Posted on October 21, 2006 in Depression Uncertainty
The shape is something like a chicken’s hip bone.
Posted on October 20, 2006 in Xenartha
The University of California at Irvine boasts Peter the Anteater as its very own mascot. Here a UCI student shows her respect.
Posted on October 19, 2006 in Psychotropics
Each time I make a med change, I find that I must relearn how to write.
Posted on October 19, 2006 in Campaign 2006 Scoundrels
Want to know who is behind the attacks on veterans? Check out the Patriot Project.
Posted on October 19, 2006 in Internet Privacy Liberty
In the wake of the Foley affair, the Right (which has done its best to undo our constitutional freedoms these last eight years) is suddenly concerned about Internet privacy. Like we on the Left didn’t warn them. Here’s an article from Forbes that you will want to read. I actually agree with much of what it has to say. Welcome, oh Forbes, to the land of liberty.
Posted on October 18, 2006 in Weather
The devil winds have resumed — taking their temperature straight off the ice in the Ninth Circle of Hell and blowing trees into obsequious forms. You can just barely see their motion down on the plain around Irvine — tree tops wiggle subtly. Here we have a STORM that is omnipresent and continual. The grass has been swept so clean that it looks as if it has undergone chemotherapy.
Posted on October 17, 2006 in Gyms
He pulled the cell phone away from his ear as he burst through the door with his two friends. A female voice came through it. “Do you have me on speaker phone? Do you have me on speaker phone?” A twitch of his finger ended it. The canine word came out of his mouth.
“She’s upset because she saw me kissing X,” he said.
“Is she still on the line?” a friend asked.
“No, I hung up on her.” He spoke rapidly. “I hung up on her.”
“If you’re not seeing her anymore it’s not an issue.”
The phone man swaggered about the locker room, bragging of his being in the right as his friends dressed themselves.
When they came back from their workout, the friends steered clear of the phone man.
Posted on October 16, 2006 in Commons Theft Folly Watch Terrorism The InterNet
Is that Bin Laden hiding in my memory chip? Homeland Security chief Michael Chertoff has gone on record to say that the Internet could be breeding terrorists. Of course, he doesn’t have any evidence of this. He just says:
“They can train themselves over the Internet. They never have to necessarily go to the training camp or speak with anybody else and that diffusion of a combination of hatred and technical skills in things like bomb-making is a dangerous combination,” Chertoff said. “Those are the kind of terrorists that we may not be able to detect with spies and satellites.”
By radicalize, does he mean that folks will be moved by the logic of liberal blogs and vote Democratic?
The Republicans are out to destroy your commons.
Posted on October 16, 2006 in Folly Watch Liberals & Progressives
Harper’s Magazine writer Wells Tower attended the twenty eighth annual National Conservative Student Conference in Washington last July and August. He collected this list of reasons why the attenders were present at the conference:
After collecting these and many others like them, Tower was surprised not to hear one reason. Can you guess what it is?
Posted on October 16, 2006 in Commons Theft
Gallenkamp characterizes Andrews as a man who didn’t really have many ideas. This allows him to write of Andrews’s life as an adventure story — which is how Andrews sold himself — rather than investigating those attitudes which informed his treatment of and negotiations with the peoples who he plundered.
First, Andrews hated Communists, so much so that he could not see their positive accomplishments through his bile. For example, before the Communist takeover of Mongolia, he observed a horrific prison: inmates were kept in coffins and forced to wallow in food crumbs and their own excrement. After the Communists took over, this system was abolished and replaced with a modern prison with spacious rooms and an exercise yard. Yet he gives the Communists no credit for the reform.
The existence of early twentieth century Communists — who derived many of their ideas from European and American Anabaptists and Evangelicals — belies Gallenkamp’s assertion that there just wasn’t anyone challenging Andrews’s core beliefs about imperialism and racism. They did confront him about his participation in the foreign plundering of China and Mongolia, but rather than redefine his presence in Central Asia, he sought to go around them and preserve his ambition to remove as many fossils as he could from these countries.
It never crossed Andrews’s mind while he was playing polo with his friends in the foreign legations why so many Chinese and Mongolians were voluntarilly joining the Party. He went on like slave owners and supporters of the Iraq War after him not acknowledging opposing views and consequently giving energy to terroristic and authoritarian movements.
Second, racism played a part. Gallenkamp conceals this under the name “ethnic concerns”. The reason why Andrews’s was tooling around Central Asia was that he was hoping to prove the thesis of his mentor — Henry Fairfield Osborn — that the human race had originated in Asia.
Osborn, the scion of a railroad fortune, believed in eugenics. He praised the Nazis and went to Germany to pick up an honorary degree. Given that American anthropologists — especially Franz Boas of Columbia University — had statistically shown the absurdity of hatred on the basis of ethnicity, we can’t say that Osborn was ignorant. Going along with his class, yes, but not ignorant.
During the 1920s, Raymond Dart announced the discovery of a very early hominid skull in South Africa. Called the Taung Baby, it challenged the notion that humanity had risen in Eurasia. Despite this, most paleontologists continued to believe in a Great Yellow Hope to come out of Asia. Despite the finding of Homo Erectus skulls in Java and China, this never materialized.
We can combine this with a third attitude which is Imperialism. When in Peking, Andrews spent most of his time hanging out at the polo grounds with other members of the foreign legations. He seldom talked to Communists and other nationalists except when it was necessary for the sake of his expeditions. Perhaps he thought that there was nothing they could offer him. This isolation enabled him to plunge forward in ignorance, pushing his explorations above all other considerations. It never crossed his mind that he might be contributing to the strife he saw all around him.
The chaos that overwhelmed China in those days allowed Andrews to play the role of the opportunist. He often bullied local militia and nomads with his auto caravan which was heavilly armed with guns guns knowing that there was little they could do to stop him. When the Mongolian and Chinese governments finally put a stop to his plundering, he approached first the puppet Pu Yi government in Manchuria and then the Soviet government(!) in attempts to reach the fabled land of fossils by routes not squatted upon by the Chinese or the Mongolians.
I do not discredit, entirely, Andrews’ contributions to paleontology because of these faults. I just feel that they have been underplayed and summarilly dismissed in a defense of the collections at the American Museum of Natural History. Do they belong in New York or in Mongolia/China? This is a good question not dissimilar to where should the Elgin Marbles go, London or Athens?
In this latter case, Lord Elgin, an opportunist of another time, arranged with the Turkish government to buy and transport the Parthenon friezes out of Greece. The Turks didn’t care about the Greek heritage. Elgin won for himself and for the British Museum an important gloating point. To this day a time of social upheaval(?) is used to justify the pilferage of a nation’s heritage. And the British Museum is not giving the Marbles back.
Who owns a nation? The Elgin Marbles and the archaeology carried out by colonialists certainly established the precedents for the Central Asiatic Expeditions. But what precedents did Andrews set and are followed today? Look to the cradles of civilization for your answer.
To be continued.
Posted on October 15, 2006 in Lies War
No one can find the least trace of radioactivity in the air following the North Korea “nuclear test”.
Posted on October 15, 2006 in Xenartha
The first of my Friday anteater blogs — a Panamanian Tamandua.
Send me your anteater tidbits, photos, cartoons, etc. Echidnas, aardvarks, and other examples of covergent evolution also welcome.