Hated by All the Right People

What’s happened to Tucker?”, Rod Dreher may have asked himself in not so many words. Since Carlson aired an interview with a young troll whose name I’ll not give further mention, and failed to press the boy on his antisemitic and generally racist reviews, Dreher and Carlson have had a falling out.  Dreher cannot understand what he reads as antisemitism from Carlson’s camp:  personally, I don’t equate criticism of Israel with antisemitism, but platforming the troll without asking him any hard questions was damned strange, if not outright vile. When Senator Ted Cruz was on, evincing his total support for Israel and antagonism towards Iran, Tucker mercilessly grilled him: that was, in fact, the reason I listened to my first TC show.  I’m not much for TV personalities, but seeing a neocon get put on the spot was a dish too tempting not to try.  “What’s Happened to Tucker?” is also the subject of Hated By all the Right People, which tracks  Carlson’s journalistic career from being a ‘young tyro’ at The New Republic through his TV heights,   broadcasting every night into a president’s ears – and beyond. 

 Hated is also already slightly dated, given that the general “Tucker sold his soul to the Devil to be near Trump” premise is now completely moot. Because of Carlson’s refusal to roll over on the Epstein files or aggressive support for Israel and its Highlander approach towards Iran,  Tucker has been denounced by the Donald as a loser with a “low IQ”.  Of course, the Donald being who he is,  they may be holding hands and skipping through the tulips before  his second term is up.   Hated by all the Right People is an interesting book, a history of a man who saw changes in journalism coming and made leaps of courage accordingly, struggling at first but then making a success of himself after an unexpected breeze blew in from south Florida.  The author has an obvious distaste for his subject, which is never promising, and this manifests itself through a multitude of quotes that are framed to diminish him. One example: the author says Carlson evinced antisemitic views by claiming  that the Jewish Zelensky had attacked Christian churches.  Zelensky’s government  has in fact attacked Orthodox churches within Ukraine,  but for nationalist rather than religious reasons. 

I knew very little about Carlson before reading this:   he was not someone I paid attention to until he announced he was going to interview Vladimir Putin. That struck me as novel and potentially interesting, but I wouldn’t wind up listening to one of Carlson’s interviews in  full until the aforementioned Cruz roast.  I enjoyed learning about his life, even from someone who was sharply critical  of Carlson’s work.  I was interested in journalism in high school, so reading about Carlson’s beginnings as a newspaper and magazine reporter were especially interesting. Tucker thought that televised journalism had a lot of potential and transitioned early,  despite the advice of friends and peers. While he did struggle, eventually he began getting traction – but  Marshall McLuhan’s admonition that the medium is the message started doing its work, and soon  Carlson was engaged in projects where arguments and outrage were more salient than measured discussion. When Carlson launched his own online news project in The Daily Caller, he openly admitted that he was chasing clicks – and while he wanted to create a right-of-center equivalent to The Huffington Post,  his desire for that monster ‘engagement’ led to sloppier, more provocative headlines. Breitbart would run as a rival and eclipse the Caller in clickbait, leading to the Caller trying to outdo it.   

 It was when Tucker returned to the big screen, though, that he really took off.  He landed a show on Fox that rode the wave of the Trump upset, and Carlson rode it well in part because he was not one of the party faithful. He presented himself as someone wary of Trump himself, but outright antagonistic toward Trumps opponents. While it’s easy to read that as insincere,   speaking from personal experience  it sounds legitimate: I know a lot of Republicans and conservatives who don’t like Trump, will actively disparage him, but they so loathe who he speaks against – the ‘woke’, the DC elite, etc –   that they’ll rally around the flag, anyway. Tucker’s teasing evidently intrigued Trump, tickling his ego but denying him satisfaction just enough: the Donald began calling Tucker to chat about the show, and after Carlson recovered from the oddity of the President watching his show faithfully, he began using it to speak directly to the president: ultimately, however, Carlson’s deeply rooted convictions against foreign wars and resentment of Israel’s influence on foreign policy – combined with whatever leverage Netanyahu has over Trump –  have resulted in a falling out since Carlson spoke out against the Iran strikes of last year that “totally demolished” Iran’s nuclear program.  Ultimately, Tucker continues to ride high: he may have been banished from Fox News, but just as he jumped from magazines to TVs and then took advantage of new online-only papers, so now he is an independent media personality with a podcast that rivals and sometimes outstrips other leading podcasters like Joe Rogan.

This is definitely a mixed bag of a book: the author’s dislike for his subject leads to a lot of misrepresentation, but the man and the currents he’s been involved with are interesting subjects in themselves – especially if you’re a libertarian with strong foreign policy views yourself!   I thought the story was most interesting from the journalistic angle, since we’re watching the field evolve over the course of thirty years. I don’t think that evolution has been a good one, either: one reason Tucker was not on my radar until last year or so is that I don’t ‘watch’ news, either on TV or on my computer; I prefer reading it, in part because Neil Postman made me think critically about information and how its presentation affects how we are able to process it. We have all seen news degenerate from long thinkpieces to clickbait titles with little substance: it entertains without informing, and unfortunately Carlson has been part of that transformation.

Next up: I am closing in on the end of Lincoln, and am still working on my review of Maverick by Jason Riley. The problem with the latter is that it’s an intellectual biography of a man, so it’s not easy to precis.

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WWW Wednesday & Long and Short Prompt

This has nothing to do with books, but considering how many presidential books I’ve read recently it might as well have

Today’s prompt from Long and Short Reviews is, “A Typical Day in My Life”. I’m as-yet unmarried and as-yet still working, so my day to day is fairly predictable. I wake up at 7, make coffee, read substack and blogs, and then get ready for work. It’s at work where things get…..unpredictable. I work at an urban public library, and we get all kinds. I don’t mean a delightful mix of crotchety old bibliophiles and giddy kids, either, but a rogue’s gallery of eccentrics, cranks, and downright nuts — some dangerous. (I’m not kidding: one former ‘patron’ of ours is currently in jail for straight-up murdering a woman in a bookstore.) My day to day work varies: while I have consistent library-man things to do (monitor the computer lab, answer reference questions, conduct historical research, shelve books, fax, scan, etc), my department gets all kinds of requests. People might ask us to help them with something with their phone, for instance: one man so frequently created issues for himself on his phone that I’ve learned a lot about Android just having to search for answers. While some days it’s quiet and I can dig into old newspapers with the contentment of a nesting hamster, other days I’m asked so many questions I will eat lunch in my car just so I can steal some peace and quiet. After work, I generally go home, unless there’s some social event in town where I can pop in. Last week, for instance, I went to a historical preservation society meeting, and sometimes there are talks at the local bookstore. Since so many of my friends left town after the tornado, I don’t get to hang out with them in the evenings the way I used to. I sometimes have responsibilities like board meetings or choir practice, but generally I go home to read, listen to podcasts/lectures, and watch a movie. (Not all in the same evening, of course.)

WWW Wednesday

WHAT have you finished reading recently? Take Me To Your Leader, Neil deGrasse Tyson, as well as the full cast audio presentation of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows.

WHAT are you reading now? I started reading Lincoln by Gore Vidal; it’s part of a series of novels he did on ‘American Empire’. It’s a fatty with small text, so I may be chewing on it a while.

WHAT are you reading next? Most likely Brad Birzer’s new release: The Declaration of Independence: A Radical Experiment in Liberty.

Firefly-O-Versary

A Firefly + ST TOS wallpaper which is so perverse I have to love it

Facebook reminded me that 16 years ago today I posted, “Watching the first episode of Firefly”. Firefly has been one of my favorite stories since, so…why not share ten favorite quotes?

(1) “May have been the losin’ side. Still ain’t convinced it was the wrong one.” – Cap’n Mal

(2) “Somebody tries to kill you, you try to kill them right back!” – Cap’n Mal

(3) “No more runnin’. I aim to misbehave.” – Cap’n Mal

(4) “Well, look-at-this! Seems we got here just in the nick of time. What does that make us?”
“Big damn heroes, sir.”
“Ain’t we just?” – Cap’n Mal & Zoe

(5) “You know, they say mercy is the mark of a great man. (stab) Maybe I’m just a good one. (stab) Well, I’m all right.” – Cap’n Mal

(6) “This landing is going to be interesting.”
“Define ‘interesting’.”
“‘Oh God, Oh God, we’re all going to die'”? – Cap’n Mal & Wash

(7) “I cannot abide useless people.” – Warwick Hallow

(8) “What’d y’all order a dead guy for?” – Jayne

(9) “Ah, I love the pitter-patter of tiny feet in combat boots. SHUT UP!” – Cap’n Mal

(10) “Can’t stop the signal.” – Mr. Universe

See less

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Take Me To Your Leader

Aliens have been in the news of late, as Congress held hearings on ‘UAPs’ in ’23 and ’24, and the Biden and Trump admins both began moving to release some of the government’s ‘Unidentified Anomalous Phenomenon’ or UFO files. Just in time comes Neil deGrasse Tyson’s book on aliens, and he should know a thing or to since he hails from the same city the Men in Black are headquartered in. The book is casually written and thus a light read, but still saturated with a range of science — chemistry, physics, astrophysics, etc. It opens by Tyson sharing his fascination with aliens as a kid, and from there roams far and wide. Tyson uses both pop-culture depictions and science to analyze our conceptions of aliens, and how anthropocentric they are: he invites us to consider how truly weird and mind-blowing aliens might be. Imagine how strange life on Earth — with whom we share part of the same DNA, the ‘part’ varying on species — is. How much more incredible must be life on other worlds? After reviewing reasons we may not have encountered alien life yet (namely, distance and rarity of life), Tyson wraps up with some good ol’ fashioned UFO debunking. This includes testimony from recent Congressional hearings, too — he is not impressed. I enjoyed this well enough, but it’s a light, fast read, and didn’t run into anything I was unfamiliar with aside from his specific criticism of some of the ’23/’24 testimony.

And with that, I’ve finally broken ground on the Science Survey for this year.

Quotations

In fact, we know more about the surfaces of both the Moon and Mars than about our own ocean bottom. Want evidence of that? In 2005 the nuclear submarine USS San Francisco collided with an uncharted sea mountain.

If Aliens landed in Los Angeles, their first impression might be that Earth’s dominant life-form is the automobile. An obvious conclusion. When one gets injured, another version of that life-form shows up to haul it away and get repaired. Some of the larger life-forms on the freeway carry multiple automobiles within them. To the Aliens, these car haulers are surely pregnant.

In science, there’s no such thing as a credible claim or a credible witness, only credible evidence. (Remember Percival Lowell claiming that Mars had canals?

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Teaser Tuesday & CC Spin 44

Teaser Tuesday

“If Aliens landed in Los Angeles, their first impression might be that Earth’s dominant life-form is the automobile. An obvious conclusion. When one gets injured, another version of that life-form shows up to haul it away and get repaired. Some of the larger life-forms on the freeway carry multiple automobiles within them. To the Aliens, these car haulers are surely pregnant.” – Neil deGrasse Tyson, Take Me To Your Leader

Classics Club Spin 44:

On Sunday the Classics Club spun up #9, which for me is…

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Harry Potter and the VERY SCREAMY CAMPING TRIP

The Ministry has fallen.
Scrimgeour is dead.
They are coming.

One minute Harry and company are attending the wedding of Bill and Fleur, the next moment they’re running for their lives and living like vagabonds in the woods while trying to figure out how to take down the second coming of Lord Voldemort. Key to his ‘immortality’ are a series of objects called Horcruxes; these are objects in which part of his soul, split apart through murder, has been embedded. In Half-Blood Prince, we learned about Voldy’s attempt to thwart death by creating one — but in fact, he’s created multiples, possibly as many as seven. Two have been destroyed already — one by Harry, unwittingly in Chamber of Secrets, and one by Dumbledore in the summer between Phoenix and Half-Blood Prince. But five remain, and if Voldemort is to be defeated and the English Wizarding world redeemed, Harry will need to track them down and destroy them. Where are they? Good question. How can they be destroyed? Even better. But that is the task lying before Harry, Ron, and Hermione. Deathly Hallows is the conclusion to the Harry Potter series, and in its audio form is a fantastic, emotional experience.

I sometimes fall asleep listening to an audiobook. This was proved to be a mistake in the case of Deathly Hallows, because I’d forgotten how much of this book is PEOPLE SCREAMING. In the first third of the book, we have three teenagers who have fled to the woods because they’re on the new government’s enemies list for various reasons. They’re frequently tired, hungry, scared, and desperate. They have a mission but no effective idea of how to realize it. Combine all this anxiety with normal teenager drama and you wind up with three people screaming at each other a lot — Harry, because he’s being bothered by his Voldemort scar again and is feeling the urgency of issue more; Ron, because he’s super-stressed about his family and emotionally charged about Hermione; and Hermione, who is upset by the boys’ constant angsting. Later on, as the trio get information that gives them leads, they cross paths with antagonists like the foul werewolf Fenrir Grayback and the delightfully insane Bellatrix LeStrange — and I must say, Saffron Coomber does excellent blood-curdling screams as Hermione. Reading that character is being tortured is one thing; hearing the screams and having your own guts clench in sympathy is quite another. The sound design in general continues to be top-tier, with an excellence balance of atmospheric sound, superb voice acting, and music used slightly when appropriate.

Deathly Hallows brims over with emotional intensity, given the stakes. Voldemort has captured the Ministry, everyone sympathetic is in hiding or actively being hurt, and death is common. The book opens with Hedwig and Mad-Eye Moody dying in an attempt to remove Harry to a new shelter after the magic that protected him at his aunt and uncle’s place expires, and before the book ends there will be more deaths. Death marks the book in other ways, too: Dumbledore’s will gave Hermione a book of children’s stories, for some reason, but one story has a symbol in it that Hermione recognizes. The story is a mythical account of three magical artifacts, one of which Harry is staggered to realize he possesses — the Cloak of Invisibility — and the other of which he really wants, the Elder Wand. This is a wand supposedly crafted by Death and gives its rightful wielder enormous advantage — though it also attracts trouble, as the owner of the Wand attracts those who also want the Wand and are willing to kill to get it. The streams of both Horcruxes and Hallows cross at the Battle of Hogwarts, in which Voldy and Harry go mano a mano — but with a twist.

I’ve lived with this story for nearly twenty years now, having read all the HP books through in the summer of 2007: you’d think knowing the ending would deaden the impact, but the sheer grace with which Rowling continues elaborating on themes from the first book — specifically, sacrificial love — combined with the excellent sound design, made Deathly Hallows a riveting experience. I was deliberately trying to hold myself back from devouring this one, since I know it’s the end, and yet at the same time I was listening to it well after midnight and regretting it in the morning. I’d already started re-listening to the FCA productions while waiting on DH to be released last week, and I will go so far as to say that I think the full cast audio books are the ideal, the definitive, way to experience the Harry Potter books. They’re that good.

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Hope Rides Again

“Picture this: Joe Biden—amateur detective. Racing around the
city in a Trans Am with his pal Barack Obama, trying to solve a crime that the
police have given up on.”

A few years ago I read a silly story about Joe Biden and Barack Obama trying to solve the mystery of an AMTRAK conductor being murdered while their Secret Service handlers and wives went “REALLY?”. This is its sequel. President Obama has lost his Blackberry, and we are at DEFCON 2.

That should be warranted. Why is President Obama using a BlackBerry in 2019? Dude, we have iPhones and Pixels! And even Samsung Galaxies, but give the Note7 a miss. No one comments on the oddity of using BlackBerries, but things get interesting when Obama and Biden do a location request on the BlackBerry and it shows up in the freight yards: Obama wipes the phone remotely, but Biden is intrigued. There’s something rotten in the state of Chi-Town! Scranton Joe strikes out in search of answers, but finds only more questions. (And thank goodness, because that’s generally how mystery novels work.) A young hotshot intern who also worked at the freight line has been shot, and is expected to die. Did he steal the President’s phone? Why?

Unlike the first book, Biden and Obama are not dogged by police who wish these two retired politicians (well, semi-retired — Biden is thinking about the 2020 election) would butt out, but they’re running around the South Side of Chicago — which, judging by the song “The Night Chicago Died”, is not a side to hang around in. The book leans heavily into mythic perceptions of both men, partially for a joke: even when Obama is tied up in a speakeasy and finds out that one of his captors didn’t vote, he has to give a lecture on the importance of serious voting. Biden, meanwhile, is obsessed with his everyman image and the ‘old man’ who doesn’t recognize any culture reference past the 1960s while Obama is so cool he’s tired of being cool. It’s a strange combination of Chicago crime and Presidential satire/humor.

I didn’t like this as much as the first book, possibly because the first title had the advantage of novelty: it also had the advantage of a more interesting supporting cast. Still, it was fine for a few hours of laughs and eye-rolls.

Related:
If Presidential humor is your thing, check out FinnFTW on youtube. He uses AI and character-accurate scripts (and….vulgarity) and has presidents playing video games together. It’s hilarious.

Don’t worry about me,” I told him. “This isn’t my first rodeo.” It wasn’t until I shut the door that I remembered I’d never been to a rodeo.

[Obama] closed his eyes and massaged his temples. “I was supposed to give up my phone for Lent. I was good for a couple of weeks, but then I started sneaking it out to check basketball scores. And then read the paper. And pretty soon I’d fallen off the wagon completely.” He looked over at me.
“Maybe this is God’s way of helping me get back on the wagon.”
“Lent? Trying to reconnect with your Irish ancestors?”
“More like trying to reconnect with my family. Michelle wanted me to try going a month without it. Said she ‘wanted her husband back.’”

One of my nicknames may have been Amtrak Joe, but I’d spent more time behind the wheel than Mario Andretti. “Car Joe” didn’t quite have the same ring to it, however.

Barack rolled his eyes behind his sunglasses. I didn’t actually see him do it —the glasses were reflective for a reason—but I knew him well enough to know which way his eyes rolled.

Neither of us had a pool of speechwriters to help us prepare our remarks—that era was long gone. Our old speechwriters were all podcasting now. One of these days, I was going to have to ask someone what in blue blazes a “podcast” was.

“Joe,” Barack said, “if I hear one more story about your weird 1930s all-boys prep school, I’m going to lose it. We’re going to have quiet time. Whoever can stay silent the longest gets two scoops of chocolate-chip ice cream.”
“And a waffle cone?”
“And a waffle cone,” he said. “We start now.”
“If you think I can’t shut up for five minutes, then—”
“You’re still talking.”

Hip-hop wasn’t my bowl of chili, so I couldn’t tell you the artist’s name. I still remember the first hip-hop song I’d ever heard. Tipper Gore had played it for me on a Walkman. She was shaking her head the whole time, and then afterward asked if I wasn’t moved to do something about it. I’m moved to turn it off, I joked.

“If we go sniffing around, asking questions like what you’re asking, we could wind up in Chicago overcoats. Six feet under.”
Barack shot me a perturbed look. “Chicago overcoats? The last person to actually say that out loud was John Dillinger. Just say coffins, Joe. Coffins.”

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Decision Points

I have a ….complicated relationship with George W. Bush. He was the president when I was in high school, and most importantly during 9/11: his “I can hear you!” response still makes me want to find a table, stand on it, and go “Oh captain my captain!”. I voted to reelect him in 2004, and then I voted straight-line Democrat in 2006. Reaction to his expansion of the military/police/surveillance state from 2005-forward was the beginning of my political consciousness; he made me a civil libertarian by opposition to his policies, which eventually made me a regular ol’ libertarian. I look at him and my multi-folded brain produces a dissonant chorus: the teenager who would stand on a desk for him, the early 20-something whose lip curled in rage at his name; the adult who wrestles with both. I’ve never read Decision Points, but somehow learning that he’d narrated it made me want to listen to it. So….read this knowing that it’s not a formal book review, but the record of a complicated man listening to another complicated man and trying to find a reckoning. (For what it’s worth, I have a similarly complicated relationship with Obama, who made me Believe again and then crushed my spirits.) The book is not a ‘biography’ as such, but rather Bush looking back at some of the hard calls of his life and presidency, and explaining why he made the decisions he did. What the reader gets out of this depends on what they went in for.

I listen to audiobooks in my car, not because I have a long commute but because my ladyfriend lives two hours away and I tend to speed if I listen to music. I have to say that spending hours listening to Bush talk about the Patriot Act, and dealing with two different versions of me arguing with one another while present-me tried to moderate and watch traffic at the same time (dude, I am not going to speed up for you, I am going to keep going slower and slower until you pass me) is a…unique experience. It’s also fairly depressing, to be honest, especially when he says stuff like “The liberation of Afghanistan had begun”. Bush frames this book not as a conventional biography, but a series of life-changing (and later on, world-changing) decisions: he begins with his decision to quit drinking, moves on to his decision to pursue a life in politics, and then discusses his political decisions. He opens his admin with a discussion on the stem cell debate instead of the obvious 9/11 / War on Terror track, but the latter dominates the midsection of the book, so it makes sense to address that first. It really wouldn’t fit in anywhere else. I will say up front that while I am a Southerner who enjoys listening to Bush’s Texas drawl, he is not as good a reader as Richard Nixon. When I listened to In the Arena by RN, I felt like the man was sitting opposite of me, bourbon in hand, earnestly talking to me about his life. When I listened to this, I distinctly felt like I was being read to from a book. There’s personality, there’s..some performance, but it’s worlds more static than RN’s delivery. This is especially obvious when he’s quoting himself and his self at the time was definitely more emotional.

Content-wise, the book itself is a mixed bag. I enjoyed hearing Bush’s behind-the-scenes offerings, but his rationale for doing this or that was not markedly different than the same rote we heard at the time. Granted, he published this fairly soon after he was out of office, in 2010, so perspective has not had much chance to form. The fine wine of hindsight was an off-tasting grape juice at that point. He admits that the intelligence that led him to invade Iraq at the time was flawed, but maintains that he had no idea at the time — and, if he were in the same position now, with the same intelligence and circumstances, he’d do it again. My memory can support this to an extent: assuming memories old enough to drink are valid, Afghanistan turned quiescent, and then Iraq happened and the insurgency, and it was the ‘bad war’; then we settled Iraq and Afghanistan became more and more complicated and it hung around our national neck like a millstone until Trump made the decision to cut bait and run, and Biden fulfilled it. When Bush was writing, we were still in that “Afghanistan War good, Iraq War bad” stage. Of course, now we know that the Iraq War’s repercussions were far worse, because they led to the rise of ISIS and to the Syrian war in which DC funded al-Queda to take down Assad (insert your favorite profanity here) — but we didn’t at the time. While I am old enough to know that politicians often lie, I am also old enough to know that the establishment also lies to the president, so I’m hesitant to go off on his rationales of all these decisions. Frankly, I already went off on them, 20 years ago, and I found it weird and amusing to listen to him offer defenses for the PATRIOT Act, the Military Commissions Act, the FISA act, etc. I remember at the time being radicalized by these, but now so much time has passed, and we’ve all become so accustomed to gross abuses of government power, that I couldn’t really remember why I’d been angry about them. (This, despite going off on lectures on people at the time!) Listening to Bush defend them, though, awoke my 2006-2007 self (who is still very angry) while my 2002 self just shrunk back feeling confused and heartbroken. Books are not for the faint of heart, I must say.

This was an interesting experience. I imagine reading the book would have been less impactful than listening to George W. read it, because — I like listening to him. It’s not just the drawl to my Southern ears, either, it’s hearing a voice from a past that, despite its problems, invokes comfort and nostalgia. That’s the funny thing about growing old, I suppose: in high school we were forced to look at the future with fear and trembling at the time by al-Queda’s actions, but at the same time I was exploring the brave new world of the internet in the early 2000s, and then — as I approached adulthood — I was getting invested in politics and remember being earnestly angry about it. Now that I’m beginning my forties, I’ve seen so much scandal that it’s very nearly water off a duck’s back — a kind of a ‘same (stuff), different day” mentality. Listening to this made me feel a sense of loss for my former self — someone who believed in something, someone who cared. I still believe in things, but not politicians. There’s a part of me that died in the car while listening to a debate between Obama and Clinton, thinking “they’re all the same, aren’t they?”, and he’s never come back. I suppose he never will, but I kind of miss him even my ‘older and wiser’ self writes him off as young and foolish. I suppose it’s telling that my 2026 self wound up just switching to a physical copy to finish the rest of the book, which hit on things like Hurricane Katrina and the economic hemorrhage.

This one is a hard one to summarize because I was listening to it — and reading — through a haze of strong emotions. These were my formative years in politics, so it’s hard to be objective. Bottom line, it was interesting to see Bush’s perspective on these events, however curated; I enjoyed hearing his voice, but he does not have a calling as an Audible narrator. His father is much better at it, but alas my listen-to of “Poppy’s” letters has been PETRIFOCUS TOTALUS!’d by the release of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, full cast audio. Ultimately, I don’t think W was a bad man: I think he made a lot of decisions under intense pressure, some of which were good and some of which were bad. That judgement is not made with the virtue of hindsight: I’m not judging Iraq as bad simply because of what happened a decade later, but by the principle that America should not go abroad in search of monsters to destroy: the so-called ’empire of liberty’ is a lie. Empire must be imperial; we cannot wield the One Ring without being subverted by its sickness.

I should maybe schedule something with kittens and flowers soon.

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Classics Club Spin #44

It’s time for another Classics Club spin, in which we’re given until May 17th to produce a list of 20 titles remaining on our Classics Club list, and then on that date a random number tells us which book on our list to read next. Because I have under twenty titles remaining on my list, I’m going to do the same thing I did last time: if the random number is above 10, I’ll simply subtract ten and go with the result. “#19” would translate to “#9” on my list, and so on.

Spin List Candidates!

(1) Ida Elizabeth. Sigrid Undset

(2) A Tree Grows in Brooklyn. Betty Smith

(3) Resurrection, Leo Tolstoy

(4) All the Little Live Things, Wallace Stegner

(5) The Mind of the South, W.J. Cash

(6) On the Nature of Things, Lucretius. Translated by Anthony Esolen.

(7) Their Eyes Were Watching God, Zora Neale Hurston

(8) Mansfield Park, Jane Austen

(9) Angle of Repose, Wallace Stegner

(10) Cancer Ward, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn

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WWW Wednesday

Today’s prompt from Long and Short Reviews is, what’s something we’d like to know more about? ….well, everything. You know when we’re children, we pester adults with question after question — what’s that? What’s that? Why does it do this? What does that do that? Where does this come from? That part of me never shut up. It’s the reason I have a book on ‘urban infrastructure’ that covers things like transformers, and why I will happily spend several hours digging around on the internet archive looking for answers to what the cryptic string ‘sept24d1m” means. (It means “run this ad in every daily paper for one month.“) It’s why I listen watch doctors dissect tv shows, or why yesterday I spent time digging through the Alabama League of Municipalities, which is a group for city attorneys. I just want to know everything about everything!

WHAT have you finished reading recently? I’m more or less done listening to Decision Points by George W. Bush, and before that I re-listened to In the Arena by Richard Nixon.

WHAT are you reading now? I paused Kennedy and Nixon for a moment to begin Maverick, a biography of Thomas Sowell which I’m enjoying enormously. I’ve begun listening to George H.W. Bush and family read a collection of his letters, which is a lot more interesting than it sounds. I’ll probably finish Maverick today.

WHAT are you reading next? Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, full cast audio edition, just dropped yesterday!

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Top Ten Bookish Quotes in re: the Whole Flower Thingummy

(Yes, I’ve been enjoying PG Wodehouse. How could you tell?)

Louisiana iris in a long-lost stand

Teaser Tuesday

“The one thing that saved me was that I always thought facts mattered. And once you think that facts matter, then of course that’s a very different ball game.” MAVERICK: A BIOGRAPHY OF THOMAS SOWELL, Jason Riley

Today’s TTT is “May Flowers”, and it’s supposed to be a psuedo-freebie in which we take liberties with flowers. I did that in ’24 with books with flower on the title, pictures of flowers, and a bit of music with flowers in the title. I feel this is peak May Flowers Freebie posting, so check it out. This time I’m going to share ….quotes about flowers, but I really liked sharing “Flower Duet” so I’m going to share another flowery song. Fun fact: when looking for quotes for this (because I only knew a few from memory and had to look on goodreads for the rest), I found a quote that said flowers were the Romeo and Juliet of nature. Someone has no idea how that play goes, do they?

I saw her sitting in the rain
Raindrops falling on her
She didn’t seem to care,
She sat there and smiled at me
And I knew
She could make me happy
Flowers in her hair
Flowers everywhere!

I love the flower girl
I don’t know just why, she simply caught my eye
I love the flower girl
She seemed so sweet and kind,
Shee crept into my mind

(1) “Our highest assurance of the goodness of Providence seems to me to rest in the flowers. All other things, our powers, our desires, our food, are all really necessary for our existence in the first instance. But this rose is an extra. Its smell and its colour are an embellishment of life, not a condition of it. It is only goodness which gives extras, and so I say again that we have much to hope from the flowers.” MEMOIRS OF SHERLOCK HOLMES

(2) “I felt after I finished Slaughterhouse-Five that I didn’t have to write at all anymore if I didn’t want to. It was the end of some sort of career. I don’t know why, exactly. I suppose that flowers, when they’re through blooming, have some sort of awareness of some purpose having been served. Flowers didn’t ask to be flowers and I didn’t ask to be me. At the end of Slaughterhouse-Five…I had a shutting-off feeling…that I had done what I was supposed to do and everything was OK.” (Kurt Vonnegut, CONVERSATIONS WITH KURT VONNEGUT)

(3)
Nature’s first green is gold,
Her hardest hue to hold.
Her early leaf’s a flower;
But only so an hour.
Then leaf subsides to leaf.
So Eden sank to grief,
So dawn goes down to day.
Nothing gold can stay.
(“Nothing Gold can Stay”, Robert Frost. All my Outsiders people holla!)

(4) Oh for boyhood’s time of June,
Crowding years in one brief moon,
When all things I heard or saw,
Me, their master, waited for.
I was rich in flowers and trees,
Humming-birds and honey-bees
(“Barefoot Boy with Cheek of Tan”, John Greenleaf Whittier. The entire poem is worth reading/reciting/memorizing.)

(5) “Butterflies are not insects,’ Captain John Sterling said soberly. ‘They are self-propelled flowers.” Bob Heinlein, The Cat Who Walks Through Walls.

(6) “I hope that while so many people are out smelling the flowers, someone is taking the time to plant some.” Herbert Rappaport

(7) “Writing blooms flowers for mind, which last forever.” Debasish Mridha

(8) “Flowers and fruits are always fit presents; flowers, because they are a proud assertion that a ray of beauty outvalues all the utilities of the world. These gay natures contrast with the somewhat stern countenance of ordinary nature: they are like music heard out of a work-house. Nature does not cocker us; we are children, not pets; she is not fond; everything is dealt to us without fear or favor, after severe universal laws. Yet these delicate flowers look like the frolic and interference of love and beauty. Men use to tell us that we love flattery even though we are not deceived by it, because it shows that we are of importance enough to be courted. Something like that pleasure, the flowers give us: what am I to whom these sweet hints are addressed?” – Ralph Waldo Emerson

(9) “She paused for a moment, curtsying to the flowers as if they were lords and ladies of the court.”
― Gina Marinello-Sweeney, Prince of Chandeliers

(10) “I ain’t dead yet — gimme my flowers now!” – Charlie Parr

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