28 April 2008

Book Reviews













Lisa and I went to Chicago this past weekend, and I had the opportunity to finish a few books.  A couple of them were excellent, so I thought I would share:



Eric Hoffer's The True Believer

The frankness and simplicity of this book is astounding, especially considering the fact that Hoffer was a self educated longshoreman with a third grade education.  I can't say I agree wholeheartedly with his conclusions, but this was among the best reads ever.

Here is a snippet:

On Misfits

The permanent misfits are those who because of a lack of talent or some irreparable defect in body or mind cannot do the one thing for which their whole being craves. No achievement, however spectacular, in other fields can give them a sense of fulfillment.  Whatever they undertake becomes a passionate pursuit; but they never arrive, never pause.  They demonstrate the fact that we can never have enough of that which we really do not want, and that we run fastest and furthest when we run from ourselves.

The permanent misfits can find salvation only in a complete separation from the self; and they usually find it by losing themselves in the compact collectivity of a mass movement.  By renouncing individual will, judgement and ambition, and dedicating all their powers to the service of an eternal cause, they are at last lifted off the endless treadmill that can never lead them to fulfillment.

Ron Paul's The Revolution- A Manifesto.

I picked this up in Chicago on a whim, and read it in a day.  It's a very simple synopsis of Paul's presidential platform (he is running as a republican, but is really a libertarian), and it was very interesting.  Here are a few quotes:

On non-interventionism:
Our friendship with Israel should continue... but no special privileges like foreign aid should be extended.  That means we should also discontinue aid to actual or potential enemies of Israel, which taken together receive much more aid than Israel does.  Only those with a very superficial attachment to Israel can really be happy that she continues to rely on over two billion dollars in American aid each year.

On the Constitution:
Now, isn't our Constitution a "Living Document" that evolves in accordance with experience and changing times, 
as we're so often told? No- A thousand times No! Those who would give us a living Constitution are actually giving us
a dead Constitution, since such a thing is completely unable to protect us against encroachments of government power.

On Abortion:
Americans who care about our fundamental law and/or are concerned about abortion do have some legislative
recourse. Article III, Section 2, of the Constitution gives Congress the power to strip the federal courts, including the 
Supreme Court, of jurisdiction over broad categories of cases. By a simple majority, Congress could strip the federal 
courts of jurisdiction over abortion, thereby overturning the unconstitutional Roe. At that point, the issue would revert
to the states, where it constitutionally belongs. Law rightly reflects the morality of the people.

On Racism:
Peaceful civil disobedience to unjust laws, which I support with every fiber of my being, can be necessary at any 
level of government. Our rights come to us not because we belong to some group, but our rights come to us as 
individuals. And it is as individuals that we should judge one another. Racism is a particularly odious form of 
collectivism whereby individuals are treated not on their merits, but on the basis of group identity.

On Economics and Legal Plunder:
People of all classes, under our current economy, are happy to use the machine of the state, if they can get away
with it, to benefit themselves instead of earning their way in the world honestly. We seek to use the government to
enrich ourselves at our neighbors expense. 70 percent of welfare budgets are eaten up by bureaucracy. Every special 
benefit, on behalf of which hundreds of millions of dollars are expended on lobbyists every year, makes goods more
expensive, companies less efficient and competitive, and the economy more sluggish.

You cannot simultaneously have free immigration and a welfare state.

On Healthcare:
The most obvious way to break this cycle is to get the government out of the business of meddling in healthcare, 
which was far more affordable and accessible before the government got involved. Short of that, and more politically 
feasible in the short-run, is to allow consumers and doctors to pull themselves out of the system through medical 
savings accounts. Those who favor national healthcare need only take a good hard look at our veterans' hospitals. 
There is your national health care. These institutions are a national disgrace. If this is the care the government 
dispenses to those it honors as its most heroic and admirable citizens, why should anyone else expect to be treated 
any better?

On Free Trade:
True free trade does not require treaties or agreements between governments. On the contrary, true free trade 
occurs in the absence of government intervention in the free flow of goods across borders. Organizations like the 
WTO and NAFTA are government managed trade schemes, not free trade.

On the Environment:
A true supporter of private property and personal responsibility cannot be indifferent to environmental damage, 
and should view it as a form of unjustified aggression. Private business should not have the right to socialize its costs 
by burdening others with the by-products of its operations.




18 April 2008

I'm being honest.....swear to Blog.








A few years back, the American Cancer Society was busted for exaggerating the morbidity and mortality rates for breast cancer.  They excused the matter by stating that increased mammogram frequency was more important than getting the numbers right (read:honesty).  With Hillary's stories of sniper fire, and all three candidates plus the Pope skirting the immigration issue (lying by omission), plus politicians spewing crap they don't believe in (ethanol fuel is a good idea- just one example), it makes you wonder what anyone in the public eye would say if honesty was paramount.  I think for one, I would get a rash of emails telling me "dude, your blog sucks, and I only look at the pictures".  Patrick Hall sent me a link to www.Fora.tv.  Click on "think tank", and there is a pretty good assessment of how public figures warp the concept of honesty with relativistic principles. 

17 April 2008

Happy Tax Day!





Yes, I know it's supposed to have been a few days ago, but if you are anything like me, all you managed to file was am extension.  McAvoy sent me a great article that succinctly voices the disgust I feel as I glance left and right in this glorious election year.  Here is a very mild snippet, followed by the link.  Thanks Brett!

Tax day is truly the lone bipartisan day of the year. We all hate it equally. It's a day that liberals can agree with Ronald Reagan, who said, "High taxes and excess spending growth created our present economic mess. More of the same will not cure the hardship, anxiety and discouragement it has imposed on the American people."

It is also a day when conservatives can agree with John F. Kennedy, who said, "I see no magic in tax dollars which are sent to Washington and then returned. I abhor the waste and incompetence of large-scale federal bureaucracies...."

So, in the spirit of bipartisanship, let me attempt one simple tax policy argument. Lower the corporate income tax.


http://www.cnn.com/2008/US/04/14/beck.taxday/index.html

12 April 2008

Robin R. Groff- April 4,1977-April 11, 2008


I learned today that our friend Robin Groff passed away last night after a 3 year battle with Leukemia.  Robin recorded the last 3 years of her life in journal entries on her web page.  Her story is one of unbelievable strength and courage.  I will miss her, and am relieved that her suffering is over.  Click here to see a slideshow created for her last year.  Her website and journal are found here:www.robingroff.com .


It also seems fitting to post these links.  If you haven't seen these videos, they are wonderful. 


11 April 2008

Big Race Tomorrow!


Okay, I know... short notice.  But better late than never! 
No excuses.   You might tell me "I haven't trained". My response is "neither have I, friend".  My advice if you haven't put the miles in -  push a stroller.  It's a great cop-out.  Besides, with the money going to the Fit America Now program, it would do you some good the show those youngsters a good example.
  The Power Ranch 10k tomorrow will be great- with or without you..... hopefully with you.  Unless you're a jerk, in which case you should stay home.
In summary, all persons not present at the run tomorrow are jerks.  As you can see, it's the only logical conclusion.

Check out www.pr10k.com or www.fitamericanow.org.  See you there!

09 April 2008

Post Barrage

New chapstick label design at the office.



I felt like I needed to post a few things to get this kicked off.  Hopefully it will spur some interest or conversation, but if it doesn't, thats fine, too.  Talk soon!  

Adventures in Potty Training





My kids are killing me lately.  I have a late start day one day a week.  I usually just follow my kids around and wonder at them.  It's completely different than getting home in the evening and seeing them when they are at their most exhausted.  The photos above are months old, but I'll recount a few stories from today.


Poppy waddled downstairs this morning bleary-eyed and with her afro in full-effect.  She stumbled toward me, and then stopped short "oh- I geth I need a new pool-up".  Waddles away to the kitchen strips her diaper off, tosses it in the trash, waddles back into the living room in a tee shirt, grabs a new pull-up,  and pulls it on like underwear.  The kid changes her own diapers, but refuses to pee in the toilet.

Lisa was baking cookies today, and burned herself as she was pulling the cookie pan out.  She dropped the pan, screamed "OH........" and bit her tongue before she said something regrettable. Poppy shouted "Shit!" and finished her sentence, and Avery (so well trained) jumped up and yelled in a tattle tale tone "Oh Poppy- you just chose your bedtime!". 


Why I Love My Mac


I am a recent convert, but love how intuitive and problem-free my MacBook is.  Plus, going down to the Apple Genius Bar at the mall is almost fun.  A blast compared to sitting on the floor in Forever 21 for half an hour with a book.  Its a far cry from the experiences I used to have with my PC.




Resonance Explained




I posted the slideshow of images titled "resonance" the other day, and then spent the rest of the week trying to figure out how to post MP3's.  Being a neophyte blogstalker is hard work.  I have always been interested in Quantum Mechanical Theory.  Classical/Newtonian Physics, to anyone that has studied it even a little, describes a very dreary, mechanical, rule-bound universe.  Quantum Theory, while equally systematic, begins to unfold a Universe that is vast and wonderful.  Models like the Zero Point Energy field, non-locality,  and Holography create a sense of how small our understanding is of the grand plan set in motion for our benefit.  

When the pioneers of Quantum Mechanics made their discoveries, they individually responded in a strange way.  Pauli turned to Qabbalah, Niels Bohr consulted the Tao and other Chinese philosophy, Schrodinger looked to Hinduism, and Heisenberg read Plato's Republic and other philosophical texts.  As they felt the implications of what they were discovering in their research, they began to recognize that what ancients teachers had been saying thousands of years before.  They recognized that their discoveries could be the "unifying Theory"- the concept that reconciled Darwinian / Newtonian Science with Spirituality and the concept of a Creator.

I am currently reading Lynne McTaggarts The Field.  It's a fascinating review of the research supporting Quantum Mechanics.  The book's title refers to the Zero Point Field- a fascinating concept that McTaggart explains as the medium of "The Holy Spirit".  I highly recommend it.
It's listed in my book list (right column).  You can click on it and the ink will take you to Amazon.  You can probably also find it on www.daedalusbooks.com or www.alibris.com.

06 April 2008

Resonance