Wednesday, February 10, 2010
New post on Los Thunderlads from Mrs Acilius
Monday, January 25, 2010
The last three months on Los Thunderlads
I've also created a number of pages of links, as a way of keeping the blogroll manageable. So we have pages devoted to Comic Strips, Ukulele sites, News and Periodicals, Filters, General Interest Blogs, Language and Linguistics sites, Pictures, Artists, and Art Blogs, Political Blogs, and Reference resources.
The blog has been getting a record number of hits, about half of them from a weird Google images result that ranked us as the top result for "burqa" because of a June post by Cymast that included a picture of some veiled women and a chunk of the rest coming from other equally weird sources. But we appreciate the traffic. For a while I felt people looking for images of burqas might be disappointed finding a site with only that one picture, so I added a post that linked to lots of pictures of veiled Muslim women. That one sank like a stone, but the post from June is still pulling them in. That's show business, I suppose.
Wednesday, October 14, 2009
Activity on Los Thunderlads
A post of mine reviewing the Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain's latest CD release also got a lot of views, but I can explain that. Al Wood mentioned it on his magnificent site Ukulele Hunt. Ukulele Hunt is one of the great things on the www, and I'm proud to say that Al sometimes reads and comments on Los Thunderlads.
Blog cofounder Le Falcon has scanned and posted a number of original comic strips. Among these is a series of political strips called "USA: CRAZYWORLD!" If you like the title, you'll like the strip. Even if you don't like the title, you may find something to like about the strip. Le Falcon has posted three installments so far (here, here, and here.) He also scanned and posted a little comic book he and I created in the summer of 1989. It's called The Adventures of Standard Man, and its cover declares "At last! A superhero derived from the concepts of Irving Babbitt." I was intensely interested in Babbitt's works and those of his school in 1989; I still am influenced by them, as a look at the category labeled "Irving Babbitt" on Los Thunderlads will show. In those days, I persuaded Le Falcon to read Babbitt's Literature and the American College; he was enthusiastic about it, and from that shared enthusiasm sprang Standard Man. When we'd finished the comic book, we sent a copy of it to Babbitt scholars Stephen C. Brennan and Stephen R. Yarbrough; they never got back to us. Le Falcon has exchanged emails with me and VThunderlad in which he's mentioned the idea of a comic strip about emails he's exchanged with me and VThunderlad. It sounds like exactly the kind of thing that catches on when people put it online, and I'm hoping he does it.
Thunderlass Cymast has been uncharacteristically silent for the last couple of months; she tells me that may soon change. We hope so! The recent spike in views for "A Snack Snake" piqued VThunderlad's interest in the workings of Google; but he rarely posts on Los Thunderlads, and I doubt that will change anytime soon. Believer1, a.k.a. Mrs Acilius, is extremely busy with grad school, so it would be a surprise (a pleasant one of course!) if she were to post soon.
Wednesday, July 8, 2009
Recent posts on Los Thunderlads
I, Acilius, have posted about a BBC correspondent's fanciful theory about Barack Obama; about Banana Art, both newsworthy and from miscellaneous places on the web; have posted ukulele videos to commemorate the Fourth of July and the death of Michael Jackson; and have made notes about points that interested me in recent issues of The Nation, The Atlantic Monthly, The American Conservative, and The Economist.
Cymast has posted about military robots; about Russian cat fancier Nina Kostova; about Pop, the Swedish baby whose gender is a secret; about a rich dude who is taking care of some ducks; and about a Chicagoland entrepreneur whose business model seems to consist of including the word "Ass" in the names of his startups.
Believer1 marked the Fourth by putting the Declaration of Independence on the site. She also put up links to video of Barack Obama's humorous speech at this year's White House Correspondents Association dinner.
Blog founder VThunderlad has been silent lately; so too has LeFalcon. I alone remain of the original Thunderlads, at least for the moment. I'm in touch with the others, though, and I have hopes for their eventual return.
Monday, May 4, 2009
A recent post from Los Thunderlads

I've long thought that the last truly acceptable US president was Warren G. Harding. He was virtually the last president not to have committed American forces to a new war. On the contrary, President Harding pulled US troops out of Russia, where his predecessor Woodrow Wilson had sent them to fight alongside the anti-Bolshevik forces. He negotiated a peace with Germany separate from the Versailles treaty and free from that document's vengeful anti-German provisions and its dangerously open-ended entanglement with the League of Nations. He concluded the Washington Naval Convention, an agreement which staved off the kind of arms race at sea that had led to the First World War. And while most other president's have treated the other countries in the western hemisphere with barely disguised contempt, a habit which made it possible for Woodrow Wilson actually to say of his 1913 incursions into Mexico that he was going to use the US military to "teach the Latin American republics to elect good men," Harding showed genuine respect for his countries neighbors. In a 1920 campaign speech, he denounced Wilson's intervention in Haiti, saying:
Practically all we know is that thousands of native Haitians have been killed by
American Marines, and that many of our own gallant men have sacrificed their
lives at the behest of an Executive department in order to establish laws
drafted by the Assistant Secretary of the Navy. ... I will not empower an
Assistant Secretary of the Navy to draft a constitution for helpless neighbors
in the West Indies and jam it down their throats at the point of bayonets borne
by US Marines.
Harding's peaceful record in foreign policy was matched by his concern for liberty at home. Unlike most of his successors, Harding did not increase the number of grounds on which Americans could be imprisoned; on the contrary, he released the political prisoners Woodrow Wilson's administration had locked up during the First World War and the subsequent First Red Scare. He even invited the most famous of these prisoners, Socialist leader Eugene V. Debs, to have Christmas dinner with him at the White House.
Scholars have argued that virtually every other president looked at the issue of race and saw only the politics surrounding it. If a civil-rights initiative could help to deliver some swing states in the next election, then the president might offer that initiative. So Harry Truman would put forward an ambitious civil rights aganda before the 1948 election. Truman was all too typical of those who have held his office in that once the votes were counted, the issue of civil rights vanished from his list of priorities. Harding was one of the few presidents who saw more in America's racial divisions than a tool to gain popularity.
Early in his administration, President Harding lobbied Congress to support a bill to give the federal government the power to act against lynching. On 26 October 1921, as this effort was in full swing, Harding stood in front of a crowd in Birmingham, Alabama and said in no uncertain terms that the law should treat blacks and whites equally. That took political courage- no one won votes in Alabama in those days by taking that position. And physical courage, too; even if he'd been surrounded by as many Secret Service bodyguards as his successors have been in the habit of massing around themselves, there would still have been an element of danger.
Harding is widely condemned for the Teapot Dome scandal. Albert Fall, whom Harding had appointed Secretary of the Interior, accepted a low price for a lease to operate a federally owned petroleum field in Wyoming, then took a bribe from the operators. However, Fall did not take his bribe until after President Harding's death. It's hardly fair to label Harding a bad president because of a crime someone else committed after he himself had died.
How would Harding have reacted had he been alive when Fall committed his crime? We form an educated guess based on the way Harding reacted to the only federal scandal to come to his attention while he was president. Money had been embezzled from the Veterans' Bureau. Harding was found in the Oval Office, throttling the director of that bureau and demanding to know "What have you done, you son of a bitch?" That may not be perfectly dignified presidential behavior, but it's hardly the mark of a man who is indifferent to the public trust.
I esteem President Harding as a man of peace, a defender of liberty, a conscientious public servant, and a courageous advocate of human equality. Thomas E Woods esteems him as an economic policymaker who responded to the economic crisis America faced after the First World War by cutting federal spending and reducing taxes. In 1920, the last year of Woodrow Wilson's administration, the federal government spent $6.3 billion. In 1922, the last (sadly, the only) full year of Harding's administration, it spent $3.3 billion. In those same years, tax rates were reduced for every Americans at every income level. The economy bounced back during this period of government rollbacks. Woods quotes economists on the contrast between Harding's conservative approach to the 1921 crisis and the approach the Japanese government took to similar difficulties at about the same time:
In contrast to Japan, which engaged in massive government intervention in
1920 that paralyzed its economy and contributed to a severe banking crisis seven
years later, the U.S. allowed its economy to readjust. “In 1920-21,” says
economist Benjamin Anderson,we took our losses, we readjusted our financial
structure, we endured our
depression, and in August 1921 we started up again. …
The rally in business
production and employment that started in August 1921 was
soundly based on a
drastic cleaning up of credit weakness, a drastic reduction
in the costs of
production, and on the free play of private enterprise. It was
not based on
governmental policy designed to make business good.
That is not supposed to happen, or at least not nearly so quickly, in
the absence of fiscal or monetary stimulus. But who are you going to believe,
Paul Krugman or your own eyes?
Naturally, some modern economists who have looked into the matter have
been stumped as to how economic recovery could have occurred in the absence of
their cherished proposals. Robert Gordon, a Keynesian, admits, “government
policy to moderate the depression and speed recovery was minimal. The Federal
Reserve authorities were largely passive. … Despite the absence of a stimulative
government policy, however, recovery was not long delayed.” Kenneth Weiher, an
economic historian, notes, “despite the severity of the contraction, the Fed did
not move to use its powers to turn the money supply around and fight the
contraction.” He then briskly concedes that “the economy rebounded quickly from
the 1920-1921 depression and entered a period of quite vigorous growth,” but (as
with most such historians) he chooses not to dwell on this development or learn
anything from it.
Harding's treasury secretary, banker Andrew Mellon, often urged policymakers to "let recession do its work." And John Maynard Keynes himself said that "The recession will catch what the auditors miss." In good times, investors can stick to familiar habits even if they serve no one's interest, while times of trouble force them to think again. For government to prevent a recession while leaving in place the malinvestments that are liquidated during a recession is as severe a case of malpractice as it would be for a doctor to treat infected patients by disabling their immune systems while the germ gains strength. So, while I'm not convinced that Harding's approach would be a wise one to imitate today, it is hardly a case of capitalistic politics at its worst and my differences with his policy in that area do not reduce my admiration for him.
Elsewhere in the issue, John Buffalo Mailer, son of the late novelist Norman Mailer, remembers his father's 1969 campaign for mayor of New York City. Norman Mailer wanted the city to secede from the rest of New York and to enter the Union as the 51st state. He hoped that this new state would have a radically decentralized political structure, and that the character of individual neighborhoods would show itself strongly:
He foresaw the city, its independence secured, splintering into townships and
neighborhoods, with their own school systems, police departments, housing
programs, and governing philosophies. In some areas, church attendance might be
obligatory, in others free love mandatory. “People in New York would begin to
discover neighborhoods of the left, the right, and the spectrum of the center
which reflected some of their own passions and desires and programs for local
government,” he wrote. One way or another, the city would come apart.
An article by Richard Gamble, author of the terrific book The War for Righteousness: Progressive Christianity, the Great War, and the Rise of the Messianic Nation, argues that conservatives should not much admire Ronald Reagan, whose practice as president did not in fact accord with the best traditions of conservatism. Gamble traces Reagan's failings to his religious upbringing "shaped by a 'Jesus-only' populist Christianity that emphasized the conversion experience and an activist faith suspicious of creeds, rituals, ecclesiastical bodies, and denominational boundaries." While many of these suspicions might be easy to share, Christianity without any of those binding forces may not do much to incline its believers to cast a skeptical eye on worldly power. "Reagan's optimistic Christianity seemed ready made for an America disinclined to hear talk of limits to power and wealth. The historic Christian message can seem downright unAmerican."
A short piece celebrates the life and thought of Isabel Paterson, an "Old Right" writer best remembered today as one of Ayn Rand's mentors. Recommended are Paterson's novel Golden Vanity and her tract The God of the Machine.
An article starting with questions about what Edmund Burke would think of America if he could see its politics today turns into an analysis of the conservative tradition in terms of religious divisions in the history of English-speaking Christians. Burke stands at the head of a "High Church" strand that emphasizes tradition, authority, and community. This strand is well-represented among contributors to The American Conservative, but is vanishingly rare among American conservatives. Most who accept that label seem to follow a "Low Church" approach. Gamble's description of the "populist, 'Jesus-only'" Christianity in which Ronald Reagan was raised seems to match the idea of "Low Church" expounded in this article. The "Low Church" strand comes with a distrust of educated elites that pushes conservative intellectuals to the sidelines, and the intellectualism of the "High Church" strand repels the adherents of the "Low Church." Most conservatives who are not "Low Church" take a "No Church" approach, with no roots in any religious tradition or much of anything else. They make it up as they go, and in the end serve only the interests of those who finance them.
Paul Gottfried attacks Columbia University historian Eric Foner's work on the Reconstruction of the South after the American Civil War. Along the way, Gottfried makes it clear that the old Marxist historiography that Foner rejects has far more in common with conservative views of history than does Foner's appeal to the "politics of indignation." While Foner sees in the postbellum South evidence that white Americans generally are a bunch of hideous racists who cannot be punished enough for their history of crimes against people of color, the Marxists at least paid attention to what was economically possible and intellectually conceivable to the people of the era. For taking those historiographical pains, marxísant historians like W. A. Dunning lived to hear themselves pilloried as apologists for white supremacy.
Mary Wakefield praises Ahmed Rashid's Descent into Chaos: The US and the Disaster in Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Central Asia for showing, among other things, how the last seven years of US policy in Afghanistan has functioned to recreate the conditions that existed in that country when the Taliban came into power in 1996. Putting it that way, it really isn't surprising that the Taliban seems capable of repeating its successes.
Philosopher Donald Livingston reviews a new book about David Hume's relationship with Jean-Jacques Rousseau. The book doesn't sound too good, but Livingston has lots of interesting things to say about Hume. "The Enlightenment," says Livingston, "was an attempt to supplant religion with philosophy," a time when philosophy was not "something done by academic bureaucrats," but a matter of vital importance to thoughtful people generally. In Europe during the eighteenth century, as in Classical Antiquity, "the public began to look again to philosophers as guides." Hume reacted against this veneration of philosophy:
A culture dominated by a false philosophy could be worse than one dominated by
religion. As Hume's career developed, his youthful claim- that the errors of
religion were dangerous; those of philosophy merely ridiculous- began to change.
The Rousseau affair shocked him into recognizing an emerging mass philosophical
consciousness, more inclined to false philosophy than to true.
Wednesday, April 22, 2009
Ukulele Loki and the Gadabout Orchestra's "Prague"
- Prokofiev's Lieutenant Kije Suite
- Klezmer-inflected clarinet playing
- Antique slide projectors, including stereopticons
- Surrealism
- Nostalgic tributes to 60s psychedelia
All five of these can be found in this video. There are also some pretty girls whose appearance could be described as "sexually available." I like them too.