• Pragerisms

    For a more comprehensive list of Pragerisms visit
    Dennis Prager Wisdom.

    • "The left is far more interested in gaining power than in creating wealth."
    • "Without wisdom, goodness is worthless."
    • "I prefer clarity to agreement."
    • "First tell the truth, then state your opinion."
    • "Being on the Left means never having to say you're sorry."
    • "If you don't fight evil, you fight gobal warming."
    • "There are things that are so dumb, you have to learn them."
  • Liberalism’s Seven Deadly Sins

    • Sexism
    • Intolerance
    • Xenophobia
    • Racism
    • Islamophobia
    • Bigotry
    • Homophobia

    A liberal need only accuse you of one of the above in order to end all discussion and excuse himself from further elucidation of his position.

  • Glenn’s Reading List for Die-Hard Pragerites

    • Bolton, John - Surrender is not an Option
    • Bruce, Tammy - The Thought Police; The New American Revolution; The Death of Right and Wrong
    • Charen, Mona - DoGooders:How Liberals Hurt Those They Claim to Help
    • Coulter, Ann - If Democrats Had Any Brains, They'd Be Republicans; Slander
    • Dalrymple, Theodore - In Praise of Prejudice; Our Culture, What's Left of It
    • Doyle, William - Inside the Oval Office
    • Elder, Larry - Stupid Black Men: How to Play the Race Card--and Lose
    • Frankl, Victor - Man's Search for Meaning
    • Flynn, Daniel - Intellectual Morons
    • Fund, John - Stealing Elections
    • Friedman, George - America's Secret War
    • Goldberg, Bernard - Bias; Arrogance
    • Goldberg, Jonah - Liberal Fascism
    • Herson, James - Tales from the Left Coast
    • Horowitz, David - Left Illusions; The Professors
    • Klein, Edward - The Truth about Hillary
    • Mnookin, Seth - Hard News: Twenty-one Brutal Months at The New York Times and How They Changed the American Media
    • Morris, Dick - Because He Could; Rewriting History
    • O'Beirne, Kate - Women Who Make the World Worse
    • Olson, Barbara - The Final Days: The Last, Desperate Abuses of Power by the Clinton White House
    • O'Neill, John - Unfit For Command
    • Piereson, James - Camelot and the Cultural Revolution: How the Assassination of John F. Kennedy Shattered American Liberalism
    • Prager, Dennis - Think A Second Time
    • Sharansky, Natan - The Case for Democracy
    • Stein, Ben - Can America Survive? The Rage of the Left, the Truth, and What to Do About It
    • Steyn, Mark - America Alone
    • Stephanopolous, George - All Too Human
    • Thomas, Clarence - My Grandfather's Son
    • Timmerman, Kenneth - Shadow Warriors
    • Williams, Juan - Enough: The Phony Leaders, Dead-End Movements, and Culture of Failure That Are Undermining Black America--and What We Can Do About It
    • Wright, Lawrence - The Looming Tower

A bit of 2012 Humor Thank you, MN Prager fans…..”Two Coffees”

 

Two Coffees in Heaven!
>
>
> Having arrived at the Gates of Heaven,
> Barrack Obama meets a man with a beard.
> ‘Are you Mohamed?’ he asks.
> ‘No my son, I am St. Peter; Mohamed is higher up.’
> Peter then points to a ladder that rises into the clouds.
>
> Delighted that Mohamed should be higher than St. Peter,
> Obama climbs the ladder in great strides,
> climbs up through the clouds and comes into a room
> where he meets another bearded man.
>
> He asks again, ‘Are you Mohamed?’
> ‘Why no,’ he answers, ‘I am Moses;
> Mohamed is higher still.’
>
> Exhausted, but with a heart full of joy
> he climbs the ladder yet again.
>
> He discovers a larger room where he meets an
> angelic looking man with a beard.
> Full of hope, he asks again,
> ‘Are you Mohamed?’
>
> ‘No, I am Jesus, the Christ;
> you will find Mohamed higher up.’
>
> Mohamed higher than Jesus!
> Man, oh man! Obama can hardly contain his
> delight and climbs and climbs ever higher.
>
> Once again, he reaches an even larger room
> where he meets this truly magnificent looking man
> with a silver white beard and once again repeats his question:
>
> ‘Are you Mohamed?’ he gasps as he is by now,
> totally out of breath from all his climbing.
> ‘No, my son, I am Almighty God, the Alpha and the Omega,
> but you look exhausted.
> Would you like a cup of coffee?’
>
> Obama says, ‘Yes please!’
> As God looks behind him, he claps his hands and yells out:
> ‘Hey, Mohamed, two coffees!’

Sent by Bruce Taber

Obama Chooses to Support Mideast Oil and Islam……Will kill Revenues and Jobs from Canadian Pipeline

Obama administration to reject controversial

 Keystone pipeline

By Ben Geman and Andrew Restuccia -     at   The Hill:

“The Obama administration will reject the Keystone XL pipeline Wednesday afternoon, according to a source closely following the issue.

The State Department is expected to make an announcement at 3 p.m. Wednesday. While the administration is expected to reject TransCanada Corp.’s permit application, it will allow the company to re-apply, according to the source.

 

The White House has long signaled that the administration is unlikely to approve the Alberta-to-Texas pipeline under the timeline required in December’s payroll tax cut extension law, which mandates a decision by Feb. 21.

 

House and Senate Republicans have signaled in recent days that they will push new legislation to win approval if the White House rejects a permit.

The pipeline is the subject of an intense election-season political fight.

“The result of today’s announcement will be a massive call for both sides to ‘man your battle stations’ through the Sunday talk shows,” said Stephen Brown, a vice president for government affairs with Tesoro, a refining company.

Environmentalists, who have made stopping Keystone a top priority, and many Democrats oppose the proposal due to greenhouse gas emissions from Alberta’s massive oil sands projects and other ecological concerns.

But Republicans are hammering President Obama for failure to approve the project thus far, calling it a missed opportunity to create jobs and improve energy security.

They’re backed by an intense lobbying and public relations campaign by groups including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the American Petroleum Institute, and a number of unions — which, like environmentalists, are part of Obama’s political base — are pushing for the project too.

A spokesman for House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) vowed Wednesday that “this is not the end of this fight.”

Republicans have cited proposals to transport oil sands from Alberta to Asian markets via the British Columbia Coast in calling for U.S. approval of Keystone.

“President Obama is about to destroy tens of thousands of American jobs and sell American energy security to the Chinese. The President won’t stand up to his political base even to create American jobs,” Boehner spokesman Brendan Buck said in a statement.

Environmentalists argue that jobs estimates cited by Republicans and industry groups are wildly inflated.

Bill McKibben, the environmentalist who has helped spearhead opposition to the project, cheered the apparent decision to reject the pipeline.

“Assuming that what we’re hearing is true, this isn’t just the right call, it’s the brave call. The knock on Barack Obama from many quarters has been that he’s too conciliatory,” said McKibben, head of the climate advocacy group 350.org. “But here, in the face of a naked political threat from Big Oil to exact ‘huge political consequences,’ he’s stood up strong.”

His comment about the “threat” is a reference to recent remarks by the head of the American Petroleum Institute, the powerful industry trade group that recently warned of political “consequences” if Obama nixed Keystone XL.

White House press secretary Jay Carney on Wednesday attacked the GOP-crafted plan as “a purely partlsan effort to score a political point.” 

He did not confirm that the pipeline would be rejected, saying he did not want to get ahead of the president or secretary of state. 

“The State Dept made clear that setting an arbitrary deadline would put the State Department in a corner” and would not allow them to review the route “in a proper way,” Carney said.

On Tuesday, Carney had argued that State was still reviewing pipeline routes that would avoid an ecologically sensitive region of Nebraska.

“[I]t is a fallacy to suggest that the president should sign into law something when there isn’t even an alternate route identified in Nebraska and when … there was an attempt to short-circuit the review process in a way that does not allow the kind of careful consideration of all the competing criteria here that needs to be done,” Carney said Tuesday.

The White House last November delayed a final decision until after the 2012 election, citing the need for more review.

But advocates of the project say the years-long State Department analysis has been exhaustive.

They argue the administration could issue a permit for the massive project even as the review of Nebraska-specific issues continues, noting that TransCanada has already reached an agreement with Nebraska state officials to find a way around a sensitive Sand Hills region.”


Today’s Review of the South Carolina Squall called Campaigning

Must this Storm Continue?

From the recent debate governed by Fox we again witnessed the bull dog brilliance of the mouth and mind of our Newt Gingrich.    He has always had talent for chewing gristle, and displayed his prepared teeth digging into Obama welfare expanse.    Like every other American concerned over Obama’s moving the country  toward a Marxist state, I would love to see  the jaws of this Gingrich tear into the corruption and dishonesty of Obama personally and his government generally.

Mr. Gingrich is probably overall meaner than Barry, and for sure is older and crustier, much better educated, sharper  psychologically and has no need of a teleprompter to focus or blunt these skills.

I’d love to see Newt remove the false face and force an opened  mouth of this Marxist organizer graduate of the ‘Goddamn America’  Jeremiah Wright collective of  black racism.

My preferred candidate, Mitt Romney will not be able to do that.   The minority he represents has trained Mitt as Mitt and his wife have trained their boys to be decent human beings, honest citizens,  and possess and respect  the finest qualities of human to human behavior.

Mr. Romney does not look comfortable in the free-for-all cage wrestling of predidential politics fights.   But the system has forced his hand.    The vulgarities of the entire process seems foreign to Mr. Romney.    It appears he is too nice a guy.    My challenge to the Governor himself is to either can his PAC allies or  re-educate them to  accentuate as many of the Romney skills and good character examples as they can.    And there are countless…..including his experiences at Dain Capital.

He is a business man  by experience more  than he is a hardened, sly, sharp tongued maneuvering politician.

I prefer Mr. Romney over the sharp and sly noises of skilled Gingrich and Marxist any day.   Barry Obama lies constantly and lies with such great rhythm the general voting public,  especially single lefty women,  isn’t knowledgable  enough   to notice.     Even champion blabber, Obama excuse maker Charles Schumer, Senator from New York, lectured via television that the separation of powers crafted by our nation’s founders  was The Executive Branch, the Senate, and the House of Representatives.

Discover the error yourself.   Yet, I wonder how many of you, dear readers, have recognized the grossness of the error of this claim.   

Gingrich most likely will remove Rick Santorum from contention.    The Senator did not look good the other night on Fox debate stage.   Petulance is not his strong hand as it is with Obama and Gingrich.   He seemed nervous forced into that role probably by his advisors.

Dear Mitt Romney…….Be forthright and open with your answers and claims.  Clean up this election by example of your good behavior.    Don’t ever be ashamed of your success.   Share your faith in business and good government with your contrymen and women.   Best Obama by your good example……But expose all of the man’s lies and pretenses.   He reeks failure as president.   He divides the country into tribes against the nation begging them to become has resentful and hating against the flag and country as possible.

 

Honesty is hard to come by in the Obama campaign world

Obama Pollster Calls Herman Cain “Racist” On TV … Then Denies It

 found at RealClearPolitics:

Daily Caller reports: On Cooper’s Tuesday program, Democratic strategist and Obama 2012 campaign pollster Cornell Belcher took aim at former House Speaker Newt Gingrich’s response to a question from Fox News Channel’s Juan Williams during a Monday GOP presidential debate, saying it was “it was dog-whistle politics at its worst.” (first video)

“This is the second time I’ve been on the show with Cornell,” Ari Fleischer said. “Earlier, he said Herman Cain was a racist. Now he’s saying Newt uses these terms, as he put it. And what I hear, Anderson, is actually the opposite.”

Belcher denied that it happened, but he did call Herman Cain a racist in a segment last fall. (second video)

Click below for videos:

http://www.realclearpolitics.com/video/2012/01/18/obama_pollster_calls_herman_cain_racist_on_tv__then_denies_it.html

Jimmy Earl Carter Suggests He Knows a Racist When He Sees One….yet another tiime

Jimmy Carter, has often played submarine framing racists through  his Lefty periscope.   He used to be a peanut farmer from Georgia when nearly all of the openly political racists in America were Democrats, many his comrades.    A narrow and pinched person especially during his days cuddling alone deep  in his energy-saving sweaters pontificating from the Oval office  that a comfortable American life included colder temperatures indoors in winter and no purchases  for transportation use and the gas pump.

He also invented the policy that his government would sue the American banking industry for Civil Rights Violations  if  its empires would not allow the American black to purchase homes whether they could pay the morgages or not.    Mr. Carter was the Champion of Champions in leading the nation’s financial industry to abandon age-old standards  of honesty in lending.  the beginning of  the twenty-year old bubble and collapse of not only the American housing industry, but also the nation’s financial integrity as well.

Hail Jimmy Earl…….thou art in your news again:      Hear Jimmy speak by clicking below.    Article was found at RealClearPolitics)

Former President Jimmy Carter says Newt Gingrich knows exactly what he is doing when he uses phrases like “food stamp president” and talks about the poor learning a work ethic. Carter says this rhetoric is “appealing to the wrong element in South Carolina.”

“Newt Gingrich is probably as enlightened as I am about being gratified that we’re in the desegregation years in the South,” Carter said to CNN’s Piers Morgan.

It’s an Ice Age in our American future; NOT global Warming!

Are We Holding a New Ice Age at Bay?

from the National Center for Policy Analysis:

In the early 1970s, after two decades of slight cooling, many scientists were convinced that the end of Earth’s 11,600 year old warm spell was at hand.  Since then, of course, warmth has returned, probably driven at least partly by man-made carbon dioxide emissions, says the Wall Street Journal.

A new paper drew headlines last week for arguing that these emissions may avert the return of the ice age.  Less noticed was the fact that the authors, by analogy with a previous warm spell 780,000 years ago that’s a “dead ringer” for our own, expect the next ice age to start “within about 1,500 years.”  Hardly the day after tomorrow.  Still, it’s striking that most interglacial periods begin with an abrupt warming, peak sharply, then begin a gradual descent into cooler conditions before plunging rather more rapidly toward the freezer.

  • The last interglacial — which occurred 135,000 to 115,000 years ago — saw temperatures slide erratically downward by about two degrees Celsius between 127,000 and 120,000 years ago, before a sharper fall began.
  • Cyclical changes in the earth’s orbit probably weakened sunlight in the northern hemisphere summer and thus caused this slow cooling.
  • Since the northern hemisphere is mostly land, this change in the sun’s strength meant gradually increased snow and ice cover, which in turn reflected light back into space, further cooling the air and, gradually, the ocean too.
  • Carbon dioxide levels did not begin to fall much until about 112,000 years ago, as the cooling sea absorbed more of the gas.

Our current interglacial shows a similar pattern.

  • Greenland ice cores and other proxy records show that temperatures peaked around 7,000 years ago.
  • An erratic decline in temperature followed, culminating in the exceptionally cool centuries of the “Little Ice Age” between 1550 and 1850, when glaciers advanced all over the world.
  • In the Greenland ice cores, these centuries stand out as the longest and most consistent cold spell of the current interglacial.

In other words, our own interglacial period has followed previous ones in having an abrupt beginning and a sharp peak, followed by slow cooling.  The question is whether recent warming is a temporary blip before the expected drift into glacial conditions, or whether humankind’s impact on the atmosphere has now reversed the cooling trend.

Source: Matt Ridley, “Are We Holding a New Ice Age at Bay?” Wall Street Journal, January 14, 2012.

For text:

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204257504577150812451167538.html

For more on Environment Issues:

http://www.ncpa.org/sub/dpd/index.php?Article_Category=31

Dennis Prager Examines Ron Paul’s Claim of Understanding True Racism In US

Ron Paul and America’s Alleged Racism

by Dennis Prager   at dennisprager,com:
 

“In the Republican presidential candidates’ debate on January 7, Congressman Ron Paul said: “I’m the only one up here . . . that understands true racism in this country is in the judicial system.”

He said this racism has to do with “enforcing the drug laws,”and then added: “They [blacks] get the death penalty way disproportionately.”

Two groups immediately defended Paul – his supporters, and commentators on the Left. The former support anything Paul says; and the Left supports anything that Paul says that portrays America as ugly (see, for example, the defense of Paul by Left-wing USAToday columnist Dwayne Wickham, whose columns are regularly devoted to how much blacks suffer from American racism).

Just last month,Paul was asked by a representative of an organization (WeAreChange) that holds the government responsible for 9-11, “Why won’t you come out about the truth about 9/11?”

Paul’s response: “Because I can’t handle the controversy: I have the IMF, the Federal Reserve to deal with, the IRS to deal with.Because I just have more-too many things on my plate. Because I just have too much to do.” It is readily available on YouTube.

Whatever the implication of his cryptic response, when Paul is confronted by the mainstream media he denies that he believes the American government was involved in the 9-11 attacks. But what is undeniable is that Paul, like much of the Left, holds America largely responsible for 9-11 because of its foreign policy: its “occupying” countries all over the world, the sanctions on Saddam Hussein’s Iraq which Paul and the Left claim killed hundreds of thousands of Iraqis, the injustices against Palestinians that America has supported (through its support of Israel), etc.

He mocks the idea that the primary reason for 9-11 was that people of great evil attacked a very good country – because this is what the evil do, just as they did on the December 7, 1941 when the Japanese regime attacked Pearl Harbor.

It does seem that the Texas congressman’s description of the American justice system as racist is part of Paul’s generally dark view of America.

The claim that America disproportionately executes blacks is a falsehood, disseminated on virtually every Left-wing website from the ACLU to all the anti-death penalty sites. The only way it can be regarded as true is if the disproportion is in relation to the entire population of the country: Blacks make up about 12% of the population and since 1976 have been about 35% of those executed for murder. But this is a statistic that tells no truth because it is meaningless in terms of determining alleged racial bias.

This is very easy to prove. Males make up about 50% of the American population but make up about 99% of those executed. Is the American justice system wildly anti-male?

Of course, not.The statistic that matters in assessing bias in executions is the proportion of murderers of a given group that is executed, not the group’s proportion of the entire population.

And, here, it is clear that blacks are actually under-represented in executions.

According to the Death Penalty Information Center, an anti-death penalty organization, between 1976 and January 2012, 441 blacks (35% of the total) and 717 whites (55% of the total) were executed. Given that blacks committed more than half the murders during that time (52% vs. 46% by whites), if we are to assess racial bias based on proportionality of murderers executed, the system is biased against whites, not blacks.

Because this fact is both obvious and irrefutable, virtually none of the anti-death penalty sites note it. Instead they focus on the race of murder victims and even the race of prosecutors – in other words, the race of just about everyone except those convicted of murder.

It was bad enough for America and for moral clarity when Ron Paul’s views on American imperialism and systemic racism were confined to the Left. That about twenty percent of Republicans believe such things about America makes one anxious about the future of this country, not to mention about the eternal battle against evil.”

Unsurpassed Beauty of the English ‘Word’ from the Mouth of a Murderer

Modern  Marxism insists that beauty is in the eye of the beholder.   No beauty can be more beautiful than another.   All art is equally beautiful……..which logically means  ‘that which is equally beautiful is equally ugly’…..Equality is the goal of Marxist achievement.

I disagree with these  academic Marxist goals  in any of the social sciences.   It is because I am old and have been taught otherwise when Marxism was an anethema to our American way of life..

Is it possible that the  utterings of a well heeled, but cold blooded murderer faced with his own imminent demise can be written with magnificent unsurpassed   beauty, beauty of words and message   you cannot forget  as long as you live?    Could such utterings rise above the Marxist command  of forced equality of   today’s lessons of mediocrity?    Read  the following  assemblage of words from the 17th century:

“Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow,  creeps in this petty pace from day to day to the last syllable of recorded time.   And all our  yesterdays have lighted fools the way to dusty death.

Out, out, brief candle.   Life’s but a walking shadow, a poor player that struts and frets his hour upon the stage   and then is heard no more:  it is a tale  told by an idiot,  full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.”

It is easy enough English to understand.   I found it breath-takingly beautiful  when I heard it for the first time, read to me by  my 9th grade English teacher, 68 years old, 90 pound withered but commanding, Mabel Wicker, at my local urban public high school.    There were 35 other kids in that class, mostly of us  boys who were disruptive during  eighth grade classes in elementary school.      This is the same Miss Wicker from whom I earned an F   for my first eight week period in her class.   I was mesmerized by the Shakespeare  she read  as part of her daily lectures.   I recognized its beauty.   I was not disruptive.   No one in that class was disruptive.   We were not allowed to be.

She used red ink in designing the large F handwritten on my report card to increase the chances for public  humiliation.

I enjoyed her readings so much.   I had never cared about grades.   They never meant anything in elementary school.   You were either okay or you weren’t.    I never even thought about  grades…….until the  marking period after the first eight weeks with Miss Mabel Wicker’s flashy red ‘F’ shining for all to see for the rest of the school year.

 She expected homework from me.   She showed me her grading book.   There was nothing listed under my name.  It was a perfectly  clean  slate  sans any indication of  handed-in  homework.    She pointed out to me that I had earned my keep.   What could I say? 

Later in the year I did memorize the above lines from William Shakespeare’s Macbeth  as part of the 400 lines of poetry required to get a passing grade.

What is memorable from your 9th grade class?

Victor Davis Hanson asks What is the point in Reading ‘Good Books’ these days?

So Why Read Anymore?

by Victor Davis Hanson    at   Pajamas Media:                               (article sent by Brian Ross)

Is Reading Good Books Over?

There is great “truth and beauty” in Homer’s Iliad, but I would not try to make his sale on such platitudes. Gibbon’s The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire remains a classic. But I confess it can be hard to get through. Conrad’s Victory or Knut Hamsun’s Growth of the Soil, if authored by writer X this year, would be trashed on Amazon.

So what are the reasons, in this age of the iPhone, Xbox, and PlayStation — or Fox News blondes and HBO — to sit down and read old stuff for an hour or two each week?

 

Here are a few reasons other than the usual defense of the “classics,” the “canon,” and the glories of “Western civilization.”

Mental Exercise

The mind is a muscle. Without exercise, it reverts to mush. Watching most TV or using the normal electronic gadgetry does not tax us much — indeed that is by design the very purpose: to eliminate effort, worry, unease, and afterthought. None of us thinks back a year ago to a great video game session. Few off-hand can recall the Super Bowl winner of 2001. I remember the scenes in a Shane or Casablanca, but not many others in the other thousand of movies that I have watched.

By nature, our ways of expression and even thinking always fossilize and are withering away with age and monotony — a process accelerated by the modern electronic age and the neglect of replenishment through reading. The actual vocabulary of our present youth seems to me reduced to about 1,000 words or so. “Like,” “whatever,” “you know,” “cool,” and other pop culture fillers now substitute for entire phrases, a sort of modern porcine grunting. The Greeks used particles to accentuate vocabulary and guide syntax; we used them instead of vocabulary. Our syntax, both written and oral, is reverting to “Spot is a dog”: noun, verb, predicate — period. How did incomprehensible slang, spiced with vulgarity, become an object of emulation? I used to listen to farmers without college degrees speak wonderful English; now to listen to a member of Congress almost requires a translator.

Reading alone enriches our vocabulary; it teaches us that good writing requires a sense of melody as well as a command of grammar. Soon those well-read become the well-spoken.

A Master of Words

Think for a minute: why did the Right often ignore the contradictions of Christopher Hitchens, and the Left mostly give up most of its anger at him? He was not necessarily a classically beautiful stylist, and could be needlessly cruel. He wrote no great history, no great novel, no great single essay that we can instantly recall in the manner of an Orwell or Chesterton. But Mr. Hitchens surely was a rare and gifted writer, polemicist, and savant. To read 800 words was to learn something new in passing. Even in his most ridiculous rant, a nugget of wisdom could be uncovered. A reference to an obscure Eastern European politician might appear side-by-side a line from Wordsworth — and would make a better illustration of his argument than just showcasing his erudition. He mastered the odd, even perverse turn of phrase, the ability to juxtapose the colloquialism next to Latinate pomposity, or to write a ridiculous 10-line long sentence, stuffed with semi-cola, dashes, cola, and commas, followed by a two-word noun-verb sentence that a five-year old could produce. In short, Hitchens was a voracious consumer of texts, and the result was that he achieved what the Roman student of rhetoric, Quintilian, once called variatio, the ability to mix up words and sentences and not bore. He could hold, even shock, the reader or listener from sentence to sentence, moment to moment.

But We Are So Much More to the Point

But you object that at least our current economy of expression cuts out wasted words and clauses, a sort of slimmed-down, electronic communication? Perhaps, but it also turns almost everything into instant bland hot cereal, as if we should gulp down oatmeal at every meal and survive well enough without the bother of salad, main course, and dessert. Each day our vocabulary shrinks, our thought patterns stagnate — if they are not renewed through fresh literature or intelligent conversation. Unfortunately these days, those who read are few and silent; those who don’t, numerous and heard. In this drought, Dante’s Inferno and William Prescott’s History of the Conquest of Mexico provide needed storms of new words, complex syntax, and fresh ideas.

Humility

Technology has deluded the modern West. We equate widespread knowledge of how to use an iPad with collective wisdom. Because a rare, brilliantly inventive mind from Caltech or MIT can craft a device undreamed of in the age of Einstein, we assume that we all warrant a share in his genius, as if our generation has trumped Einstein’s. We deserve no such kudos — unless animals at the zoo that find delight in their rote enjoyment of their hoops and bars can be credited with the architect’s sophisticated zoological design.

Pumps Are Not Water

Technological progress is no guarantee of collective wisdom — other than an acknowledgement that there is a brilliant scientific elite that we foster and don’t kill off in exchange for the good stuff that they give us. Our California public schools rate about 48th or 49th these days in nationwide testing, while most of the state seems to have their heads permanently transfixed to iPhones. Do we believe then that the population is smarter because we know “apps” or because there is an Apple or Google headquarters full of engineers living in the cocoon of Silicon Valley?

There is an arrogance of an age that comes with access to always better stuff. New technology prompts an assumption that there are always better things to come. Not true. Life was far better in Rome in AD 25 than in AD 425. Would you like to buy a house in Detroit today or in 1940? Me? I would rather drive down the central section of 101 in 1970 than tomorrow. Regress — material, intellectual, and moral — can be as common as progress, if each new generation proves a poor custodian of the laws, behavior, knowledge, and learning inherited from those now gone.

We Are Not Alone

No one in my town ripped out copper wire from the street lights in 1963 as they commonly do now; my grandfather contended with swarms of vine-hoppers and spider mites, not, as I do, with thieves who destroy pumps to scavenge conduit wire. I know that this will not be a problem in 2080 — either because such crime that threatens society must cease, or society as we know it will cease. Can we see these as symptoms, as something also beyond our present anguish, as challenges shared by Athenians, Romans, and Byzantines? We can — if we have some guide that turns the nonsense of today into the sense of the ages.

Not a poet in America today could match Virgil. Few, if any, of us historians could write with the flair and judgment of a Tacitus. But how would we know that — or care — if we did not read?

Without some awareness that ideas are old and somewhat finite, and that we are young and ignorant, we assume that each new adventure must be novel because we alone — right now! — are experiencing it. If Barack Obama would read Procopius, he would learn the wages of his huge inefficient bureaucracy. Jerry Brown, the self-described Jesuit sage, should return to his St. Jerome, because the latter’s descriptions of an eroding Rome could just as well describe a drive down California’s 99. (Before a crumbling society can borrow billions for a high-speed rail to nowhere it might better bring out the dusty maps and charts of a dead generation of engineers that once bequeathed to us plans about how to finish a three-lane freeway without cross traffic.)

Ourselves and Our Archetypes

Reading literature endows us not just with a model of expression and thought, but also with a body of ideas — and the names, facts, and dates that we can draw on to elucidate them. When I used to follow the career of the brilliantly destructive Bill Clinton, he seemed to be Alcibiades reborn — and thus was surely bound to share the same fate of those with enormous talent who are consumed by their own huge and unrepressed appetites.

Richard Nixon jumped out of the pages Sophocles, another gifted Oedipus whose innate and unaddressed flaws were waiting dormant — for just the right occasion to explode him, for Nemesis to take him from the King of Thebes to itinerant blind beggar.

Obama? He came on the scene as arrogant and self-righteous as young Pentheus or Hippolytus and he is now learning firsthand the effects of his Euripidean smugness on others. Nothing that we experience has not happened before; the truly ignorant miss that, hypnotized by sophisticated technology into believing that human nature has been reinvented in their own image.

Transcendence

We all wish to live beyond the confines of our pathetic flesh and the limitations of the material world. I am here not just talking of religion, but rather of how shared ideas and learning trump age, race, class, gender, all the supposed barriers that only government alone can trample down.

At Fresno I used to teach works like Xenophon’s Hellenica or Aeschylus’s Prometheus Bound in advanced Greek classes, usually to about 10 students. Some were 60 years old and retired. Some were physically disabled and rolled in on wheel chairs. Some were Mexican-American; some women; some Asian. Often an epileptic retiree, who took every Greek course offered, would have a seizure in class. Most were poor or of middle means; but I recall there were one or two millionaires as well.

The Point of Such “Diversity”?

There was no diversity.

When they translated or sounded off about Prometheus’s pontifications or nearly wept at poor Theramenes (who perhaps deserved his fate for his triangulation) being dragged off to his death, all “difference” disappeared. What we had in common vastly outweighed our class, gender, and racial distinctions. Thucydides could belong to an immigrant from Oaxaca as much as it did to me — or even more so.

It was almost as if the mind lived without a body or perhaps despite it. In his treatise on old age and again in the Pro Archia, Cicero made the argument that learning gives us a common bond. (omnes arts quae ad humanities pertinent habent quoddam commune vinclum et quasi cognatione quadam inter se continentur.)

Old? Hardly

Literature and history become bulwarks from the cruel assaults of old age. I used to hike in the Attic hills with a group led by the septuagenarian, the legendary classical Greek scholar and topographer Eugene Vanderpool. He was to the eye almost decrepit — with few teeth (from the effects of malnourishment after internment in a German prisoner of war camp during the Nazi occupation of Athens) and recovering from a stroke. He reminded me of David’s 18th-century painting of an elderly Belisarius asking for alms outside the Hippodrome.

But as we hiked each Saturday he quietly pointed out the pass where Mardonius retreated back to Boeotia in spring 479 B.C. before being obliterated with his Persians at the subsequent battle of Plataea. “Hanson,” he once whispered, “did you realize you just stepped on the Attic Orchid; can I tell you a little about this vanishing flower that you crushed?” Someone kicked up a clay loom weight. He smiled shyly at it, and in muffled voice muttered, “Hmmm, about 400 B.C.; there must be a classical farmhouse about here somewhere.” We walked right by blank rocks; he asked, “Did anyone see back there that horos inscription? It was a boundary marker, Hellenistic I imagine.”

Ageless Man

When we got to the mountains overlooking the coast, he would rattle off the various armadas — Persian to nineteenth-century European — that had once docked below us. At 24, I felt like he was Napoleon addressing the Grand Army before the Pyramids. The result was that Mr. Vanderpool magically turned into 20-something like the rest of us, as if material existence were a bothersome afterthought. Our initial shock at his withered body vanished. He became almost an Apollo. I expected him to show up back at Athens at a Saturday night midnight disco bash to discourse on the Bee Gees as he had on the origins of ostracism.

Certificates of What?

We don’t need more technocrats who fool us that their Ivy League law degrees are synonymous with wisdom. They can be, but now are more likely not much more than tickets that allow an Eric Holder or Timothy Geithner into the first-class seating. I am not calling for us to be academics or scholastics with our noses in books or our heads up our posteriors; but to match physicality and pragmatism with occasional abstraction and reflection from the voices of the past — just a little, now and then, to remind us that Twitter or Facebook speed up communication, but can slow down thought.

Literature and history belong to us all. The recollection of ideas and thoughts can turn drudgery into something at least a little better. I once read Les Miserables and the memoirs of U.S. Grant simultaneously each night, and by day sprayed pre-emergent herbicide (in those pre-green days, per acre: ½ pound of Simazine, ½ pound of Karmex, washed down with spreader and some Parquat) all day long. Gradually the leaks, the toxicity, and the monotony of one sprayed row after another vanished. My head had gone underground into 1832 Paris and then came out again to the tricky siege of Vicksburg. That trance could mean the herbicide might once or twice miss the berm (and we would not recommend that 757 pilots dip into their Tolstoy during autopilot sessions), but for a time I was no longer cold and wet.

Links in the Chain

Somehow we must convince this new wired generation that speaking and writing well are not just the DSL lines of modern civilization, but also the keys to self-mastery, a sort of code that one takes on — in addition to others, moral and legal — to uphold standards of culture itself, to keep the work and ideas alive of our long gone betters for one more generation — as if to say, “I did my part according to my time and station.”Nothing more, nothing less.”

Comment:   Good man and good thinker Hanson  errs in the above piece….according to a  Law of St. Dennis the Divine, otherwise known as Dennis Pragrer with whom upon nearly all matters I agree, I have been encouraged to enclose my understanding  of the error in this manner:

The  brain, not the mind, is a muscle.    The mind is the composite (or deposit)  of experiences which collectively or individually guide or fail to guide the muscular drive of the brain.    

No matter.    Mr. Hanson is a mind always worth reading.

I don’t think there is a single art form that the western university Left  hasn’t contaminated by its invasions.    It is a Marxist thing.   Everything must be equally beautiful, or equally unbeautiful.   

Most classical beauties of art possess  beauty that is ageless, therefore classical.   But these creations whether in music, writing or in any of the visual arts, were expressed before  the pedestrian bureaucratic Marxist priests at university  dominated the realms of learning over the past century.   

Furthermore nearly all art of great beauty   has been created by the human male………whether Japanese, English, Chinese, French, Russian, German, Zuni,  Maori, Egyptian, Roman, Greek,   or Swahili.    This TRUTH,  is a  lonely one these days made absent by rules of thinking established at  our neighborhood  Marxist university   causing us all  to live in an America of deceit, dishonesty, duplicity, and  deviousness, led by Barack Hussein Obama.

If something is deemed beautiful, it automatically suggests something else is less beautiful or not beautiful at all.   The priests at university talk politically about art, but possess no abilities to create it beyond what the mouth can reek.

These talkers of art  call their profound mediocrity  a “Liberal Arts education”.

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