Category Archives: Scribbles

Stan Rogers

Now that there is a genuine Northwest Passage through the Arctic, it’s time to recall Stan Rogers’ lyrics on the subject:

Northwest Passage
(Stan Rogers 1949-1983)

Westward from the Davis Strait ’tis there ’twas said to lie
The sea route to the Orient for which so many died;
Seeking gold and glory, leaving weathered, broken bones
And a long-forgotten lonely cairn of stones.

Chorus: Ah, for just one time I would take the Northwest Passage
To find the hand of Franklin reaching for the Beaufort Sea;
Tracing one warm line through a land so wild and savage
And make a Northwest Passage to the sea. 

Three centuries thereafter, I take passage overland
In the footsteps of brave Kelso, where his "sea of flowers" began
Watching cities rise before me, then behind me sink again
This tardiest explorer, driving hard across the plain.

And through the night, behind the wheel, the mileage clicking west
I think upon Mackenzie, David Thompson and the rest
Who cracked the mountain ramparts and did show a path for me
To race the roaring Fraser to the sea.

How then am I so different from the first men through this way?
Like them, I left a settled life, I threw it all away.
To seek a Northwest Passage at the call of many men
To find there but the road back home again.

A northwest passage to the sea

Ice melting in the Arctic has created a long-sought fabled sea route from Europe to Asia across the top of the world. The usual suspects, of course, are blaming global warming. It could be, but I rather doubt it. The record is simply too young to know for certain if this hasn’t happened before. Hopefully, the Seablogger will enlighten us on the subject, once he gets his pitiable personal work completed.

The return of the plague

Every time we pass through the gates of the Dell campus of the Jewish Community Association of Austin–the local JCC, in other words–I say a prayer for the smiling but serious off-duty state troopers and city cops working the guard booth for extra pay. There’s time because we have to slow down and weave around the large orange barriers intended to thwart a speeding truck bomb. Although if the driver was a suicider, he probably wouldn’t be concerned about speed. VDH, no alarmist, explains what’s going on better than I have seen it in a while.

MORE: The powerful, controlling (let’s not forget wealthy) Jewish lobby. Subject of a new bestseller.

Napoleonic analogies

Getting Mr. Boy up in the morning for school the past few days has been tedious. Removing the covers had only limited effect. So I thought to capture his young male imagination, by telling him how bosuns of the Napoleonic-era Royal Navy did it–per the Aubrey-Maturin series. They’d come through the lower decks rousing the next watch by shouting, "Out or down!" Meaning if you didn’t get out of your hammock, they would use their knives to cut your hammock down and you’d sprawl on the deck. It got a smile, and the obvious retort from Mr. B. that he wasn’t in a hammock. But the thinking and the smile were enough to make him open his eyes. From there it was a relatively short step to getting his feet on the floor.

The battle of the sources

Anonymous ones, that is. I don’t know what to make of it when little media and big media square off with their anonymous sources, and new media picks up little media’s charges without scrutiny. Big media, of course, uses anonymous sources all the time. This time the small, conservative American Spectator magazine is claiming two unidentified sources to support its assertion that the NYTimes gave the leftist MoveOn group special treatment in its purchase of a full-page display ad calling Gen. Patraeus a "Betray Us" traitor. The newspaper denies it. The first anonymous AS source, characterized as "a MoveOn organizer," says the group got a $100,000 discount for the ad. The second unidentified source, called "a former NYTimes ad staffer," says a coalition of conservative Pro-Life groups were turned away for any ad, let alone a discounted one. The magazine also adds, without any attribution, that Swift Boat Veterans for Truth were similarly turned away before the 2004 presidential election. Instapundit and other conservative blogs have picked up the Spectator’s charges without qualification, though Instapundit did insert the word "apparently" in its item about it. The conservative NYPost picks up the story, but also relies on anonymous sources. What is the truth? Your guess is as good as mine. To me, the use of anonymous sources makes it hard to sort it out, whichever media claims to have it.

MORE: However much MoveOn paid, Fred says the ad was reprehensible. Of course it was.

UPDATE: Rudy raised a big enough stink about the ad that he’s getting the same rate to run his own defending Petraeus. 

The blessing of the backpacks

"Two dozen children emerged from all over the congregation with their backpacks and brought them to the altar. One man was late as the priest asked that they raise them into the air. He literally sprinted down the aisle to get his child’s backpack into the circle."

Contemporary Christianity from Cobb.

Extending adolescence

It must annoy 19- and 20-year-olds to be called kids. It would me. Especially if I went to work immediately after high school, or into combat in the military. It grates everytime I hear some college football coach refer to his players as kids. But the terminology seems inescapable.