Category Archives: Scribbles

The houlihan cowboys

“I ride an old Paint/Lead an old Dan/I’m goin’ to Montana/For to throw the hoolahan.” —lyrics of the traditional song Leaving Cheyenne.

The houlihan is a lasso throw used in various ways, on horses and calves, though it seems to have been designed to capture a fleeing wild horse by roping both its forelegs at the same time. Ideally, not to make it stumble and fall, but to slow it down and gradually turn it toward the roper.

“The houlihan is swung counter clock wise, opposite a traditional loop, and opened at the throw with the flick of an agile wrist. It was not an easy throw and required years of practice to perfect.”

Hollywood’s preferred neck-shot was considered too iffy by real cowboys. The horse could lower its head to escape the loop, or, in continuing to run without escaping, be injured by a loop around its neck. Although it would seem that catching its forelegs might cause it to fall and break its neck.

Leaving Cheyenne, of course, is also a novel, one of my favorite Larry McMurtry pre-Lonesome Dove stories.

Why literary fiction is following the legacy media in decline

Because reading it:

“means that I don’t mind listening to people yapping incessantly about how terrible America is, and how terrible Bush is, and did you know America was once a slave-holding nation, and O what about the Native Americans, don’t forget them….

“and it means that I ought to covet urban apartments filled with fine objects and cool gadgets and unusual cookbooks that I won’t find on Amazon and no children, and it means that the best people know nothing whatever about cars or guns or tools or how to fix anything….”

Heh.

Heh

Meanwhile, over at the Communist News Network polling place, the Tea Party has a higher approval rating than the chief magistrate of Obamalot: 50 vs 42 percent.

Esther: Rule 5

AMERICA'S NEXT TOP MODELThe striking Esther Petrak, 18, a Boston student and quite possibly the first modern Orthodox reality modeling show contestant. See? Rule 5 can be Kosher, too. Alas for the world, Orthodox and otherwise, Esther did not make the final cut. Sad.

The country’s changed

University of Chicago lawprof Todd Henderson [is] desolated that people don’t sympathize with how hard it is to get by in Chicago on $250,000 a year.

Radicals have threatened him and his wife at their jobs for his daring to blog about it in a manner they disagreed with. How dare he think this is a free country where he could do such a thing?

How dare he imagine that his money is his own to decide how to spend? That the government has no right to step in and demand confiscatory taxes for its latest schemes and lies? That he is not just another cow to be milked by the likes of Barney Frank and Nancy Pelosi?

The country has changed.

Via Instapundit.

NeoCon Love

I(Heart)NeoConsHey, Iraq, after all, was their finest hour. Afghanistan, not so much.

Via A Commonplace Blog.

Heroes of The Alamo

alamoThis is their memorial on the south lawn of the Capitol downtown. It lists the names believed to be accurate when the thing was built in 1891. Steve Greenhow, an Austin radio personality and friend who died of cancer not so long ago, who yet lives (!), wrote a time-travel saga published as a serial on Austin’s old Electric Pages bulletin board. In the story, the memorial was used as a sort of Texas Tardis. Photo via the State Preservation Board.