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Monday, March 31, 2003 |
Divine Right of Empire Sunday Lottery
New York Sunday, March 30, 2003 Winning number for the midday Empire State lottery: 007 Operation James From The Glasgow Daily Record:
Commando raiders tightened the Allies' grip on Basra yesterday by storming a key suburb of Iraq's besieged second city. The raid was named Operation James, after James Bond. Targets were codenamed Goldfinger, Blofeld and Pussy Galore. Pennsylvania Sunday, March 30, 2003 Winning number for the midday Keystone State Lottery: 256 "All or Nothing at All" — Frank Sinatra The PA lottery number on the night Sinatra died was 256. Operation Playmate From Yahoo News: Friday, March 28, 2003 - During the Gulf War, Playboy magazine's celebrated Centerfolds reached out to U.S. military men and women... with their "Operation Playmate" project.... Those... efforts... had their roots in the Vietnam War, when 1966 Playmate of the Year Jo Collins traveled to the combat zone and flew aboard a helicopter gunship....
Now, in light of the war in Iraq, "Operation Playmate" has returned.
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Saturday, March 29, 2003 |
The Ideology of Empire, Part II The president of Columbia University said yesterday that he was horrified by the remarks of an anthropology professor who said at a campus antiwar teach-in Wednesday night that he hoped to see "a million Mogadishus" — referring to the city in Somalia where American soldiers were ambushed in a lethal firefight in 1993. The professor, Nicholas De Genova, also called for the defeat of United States forces in Iraq, and said the only true heroes are those who help defeat the American military. He said Americans who call themselves patriots are imperialist white supremacists. Commentary Few imperialists can, nowadays, politically afford to be white supremacists, and few white supremacists are inclined to applaud an American Empire based, as some Bush supporters would wish, on Christian Zionism. If De Genova were correct, then the favorite reading of "Americans who call themselves patriots" would be the following strange opus: Imperium, The review linked above begins as follows: "Imperium may be the closest thing that the real world offers Mel Brooks, take note. |
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Saturday, March 29, 2003 |
The Ideology of Empire and There has been much talk lately of the establishment of a new American Empire. An empire needs an ideology. The Bush family, which has strong ties to various right-wing Christian organizations, may favor an ideology best described as "Christian Zionism." For an excellent overview of this ideology, see the following Christ Church website: Christian Zionism: In view of the strong influence of Christian Zionism on the United States government, the following festival should perhaps be known as "Springtime for Jesus" — The National Cherry Blossom Festival, A Christian Zionist haiku Cherry blossoms bloom. Personally, I side with Henry David Thoreau, Aldous Huxley, J. Robert Oppenheimer, and Andre Weil in preferring the Hindu Holy Scripture The Bhagavad-Gita to any Abrahamic religious text. The Gita deals, at one level, with a particular incarnation of the Aryan god Vishnu. Holi 2003, a springtime festival associated with Vishnu, will be celebrated tonight in Carteret, New Jersey. "The old Aryan god, Vishnu, was portrayed as coming to Earth periodically in the form of Krishna, the embodiment of Spring...." — The Classical Empires, a website of the University of Kansas at Lawrence, Kansas (final home of William S. Burroughs)
Burroughs fans at the University of Kansas Follow-up of Sunday, March 30, 2003: See With God on His Side, by Garry Wills, |
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Saturday, March 29, 2003 |
Fourths Fourth International World Socialist Web Site, published by the International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI) Google directory of Socialist organizations Fourth Reich xxx Google directory of White Pride groups |
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Friday, March 28, 2003 |
Bright Star From a Spanish-English dictionary: Today is Reba McEntire's birthday. " 'I know what it is you last saw,' she said; 'for that is also in my mind. Do not be afraid! But do not think that only by singing amid the trees, nor even by the slender arrows of elven-bows, is this land of Lothlórien maintained and defended against the Enemy. I say to you, Frodo, that even as I speak to you, I perceive the Dark Lord and know his mind, or all his mind that concerns the Elves. And he gropes ever to see me and my thought. But still the door is closed!' — J. R. R. Tolkien, The Lord of the Rings Related material on telepathy: Shining Forth and Naturalized Epistemology Related material on rings, and another musical Reba: Leonard Gillman interview, Part I and Part II Gillman, a pianist, is co-author of Rings of Continuous Functions. |
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Thursday, March 27, 2003 |
Sixteen war protesters, handcuffed together, blocked traffic near 47th Street and 5th Avenue in New York City Wednesday. They chanted "Occupation is a Crime, Free Iraq and Palestine!" — Newsday, March 26, 2003 Forty-seventh Street between Fifth and Sixth Avenues is known as the diamond district (or, in Buddhist parlance, "Diamond Way").
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Monday, March 24, 2003 |
Orwell's question, according to "When so much of the BS is right out in the open, "First of all, I'd like to thank the Academy...." The New Yorker of March 31, 2003, discusses leftist academic Noam Chomsky. The online edition provides a web page listing pro-Chomsky links. Chomsky's influence is based in part on the popularity of his half-baked theories on linguistics, starting in the 1950's with "deep structure" and "transformational," or "generative," grammar. Chomsky has abandoned many of his previous ideas and currently touts what he calls The Minimalist Program. For some background on Chomsky's recent linguistic notions, see the expository essay "Syntactic Theory," by Elly van Gelderen of the Arizona State University English Department. Van Gelderen lists her leftist political agenda on her "Other Interests" page. Her department may serve as an example of how leftists have converted many English departments in American universities to propaganda factories. Some attacks on Chomsky's scholarship: Forty-four Reasons Why the Chomskians Are Mistaken Chomsky's (Mis)Understanding of Human Thinking Anatomy of a Revolution... Chomsky in 1962 ...Linguistic Theory: The Rationality of Noam Chomsky Some attacks on Chomsky's propaganda: Destructive Generation excerpt Partners in Hate: Noam Chomsky and the Holocaust Deniers Chomsky and Plato's Diamond Like another purveyor of leftist nonsense, Jacques Derrida, Chomsky is fond of citing Plato as a precedent. In particular, what Chomsky calls "Plato's problem" is discussed in Plato's Meno. For a look at the diamond figure that plays a central role in that dialogue, see Diamond Theory. For an excellent overview of related material in Plato, see Theory of Forms.
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Saturday, March 22, 2003 |
Remember Me to Herald Square...
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Friday, March 21, 2003 |
ART WARS: Readings for Bach's Birthday Larry J. Solomon: Symmetry as a Compositional Determinant, In Solomon's work, a sequence of notes is represented as a set of positions within a Latin square: Transformations of the Latin square correspond to transformations of the musical notes. For related material, see The Glass Bead Game, by Hermann Hesse, and Charles Cameron's sites on the Game. Steven H. Cullinane: Dorothy Sayers: "The function of imaginative speech is not to prove, but to create--to discover new similarities, and to arrange them to form new entities, to build new self-consistent worlds out of the universe of undifferentiated mind-stuff." (Christian Letters to a Post-Christian World, Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1969, p. xiii) — Quoted by Timothy A. Smith, "Intentionality and Meaningfulness in Bach's Cyclical Works" Edward Sapir: "...linguistics has also that profoundly serene and satisfying quality which inheres in mathematics and in music and which may be described as the creation out of simple elements of a self-contained universe of forms. Linguistics has neither the sweep nor the instrumental power of mathematics, nor has it the universal aesthetic appeal of music. But under its crabbed, technical, appearance there lies hidden the same classical spirit, the same freedom in restraint, which animates mathematics and music at their purest." — "The Grammarian and his Language," |
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Wednesday, March 19, 2003 |
A Look at the Rat In memory of Herbert Aptheker, theoretician of the American Communist Party, who died on St. Patrick's Day, 2003 — From The New Yorker, issue dated March 24, 2003, Louis Menand on Edmund Wilson's To the Finland Station: "Wilson did know what was going on in the Soviet Union in the nineteen-thirties, as his pages on Stalin in To the Finland Station make clear. The problem wasn’t with Stalin; the problem was with Lenin, the book’s ideal type of the intellectual as man of action. Wilson admitted that he had relied on publications controlled by the Party for his portrait of Lenin. (Critical accounts were available; for example, the English translation of the émigré Mark Landau-Aldanov’s Lenin was published, by Dutton, in 1922.) Lenin could create an impression of selfless humanitarianism; he was also a savage and ruthless politician—a 'pail of milk of human kindness with a dead rat at the bottom,' as Vladimir Nabokov put it to Wilson in 1940, after reading To the Finland Station. In the introduction to the 1972 edition, Wilson provided a look at the rat. He did not go on to explain in that introduction that the most notorious features of Stalin’s regime—the use of terror, the show trials, and the concentration camps—had all been inaugurated by Lenin. To the Finland Station begins with Napoleon’s betrayal of the principles of the French Revolution; it should have ended with Lenin’s betrayal of European socialism." From Herbert Aptheker, "More Comments on Howard Fast": "We observe that in the list of teachers whom Howard Fast names as most influential in his own life there occur the names of fourteen individuals from Jefferson to Bernard Shaw, Upton Sinclair to Marx, Douglass to Engels, but there is no room for Lenin. For more on Howard Fast, see my entry For a look at the pail of milk, see For a more cheerful look at geometry "There is such a thing as a tesseract." |
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Tuesday, March 18, 2003 |
Purim "Comedy gold!" BBC News, Tuesday, 21 March, Song of God The Jewish holiday Purim began at sundown "It's Springtime for Esther and Israel!" It is said that God is in the details. The details: Purim is the holiday celebrating Esther. For more on that name, see Three in One. From The New Yorker, issue dated March 24, 2003: "Lenin could create an impression of selfless humanitarianism; he was also a savage and ruthless politician — a 'pail of milk of human kindness with a dead rat‡ at the bottom,' as Vladimir Nabokov put it...." Sounds familiar, somehow. _____________________________ † Added March 20: ‡ Added March 20: |
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Monday, March 17, 2003 |
Double From amctv.com: The Milkman (1950) "Donald O'Connor plays Roger, an agitated war veteran with an unusual speech impediment caused by a war injury: he quacks like a duck when he gets upset. His father refuses to give him a job at the family dairy because he wants him to rest, so he goes to work for a competing milk farm where eccentric milkman Breezy (Jimmy Durante) works. Roger falls in love with the boss's daughter [Piper Laurie] and proves himself to be a comically incompetent milkman, and Breezy must cover up his mistakes."
Summa Theologica From amctv.com: St. Patrick's Day (1999) "In this warm family saga, Mary Pat Donnelly McDonough (Piper Laurie), the widowed matriarch of a big Irish-American clan, shocks her family when she announces she has pledged to give up alcohol and won't be serving any at her traditional house party. What follows is a multi-generational story with many surprising revelations...." See also The Diamond Project. |
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Sunday, March 16, 2003 |
Letter On this date in 1850, Nathaniel Hawthorne's novel "Ye see how large a letter Einstein wrote a rather Song of God From the Hindu holy scripture Bhagavad Gita (Song of God): "Of orators, I am the speech; of letters the first one, A; I am imperishable time; the Creator whose face is everywhere; death that devours all things." "... — Suzan-Lori Parks, See also my note of two years ago, "Random Thoughts for St. Patrick's Eve." For more on Oppenheimer and the Bhagavad Gita, see |