Fausta's Blog

American and Latin American Politics, Society, and Culture

March 22, 2007 By Fausta

The dead cricket coach, and today’s other stories

I don’t really understand how cricket is played, but I loved watching part of a game at an English village green while enjoying some Faust lager years ago. The guys looked great, the weather was wonderful, and the beer was good. Now here’s a cricket mystery: Bob Woolmer – foul play suspected by more people than Sarfraz Nawaz. My neighbor TigerHawk was wondering about this, too.
PS, Yoddha plays cricket at Princeton.

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Imagine if a Republican made a Democrat congress wait for half an hour, didn’t bring his material for them to review until (literally) the last minute, and then showed up preaching about moral crusades.

Well, Algore did all that, and then compared himself to the 300. No Al, your weight may be approaching 300, but that’s in pounds, not Spartans. You wouldn’t know a Spartan if one fell on you and broke your nose.

And there’s no such thing as “carbon neutral”, and you can not do “an immediate freeze on CO2 emissions,” either. But, as Jules said, Planet-saving low energy crap is for peasants like you and I, but not for Al. (h/t Larwyn).

Update That’s the problem with moralistic, messianic crusading — people expect you to live up to it. (click on the link – Glenn needs the traffic!)

Wretchard asks, Which is Greener: the Prius or the Hummer? but everyone knows the Hummer will keep you safer on the NJ Turnpike.

Maria sent this, Czech President Vaclav Klaus sent this letter to the House Energy and Commerce Committee prior to former Vice President Al Gore’s appearance before the panel today. From the letter:

The moral obligation of developed countries to the developing countries is to create such an environment which guarantees free exchange of goods, services, and capital flows, enables utilization of comparative advantages of individual countries and thus stimulates economic development of the less developed countries. Artificial administrative barriers, limits and regulations imposed by developed countries discriminate the developing world, affect its economic growth, and prolong poverty and underdevelopment. The environmentalist proposals are an exact example of such illiberal policies that are so harmful for the developing countries. They will not be able to cope with the limits and standards imposed on the world by irrational environmental policies, they will not be able to absorb new technological standards required by the anti-greenhouse religion, their products will have difficult access to the developed markets, and as a result the gap between them and the developed world will widen.

Don Surber has more on Vaclav. (h/t Larwyn)

Listen to Vaclav, guys.

———————————————–

Amanda Carpenter and Francis Porretto liked the 300. I guess I’ll have to see it.
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Gustavo Coronel reports on Pres. Bush’s trip to Latin America, and raises the issue of the value of good citizenry:

Listening to Tom Shannon I could not help thinking that there could exist a golden opportunity for the U.S. to take an initiative that, unless I am totally mistaken, would find enthusiastic reception in Latin America and more important, make a significant impact on our societies while generating much good will for the U.S. This initiative would be based on the close correlation that exists between good quality democracy and good quality of citizenship. A country without a critical mass of citizens cannot have a true democracy. Good citizenship is, therefore, the essential condition for democracy to take roots. Furthermore, good citizenship is a key ingredient of a progressive society. Absence of good citizenship has condemned Latin American societies to poverty, undue dependence on the State, ignorance and under-development. It is largely useless for more advanced countries to inject billions of dollars into societies that have no citizens able to put the money to good use. It would be like trying to build castles in the sand. Therefore, a long-term, systematic, perseverant program designed to form citizens would be a most valuable contribution to true Latin American development. This is a program for which both strategy and content can be easily defined and for which there is no need to “rediscover the wheel.”

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Maria sent this article about Chemo alternatives for lymphoma
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I’ll post more later. Right now I’m heading to the gym for an exercise class since Janet-my-personal-trainer’s sick with a cold and my dentate gyrus needs a workout. I assure you it’s not going to be aerobic yoga.

Yesterday afternoon at the gym they were giving back rubs, so I had one. I wonder if those guys/ladies are still around today…
Later
I’m back, no massage, just Pilates.

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Children of Men in out on video

I found it baffling and midlly exhausting, but others liked it.

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Filed Under: 300, Clive Owen, Global Warming, health, Latin America, movies, news, Princeton

March 18, 2007 By Fausta

Why Joe outed Valerie, and today’s items

All the outrage over Valerie Plame’s outing. But did Joe Wilson outed her? When And Why Joseph C Wilson IV Outed Valerie Plame (h/t Larwyn).

TownCommons posts about The New York Times at their most irresponsible and disingenious. Why are so few people outraged at the NYT??

Speaking of what the media doesn’t cover, Michelle Malkin has a sensational round-up of the Gathering of Eagles. Follow every link! Jane has the pictures.

Patrick Hynes has a post and video of McCain’s New Hampshire visit, and notes,

My friend Hugh Hewitt makes a point that candidates for high public office cannot reach their target audiences without the aid of conservative media. Hugh says this not because he is a member of the conservative media, but because it is true. No candidate, including my client John McCain, will successfully navigate the primary process without communicating with and through the talk radio/blog/Podcast/YouTube nexus.

If you haven’t watched it yet, you must: Make time today and watch the entire 1-hour-and 15-minutes of The Great Global Warming Swindle:

Update: Dr Sowell writes,

“Global warming” is just the latest in a long line of hysterical crusades to which we seem to be increasingly susceptible.

(end of update)

Speaking of ecological shell games such as Global Warming, Dinocrat has an excellent post on The pimping, pumping, primping and propping of China’s accounting and why Purchasing Power Parity is not a substitute for GDP figures (h/t Larwyn).

Louisiana Conservative posts brain bullets

Dr Sanity has The Carnival of the Insanities:

In a lighter mode, Maria sent the NOT SUITABLE FOR WORK The F’in Departed: The Acadamy Award winning best picture of 2006 in under two minutes. Had Maria sent me the link two weeks ago, I would have rented a different video!

Ace explores why Why Are Women So Easy When It Comes To Giggles? I laughed so hard when I did my podcast with Steve of Hog On Ice that one of his commenters asked if I have a speech impediment. (Steve’s making pizza – go check it out).

I’ll be blogging more later. Possibly because of the Gore effect (was Al in NJ two days ago?) we still have a couple of inches of ice on the driveway, so I’ll be staying in today – might as well blog!
Update The temps went up to 40F and the ice melted enough that it could be scraped off the driveway. I like that.

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Filed Under: China, Global Warming, Hog on Ice, Joe Wilson, movies, NJ, NYT, Sanity Squad, Valerie Plame

March 14, 2007 By Fausta

Dr John Fleming talks about the Middle Ages and the modern world, part 3

Part 1
Part 2

F And the character really makes you think as a reader what your beliefs are, too. I thought that was one of the better Tales. However, reading the Canterbury Tales, I was very impressed that there was so much money that people could actually forego earnings and go on pilgrimages. The Wife of Bath basically spent her life travelling from one pigrimage to another.
JF: Well, Fausta, the Wife of Bath was very rich because she had, unlike you and other nice girls, married very strategically. She had married, if you remember, a series of old geezers who were quite rich and who conveniently died right away -with her help, probably, I wouldn’t want to be married to the Wife of Bath, but she had inherited a lot of property. If you remember, the husband she loves most and has the knock-down, dragged-out fight with, when they have the slogging match she says, “Oh, it’s for my land that you have murdered me”. He obviously owns some possessions.

It’s quite true. I think people did impoverish themselves sometimes to go on pilgrimages. It is thought by some economic historians that one of the problems with the Medieval economy was that there were so many people who were, in effect, non-producers, either living in religious houses, hermits, or as you say wondering around all the time.

But Medieval poverty was different from modern poverty. Look at St Francis: he founded his order on the concept of what he called evangelical poverty, because in his readings of the Scripture Christ was a very poor man who, according to his interpretation, owned absolutely nothing at all. So that poverty which was voluntary was a theological virtue. What we call poverty, which of course is poverty, is a terrible social disaster. There were such people too, in the Middle Ages, but they were thought of as the absolutely necessary recipients of social charity. This is what the word hospital actually means: a place where you provide hospitality to a traveler, a pilgrim, a poor person, a sick person even, and that’s how the word came to its meaning today.

F: [That’s] interesting about the number of non-productive people because you tend to think that a monastery would come to be a place of industry of some sort just because they had to support so many people.
JF: Many of them were, but the problem is that it doesn’t take very long for idealism to crash up against the rocks of social reality.

We see this in monastic history all the time, that is to say, you get a religious reformer, this is very brilliantly exemplified by the rise of the Cistercian order – with whom we associate St Bernard and other famous saints in the 12th Century. These guys moved out into the deep countryside because they didn’t want to be around. They wanted to get away from snares and delusions of the world. Rich landowners often gave them land that they thought was without value, not good agricultural land out in the wilderness. Then in the 13th Century, particularly in England, there’s a tremendous development of the wool trade, textiles, now, wool is made from sheep, sheep like to eat grass, so that these vast holdings, and some of the monasteries are now very valuable property. And suddenly they’re rich people and they start out to be professional paupers and end up as rich people just like the people they’re trying to get away from.

Nothing fails, Fausta, like success.

F: So is that what the Middle Ages teach us?
JF: Well, that’s certainly not the final thing it teaches. The Middle Ages has, what I find, incredible, and in many ways, admirable cultural coherence. But of course it does that at the expense of other values that in our age we’ve come to appreciate much more greatly, so-called multicultural values. The values of actual cultural, religious, intellectual diversity.

This is a big problem with culture altogether. The tension between that core commonality that holds people together and the danger that that very commonality can turn into a source of discord or ethnic strife, whatever it may be, the stuff we see every day in the front pages of the New York Times.

F: Thank you very much Dr. Fleming.
blog radio
Copyright 2007 Fausta Wertz, John Fleming

John V. Fleming is the author of

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Filed Under: Blog Talk Radio, books, history, John Fleming, literature, movies, podcasts

March 10, 2007 By Fausta

Must-watch TV; The last stand of the 300

Earlier this week I watched an excellent documentary in the History Channel, The Last Stand of The 300

After Custer, Thermopylae is the most famous last stand in history. In a narrow pass in Northern Greece, seven thousand Greek soldiers await an onslaught of epic proportions. They will soon face the largest fighting force ever assembled–the war machine of the mighty Persian Empire, estimated at over a million men. The Greeks are led by three hundred of the most ferocious warriors of the ancient world–the Spartans. Their leader is the fearless King Leonidas, who after this battle would be catapulted into legend. When it is over, every Spartan in the pass will have sacrificed his life for freedom.

The Last Stand of The 300 will be on the History Channel today at 5PM EST, and also on Friday, March 30 at 08:00 AM and 2:00 PM.

Dr Sanity. Belmont Club, and Winds of Change are posting about the movie 300

Since “300” is from the makers of Sin City, the only film I’ve walked out of in years because it was that gross, I don’t think I’ll see 300 in theaters but will wait for the DVD (yes, I fast-forward gruesome scenes).

But Victor Davis Hanson’s got a great article History and the Movie “300”, and he’s doing the introduction to the book released about the film:

The phrase “300 Spartans” evokes not only the ancient battle of Thermopylae, but also the larger idea of fighting for freedom against all odds – a notion subsequently to be enshrined through some 2500 years of Western civilization.

Which is why The Left Doesn’t Like It One Bit.

Here’s a trailer to “300”

and another History Channel program on Thermopylae:

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Filed Under: 300, history, History Channel, movies

February 26, 2007 By Fausta

James Cameron finds Jesus

… or at least he claims to not only have found Jesus’s grave, but also the graves of Jesus’s whole family.

Scholars don’t believe him, Kobayashi Maru, Eric, The Anchoress and Steve are posting about it.

Apparently Cameron thinks that finding

10 ancient ossuaries – small caskets used to store bones – discovered in a suburb of Jerusalem in 1980

is evidence, because

One of the caskets even bears the title, “Judah, son of Jesus,” hinting that Jesus may have had a son

All I can say is, if the name Jesus was anywhere near as common in Judea 2,000 years ago as it is today in Spanish-speaking countries (and the Phillipines – I knew a Philipino named Jesus), Cameron’s got his work cut out for him.

Heck, even The Dude found Jesus at the bowling alley:

More at PowersPoint, via Jeremayakovka

Update, Wednesday 28 February: What did I tell you?

Other archeologists note that the names listed by the documentarians were the most common names in use at the time for Jerusalem.

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My email seems to be working again. Thank you for your patience.

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Filed Under: Christianity, Jesus, movies

February 25, 2007 By Fausta

Romeo, Juliet, and me

Neo-Neocon’s Romeo and Juliet post reminded me of when I was in school.

I went to an all-girls Catholic school in Puerto Rico, run by Vincentine nuns. When I first started at that school the nuns used to wear Flying Nun hats

but the school was located in Santurce, not San Tanco. The nuns were addressed as Sor (Sister), and unlike other orders, kept their original names. I never saw any of them take flight but they were notoriously bad drivers. The only people taking flight were those who got in their way.

The nuns wore their flying hats which they later changed to regular veils, probably to save on starch, and made us wear the ugliest possible uniform and Bass penny loafers. In the lower grades we had to wear lace-up oxfords, uglier yet.

Being first short and skinny and later tall and skinny, I looked like a pale stick for all my school years – I looked awful in that thing. Have you ever had a nightmare where you show up naked at an important event? I have had nightmares where I show up wearing my old school uniform.

After I left school I have never purchased a pair of Bass penny loafers, either.

Being in that school for eleven years accounts for a lot of my ideosyncracies. One of the better ones is my love of movies.

A few blocks away from my school, El Metro (as in Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, not underground/subway metro), the most modern cinema in the area, was located. The nuns took us on field trips to watch nun-approved movies.

I remember the time that we walked from the school to El Metro to see the re-release of Ben Hur. By the time we got to our seats I ended up in the next-to-last seat in my row, and much to my chagrin Sor C.G. (whose name I withold in case she ever reads this) sat next to me after everybody else was seated. Sor C.G. was one of the weirder nuns in the large gaggle of weird nuns from that convent. Well, Ben Hur got rowing,

and Charlton Heston was looking Pretty Damn Good shackled at the oars, when much to my surprise Sor C.G. let out a deep deep sigh.

I wonder if she ever told that one in confession.

But back to Romeo and Juliet.

Ever-watchful for our virtue, one good day the school principal, Sor P. (name withheld to protect the guilty, again), came to our classroom during religion class. If memory serves me right, Sor C.G. was the religion teacher that year. Sor P. sat “inconspicuosly” in the rear of the classrom and at a strategic point in the class formally announced that none us girls should see Zefferelli’s Romeo and Juliet.

Discreet glances were exchanged among us girls, and I for one made a mental note to go see Romeo and Juliet right away.

Sor P. went from classroom to classroom making the same announcement.

The next day must have been either a Saturday or one of the many holidays they have in Puerto Rico (Puerto Rico and France must be tied for record number of paid holidays), because four of my friends and I walked to the movie theater and saw Romeo and Juliet. All of our mothers, who had not seen the movie, approved of the excursion and some might have even been pleased at our sudden interest in high culture.

By the time our mothers caught on to the fact that R&J had a nude scene we’d seen the movie at least twice.

My friends and I loved the movie. We all let our hair grow to Juliet lengths (I had nearly-waist-long hair for all of my teens), and danced with jingle bells on our wrists. Stores started carrying dresses with Juliet sleeves and we talked our moms into buying them for us. I memorized the theme music and can still play it on the piano.

Romeo and Juliet was a huge success at El Metro and played for long enough that my friends and I memorized the dialogue.

Zefferelli should have sent the nuns a thank-you note.

A few years later my first boyfriend (one of the guys that didn’t want me to wear eyeglasses in his presence) quoted

let lips do what hands do,


and wanted me to think he’d come up with that line.

I dropped him because of that.

After I started at the University of Puerto Rico I ran into him and his then-girlfriend.

He had her convinced that the poetry he quoted was his.

You Tube has the original R&J trailer:

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Dr. Sanity, the other member of the Sanity Squad I’ve met in person, has the Carnival:

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Filed Under: movies, Neo-Neocon, Puerto Rico, Sanity Squad, schools

February 23, 2007 By Fausta

Amazing Grace opens today

Several years ago I was very sick with blood sugar problems, and since it was not diabetes it took months before the condition was diagnosed correctly. By the time it was diagnosed I was bedridden, needing help to get to the bathroom, and fainting frequently. I had also lost 30 lbs from my usual weight, to the point where the clothes I’m wearing would hang as if on a hanger. I was so weak that I despaired of ever being able to return to a normal life.

In a word, I was desperate.

In the depths of my desperation I tried to hang on to any positive thought, and for some reason the words of the hymn Amazing Grace (which I posted yesterday), particularly,

The Lord has promised good to me.
His Word my hope secures.
He will my shield and portion be
As long as life endures.

kept returning to my mind, like those pesky songs that get in your head and play over and over.

I do not know how I recalled those words since I’m not particularly religious, don’t remember hymns or lyrics and most of the time I don’t even understand the words being sung, but I held on to those words as a means to my regaining my health.

And, thank God, I was able to find the way to get better. It was the hardest thing I’ve ever done, by far, which was complicated by the fact that I had a completely inept doctor and was given bad medical advise by him and other members of his staff.

It took me nearly five years before I could carry a normal schedule.

A few years later, one Sunday in church the rector held his annual sing-along service, where he’d ask people to request their favorite hymn. I asked for Amazing Grace, of course, and before we sang, he told the story of the song.

I don’t cry often, but I cried when I heard it. I had no idea it was connected to the abolition of the Atlantic slave trade, which the British accomplished in the nineteenth century. March, 2007 marks the 200th anniversary of the slave trade’s abolition in Britain.

While I still frequently sing the hymn (quietly to myself, since I sing like a frog), I totally forgot the story behind it until I saw the trailers for the movie a couple of weeks ago.

This morning I was taking care of personal matters when I read an email from Caitlin Bozell,

Hi Fausta,

I would like to let you know that, today, the epic story of abiding faith and uncommon courage, Amazing Grace, comes out in theaters everywhere. It tells the story of William Wilberforce and a community of abolitionists as they awaken the conscience of a nation by taking on the most powerful interests of their day to end the British slave trade. It is the true story of a reluctant leader called to do the impossible in order to allow truth and justice to prevail

Many inspiring global crusades have been launched in order to finish the work that Wilberforce started over 200 years ago. Behind the film Amazing Grace is a movement against modern-day slavery called The Amazing Change campaign, created to make freedom a reality the estimated 27 million slaves in the sex and labor industries today.

The Amazing Change website has information on present-day slavery, among them the fact that there are more slaves in the world today than during all 400 years of the trans-Atlantic slave trade.

I have posted about slavery for a few years now. Let’s hope this film will bring new energy into the work that’s needed to end this horrible crime.

Maria sent me the NYT review.

I’ll try to see the movie today or tomorrow.

Update: Peggy Noonan writes about how Wilbeforce was driven by Christianity, and the hymn itself (emphasis added):

It is thus fitting that John Wesley happened to write his last letter–sent in February 1791, days before his death–to William Wilberforce. Wesley urged Wilberforce to devote himself unstintingly to his antislavery campaign, a “glorious enterprise” that opposed “that execrable villainy which is the scandal of religion, of England, and of human nature.” Wesley also urged him to “go on, in the name of God and in the power of his might, till even American slavery (the vilest that ever saw the sun) shall vanish away before it.”

Wesley had begun preaching against slavery 20 years before and in 1774 published an abolitionist tract, “Thoughts on Slavery.” Wilberforce came into contact with the burgeoning antislavery movement in 1787, when he met Thomas Clarkson, an evangelical Anglican who had devoted his life to the abolitionist cause. Two years later, Wilberforce gave his first speech against the slave trade in Parliament.

As for the hymn “Amazing Grace,” from which the film takes its name, it is the work of a friend of Wilberforce’s named John Newton (played in the movie by Albert Finney). Newton had spent a dissolute youth as a seaman and eventually became a slave-ship captain. In his 20s he underwent a kind of spiritual crisis, reading the Bible and Thomas a Kempis’s “Imitation of Christ.” A decade later, having heard Wesley preach, he fell in with England’s evangelical movement and left sea-faring and slave-trading behind. Years later, under the influence of Wilberforce’s admonitions, he joined the antislavery campaign. The famous hymn amounted to an autobiography of his conversion: “Amazing grace . . . that saved a wretch like me.” In the most moving moment of the film–and one of the few that addresses a Christian theme directly–the aged and now-blind Newton declares to Wilberforce: “I am a great sinner, and Christ is a great savior.”

This idea of slaving as sin is key. As sociologist Rodney Stark noted in “For the Glory of God” (2003), the abolition of slavery in the West during the 19th century was a uniquely Christian endeavor. When chattel slavery, long absent from Europe, reappeared in imperial form in the 16th and 17th centuries–mostly in response to the need for cheap labor in the New World–the first calls to end the practice came from pious Christians, notably the Quakers. Evangelicals, not least Methodists, quickly joined the cause, and a movement was born.

Thanks to Wilberforce, the movement’s most visible champion, Britain ended slavery well before America, but the abolitionist cause in America, too, was driven by Christian churches more than is often acknowledged.

Go read it.

Wintley Phipps;

Update, Saturday 23 February How Faith Moved a Nation

Abolition was, strictly speaking, impractical. According to Adam Hochschild’s history of abolition, “Bury the Chains,” Britain was a country “where profits from West Indian plantations gave a large boost to the economy, where customs duties on slave-grown sugar were an important source of government revenue, and where … the trade itself had increased to almost unparalleled levels, bringing prosperity to key ports, including London itself.”

How to overcome all this? The abolitionists called on the British people to live up to their professed faith. If they believed that all men were created in the image of God, how could they sanction treating some of them as chattel? They pushed the public’s nose down into the facts of what happened on the slave ships, countering the propaganda about slaves enjoying their journey. They mobilized public opinion in an unprecedented way, producing petitions signed by hundreds of thousands of people.

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Filed Under: Amazing Grace, movies, music, slavery, Wintley Phipps

February 22, 2007 By Fausta

Early evening blogging: Ma na ma na

By popular request,

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Filed Under: humor, movies, Muppets

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