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The New Neo

A blog about political change, among other things

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Janácek interlude

The New Neo Posted on December 28, 2009 by neoApril 11, 2021

I happen to love these two works of music by Czech composer Leos Janácek, from his piano cycle of thirteen pre-WWI pieces called “On an Overgrown Path.”

I love that evocative title. They fit the somber mood of the present day, and are extraordinarily beautiful besides, especially the second one. Enjoy.

[NOTE: You may recognize the cycle as having been featured in the film “The Unbearable Lightness of Being,” based on the novel by one of my favorite authors, Milan Kundera, another Czech. But that’s not where I first encountered it. It was the accompaniment to a beautful ballet by Jiri Kylian choreographed in the early 80s.

What’s more, I tried long ago to learn these two pieces on the piano, in the manner of my Chopin jaunt. But alas, I was roundly defeated; they are fiendishly difficult.]

Posted in Music | 2 Replies

Another change book

The New Neo Posted on December 28, 2009 by neoDecember 28, 2009

I haven’t read this book, but it sounds as though it could be apropos: Why I Turned Right: Leading Baby Boom Conservatives Chronicle Their Political Journeys.

Posted in Political changers | 4 Replies

The Flight 253 Christmas bomber: the silence of Obama

The New Neo Posted on December 27, 2009 by neoDecember 27, 2009

President Obama is vacationing in Hawaii, and hasn’t yet deigned to address the nation on the subject of the Flight 253 terrorist. Instead, he has left that task in the very unsteady hands of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano, who has reassured no one by saying that “the system worked.”

What’s going on here? Speculation ranges from the idea that Obama’s handlers are nixing a statement from him in order to protect Obama from any faux pas, ad-lib or otherwise; to Marc Ambinder’s risible notion that Obama’s silence is strategic, and will deny the terrorists the attention they’re hoping for. Richard Fernandez takes care of Ambinder thusly:

[Ambinder’s words] come ready formed from that Washington cauldron of action, the cocktail party. In that setting the wounds are inflicted by different weapons: the disparaging glance, cutting word, calculated snub and the limpness of the handshake. These strike the telling blows…Through this prism the world looks a different place. Al-Qaeda must be crushed that the President has decided to stay in Hawaii rather than react to their nearly successful attempt to bring an airplane with nearly 300 people down on Detroit. The Islamists must be mortified that he does not even deign to notice them. They must feel downcast; oppressed by the certainty that they are so yesterday. In that universe Obama could not have smitten them more cruelly than if he had told them “don’t call me, I’ll call you”.

Ridiculous, as Fernandez goes on to say.

But what does it mean when Napolitano says “the system worked” when it most definitely did not, and when Obama cannot interrupt his golf game to make his own statement? Look at it from their point of view. The contempt in which they hold the American people assumes that the public cannot figure out on its own that this was a serious attack in which the system most definitely failed. They believe that if Napolitano tells us all is well, then we are reassured and will believe it to be true, despite the evidence before our lying eyes. Since the administration can’t figure out a way (yet) to say that they “inherited” this particular attack from President Bush, and since no one was killed, they believe the best approach is to minimize it.

After all, this was just an “attempt.” In law (and always remember that Barack Obama is a lawyer, as was Bill Clinton before him, as is Napolitano), the word “attempt” means that the criminal act did not succeed in its intended result. It doesn’t mean it was not potentially very lethal indeed.

For example, if a terrorist obtained a suitcase nuclear device designed to kill many thousands, and for some minor reason it fizzled (much like the Flight 253 bomb) when set off and therefore failed to kill anyone—legally, that chain of events becomes a mere “attempt,” subject to far smaller penalties than if a single person were murdered, even though the perpetrator did everything in his power to kill enormous numbers of people and was protected only by his own incompetence.

Obama has been strongly pushing the pre-9/11, criminal law approach to terrorism, and that’s the way the civilian criminal law would treat any such act. So, to our president, this really is a minor incident hardly worthy of notice. Move along please; nothing much to see.

A great many Americans view this quite differently. They would like to see some serious attention paid, and they’re getting the distinct impression that this administration will not be doing so at any point soon.

Wake-up call ignored.

Posted in Obama, Terrorism and terrorists | 48 Replies

Reflections on the would-be Christmas bomber of Flight 253

The New Neo Posted on December 27, 2009 by neoDecember 27, 2009

A few observations on the case of Abdul Farouk Abdulmutallab, the 23-year-old Nigerian Muslim who tried to blow up a Northwest Airlines jetliner on Christmas day, but ended up following in Richard Reid’s footsteps (pun intended):

(1) It seems to fit a recent pattern, that of a single terrorist agent with backstage helpers, and an attack that—if unsuccessful—is thwarted less by the skill of opponents than by bad luck and/or incompetence on the part of the perpetrator.

(2) It shows how difficult it is to activate the proper channels to compel authorities to take proper defensive action and bar the passenger from traveling, even when multiple and glaring red flags are present.

(3) It shows once again that Islamicist terrorists often come from the ranks of the prosperous rather than the poor.

(4) It follows a well-known trend, that of Islamicist terrorists tending to have had training as engineers or to be in the field of medicine.

(5) It features the MSM disclosure that the bomber’s father tipped the US off about his son’s dangerousness. Unless this information was furnished to the media by the father himself, it seems to me unconscionable that the informant’s identity was revealed. This not only endangers the father, but will most likely have a chilling effect on any such future warnings.

(6) We will all pay with increased annoying and inconvenient prohibitions and rules for flight behavior that will in all likelihood do absolutely nothing to prevent future attacks.

Posted in Terrorism and terrorists | 22 Replies

At PJ: Give me liberty or give me social justice

The New Neo Posted on December 26, 2009 by neoDecember 26, 2009

Please take a look at my new article at Pajamas Media, “Give Me Liberty or Give Me Social Justice.” The subject is health care reform, but the real subject is the threat to liberty represented by the left’s agenda and philosophy.

Posted in Health care reform, Liberty | 22 Replies

The silence of the MSM

The New Neo Posted on December 26, 2009 by neoDecember 26, 2009

Among all the other disturbing trends of the Obama era, we have the specter of an MSM that has completely abdicated its duty to report fairly and to (remember this quaint phrase?) question authority. Many have pointed out that this has let Obama and the current crop of Democrats get away with actions that previous administrations would have been called on.

But it’s even worse than that. A silent, complicit, and enabling MSM doesn’t just let this administration get away with things. It emboldens its functionaries to escalate their offenses and to believe that they can operate that way indefinitely and with impunity.

If things seem to be getting worse and worse, the outrages more egregious, and our elected officials more open and shameless about them, that’s not just a coincidence. We are seeing the effects of a corrupted press. A more honest MSM would have helped to keep the forces of a power-hungry and corrupt government in check.

It’s rather like a functioning immune system. When that system is no longer working properly, then bacteria can multiply freely, take over, and sicken a previously healthy organism. This is what has happened to our body politic.

Posted in Politics, Press | 38 Replies

Some bumper stickers for our times

The New Neo Posted on December 26, 2009 by neoDecember 26, 2009

Found here, the following:

sorryyet_small.jpg

And this one:

oops_small.jpg

Posted in Obama | 6 Replies

Merry Christmas: here’s my gift to you

The New Neo Posted on December 25, 2009 by neoDecember 19, 2010

It’s a holiday recipe. I posted it once before, but that was in my first year of blogging, and most of you probably never caught it.

This was brought over from Germany sometime in the mid-1800s, and was my favorite of all the wonderful goodies cooked by my great-aunt Flora, a baker of rare gifts. She and my great-uncle were not only exceptionally wonderful people, but to my childish and wondering eyes they looked very much like Mr. and Mrs. Santa Claus.

The name of the treat is lebkuchen. But it’s a different version from the traditional recipe, which I don’t much care for. This is sweet and dense, can be made ahead, and keeps very well when stored in tins.

Flora’s Lebkuchen:

(preheat the oven to 375 degrees)

1 pound dark brown sugar
4 eggs
2 cups flour
1/2 tsp. baking soda
1/2 tsp. baking powder
1 tsp. cinnamon
1/2 cup chopped walnuts
4 oz. chopped dates
1 cup raisins
1 tsp. orange juice
1 tsp. vanilla extract
1 tsp. almond extract
1 tsp. lemon juice

Sift the dry ingredients together (flour, baking soda, baking powder, cinnamon).

Beat the eggs and brown sugar together with a rotary beater till the mixture forms the ribbon. Add the orange juice, lemon juice, and extracts to it.

Add the dry mixture to it, a little at a time, stirring.

Add the raisins, dates, and walnuts.

Grease and flour two 9X9 cake pans. Put batter in pans and bake for about 25 minutes (or a little less; test the cake with a cake tester to see if it’s done). You don’t want it to get too dark and dry on the edges, but the middle can’t still be wet when tested.

Meanwhile, make the frosting.

Melt about 6 Tbs. of unsalted butter and add 2 Tbs. hot milk, and 1 Tbs. almond extract. Add enough confectioner’s sugar to make a frosting of spreading consistency (the recipe says “2 cups,” but I’ve always noticed that’s not exactly correct and it needs considerably more). You can make even more frosting if you like a lot of frosting.

Let cake cool to at least lukewarm, and spread generously with the frosting. Then cut into small pieces and store (or eat!).

Posted in Food | 6 Replies

‘Twas the Blogger’s Night Before Christmas

The New Neo Posted on December 24, 2009 by neoDecember 24, 2009

‘TWAS THE BLOGGER’S NIGHT BEFORE CHRISTMAS

‘Twas the night before Christmas, and all through the ”˜sphere
Bloggers were glad to see Christmas draw near.
Their laptops were turned off and all put away
The bloggers were swearing to take off the day.

Their children were nestled all snug in their beds
While visions of extra time danced in their heads
With a father or mom not distracted by writing
No posts to compose, and no links to be citing.

But we know that vows were just meant to be broken
And the vows of a blogger can be just a token.
There’s always a chance that some sort of temptation
Will rise up to make them of fleeting duration.

For instance, there might be found, under the tree
An Apple; well, what better sight could there be?
And who could neglect it and wait the whole day?
It has to be tried out, one just can’t delay.

Or maybe somewhere there’s a fast-breaking story
Important, and complex, and covered with glory.
It can’t be ignored, there’s really no choice,
So add to the din every blogger’s small voice.

And then there are some who may just like to rhyme
(I’m one who at times must confess to this crime),
And it’s been quite a while since Clement Clarke Moore
Wrote his opus (though authorship’s been claimed by Gore)””

So it seems about time it be newly updated
And here’s my grand effort””aren’t you glad you all waited?
Forgive if it sounds a bit awkward to read.
Writing, I set a new record for speed.

I had to get under the wire and compose it
Before Christmas Day. Now it’s time that I close it.
But let me exclaim (or, rather, I’ll write)
Happy Christmas to all, and to all a good-night!

[NOTE: Reprint of previous effort. Merry Christmas to you all!]

Posted in Blogging and bloggers, Poetry, Pop culture | 10 Replies

It’s a Wonderful Bill

The New Neo Posted on December 24, 2009 by neoDecember 24, 2009

Iowahawk gives us all a Christmas present. You’ll laugh, you’ll cry! Just read it.

Posted in Health care reform | 1 Reply

Senate places lump of coal in America’s stocking: historic health care “reform” bill passes

The New Neo Posted on December 24, 2009 by neoDecember 24, 2009

Yep, it’s a historic vote all right. A milestone (or is that millstone?)—setting a new record in partisan-driven, mendacious, incoherent legislation that ignores the will of the American people while affecting our lives in the most intimate of matters.

President Obama calls it “the most important piece of social legislation since the Social Security Act passed in the 1930s,” and I agree with him. We disagree, unfortunately, on whether this new act a good thing or a very bad thing. Suffice to say I hope it will be repealed by the 2010 or 2012 Congress, or improved to the point of non-recognition—and to the point of actually benefiting the American people, for a change.

It is a mark of how truly terrible this bill is that Olympia Snowe, seasonally-named Maine Senator and RINO extraordinaire, who almost never met a Democrat-sponsored bill she didn’t (sorta) like, greeted the news with the following statement:

I was extremely disappointed…there was zero opportunity to amend the bill or modify it, and Democrats had no incentive to reach across the aisle…[the bill could have] a dampening effect on job creation and job preservation.

On the other hand, Rhode Island’s Democratic Senator (and fearless vampire slayer) Sheldon Whitehouse (another serendipitously named legislator) indicated the bill would help drive a deserved “stake through [insurance companies’] cold and greedy heart.”

I say that it takes one to know one—a cold and greedy heart, that is.

Posted in Health care reform | 6 Replies

Responses to this Congress?

The New Neo Posted on December 24, 2009 by neoDecember 24, 2009

There’s a great deal of anger on the part of voters about the direction Congress and this administration are taking and will be taking in the time left them before the elections of 2010 and 2012. Here are some possible ways to harness that outrage in a productive direction:

(a) consider state nullification

(b) think about a general strike

(c) organize tax refusals on large scale

(d) campaign against incumbents

(e) legislate term limits

(f) attempt recall of state representatives (in states where this process is both justified and permitted)

Posted in Liberty, Politics | 25 Replies

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