The Daily Eudemon
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Monday Miscellany

Twitter Monday

Some weekends get away. That was mine. Between two evening baseball games, a high school graduation, and a wicked hangover Saturday morning (brought on by a mere two beers–is there no justice?), I entered Sunday evening with nothing in mind for Monday’s post. I scoured the Internet, and nothing jolted me into blogging action. Nonetheless, I found a handful of interesting things, so I’m going to rattle them off, Twitter style.

I’m aware, incidentally, that a true “twitter” post allows only 140 characters (including spaces), so these aren’t really “twitters.” By comparison, these posts are practically Tolstoyan. But the term “Twitter” is in vogue, so I’m using it.

Education Secretary Arne Duncan said in April to Denver students: “I think schools should be open six, seven days a week, eleven, twelve months a year.” Link. What’s driving this lust to kill summer vacation for children? The need to keep up with international students? Yes, in part, but it might be more of a leveling thing (the type favored by the Left for centuries, and excoriated repeatedly–and properly–by Russell Kirk):

One issue that doesn’t come up enough in discussions of extending the school year is that doing so is also, fundamentally, an issue of economic fairness. If you believe in equality of opportunity, then one of the most important things the state can do is provide some baseline level of education that seeks to alleviate vast differences of class. But, small though it may seem, one of the most profound ways in which class differences express themselves is over the summer vacation.

This is because wealthy parents can afford to given their children all sorts of edifying summer experiences that downscale parents cannot. And this, as researchers at Johns Hopkins have found, leads to backsliding: Educational advancement across classes tends to be fairly even during the school year. But downscale students actually decline in educational achievement over the course of the summer, while upscale students remain relatively stable.

Bizarre Book of the Month: Absinthe & Flamethrowers: Projects and Ruminations on the Art of Living Dangerously. Perfect for that recent high school graduate in your life!

Funny Conan: “Yesterday President Barack Obama met the King of Saudi Arabia, who kissed Obama twice. Obama says he hasn’t got this kind of treatment since he met Keith Olbermann.” I’m shocked, shocked to find that sexploitation of models is going on in the modeling industry! “She tells the story of a 16-year-old model who complained when a 45-year-old photographer made a pass at her. ‘Her agency said she should have slept with him.’” R-Rated Link. Favorite quote from the weekend’s reading: “[Y]our authors have no position on foreign policy. We only notice that the people who do have them are idiots.” Bill Bonner and Addison Wiggin, Empire of Debt. Favorite headline from the weekend’s surfing: “Galilee communities: We’re not racist, we just don’t want Arabs.” From The Economist: Venezuela’s president, Hugo Chávez, praised “Comrade Obama” for nationalising General Motors and expressed worries that he and Cuba’s Fidel Castro could end up to the right of the president of the United States.

A former senior economist at General Motors and an analyst at Amtrak asks a pertinent question: Is GM the New Amtrak? “Taxpayers are still sinking billions of dollars into Amtrak—almost 40 years after buying it. Economist James Langenfeld says the bailout of GM could be an even bigger disaster.”

Where do I send my check? “[T]he hedge fund advised by best-selling author Nassim Nicholas Taleb is launching a fund that seeks to profit from the return of hyper-inflation. Taleb’s 2007 book The Black Swan warned of the impact of highly improbable events on world markets. US hedge fund Universa, with which he is associated, is now launching the Black Swan Protection Protocol-Inflation fund. It will invest in commodities such as oil, copper and corn and will also “short” government bonds — a bet that makes money when prices fall — in case inflation takes off as it did in the 1970s.” Link. Ah, dang it: But investing with Universa isn’t easy, or cheap: The firm has a $25 million minimum investment requirement, the Journal reports, and rarely accepts investments of less than $100 million. Oh well. I was kinda questioning the whole enterprise, anyway. Kinda struck me as a “strike while the iron is hot” thing.

Modern-day Johnny Appleseeds. I like it: By dead of night, a group of ‘guerilla gardeners’ in the UK are reclaiming urban wastelands, from a ‘huge shrubbery/urinal behind the bus stops on London Road’ to a North London plot ‘filled with weeds, beer cans, and a pool of vomit,’ by clandestinely planting bulbs, bushes, and herbs. As it turns out, the London duo aren’t pioneers, but part of a growing movement.


The critic and erstwhile blogger Lee Siegel, in Against the Machine, a polemic against online habits, makes a list of “five open supersecrets” about bloggers:

1. Not everyone has something valuable to say.
2. Few people have anything original to say.
3. Only a handful of people know how to write well.
4. Most people will do almost anything to be liked.
5. “Customers” are always right, but “people” aren’t. Link.

1: Agree, except to the extent modified presently. 2: Disagree. Every person has a unique take on something, which is why economics and governance from the bottom-up is better than the top-down approach we’re currently saddled with. This is an Hayekian line of thinking, incidentally. 3. Agreed. 4. Disagree. Most people graduated from high school years ago. There’s a difference between courting popularity and showing civility. 5. Not sure how to respond: the first part is a fiction devised by anxious retailers, the second is so obvious it doesn’t warrant discussion.

I’m enjoying my new find, Alan Abelson. Heck, I may even have to re-subscribe to Barron’s (received it years and years ago). On housing, terrorism, and Geitner’s inability to unload his house. Excerpt: “When we look back at the end of 2009, anyone that made positive predictions this year will not believe how far off they were.”

Our family eschews cute names for the human anatomy. I think it’s a good policy, but sometimes, it backfires. Overheard family conversation: Alex (16) and Max (5):

Alex: I can spell everything.

Max: Spell Earth.

Alex: E-a-r-t-h.

Max: Talking.

Alex: T-a-l-k-i-n-g.

Max: China [pause]. Don’t worry. I’m not talking about the ones girls have.

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Abbey-Roads
Abbey-Roads2
Acts of the Apostasy
Aggie Catholics
All Manner of Things
Alternate Dementia
Always Advent
Belinda’s Brain
Bethune Catholic
Book Reviews and More
Bourbon and Nachos
Catholic Anarchy
Catholic Blogs
Catholic Exchange
Catholic Father
Catholic Fire
Catholic Maniacs
Catholic Sphere
Charlotte Was Both
Chesterton and Friends
Crossroads
Danielle Bean
Dark Speech Upon the Harp
Decent Films
Deep Furrows
Digital Hairshirt
Dyspeptic Mutterings
Eric Scheske Writer’s Site
EWTN
Fathers of the Church
First Principles
From the Shattered Drum
Get Blogs
Gilbert Magazine
Godspy
Hallelujah is Our Song
Hallowed Ground
Happy Catholic
Holy Cards
Janet Cassidy
Let Britannia Rise
Leviathan Slayer
Lunch Box Catechism
Mark Shea
Mere Comments
More Last Than Star
National Catholic Register
New Advent
Old World Swine
Ordinary Grace
Organic Learning
Phat Catholic
Piece of the Puzzle
Pillar and Fire
Post Modern Papist
PowerBlog
Pro Ecclesia
Quaffs and Quibbles
Reasoned Audacity
Reconnaissance of the Western Tradition
Roman Catholic Info
Rosetta Stone
Ruri et Orbi
Scheske at Catholic Exchange
Scholium
Shadow of Diogenes
Signs of the Times: Salvo Blog
Some Have Hats
St. Blog’s Parish Blog Digger
St. Blog’s Parish Directory
St. James Journal
St. Peter Canisius Apostolate
Standing on My Head
Stella Maris
Stony Creek Digest
Streams of Mercy
Stupid Scholar
Suicide of the West
Summa Minutiae
Taki
The American Conservative
The Blue Boar
The Cafeteria is Closed
The Crescat
The Curt Jester
The Dawn Patrol
The Drunken Dollar
The Impractical Christian
The Inn at the End of the World
The Michiana Blawg
The Muniment Room
The Radical Academy
The Reticulator
The Saint Wannabe
The Scratching Post
The Snoring Scholar
The Summa Mamas
The Waffling Anglican
The Western Confucian
Things and Stuff
Thursday Night Gumbo
Uncovering Orthodoxy
Victor Lams
Video Meliora
Vita Mea
Vox Nova
What's Wrong with the World
With Both Hands
Within the Garden
Without Having Seen
World Wide Words

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