. He got my mom, who immediately got me in the house and summoned iodine, band-aids, ice pack, and comfort. After I stopped crying my mother heard a banging noise coming from the porch. Alarmed (the tool set wasn't exactly her idea), she ran to the porch and found my brother banging the ledge with his hammer.
She asked him, "Why are you doing that?"
and he replied, "Because it hurt my sister."

I remembered that incident yesterday when I read The Anchoress' post Affection for the protector lads and He-men:
in thinking about this 25 year old picture, and men in general, I realized we don't think of men as "protectors" any more
Men like my brother are born protectors.

The Anchoress' son Buster, who concurs with my post on men, has been watching TV and
Much of pop culture causes him to get aggrivated, these days, but nothing does so more than the way men are served up to the national psyche by Madison Avenue.
Anyone who's read a story knows that adversary relationships further the plot, and that sex sells. That's why we're still paying good money to go to Shakespeare comedies like Taming of the Shrew and Much Ado About Nothing, whose plots go like:
antagonism -> sexual attraction -> surrender.
Hardly surprising, then, that Madison Avenue and everyone flogging a script injects the first two every time they get a chance. Not being Shakespeare, they tend to omit the third, the result being that we, the public, are bombarded with little (ads) and big (movies, plays, soaps) stories portraying relations between men and women as inherently adversarial.

The 'women are inherently better than men' meme gets a lot of mileage because/from that. In either case, the message is that men are wrong in being what they can not help but be: being men.

The Anchoress remarks,
It's a shame that our society seems interested only in the softer, more feminine sides of a man, or in making a man into a buffoon.
As I was saying the other day, men are not hirsute women with different plumbing. Additionally, men are not bufoons and will resent you and avoid you if that's what you believe.

Men want to protect women.

Be glad they do.

The Anchoress, whose two sons are definitely protectors, says,
As capable as I am, I am happy to know that I am under their protection, and their father's.
Amen to that.

My brother and I by the guilty ledge.

Update, Monday, August 28: Visit man-o-pause, "Providing Midlife Men a Place to Breathe".

Update, Saturday September 9 In honor of three protectors

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The ambulance hoax, and today's articles from Maria

As Barcepundit said, "Another piece of propaganda that would have worked perfectly if it weren't that the traditional media no longer monopolizes access to information": The Red Cross Ambulance Incident: How the Media Legitimized an Anti-Israel Hoax and Changed the Course of a War

Today's articles from Maria
Arabs' last chance
REVIVING OUR 'THIRST FOR BLOOD'

Germans, Spared Until Now, Awaken to Reality of Terror Threat. Spared? What about Munich, 1972?

Time with your kids - the music of life

Dr. Sowell writes on The left and crime (part 1) part 2

More articles later.
Tony Blankley's asking Are Bush's critics right?

Intellectually curious George

The pedophile next door

Why the world hates America

A link to the INCREDIBLE ADVENTURES website.

Sigmund Carl and Alfred points the way to The new group therapy for the American male: Lawn Chair Drill Team

Fist Saint Christopher, now Pluto (hat tip Daniel

Thursday, August 24, 2006

Chavez in China

(with apologies to those who hate aliteration)

Hugo's on schedule trying to buy Venezuela a seat in the UN Security Council (yet another reason to shut down the UN), and is now visiting China:
Chavez arrived in the Chinese capital on Wednesday with plans to sign agreements to boost China's investment in oil-rich Venezuela with joint projects in petroleum, telecommunications, farming and railways.

He also proposed an ambitious target plan under which Venezuela -- the world's No. 5 oil exporter -- will almost quadruple its sales to China, which wants access to Latin American energy supplies to fuel its booming economy.
At the same time that a Chinese newspaper notes mistrust of the Chavez visit, Chile continues on the path to prosperity by signing free-trade pacts not only with the US, but also with China.

Meanwhile, in Venezuela Accompanied by a donkey, a popular Venezuela comedian on Wednesday signed up as a candidate to challenge Hugo Chavez in presidential elections, and addiitonally, there appears to be a serious candidate for the opposition.

The campaign season promises to be interesting: Venezuela News and Views posts on a chavista coming out of the fascist closet.

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Summer comedies: Three quick reviews

SPOILER ALERT

Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest: Must see!
Johnny Depp is outrageously funny, and, while the movie is a little too long (whatever happened to the 1 1/2 hr action/comedy movie?) there are laughs and thrills aplenty. The cannibals' island got so much stuff you almost expect King Kong's dinosaurs to burst into the screen. The only minus is that this is the second part of a trilogy. The plus is that Keith Richards will be playing Jack Sparrow's dad in the third part, and it makes you want to go back for more.

Funniest sequence: Jack Sparrow's shishkebbab's drop down the cliff. Wilie Coyote would be envious.

Funniest line: "*Alas*, my children! This is the day you shall always remember as the day that you almost... {{{SPLASH}}} ...Captain Jack Sparrow."

Warning: There are shiploads of really scary monsters so real-little kids might not want to stay in the theater. Two little kids (twins?) had panic attack and beat a path to the door while we were there.
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Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby: Funny, but not because of Ricky Bobby who's too tiresome and obnoxious. NASCAR racing looks like fun if it didn't involve having to watch for hours to no end when you're at the actual racetrack.

Sasha Barron Cohen, however, steals the show as Jean Claude Girard (pronouncing his name to sound a lot like Jean Claude CHIRAC), a "formoola EHN" French driver who rides his way to the top of the NASCAR tour in a Perrier car.

Biggest surprise: Gary Cole's (Ricky Bobby's dad) lost a lot of weight.

Funniest line: "You taste like America!"

Warning: Coarse language coming from smart-aleck obnoxious kids, and from grownups, too. Sexual situations, too.
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Scoop: Up to you.

Woody Allen has been beating us with the same shtick for nearly five decades now, and, after a series of thuddingly dull movies where he miserably attempted to be Ingmar Bergman, he's back to trying to be entertaining. The plot is not surprising, but at least follows a five characters-three acts format.

Minus: Lots of Woody on screen doing his usual.
Plus: When Hugh Jackman's on screen, you don't notice Woody. Or nothing much else.
Added pluses: Charles Dance, and Mr. Swearengen himself, Ian McShane, when Hugh's not on screen.

Plus: Scarlett Johansson.
Minus: Scarlett Johansson wearing clothes that came from What Not To Wear rejects, and sounding like Judy Julie Kavner.

Minus: Lame plot.
Plus: Lots of really nice real estate, and London locations.

Warning: A chick flick in whoddunit clothing. Bring a woman friend and discuss Peter Lyman as a prospective mate.

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Wednesday, August 23, 2006

Hezbollah and counterfeiting, and today's articles from Maria

At the blogs
Dan Riehl has the story on Hezbollah And Counterfeiting

Remember the political cosmetics? Well, Conservative women are consumers, too, and The Cotillion is on a roll.

Right Wing Sparkle's first vlog!

ACLU To Defend War Desserter, Lt. Ehren Watada
Judge Taylor Who Struck Down Wiretap Case Accused Of Conflict Of Interest

This probably means I better celebrate my birthday a day or two early.

The National Review, promoting free trade?
We live in the age of miracles indeed: The awful effects of American protectionism.
The End of Free Trade


Forget the World Bank, Try Wal-Mart

Today's articles from Maria
Point of no return?
Even ruthless conquerors of the past, from Genghis Khan to Adolf Hitler, wanted some tangible gains for themselves or their nations -- land, wealth, dominion. What Middle East fanatics want is the destruction and humiliation of the west.
Read it all.

It isn't fanaticism, it's evil

Hizbullah: Zionist regime will be destroyed

A War of Images

War protest growing. IDF reserve soldiers, bereaved families want political, military leaders to resign in wake of war

Lebanon warns missile attacks on Israel will be seen as collaboration with enemy

Bush: 'Urgent' need for Lebanon security force

Letters to the Editor: REFUSING TO PROFILE MEANS 'DEATH BY PC'

Many Lebanese fear next conflict will be with Hezbollah

Heavenly dog: Jazz funeral for pets lost to Katrina

A boy genius who played his numbers just right
Maths geniuses sum up the odd

Ozone hole stable, say scientists
Leading scientists in the United States say the hole in the ozone layer of the Earth's atmosphere above the Antarctic appears to have stopped widening.
I'm glad to hear that my former co-worker Juan's overuse of hairspray didn't have a lasting effect.

China pours £70bn into rescuing its water supply

NEW WRINKLE IN SUNSCREEN

Don't Believe That Lying Telephone

Via Jay, There Is No Right To Aid Terrorists

I stand corrected

Sunday I was saying that, if it's Scotch, it's whisky. I sent the Public Editor of the NYT an email saying exactly that.

Here's their reply,
To: "Fausta"
Subject: 8/21 OPE Response Re: Venezuelas Cup Runs Over, and the Scotch Whiskey Flows
From: "Public/NYT/NYTIMES"Alert
Date: Mon, 21 Aug 2006 15:44:54 -0400

Dear Fausta Wertz,

Thanks for writing. I thought you might like to see the paper's stylebook entry on "whiskey":

whiskey(s). The general term covers bourbon, rye, Scotch and other liquors distilled from a mash of grain. For consistency, use this spelling even for liquors (typically Scotch) labeled whisky. Also see alcoholic beverages.

Sincerely,
Joe Plambeck
Office of the Public Editor
The New York Times

Note: The public editor's opinions are his own and do not represent those of The New York Times.
Wait until the Scots hear that one.

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Children and salvation

Back when I was pregnant years ago I watched a movie on TV, Miracle in Rome, based on a story by Gabriel Garcia Marquez, which had the theme that children are the salvation of their parents. I haven't watched it again, but the movie left a deep impression, particularly because of the timing.

Children are the salvation of their parents. Frequently we don't realize this, but it is true.

That is why every day millions of parents around the world work three jobs to send their kids to good schools, mortgage their houses to meet college tuition fees, donate blood and kidneys and blood marrow so their children can survive, stay awake at night taking care of sick kids, and do the millions of tasks that parents willingly do. Any good parent gives their life for their child: as Father Paul Nellis explains,
people like those we all know, people living good lives by doing the little things day after day that good people do: Loving your spouse, trying to be a good parent, doing your duty. We are surrounded by such people but tend to take them for granted. Often, they're no further away from us than the next room.
And yet we find parents who have completely abrogated their responsibilities: Yesterday Sigmund, Carl, and Alfred mentioned this post The Academy Awards, Pan-Sexuality, Narcissism, & Loneliness, which refers to The Cuddle Puddle of Stuyvesant High School. Few things leave me speechless, but that article did.

A "cuddle puddle" represents a total failure of all the adults that those children interact with on a regular basis. Each and every adult who cares for those kids has failed as a person.

Why?

A "cuddle puddle", which NY Mag describes as the "social rituals of the pansexual, bi-queer, metroflexible", i.e., "cool", kids, is this:
Alair is headed for the section of the second-floor hallway where her friends gather every day during their free tenth period for the "cuddle puddle," as she calls it. There are girls petting girls and girls petting guys and guys petting guys. She dives into the undulating heap of backpacks and blue jeans and emerges between her two best friends, Jane and Elle, whose names have been changed at their request. They are all 16, juniors at Stuyvesant. Alair slips into Jane's lap, and Elle reclines next to them, watching, cat-eyed. All three have hooked up with each other. All three have hooked up with boys - sometimes the same boys. But it's not that they're gay or bisexual, not exactly. Not always.
Never mind whether they are gay or bisexual. The entire thing is wrong in every way. What about VD? statutory rape laws? Will the "puddle" stop with the first lawsuit?
What's the difference between that and an orgy? that you go to class afterwards? or doesn't anyone care? ShrinkWrapped asks,
The article includes all the usual points: These are a small group of kids, many from broken homes, with exaggerated notions of teen angst, pushing the limits; they are closer to the "cool" kids than the nerds; their parents don't understand them or feel they can control them; worse, some parents condone their behavior because they are ex-Hippies themselves, free spirits who would not want to impose their old fashioned notions of morality on their kids. One marvels at this. Isn't transmitting notions of moral behavior one of the essential jobs of parents?
Yes, it most certainly is. The ex-Hippies and free spirits, who can not impose "old fashioned notions" on their children are all-accepting; all-accepting of practices that can kill the soul. They, in their all-acceptance of anything but moral behavior, have negated the values of a free society. But they are not alone.

There's the acceptance in the Western World, in the name of multiculturalism and who knows what else, of societies that indulge into what for most of us is inherently revolting, aberrant degeneracy: the weaponization of children. Children suicide bombers, children witnessing public acts of unspeakable barbarity, children used as shields during gun battles, and the corpses of handicapped children (link in French) used as (warning: graphic images) death porn in a propaganda war.

Only a monster could conceivably do that; only people with a broken moral compass would support those like her. I, like Dr. Sanity, ask,
Why did we sit by and do nothing as this evil that lies like a malignant shadow across the face of the world slowly spread?
As Siggy said, the value system of a free society is much different than the value system of a society that is not free.

Gagdad Bob explains,
At bottom, what the [6th] commandment is emphasizing is that life is sacred - it is of infinite value; therefore, do everything you can to honor and protect it. Clearly, not all cultures do so. Some, as in so much of the Muslim world, worship death, not life. And this inversion is reflected throughout these sick cultures, in that they are "fruitless." That is, they produce nothing but misery, both to themselves and to others. They produce nothing for the body, i.e., no medicines, no new ways to produce food; they produce nothing for the mind, i.e., no science, no translations of books, no freedom of inquiry; and they produce nothing for the spirit, i.e., only the spiritual shackles of their medieval death cult.

Most soul murders are undoubtedly committed by those who are already so spiritually damaged as to be functionally dead. These undead souls such as a Nasrallah, an Arafat, or an Amahdinejad, speak to us from "the other side," from the shadow world that is created when the soul has been so damaged that it essentially exits the body, leaving only a human animal in its place. But other demonic energies rush in to fill the void, so that the individual becomes a sort of "antihuman." At their core, they are filled with unbearable envy toward the living, and the only way they can assuage this envy is to kill and kill plentifully. Life is a reminder of their own walking death, hence, "death to Israel," that primordial symbol of life: l'chaim.

The undead also cannot help converting their children to their way of non-being. In ways both subtle and profound, they will interact with their children in a pathological manner, causing the children to internalize the same virus that afflicts their parents. Regardless, the virus always goes by the name of "love," which simply further confuses the child. In the end, they will not be able to distinguish the difference between love and hate or truth and lies, any more than they can distinguish between life and death.

Sigmund, Carl and Alfred (emphasis added):
When we are in a family unit or a community that negates our 'humaness' and capacity to grow and reach ever higher, we negate the value of family unit and community, because we negate the value and potential of the individual. If a community cannot value it's own children, it should come as no surprise that that community will not value the life of others.

One cannot experience the inner peace of real faith in God if one is consumed by hatred of others. Those who claim God is merciful and all powerful, and at the same time, call out for and participate in mayhem and destruction in His name, have been cheated. They know nothing of God, even as understood in their own faith. They are caught in a vortex of denial they have created for themselves and they have painted themselves into a corner, from which most are unlikely to emerge. They cannot conceded the truth that is readily apparent to everyone- in attempting to define and distinguish themselves, they rejected the values of life and embraced the values of death.

Now, they have no where to go. They are indeed, dead souls.
Dead souls who have sacrificed the only thing that could save them: their own children.

Update: Please vote for this article at Real Clear Politics
and don't forget to visit The Cotillion, where it's also cross-posted.

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Tuesday, August 22, 2006

A hypothesis on why men's lives are more difficult nowadays

As I've mentioned before, I'm not a shrink, and (as I'm sure that regular visitors to this blog have noticed) I'm not a deep thinker. The following post is only my personal observations over an issue that's come up recently. Take it with a grain of salt.

In yesterday's post I said
I've felt for a long time that women have easier lives than men. Being a man in today's world strikes me as a most difficult position
A friend wrote asking for clarification of both points.

The main reason I believe that women have easier lives than men is that I've had an easier life as a woman than my brother has had as a man. I can not, and will not, go into details, so you'll just have to take my word on this. However, I have a hypothesis on why men's lives are more difficult nowadays

There are three main trends why being a man in today's world strikes me as a most difficult position:
1. The Church of Oprah
2. Sex and the City
3. Teen girl media
The Church of Oprah
One of the central tenets of the Church of Oprah is that women are inherently better than men. A corollary of that is that women are more nurturing than men.

This point of view has been erroneously based on the fact that men are not women.

While the women's movement might want to believe that men are hirsute women with different plumbing, they are mistaken. No matter how they cut it, one fact remains
Men are not women, and women are not men.
That doesn't mean they have nothing in common, either. A former Oprah protege has made piles of money - has actually created an industry - out of the premise "men are from Mars and women are from Venus" (if you want to look it up, knock yourself out, I'm not linking to it). Nonsense. Women and men are made of the same clay. Just because men are not women doesn't mean they come from another planet.

Jeff Foxworthy has said "Men are simple creatures. They want a beer, and they want to see something naked" which, if you ask the average Joe, is true. Let's divide Jeff's statement in two parts and see what this means, in Oprahspeak:
a. "they want a beer": men don't like to talk about their feelings. In fact, the more you insist that a man discuss his feelings at length, the more he will resent you. Since the Church of Oprah is based on confessional feelings, this invariably leads to problems among its adherents. Rather than fill six verbal pages of conversation about his feelings, a man will rather sit down, have a beer and enjoy a moment of emotional peace and quiet. That's what Jeff means by "they want a beer".

b. "they want to see something naked": they do because it's in their wiring. As Ron White put it, "once you've seen a naked woman, you want to see them all."
Men and women have been having sex with each other without love for as long as there've been men and women. However, while I have known two severely emotionally damaged women who truly loved men and not desire them, I've never even heard of a man who did not desire the woman he loved. A man may not love a woman he desires, but a man can not not desire a woman he loves. That's just the way it works.
(see also this gentleman's comment)

Let's look at 'women are inherently better than men'. If you believe that, you are WRONG. Virtue and character are inherent on each person, and gonads do not determine either; never have, never will.

Similarly, women are not more nurturing than men. Men don't want to talk about being supportive and loving but they are.

For every manipulative and abusive man, there is an equally manipulative and abusive woman. The form of the manipulation and abuse may vary between the genders, but neither gender has the exclusive on that. Having attended an all-girls' school for eleven years, I'll dare say that women can be much more worse (pardon the grammar) at both manipulation and emotional abuse, and many indeed are.

Additionally, many many women believe that men can't feel as deeply as women, since men generally don't verbalize hurt, grief, and despair (and I'd even say that the more deeply they feel those, the less they can verbalize them). Again, that is incorrect. Gonads do not determine the quality of a soul. Compounding the impression that many women have about men's feelings is the fact that many men can only express the depth of their despair through violent means (and I'm most certainly not justifying the violence, which is wrong no matter what), which in turn becomes more fodder for the daily installment of the Church of Oprah.

So we have a whole industry (network and cable TV, magazine, books, seminars) propagating the idea that women are inherently better than men. That's factor #1.

Sex and the City
Factor #2 is what I call the Sex and the City syndrome: the assumption that the only reason for men's existence is to pleasure women. The 4 women in S&TC certainly spend most of their air time using men (I did a related post a while ago) for that purpose and that purpose only. And in real life, too, there are many such women, probably a lot more now than there were a generation or two ago.

The end result is that many women nowadays won't want to find intimacy. No matter how great a guy is, if he comes across a woman who will not want intimacy - no matter how great the sex - that relationship can not progress beyond that. A man who wants commitment and yearns for a reciprocal relationship will be setting himself up for hurt and disappointment if he thinks he can survive in a relationship with a woman who will not surrender herself to his love, or, equally as damaging, if he can not recognize that she is incapable. That's factor #2.

Teen girl media
Factor #3 I just noticed recently, and is related to factor #2.

The salon where I get my manicure used to carry the usual women's magazines, such as Vogue and Good Housekeeping, but in the past few months they've had a large number of teen girls' magazines, among them Seventeen, and magazines supposedly marketed to young adult women, such as Glamour, Jane and Cosmopolitan. Since I'm well past their demographic and there are no teen girls in my home, I hadn't read any of those for literally decades.

I was in for a huge surprise.

Seventeen gives a lot of sex advice, not just on birth control, but on how. Glamour, Jane, and Cosmo might be marketed to women in their early twenties but I assure you that when I was 12 years old (way before Jane was concieved) I was reading my neighbor's older sisters' Cosmos at their house. In a recent issue of Jane, for instance, there was clear and explicit advise on how to perform oral sex, and how and where to have sex in public. The subject of the articles is not much different from what Gerard Van der Leun was editing back when he worked for Penthouse.

If you believe I exaggerate, read what (according to the NYT article The Taming of the Slur) Atoosa Rubenstein, editor of Seventeen magazine, has to say:
"Today, 'slut,' even 'ho' - girls use it in a fun way, a positive way," said Atoosa Rubenstein, the editor in chief of Seventeen magazine, adding that a phrase such as "you little slut" has become a way for girlfriends to bust each other's chops.
As Betsy Newmark asked,
Does this strike anyone else as really a sick sign of where we are in our society?
The net result, as The Anchoress points out, is that many young men are finding
that intimacy has been defined downward, especially for our young girls, to mean little more than a "hook-up." This is something Buster talks to me about. Children, but especially girls, are being sexualized at ever-earlier ages. The sexual messages begin very young in television commercials and on the clothes-store racks, and most of Buster's generation grew up watching Friends and Sex in the City and thinking that this was what life was: a series of sexual encounters with no emotional attachments, no repercussions, no pain, no loss of oneself.

Sexualized early, many girls are either overly jaded or mistrustful and remote. Buster says a troubling number of girls his age are sexually hyper-active, but unhappy and lonely - they cannot make good, healthy connections with respectable young men, because they don't "get" the guys who open car doors for them and who look for a relationship to be about more than a "hook-up" or perfunctory oral sex. (A romance recently busted up because Buster wanted a real relationship, and the girl, a nice-enough kid, simply did not know what that meant!)
In conclusion, if these three factors don't make men's lives more complicated than they already are, I don't know what would.

I'm opening comments on this post, for the first time in several months.

Postscript: A note to V.:
If you are reading this, here's what I have to say:
Anyone that calls you at work to break up with you not only doesn't deserve you, but is a bad person. Character is everything and that person has proved to be bad.
The pain that you postpone by getting back together will only be a down payment on the pain you'll be feeling years down the line. As your dad said, you're setting yourself up for an encore.

Update Maxed-Out Mama:
by banishing the word "virtue" from our publicly acceptable vocabulary we women have rendered ourselves incapable of recognizing virtue in a man
Read every word.

Related post: My brother and The Anchoress

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Monday, August 21, 2006

The invisible suburban matron is now a security mom

Back in the olden days, women with children who didn't live in big cities or in the countryside were referred to as suburban matrons. The suburban matron lived (obviously) in the suburbs, was married to a man, was middle-aged, had children and drove a Chevy station wagon.

The word matron, while implying a certain frumpiness, also conveyed a meaning of dignity and an established social position. It carried a frisson of classiness and stability. Then came the 1960s and 1970s and the social upheaval of the times rejected the appeal of belonging to a group of middle-aged women of the establishment. The frisson was gone.

The Chevy station wagon was replaced by Volvos, Toyota and Honda mini-vans, and SUVs, including the Chevy Suburban, for the matron-on-the-go. Bras were burned, frequently by those who most needed them, and it took a village - rather than a traditional couple - to raise a child.

Additionally, to the baby boomers, with their fixation of holding on to eternal youth, the notion of belonging to the middle aged is anathema. Never mind that around the world, life expectancy is now around age 65 for men and 70 for women. That means that one qualifies as being middle aged by the tender age of 32 1/2 years or by one's 35th birthday, depending on one's gender.

The suburban matron, while continuing to exist, became invisible.

Ever since, social observers have been trying to come up with a term to describe the particular demographic group of middle-aged suburban mothers married to men, much like myself. First came The Stepford Wives movie, which even got remade. More recently, there were the soccer moms. Now we have security moms.

I had to read the WaPo article to find out what they meant by the latter. After all, any five year old will tell you that moms are security-minded. It turns out security moms are suburban matrons that worry about terrorism. A cliche is born.

All cliches considered, I've felt for a long time that women have easier lives than men. Being a man in today's world strikes me as a most difficult position. And men are not free from being typecast, either: there are the NASCAR dads.

At least that sounds more fun than being referred to as the man in the grey flannel suit, a.k.a., organization man.

Update: Lileks reviews the Fifties, the decade when "Adolescents were young grownups, expected to adhere to the same general rules of behavior".

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Old dads, Jessie rides again? and today's articles from Maria

In praise of old dads:
I disagree with this statement: Fatherhood, I Now Learn, Is a Young Man's Game. Good things happen at their time, and his kid is lucky to have him as a dad.

At the blogs
From a coronation to an election in just ten days
NewsMax says that Hugo Chavez Gets U.S. Handouts

NE Intelligence Network's Official Statement Regarding Debbie Schlussel's Legally Actionable Allegations against the Northeast Intelligence Network, via Emily

Today's articles from Maria:
Jessie rides again?

Rev. Jackson offers to negotiate Middle East prisoner swap. As Maria said, in a rare show of sarcasm, "Oh, thank you Allah! Finally we have a really wise politician who will sacrifice his precious time to save the Middle East..."

Another trophy patient:
A few days ago, SC&A was saying about an "artist",
Of course, every now and then there is the "dream patient," the one who is so nuts that even the best, most somber and professional therapist can barely contain themselves. They want to treat that patient, just for the bragging rights
Here's another one for you, Siggy, for Pricasso has met his match: It's art, says the naked woman who'll hug a dead pig on stage.
She calls it art, I call it crazy.

More from Maria
Thuggery & Trickery: How Islamic terrorists manipulate the media

2006 Tropical Storm Season Now Below Normal

FRIENDS FOR LIFE, TODAY AND THEN

MOMENT OF TRUTH

UK ExpoIslamia features suicide-bombing advocate. Aim of 'Call to Humanity' convention: To present Islam to Muslims, non-Muslims in clearest form

Another display of depravity and cruelty: Mother of 2 faces death by stoning. Petition to Iranian authorities urges clemency for 34-year-old 'adulteress'

Hostage: The Jill Carroll Story - Part 5 : Mujahideen movies

Obits of the rich and famous: Princess Tatiana von Metternich

Surveilling Injustice

Joseph Farrah looks at Israel's terminal illness

Olmert's government will fall, says Jumblatt. Lebanese leader: Hezbollah 'victory' will bring down Israeli PM, embolden terrorists

I hope this isn't true: Controversial Muslim group gets VIP airport security tour. Feds show CAIR latest screening steps, sensitive counterterrorism procedures

Here's Jimmy Carter's SPIEGEL Interview. The worst president in US history goes abroad to lay yet another egg, as if he hadn't done enough of that domestically.

In the dog house: 'Love triangles' leave dogs feeling jealous

A video: Brazilian unhinged preacher of the very young sort. I pity her otolaryngologist.

Mutants in the woods? 'Hybrid Mutant' Found Dead in Maine

Can You Beat Cellulite? Maybe with a stick, but don't count on it.

Carnival Time
The Carnival of the Insanities


Useless waste of time:
Via Merri Musings, Park the car

Sunday, August 20, 2006

Sunday blogging: Whiskey is not Scotch

In today's NYT, an article about the boliburgesia in Venezuela: Venezuela's Cup Runs Over, and the Scotch Whiskey Flows.
Purists and Scots around the world roll their eyes: if it's Scotch, it's whisky.
-------------------------

Today's camera phone photo: Bunny


Update Wait until the Scots hear this!

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