Sunday, July 13, 2014
don't let not having the tools be your trepidation
the baby ghost says beat it with your chain
cheerful walkaway power
communism for one
digital blackwater
one eyed mother
bucket of blood
braille playboy
hermit forum
cassie sings
dark joy
l.e. sissman
chamber of horseshit
l.e. sissman
cholly
ponzis
who me
ant slavery
nz prophecy
five penalties
the brass check
capitalist realism
creative menopause
radical constipation
ephemeral synagogues
league of land-locked nations
autonomous teenage bedrooms
nutrient pulses in tropical forests
Saturday, June 28, 2014
Christian theologians after the Middle Ages need to be credited for having started to sense the intolerability of their own resentment constructions. Subsequently, they felt compelled to weaken the excesses of their theology of rage. This was reflected in the invention of purgatory. It is probably not overdrawn to characterize the new theology of purgatory, which rapidly expanded from the eleventh century on, as the real Christian thought that created history.
- Peter Sloterdijk, Rage and Time
Saturday, June 21, 2014
The Harsh Skull
In the night the skull came to his dreams and said "You are a fool to rejoice in the entanglements of life."
Chuang Tzu couldn't believe this and asked "If I could return you to your life, you would want that wouldn't you?"
Stunned by Chuang Tzu's foolishness the skull replied, "How do you know that it is bad to be dead?"
Monday, June 16, 2014
Tuesday, April 8, 2014
Bad Quotes
To manage a business successfully requires as much courage as that possessed by the soldier who goes to war. Business courage is all the more natural because all the benefits which the public has in material benefits comes from it.
-Charles F. Abbott
Catholic doctrine and discipline may be walls; but they are the walls of a playground.
-G.K Chesterton
It's alright for the navy to blockade a city, to starve the inhabitants to death; but there is something wrong, not nice, about bombing a city.
-Sir Arthur "Bomber" Harris
A mere forty years ago beach volleyball was just beginning. No bureaucrat would have invented it-
and that's what freedom is all about.
-Newt Gingrich
Nobody in the game of football should be called a genius. A genius is somebody like Norman Einstein.
-Joe Thiesman
-Charles F. Abbott
Catholic doctrine and discipline may be walls; but they are the walls of a playground.
-G.K Chesterton
It's alright for the navy to blockade a city, to starve the inhabitants to death; but there is something wrong, not nice, about bombing a city.
-Sir Arthur "Bomber" Harris
A mere forty years ago beach volleyball was just beginning. No bureaucrat would have invented it-
and that's what freedom is all about.
-Newt Gingrich
Nobody in the game of football should be called a genius. A genius is somebody like Norman Einstein.
-Joe Thiesman
Sunday, March 9, 2014
What a Piece of Shit is Man
Scarfeld
Pilgriminals
Pat Ruthensmear
The Breaking Hands
The Sociological Imagination
Narvel Felts is a Passionate Cat
Doping in Iranian Table Tennis
Mike Tyson's Abandoned Mansion
The Militarization of Public Relations
Mid-Eighties Brunch at Steak and Ale
Brainsick Charles Krauthammer Groupie
Joyce's Notes on Business and Commerce
Treating Cluster Headaches With Psychedelics
Your Future Son-in-Law Will Be Able to Run 60 MPH
The Blood-Drinking and Flesh-Eating Cavaliers
Poetry from the United Auto Worker 1937-39
Anti-Abortion as a Cheap Moral Position
Journeys Into the Bright World
Robert Johnson Slown Down
Lincoln in a Crystal Maze
Prison Notebooks
Capitalist Sorcery
Death of Richie
Friday, January 31, 2014
Names I've Found Difficult to Pry Apart; Thinking Two People Are One or Thinking Two People Are Eachother
Marlee Matin + Mary Matalin
William Gass + William Gaddis
Eve Sedgwick + Edie Sedgwick
Richard Sennet + Daniel Dennett
Rosa Luxemburg + Ethel Rosenberg
Louis Auchincloss + Louis Althusser
Andrew Solomon + Andrew Sullivan
Michael Kelley + Michael Kinsley
Richard Belzer + Richard Meltzer
Arthur Laffer + Alvin Toffler
Paul Valery + Paul Verlaine
Montaigne + Montesquieu
Al Capp + Andy Capp
Tanzania + Tasmania
William Gass + William Gaddis
Eve Sedgwick + Edie Sedgwick
Richard Sennet + Daniel Dennett
Rosa Luxemburg + Ethel Rosenberg
Louis Auchincloss + Louis Althusser
Andrew Solomon + Andrew Sullivan
Michael Kelley + Michael Kinsley
Richard Belzer + Richard Meltzer
Arthur Laffer + Alvin Toffler
Paul Valery + Paul Verlaine
Montaigne + Montesquieu
Al Capp + Andy Capp
Tanzania + Tasmania
R'Akiva was inspired to begin his Torah studies at the age of forty when he observed how water could wear grooves into solid stone after years of constant dripping.
Forced into a life of abject poverty, R'Akiva and his wife were homeless and took shelter in a hay stall, but she remained loyal and supportive, insisting that she was ready for any sacrifice in order for him to become a scholar. Once he said to her, "If only I could, I would have an artisan create for you a gold tiara in the form of the skyline of Jerusalem."
R'Akiva studied under R'Eliezer ben Hyrkanos and R'Yeshoshua ben Chanania and returned home after twelve years. As he approached his home, he heard an old man chiding his wife: "How long will you be the widow of a live man?" She replied selflessly: "If he were to listen to me he would remain even longer in his studies." R'Akiva immediately turned back and devoted himself to Torah study for twelve years.
Upon his triumphant return home, R'Akiva was escorted by his 24,000 students. His wife went out to greet him in simple clothes that indicated her poverty. Unaware that she was his wife, his students sought to deny her access to their great teacher. Said R'Akiva, "Allow her through, for my Torah and
yours is really hers.
Akiva's love and appreciation for his wife's dedication to him is given vivid expression in his aphorism: "Who is wealthy? One who has a wife whose deeds are beautiful".
Forced into a life of abject poverty, R'Akiva and his wife were homeless and took shelter in a hay stall, but she remained loyal and supportive, insisting that she was ready for any sacrifice in order for him to become a scholar. Once he said to her, "If only I could, I would have an artisan create for you a gold tiara in the form of the skyline of Jerusalem."
R'Akiva studied under R'Eliezer ben Hyrkanos and R'Yeshoshua ben Chanania and returned home after twelve years. As he approached his home, he heard an old man chiding his wife: "How long will you be the widow of a live man?" She replied selflessly: "If he were to listen to me he would remain even longer in his studies." R'Akiva immediately turned back and devoted himself to Torah study for twelve years.
Upon his triumphant return home, R'Akiva was escorted by his 24,000 students. His wife went out to greet him in simple clothes that indicated her poverty. Unaware that she was his wife, his students sought to deny her access to their great teacher. Said R'Akiva, "Allow her through, for my Torah and
yours is really hers.
Akiva's love and appreciation for his wife's dedication to him is given vivid expression in his aphorism: "Who is wealthy? One who has a wife whose deeds are beautiful".
Friday, January 10, 2014
Inverse relationship between well-being and inequality in American history. The peaks and valleys of inequality (in purple) represent the ratio of the largest fortunes to the median wealth of households (the Phillips curve). The blue-shaded curve combines four measures of well-being: economic (the fraction of economic growth that is paid to workers as wages), health (life expectancy and the average height of the native-born population), and social optimism (the average age of first marriage, with early marriages indicating social optimism and delayed marriages indicating social pessimism).