Daily Archives: July 30, 2010

Prose Fiction Update With A Bit of Poetry

July 30, 2010
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Prose Fiction Update With A Bit of Poetry

Another week, another passel of links into the wide, wide world of wondrous word-smithery.  This week closes out with a bit of verse from Gerard Manley Hopkins, who was born on July 28, 1844. Short Fiction: “The Doors” by E.B. White When Jane Met Rochester – A scene from Libby Sternberg’s soon to be released novel Sloane Hall The Sisters of the Sacred Heart Criticism and Commentary: The Real Carver: Expansive or Minimal? “The Designs of E.B. White” by Gerald Weales What is Art? A Fish Studying Water – On studying and teaching one’s native language Comics and Graphic Novels vs. The Critics Fritz Leiber Tackled the Oil Spill First News and Reviews: “If any form of pleasure is exhibited, report to me and it will be prohibited…” – A brief review of Lars Walker’s West Oversea. In Defence of Amazon – The online bookseller isn’t to blame for the book industry’s failures Point Break - John J. Miller’s brief comments on Stephen Koch‘s The Breaking Point: Hemingway, Dos Passos, and the Murder of Jose Robles Andrew Klavan reviews David Wong’s John Dies At The End The Writing Life: Wright’s Writing Corner: Cotton Candy Writing And now for some of that high culture stuff. A bit

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Evolution—You’d Think That After a Century of Torture Somebody Would Admit the Truth

July 30, 2010
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Evolution—You’d Think That After a Century of Torture Somebody Would Admit the Truth

Brian Thomas at ICR reports that “100 Years of Fruit Fly Tests Show No Evolution”: Fruit flies, with their short generation times and only four pairs of chromosomes, presented prime testing ground for evolution. In laboratories worldwide, they have been subjected to all manner of mutation-inducing phenomena, including hosts of chemicals and radiation treatments, to try and accelerate evolution-mimicking mutations. After all this, fruit flies should have certainly exemplified evolution by now. But they haven’t. …. mutating (through substituting, deleting, or duplicating) developmental genes like HOX has only ever yielded a dead fly, a normal fly (if the mutation happened to have no noticeable effect), or a tiny monster. None of these results match the “positive improvement” expected of Darwinian evolution. —Mike Gray

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Are You Sane? You May Soon Be the Only One Who Is

July 30, 2010
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Are You Sane? You May Soon Be the Only One Who Is

Reuters, a not altogether reliable news agency, reports that the new edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM), which is being revised now for publication in 2013 by the American Psychiatric Association (APA), could devalue the seriousness of mental illness and label almost everyone as having some kind of disorder.  Citing examples of new additions like “mild anxiety depression,” “psychosis risk syndrome,” and “temper dysregulation disorder,” they said many people previously seen as perfectly healthy could be told they are ill. The implications of this, as the National Center for Policy Analysis points out, could be that technically, with the classification of so many new disorders, we will all have disorders. This may lead to the belief that many more of us “need” drugs to treat our “conditions,” and many of these drugs will have unpleasant or dangerous side effects. The “psychosis risk syndrome” diagnosis is particularly worrying, since it could falsely label young people who may only have a small risk of developing an illness. Homosexuality used to be classified as a mental disorder until politics overwhelmed science. And let’s not forget that, always lurking in the background, is the argument that if you don’t

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Reagan v. Obama Smackdown on Socialized Medicine

July 30, 2010
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Reagan v. Obama Smackdown on Socialized Medicine

Well, it’s sort of a smackdown, with a dead man exhibiting far more good sense than a living one. Americans for Limited Government have posted a video comparing and contrasting two diametrically opposed world views. Run time: 6 minutes 1 second. —Mike Gray

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The Ugly Face of Intolerance—From the “Victims” of Intolerance

July 30, 2010
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The Ugly Face of Intolerance—From the “Victims” of Intolerance

The National Organization for Marriage (NOM) is conducting a summer tour of twenty-three cities promoting the traditional sense of marriage as a union between one man and one woman. As might be expected, a small but highly vocal segment of the population doesn’t like it, as Brian S. Brown of NOM observes: They’ve come to our peaceful marriage rallies in city after city to harass and intimidate us. We’ve seen men harass a nursing mother, refusing her request to feed her children in private and instead stare at her and block her ability to watch our rally from a safe distance. We’ve seen protestors draped in the rainbow flag storm the stage and scream, red-faced into the microphone to prevent our speakers from talking. We’ve seen them bait a five year old child, asking her if she’s being raised by her mother to be a bigot. We’ve even heard a gay marriage supporter threaten to kidnap a child in attendance at a rally. The protesters are composed of the usual suspects, the allegedly politically oppressed and socially persecuted darlings of the liberal-progressive establishment media. As usual, these people pour scorn on traditional institutions and their representatives, and they consider their

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For One Museum, Patriotism Doesn’t Draw a Crowd

July 30, 2010
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For One Museum, Patriotism Doesn’t Draw a Crowd

Even where one might think it to be popular, patriotism is not an easy sell. In Georgia, some folks just aren’t that into the ‘Spirit of ’76′, if the fate of the National Museum of Patriotism tells us anything. he National Museum of Patriotism in Atlanta closes this week. … he institution, whose jaunty slogan is “Come for a memory, leave with a mission”, is the latest victim of the economic downturn. “Therefore, The National Museum of Patriotism had to answer the call of the new economy to find a new way of doing business. The National Foundation of Patriotism will become a virtual museum online,” according to the museum website. Isn’t this exactly the kind of thing the “silent majority” demands? More museums that promote America and American values? So why aren’t people buying?

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