Klara’s sick at home, so we watched Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio to keep her entertained. It’s well-made but I can’t figure out who the audience is supposed to be. It’s too dark and convoluted for kids but too preachy and primitive for adults. Klara watched it but she’s screen-deprived and would watch a soap commercial on a loop. I watched to keep her company but it was very tedious.
Author: Clarissa
Mature Conservatism
Exactly. Meloni has been amazing in her fierce anti-Russian stand. She’s one of European conservatives who are doing what their American counterparts aren’t managing to do, which is being conservative without practicing extreme subservience to Russia.
Meloni’s conservatism is of the mature kind. It has the moral authority to express opinions independently, without first checking what the opponents think and always trying to say the exact opposite.
Not For You
Oh, thank God. I hate the stupid “for you” tab. It’s great that only the blue checks will be persecute by it.
Ukraine: Conservative or Woke?
Thanks to this wonderful volunteer, there’s a translation of this important discussion on whether Ukraine is a conservative or a woke project:
The question can only arise in the minds of those who are completely unfamiliar with the situation but it’s ok, nobody should be blamed for not knowing.
As to why US (but not European) conservatives are pissing away a brilliant chance to suddenly become relevant while supporting nationalism, patriotism, freedom of speech and of religion, the reason is the same as why they piss away every chance to not be irrelevant. Conservatives in Europe have figured it out but ours are determined to marginalize themselves forever.
In Concert
Which federal government in the USA?
Exactly. The Trump and Biden administrations worked in complete concert to make this happen. Whether you like the PREP act amendments of 2020-2021 or not, it’s undeniable that both administrations made them happen.
But only one managed to get rid of Fauci.
Two Poems by Elizabeth Jennings
KINGS
You send an image hurrying out of doors
When you depose a king and seize his throne:
You exile symbols when you take by force.
And even if you say the power’s your own,
That you are your own hero, your own king
You will not wear the meaning of the crown.
The power a ruler has is how men bring
Their thoughts to bear upon him, how their minds
Construct the grandeur from the simple thing.
And kings prevented from their proper ends
Make a deep lack in men’s imaginings;
Heroes are nothing without worshipping,
Will not diminish into lovers, friends.
THE ENEMIES
Last night they came across the river and
Entered the city. Women were awake
With lights and food. They entertained the band,
Not asking what the men had come to take
Or what strange tongue they spoke
Or why they came so suddenly through the land.
Now in the morning all the town is filled
With stories of the swift and dark invasion;
The women say that not one stranger told
A reason for his coming. The intrusion
Was not for devastation:
Peace is apparent still on hearth and field.
Yet all the city is a haunted place.
Man meeting man speaks cautiously. Old friends
Close up the candid looks upon their face.
There is no warmth in hands accepting hands;
Each ponders, ‘Better hide myself in case
Those strangers have set up their homes in minds
I used to walk in. Better draw the blinds
Even if the strangers haunt in my own house.’
Punishment for Good Intentions
Out of the goodness of my heart, I agreed to serve as a judge for the graduate research showcase. My kind intentions were immediately punished. One of the students assigned to me will be presenting on how the USSR liberated the Nazi Baltics in 1940.
I had no idea that there were people on campus whose research aims to praise the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact. I would have been quite content to continue existing in that happy ignorance.
COVID Dandelions
In order to pay for the stimulus checks, the “free” vaccines, the “free” COVID tests, etc, the US government had to print a lot of money. That freshly printed money made the money already in existence less valuable. When there’s more of something, it loses value. Dandelions aren’t nearly as valuable as diamonds.
Since a dollar is worth less, you need more dollars than before to buy the same thing. That’s called inflation.
I’ve made some calculations, and my single “free” vaccine shot has already cost me thousands. Knowing what we know now, wouldn’t we have preferred to pay $30 for the vaccines or the tests?
I don’t want to discuss the advisability of the vaccines right now but the issue of what these “free” things ultimately cost. We’ve lived with the Universal Basic Income (aka COVID stimulus checks) for a little over a year. And look at the results. We are all poorer and more precarious.
Expensive Activities
All kids’ activities in the area have become dramatically more expensive. The Aquarium in St Louis is now for rich people. We’ve been once, and are not planning to return because the cost is exorbitant. The local kid gym and trampoline park where we used to go without even wondering how much they cost became a rare treat.
I have a very good income, folks, and it’s still too expensive. If a tenured academic with a techie husband can barely afford it, there’s really something wrong.
The most annoying part is that these price hikes that punish parents are the result of the COVID policies that. . . also punished parents. Lockdowns wiped out kids’ activities, making the ones that remain very expensive. COVID stimuli created the inflation.
The First Neoliberal President
“Government cannot solve our problems, it can’t set our goals, it cannot define our vision. Government cannot eliminate poverty or provide a bountiful economy or reduce inflation or save our cities or cure illiteracy or provide energy. And government cannot mandate goodness.”
No, it wasn’t Reagan who said this. It was the first neoliberal American president Jimmy Carter, inspired by his friend and neoliberal muse Ralph Nader.
Of course, now everybody will tell me this is widely known but I had no idea. I’m only finding this out from Gary Gerstle’s book The Rise and Fall of the Neoliberal Order.
See? It’s what I keep saying. Political parties aren’t that important. There’s no difference between Carter’s words and Reagan’s later quip about the scariest words in the English language being “I’m from the government and I’m here to help.” And guess who started the massive deregulation of the airline, trucking and railroad industries? Also Carter. Then Reagan carried on in the same vein.
It goes in waves. Neoliberal Carter, neoliberal Reagan, neoliberal Bush, neoliberal Clinton, and so on.
I’m only on page 67 out of 406 but it’s an excellent book so far. Reads very easily, no academic jargon at all. I’m on pins and needles to find out how the story ends because I’m now really doubting my earlier disagreements with Gerstle.