Weekly Digest: May 26, 2013-June 1, 2013

  • How the Creative Class Created

    Quite fascinating : Nikola Tesla typically worked from noon until midnight, breaking at 8:00 p.m. for dinner every night at the Waldorf-Astoria. Among the many peculiarities of this ritualized repast was his practice of not starting the meal until he had computed his dinner's cubic volume, "a compulsion he had developed in his childhood." Truman Capote, who wrote lying down in bed or on a couch, refused to let more than two cigarette butts pile up in an ashtray and "couldn't begin or…

  • Scandal Watch (More IRS Follies)

    Sigh . . . The IRS has problems with you if you are a conservative group that wants to apply for tax-exempt 501(c)(4) status. By contrast, the IRS has no problems whatsoever with itself when it wants to spend money like it is going out of style . 88 IRS employees have documents related to the investigation of the IRS's targeting of conservative groups. Remember that this story is allegedly only a "so-called scandal,"  and remember as well--as the CNN story points out--that the initial…

  • The Ghosts of Lincoln and Douglas Weep

    It's bad enough that the presidential election process in Iran consists of having hardliners eliminate reformist candidates so that the former can hold on to power without having to actually bother to steal the election (though 2009 showed quite clearly that hardliners are entirely willing and eager to steal an election if that is what it takes to hold on to power). It's even worse that the interaction amongst the candidates who are allowed to run makes it extra special clear that the Iranian…

  • Scandal Watch (The Saga that Won't End)

    The latest: The IRS targeting of conservative groups is only a "so-called scandal"  in the eyes of some, who coincidentally, probably don't like conservatives all that much. Equally coincidental, I am sure, those calling the IRS scandal a "so-called scandal" are members of the media, which we are repeatedly assured is never ideologically biased and treats both sides of the partisan divide fairly and honorably. Rich Lowry  points out that the IRS scandal--which really is much more…

  • Scandal Watch (A Continuing Series)

    So, let's review the latest: Concerning the IRS scandal, we learn that Lois Lerner was "directly involved"  in the targeting of conservative groups. This included signing letters that contained " a list of detailed questions of the kind that a Treasury inspector general’s  audit   found to be inappropriate." Organizing for Action is a 501(c)(4), which means that it is supposed to act in a non-partisan capacity when engaging in advocacy. So naturally, the president of the United…

  • A Good Pope

    This is the kind of leader the Vatican so desperately needs and needed in order to win back hearts and minds and in order to overcome the scandals that have plagued the Catholic Church over the past few years: Pope Francis has revealed for the first time the reasons for his decision to shun the official papal apartments and instead live in a much more modest Vatican 'hotel'. He has told a friend that he likes being in daily contact with ordinary people, does not want to be isolated and enjoys…

  • Is This What Iranians Have to Look Forward to?

    The frontrunner in the race to succeed Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as president of Iran is Saeed Jalili. Don't know who Saeed Jalili is? Behold : At his first presidential campaign rally, Saeed Jalili on Friday welcomed the cheers of thousands of young men as he hauled himself onto the stage. His movements were hampered by a prosthetic leg, a badge of honor from his days as a young Revolutionary Guards member in Iran’s great trench war with Iraq. “Welcome, living martyr, Jalili,” the audience shouted in…

  • Quote of the Day

    . . .  The President’s view is not necessarily statist in the sense that everything must come from government. He holds the fairly standard view that markets should be robust, but that market failures and other societal needs require government action. His views about the size of government are of course more expansive than that of most readers of this blog, but they are not out of the mainstream: they summarize the standard progressive position. Yet it is not this antinomy between large versus small…

  • Is Our Deficits Shrinking?

    President Obama claims that they are. Keith Hennessey has a better grasp on the facts : CBO projects that  under current law  we would have a deficit of 4% of GDP for 2013, meaning that our debt/GDP will continue to rise. CBO further projects that  under the President’s budget  we would have a deficit of 4.2% of GDP for 2013, slightly higher than their projected deficit under current law. President Obama’s words:   Our deficits are shrinking at the fastest rate in decades. Translation 1:   The…

  • Is Obamacare Affordable?

    There has been some celebrating on the port side ever since stories like this one came out, indicating that premium costs associated with the Affordable Care Act--Obamacare--are, well, affordable . We are to believe that  [b]ased on the premiums that insurers have submitted for final regulatory approval, the majority of Californians buying coverage on the state's new insurance exchange will be paying less—in many cases, far less—than they would pay for equivalent coverage today.  And while a…

  • People Who Are Against Genetically Modified Foods Are Ill-Informed, and Willing to Let Millions Starve to Death

    Read all about it . And remember the port side's insane, completely unjustified opposition to genetically modified foods the next time that someone tells you that the American left and center-left has some kind of monopoly on respect for science and the scientific method. Oh, and be sure to watch the video : Anyone really surprised to find out that members of the anti-GMO crowd are unbelievably uneducated, completely weird, and boast at least one individual who refuses to vaccinate her kids because of…

  • I for One Welcome Our New Robot Therapists

    Soon, we will have virtual therapists . I presume that there will be options to install Jungian or Freudian programs in specific therapist models. Query: Will the virtual therapists smoke virtual pipes during sessions? Will top models come equipped with Austrian accents?

  • THIS Is "Austerity"?

    Paul Roderick Gregory begs to differ with the notion that Europe is in the grips of austerity: The Keynesian stimulus crowd blames austerity for the world’s economic woes without bothering to examine facts. I advise them first to consult my colleague at the German Institute for Economic Research (Georg Erber,  I See Austerity Everywhere But in the Statistics ), who, unlike them,  has actually taken the time to examine the European Union’s statistics as compiled by its statistical agency, Eurostat.…

  • Nice Work If You Can Get It

    $156,000 a year for eating my fill and napping for two hours in the office before I go home? A $1,400/month food allowance? Where do I sign up ? Some labor supporters think that the decline of the labor movement is due to evil conservatives and their evil ways. But perhaps they should contemplate the possibility that labor's decline is due to the fact that the talent pool in the labor movement is not what it used to be.

  • Tumbling 'Round the Intertubes--May 27, 2013

    1. The Urban Dictionary makes it to the courtroom . 2. A Franco-American Memorial Day commemoration . 3. Yes. Let's . 4.  Since this links to a spoiler FAQ, you obviously should not read it if you want to avoid spoilers. But you  should  read it if (a) you don’t care about avoiding spoilers; and (b) you want to laugh so hard that you pull a gut muscle or several.

  • Some Good Economic News, for a Change

    We have been so used to bad economic tidings ever since the onset of the financial crisis that it is hard to remember what good news reads/sounds/looks/smells like. But courtesy of Tyler Cowen , we have some cause for optimism: THE state of the economy is far from ideal, but some very definite positives are brewing. It’s not just that we are continuing to recover from a deep recession; we are also seeing signs that America’s long-term future may be looking up, too. The case for optimism is  hardly…

  • Couldn't Have Titled It Better Myself

    "The secret to immortality: Be a lobster, avoid bisque."

  • Reforming the D.S.M.

    I am no expert on mental health issues, so I don't know whether objections to the D.S.M. are all that valid, but this article struck me as being very interesting: When Thomas Insel, the director of the National Institute of Mental Health,  came out swinging  with his critiques of the American Psychiatric Association’s  Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders,  a couple of weeks ago, longtime critics of psychiatry were shocked and gratified. Insel announced that that the D.S.M.’s…

  • Quote of the Day

    So to the indifferent inquirer who asks why Memorial Day is still kept up we may answer, it celebrates and solemnly reaffirms from year to year a national act of enthusiasm and faith. It embodies in the most impressive form our belief that to act with enthusiasm and faith is the condition of acting greatly. To fight out a war, you must believe something and want something with all your might. So must you do to carry anything else to an end worth reaching. More than that, you must be willing to commit…

  • Tumbling 'Round the Intertubes--May 26, 2013

    1. We are doomed . 2. Anyone really surprised by this ? 3. Have I mentioned recently that we are doomed ? 4. I mean, seriously, we are doomed .