...
 

Ambler Archive
Search The Ambler
About KMG

E-mail KMG


Greatest Hits
Death Disco
Cinematic Smoking I II
Intro to Eric Rohmer
Michel Who?
Contra John Doyle
Tony Blair Speaks
In re Rachel Marsden
50th Birthday Interview
The May Coup d'État
My Glorious Ancestors
What's A Redneck?
Shaidle vs Zerbisias
An Old Lesbian Forgets
RIP Ron Basford
Closer: Four Manikins In Search Of A Soul
Canada: America's
Discount Drugstore

Morris Dees: Scamster
Who Is Malcolm Azania?
Lord Black's Disgrace

What Nancy Pelosi Said
Irshad Manji And Oxymoronic Islam
Roger Scruton's The West And The Rest
Mark Steyn: Decline and Fall Illustrated
American Weimar
Arise Sir Mick Jagger!
Bach, Beethoven, Brahms And Beefcake
Evelyn Waugh Triumphant
IC: Are Bathroom Breaks OK?
J'accuse: Death Of 
the Report I
II III IV
Ben Mulroney: The Truth
Is KMG Bad In Bed?
The Spy Who Bored Me
Mark Harding: The Unknown Martyr
RIP Joe Strummer
Intelligent Design: The
Revolt Against Darwin
Attila The Hun: My Stalker
Immigration: Electing A New Canadian People
Fiat Lux!
Mad, Bad Glenn Gould
Why The Nuclear Family 
Isn't Worth Saving

Fear And (Self-)Loathing
On The Canadian Right

RIP Auberon Waugh

Mail not intended for publication should be clearly noted as such

Nevada Gold Deposit
Joe Wan

 

THOUGHT FOR THE DAY

My father worked in a greengrocers' shop for 35 years; my mother was a housewife before she committed suicide in 1987. They were both lifelong Labour voters. My mother hanged herself in the house she lived in all her life, in Southall, west London, a town that had changed beyond all recognition. It is today the least white place in the whole of Britain.

She wrote in her suicide note: "I hate Southall, I feel so alone." In case anyone dare accuse her of any racism, she may have hated Southall, but my mother was incapable of hating people. She worked in the last years of her life as a dinner lady in an all-Asian school and was much loved. But she was lost. Her world had disappeared.

Her dilemma is partly the dilemma of the white working class...

By what methods were the white working classes (WWC) despatched? The first development that undermined WWC hopes and morale was the great betrayal in education the abolition of grammar schools and the retention of private schools.

Grammar schools, in the guilt-ridden WLMC [white liberal middle classes] view of things, favoured middle-class children over working-class children. What they actually favoured or could have favoured, if the tests were designed sufficiently well was clever children over less clever children. And if you look at the dynamism of the post-war grammocracy (Pinter, Dyke, Potter, Jacobson, Sillitoe, Bragg, Bennett and hundreds of others), it provided a crucial injection of WWC sensibility into the wider culture...

The second great betrayal was multiculturalism. This was the creed that said all cultures were as valid as each other (in theory) but that minority cultures were somehow no one was quite sure how actually superior to the host white indigenous culture which was axiomatically racist. So even if you happen to come from a culture that endorsed female circumcision and was misogynist and homophobic, it was a given that you were a "victim." And who were the "victimisers"? The WWC who were faced with the profound challenge and stresses of assimilation.

There was a lot of WWC resistance to immigration. This was partly about racism, which, of course, the WLMC are immune to. Something in the organic bread, I think. But it was also about losing housing opportunities, cheap labour taking away jobs, and the simple, profound problem of learning to exist in a new kind of culture, which in some cases overwhelmed and bewildered the indigenous one. The trick of learning to feel ashamed at the same time as everything was being taken away from you was a really hard one to pull off...

The third great betrayal was the WLMC determination to stamp out nationalism at least if you were English. If you were Scottish, Welsh or Irish, of course, you could celebrate your flag and your culture as loudly and proudly as you liked. But if you were native WWC, to celebrate St George and the English flag was racist. This is because the WWC, despite being stuck down mines and corralled in factories, apparently managed to exploit their colonial brothers and sisters throughout the previous centuries, so they could no longer show pride in their own country, the country that their parents and grandparents died for and suffered for in two world wars in the second one fighting a racist tyrant. They continue to die in Iraq and Afghanistan. And without complaint, because they have learned to be quiet and to be ashamed of who they are and accept that they aren't "good" like the WLMC, who lived in all-white enclaves and to whom multiculturalism meant a nice Continental deli at the end of the road.

What else? The utopian council estates of the 1960s and 1970s the WLMC, pursuing their project of bracing architectural piety, uprooted whole WWC communities and put them in ugly, unliveable blocks, leaving them without a sense of place or meaning, while the architects and town planners themselves lived in little Edwardian terraces or Cotswold villages. Since the great council house sell-off of the 1980s fiercely opposed, of course, by the liberal left many of the WWC have bettered themselves. But now that the housing stock has run out and run down, those left behind are beached and helpless.

Who can wonder why the white working classes have got themselves a bad name? Who can wonder why they are angry, why they are despairing, why they carry knives, fight and drink themselves into oblivion...

Do I look down on the WWC now that I am middle class myself? Probably. But I don't hate them, not in the way I hate the people who destroyed and abandoned them, the ideologues and meddlers that have left them without a meaning and without a home and without an escape. I'll keep voting Left because I can't imagine voting Tory, and the Lib Dems are a wasted vote. But I know that, in the end, I am voting for a double-talking mealy-mouthed enemy of everything they purport to be promoting equality, opportunity, fairness. They are the living embodiment of Lao Tse's greatest truth and the source of the white working classes tragedy that "goody goodies are the enemies of virtue."
Tim Lott, "White, Working Class And Threatened With Extinction: It's The Do-Gooding Liberal Middle Classes That Have Betrayed Those 'Beneath' Them," Independent, 9 March 2008

Kevin Michael Grace, 12.05 pm, 27 March 2008

THOUGHT FOR THE DAY

The fact that it is considered "daring" for the BBC to make a series of programmes about the problems and fears of the white working class (i.e., the majority) tells you all you need to know about the BBC and much of what you need to know about Britain.

Richard Klein, the series commissioner, must have fought hard to get sanction for programmes about the mere majority.

The most daring programme so far (in media eyes) has been the sympathetic picture of Enoch Powell.

It conveyed his rage that the populace was never consulted about the drastic change being made in its composition and culture without so much as a by your-leave.

Politicians on both sides, furious about the "river of blood" speech in 1968, claimed thenand some still dothat Powell's speech hindered reform.

It was so extreme, you see, that it made it difficult for us moderate men to do something about immigration, which we obviously had intended to do when the occasion was suitable, when the time was right, at the appropriate juncture, etc.

I promise you as God is my witness that what the two frontbenches wanted to do was nothing, nil, zero, rien and nicht. It was this conspiracy of silence and inertia which enraged Powell and much of the public.

It is understandable why he became hated by Labour figures like Roy Hattersley, interviewed on the programme. For it meant that he and his fellow socialists had been found out.

For all their supposed unique contact with the masses, and their beliefs that the proles would naturally trust Labour to be told what was right, here was an aroused and angry public indicating the opposite.

It undermined the very basis of many a Labour politician's lifelong belief along with his faith in the universal brotherhood of man.

Powell was scarcely less hated by various Tory politicians because an election was looming and here was this bloody man turning everything upside down, enraging the opinion-forming elite and insisting that the party had jettisoned its responsibilities.

Interestingly enough, a middle-of-the-road Tory from that elite assured me the other day that immigration was not a problem, though he admitted "there are still some difficulties with the white working class."

It is a remark worth treasuring. Framing, if not embalming.

Powell was always an uncomfortable man politically, his impassioned attack in 1959 on the official hushing-up of atrocities in Kenya's Hola Camp for Mau Mau terroristsDenis Healey describes it as the finest Parliamentary speech he ever heardwas a nuisance for the Macmillan Government.

Powell also deplored our nuclear deterrent: he wanted an end to our bases East of Suez and an end to posturing as a world policeman.

He saw the Soviet threat as greatly exaggerated and the Anglo-American alliance as a menace. Ted Heath's prices and incomes policy was "madness."

Enoch was my oldest friend in politics, and in later years he would regularly invite me to scrutinise his speeches in advance. I would sometimes comment that his remarks would upset many people. His usual reply was that they needed to be upset.
Andrew Alexander


Powell: Mea mihi conscientia pluris est quam omnium sermo

Kevin Michael Grace, 7.40 pm, 14 March 2008

THREE SHORT REVIEWS

The Darjeeling Limited

Guest reviewer: GK Chesterton

According to Mrs Besant th[e] universal Church is simply the universal self. It is the doctrine that we are really all one person; that there are no real walls of individuality between man and man. If I may put it so, she does not tell us to love our neighbours; she tells us to be our neighbours. That is Mrs Besant's thoughtful and suggestive description of the religion in which all men must find themselves in agreement. And I never heard of any suggestion in my life with which I more violently disagree. I want to love my neighbour not because he is I, but precisely because he is not I. I want to adore the world, not as one likes a looking-glass, because it is one's self, but as one loves a woman, because she is entirely different. If souls are separate love is possible. If souls are united love is obviously impossible. A man may be said loosely to love himself, but he can hardly fall in love with himself, or, if he does, it must be a monotonous courtship. If the world is full of real selves, they can be really unselfish selves. But upon Mrs Besant's principle the whole cosmos is only one enormously selfish person.

Grade: C-


The Darjeeling Limited: The wheels in the brain go round and round

In Bruges

This is another spiritual journey, featuring hitmen, two Irish and one English, who are philosophers as all movie hitmen these days must be, just as all movie policemen must be head cases. Colin Farrell's hitman is a head case too, but any competent moral theologian could have told him that the second killing he agonizes over was no more evil than the first which precipitated it.  Suggested scriptural reading: Proverbs 9:10.

And someone should tell writer-director Martin McDonagh that a superabundance of swears alone doesn't make you the next Coen Brothers or David Mamet. Though hiring Carter Burwell to do the music doesn't hurt. Bonus points: Bruges itself, the great Brendan Gleeson and the lovely Clémence Poésy and Thekla Reuten, Andreas Schmidt singing Der Leiermann and the little boy's confessional crib sheet, which is the saddest thing I've ever seen.

Grade: B+


In Bruges: Even dwarves start small

The Bank Job

Jason Statham struggles manfully against inept direction, inapt cinematography and a witless, distended script, but he cannot save this steak and kidney plod, despite valiant support from old pros Peter Bowles, Jason Faulkner and the peerless David Suchet. And he gets no help from Saffron Burrows, who's a cold fish to match her trout pout. Perhaps she simply doesn't like men.

Best bit: the opening credits, set to T Rex's "Bang a Gong," which is everything this movie is not: sexy, swaggering and cocksure.

Grade: C


The Bank Job: Nothing in their outward 
appearance suggested a total lack of chemistry

Kevin Michael Grace, 1.50 pm, 14 March 2008

ONE SHORT REVIEW

Vantage Point

When did I realize this movie was risible? About one minute in, when we are introduced to a top female cable news network correspondent who would strain credulity as a contestant on America's Next Top Model. How ridiculous is the plot? Dale Gribble would scorn it as contrived. When did this movie make me laugh out loud? About one hour in, when the chief conspirator says, "We have to tie up all of the loose ends." To what can sitting through this movie be compared? Like being trapped in a Tilt-A-Whirl while being subjected to brief random images and belaboured about the head with saucepans of various sizes. If there were a Dennis Quaid School of Acting, what would it teach? 1. Grimace. 2. Shout. 3. Repeat. Where can I buy one of those cool PDAs that lets you detonate bombs and perform assassinations by remote control? Nowhere as yet, but Steve Jobs promises delivery of the iTerrorist by 4Q 2008.

Grade: D


Vantage Point: Sigourney Weaver asks, 
'Will someone please tell me what I'm doing here?'

Kevin Michael Grace, 5.20 pm, 1 March 2008

OBITER DICTA

Jay Currie and Edward Michael George have challenged me to "share six non-important things/habits/quirks about yourself." Probs neg, as Nathan Barley would say, but I will add the usual proviso that the tag dies with me.

1. I suffer from a condition called Pseudofolliculitis barbae.

2. The first record I ever bought (1967) was the soundtrack to Casino Royale (in mono).

3. I had a short conversation with Johnny Rotten at the Roundhouse in Chalk Farm, July 4, 1976:

KMG: Hi, Johnny!
JR: Who're you?
KMG: Just a fan.
JR: Ahhn't they ahhhlll.

5. I didn't start smoking until my late 20s.

6. I once earned £5 for contributing an item ("Ongoing Situations") to Private Eye. This is my proudest achievement as a journalist. 

Kevin Michael Grace, 7.30 pm, 28 February 2008

THOUGHT FOR THE DAY

Since the death of Debussy, Sibelius and Schönberg are the most significant figures in European music, and Sibelius is undoubtedly the more complete artist of the two. However much one may admire Schönberg's powerful imagination and unique genius, it is difficult not to feel that the world of sound and thought that he opens upthough apparently iconoclasticis au fond as restricted as the academicism it has supplanted. Sibelius's music suffers from no such restriction, and it indicates not a particular avenue of escape but a world of thought which is free from the paralyzing alternatives of escape or submission. It offers no material for the plagiarist and is to be considered more as a spiritual example than as a technical influence. We are not likely to find any imitations of Sibelius's No. 7 because the spiritual calm of this work is the climax of the spiritual experience of a lifetime and cannot be achieved by any aping of external mannerisms.
—Constant Lambert, Music Ho!, 1931

Sibelius Symphony No. 7 Part 2
Sibelius Symphony No. 7 Part 3

Kevin Michael Grace, 8.36 am, 14 February 2008

ONE SHORT REVIEW

Cloverfield

Sometimes technique is enough. And when it is harnessed to an uncompromising vision followed through with total commitment, you get art. Yes, that's right. If this seems ridiculous, consider what Steven Spielberg would have added to this apocalyptic scenario. Well, you'd get superfluous exposition, kute kiddies, a happy ending and a wooden stake of "meaning" driven through its heart.  Instead, Cloverfield is pure cinema, stripped bare of accretion. Its flat emotional affect delivers a mise en scène perfectly consonant with the personal experience of disaster as it happens.

Post-9/11 metaphor? Think harder, reviewers. Cloverfield is not horror recollected in sentimental tranquility. It is a presentiment of the long emergency.

Grade: A


Cloverfield: 'Does this mean we don't get bonuses this year?' 

Kevin Michael Grace, 6.22 am, 14 February 2008

THREE SHORT REVIEWS

Juno

Has atavism been entirely bred out of the (North) American male? It is tempting to describe Juno as a twee feminist fantasy, but the almost universal rapture with which our elite has greeted it suggests we are meant to regard it as The Way We Live Now. So this is the way the (Western) world ends: not with a bang, not with a whimper but instead suffocated under an avalanche of excruciatingly poptastic "witticisms." Imagine Oscar Wilde as channelled by the Gilmore Girls, and you'll get an understanding of just how sissified this movie is.

After Juno had ended, I resolved to devote what remains of my life to making the possession of acoustic guitars a crime punishable by death. Then I considered converting to Islam. Later, after I calmed down, I was possessed by a renewed admiration for the truth and beauty to be found in John Hughes's high school comedies.

Grade: D-


Juno: Transgendered love

There Will Be Blood

If Juno is the Barack Obama of Oscar-nominated films, then There Will Be Blood is the John McCain —nothing but atavism. In fact, much like John McCain's public image, it is a celebration of insanity. As Aristotle pointed out, the mad have nothing to teach us and so neither does this movie, despite its high level of technical achievement. 

Now, I understand that the past is a foreign country, and that it is too much to expect Paul Thomas Anderson to betray the slightest knowledge of orthodox Christian theology, let alone the syntax and cadence of the Authorized Version. But am I alone in finding Eli Sunday the feeblest fundamentalist ever? Prediction: "I'm finished!" will be to the 2000s what "Here's Johnny!" was to the 1980s. You have been warned.

Grade: C-


There Will Be Blood: Punch-drunk plutocracy

No Country For Old Men

Thank God for the Coen brothers, who make movies for adults. No Country For Old Men is just as technically accomplished as There Will Be Blood, but its artistry is deployed in the service of moral seriousness, not merely in striking the nerve endings that induce bleats of "masterpiece" from the critically jejeune. 

Another difference between the two is that while Daniel Plainview and Anton Chigur may both be regarded as the Devil, No Country For Old Men does not regard his triumph as inevitable. Two caveats: 1. One suspects that Tommy Lee Jones cannot distinguish profound from ponderous —or mellifluous from mushmouthed. 2. One suspects that the Coens believe cheating the audience of narrative expectations to be per se a good thing. But this is an exquisitely beautiful film and terrifically exciting in every respect, while Javier Bardem and Josh Brolin are just as good as Daniel Day Lewis. Better, actually, because their performances are less self-regarding.

Grade: A-


No Country For Old Men
: Dogs are the stormtroopers of the animal kingdom

Kevin Michael Grace, 5.38 pm, 12 February 2008

THOUGHT FOR THE DAY (SPECIAL WHERE WERE YOU WHEN I NEEDED YOU? EDITION II)

Marvin Kurz [lawyer representing B'nai Brith]: I understand from your previous evidence that you don't feel that there should be any kind of human rights redress for people who feel that they are discriminated against. That is how I understood your evidence this morning. Right?

KMG: No, I think that, as long as people can go to court under tort law, they don't need human rights laws.

Kurz: As long as people can sue in tort, you think that should be sufficient, that there should not be any Human Rights Commissions at all.

KMG: No, I don't think they are a good idea.

Kurz: And human rights tribunals.

KMG: No.

Kurz: Do you agree that harmful words against a group can hurt them?

KMG: That is a difficult question. They may feel hurt. Whether they are hurt or not is a different thing. In any event, individuals are hurt every day. It seems to me that is a part of life.

Kurz: Groups who feel hurt by language used by others should just get on with it. That is basically your view?

KMG: Pretty much. Let me make a distinction. It is against the law, and I fully support lawsif someone writes, "Let's kill all Jews." That goes beyond free speech and I don't think it is defensible. The sorts of statements counselling violence against people I don't believe to be acceptable.

Kurz: If somebody just defames the Jews, since you brought up that example, you think the Jews should have no response. Right?

KMG: They have all the responses that are open to anyone else in society. They can complain that this is unjust. They can say, "You shouldn't print this," or they can start boycotts, whatever people want to do.

Kurz: But there should be no legal redress. That is your position.

KMG: That is my position.
—Kevin Michael Grace, testimony before the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal, in Citron v Zündel, 5 December 2000 (8024-8026)

Kevin Michael Grace, 3.57 am, 10 February 2008

THOUGHT FOR THE DAY (SPECIAL WHERE WERE YOU WHEN I NEEDED YOU? EDITION)

Marvin Kurz [lawyer representing B'nai Brith]: To put it perhaps mildly, you disagree with the decision that the [British Columbia Human Rights] Tribunal reached in the Collins v Abrams case. Correct?

KMG: Yes, I disagree. Further, I think they should have no authority to consider such matters.

Kurz: What do you mean by that, sir? I don’t understand.

KMG: I don’t believe that a Human Rights Commission such as the BC Human Rights Commission should have the ability to empanel tribunals to imperil freedom of the press.

Claude Pensa [Chairperson, Canadian Human Rights Tribunal]: I am sorry, I didn’t hear the last words.

KMG: To imperil freedom of the press.

Kurz: You don’t think that human rights legislation should deal in any way with any form of restriction of freedom of speech. Is that what you are saying?

KMG: I don’t believe in human rights legislation.

Kurz: You don’t believe in human rights legislation?

Grace: No, I do not.

Kurz: Why is that?

KMG: Because I believe that certain things are criminal and certain things are not criminal. I think that human rights tribunals fall between two stools. I think, if someone has committed a crime against the Criminal Code, you find the evidence and try them. Other than that, I don’t believe in it.

Kurz: What if somebody discriminates against another person? You don’t think there should be redress to that in a human rights tribunal?

KMG: No, I do not.

Kurz: You think they should just be able to discriminate for reasons of race or religion?

KMG: Let me put it this way. Short of establishing a police state, it is impossible to end discrimination. If people have cases, there is tort law. If people have suffered damages, they can go to the courts and get redress.

Kurz: I take it you have no great respect for human rights tribunals. Would that be a fair statement?

KMG: Yes, I think it would be a fair statement.

Kurz: You think they are kangaroo courts?

KMG: Yes, indeed I do.

Kurz: Do you think they jump to the will of the political elite?

KMG: Yes.
—Kevin Michael Grace, testimony before the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal, in Citron v Zündel, 5 December 2000 (7931-7933)

Kevin Michael Grace, 12.45 am, 9 February 2008

GREETINGS FROM BEYOND THE PALE

Dr Dawg (sic) and Antonia Zerbisias are shocked beyond measure:


'The Bloggers Who Read KMG' (With apologies to HM Bateman)

Kevin Michael Grace, 8.11 pm, 23 January 2008

THOUGHT FOR THE DAY

Last week, this story appeared buried inside the business pages of the Washington Post. Why wasn't the story on Page 1? The Post reports that the blue-blooded five, Wall Street's five top investment banking houses, awarded their management $39 billion in bonuses for 2007—a period when those firms combined to earn investors about $11 billion in profits. Merrill Lynch lost $8 billion in 2007, Morgan Stanley $3 billion and Bear Stearns $230 million, yet the executives of these companies were showered with billions of dollars in bonuses. Otherwise, they would refuse to do any work! Which, apparently, would be in shareholders's interest. Merrill Lynch and Morgan Stanley could have done better by their shareholders in 2007 by simply purchasing Treasury bills; a software program designed to make simple conservative investment decisions about market-following mutual funds would have performed better in 2007 than the top management of most investment banking houses. And the software program would not have paid itself billions of dollars in bonuses for screwing up!...

It's one thing when profitable firms shower money on their CEOs and other top brass; often the amounts are indecent, but as long as shareholders come out ahead, the executives have at least some justification for their windfalls. But in the modern milieu of corporate kleptocracy, even when the company does terribly and the CEO makes decisions that blow up in the firm's face, the CEO awards himself hundreds of millions of dollars, anyway. Why is this not seen as white-collar crime?

Last week's buried Post story included this priceless quote: "'To many people, [the bonuses] will be shocking and questionable,' said Jeanne Branthover, managing director of Boyden Global Executive Search. 'People in New York in the world of investment banking will understand it. It's critical that pay is still there or you're going to lose really good people.'" Beyond that executive headhunter firms such as Boyden have a self-interest in running up CEO pay —this can increase the search firms' headhunting commissions—consider the reasoning: OMG, we can't lose the really good people who cost our shareholders billions of dollars with dim-witted decisions! The notion that top corporate managers must be paid fantastic amounts because they possess incredible, astonishing expertise often is used to justify CEO pay, even when the managers who claim the incredible, astonishing expertise make foolish decisions. "We'll put billions of dollars of money entrusted to our care into subprime gimmick mortgages backed by no documentation of income; my incredible, astonishing expertise tells me this is totally safe!"

If corporate managers who screwed up received $5.85 an hour, the federal minimum wage, for the year in which they screwed up—that is, if their wallets were at risk when they perform poorly—then they might fairly argue for huge bonuses when they perform well. But there is no evidence that the people who made the big investment calls on Wall Street last year (except at Goldman Sachs, which avoided the subprime mess) are any better at what they do than people chosen at random off a Brooklyn street. You bet "people in New York in the world of investment banking" will understand huge executive bonuses paid in the same year as huge losses. What's happening is basically a hustle, intended to enrich the executives while separating the investors from their cash. "People in New York in the world of investment banking" understand that, all right!
Gregg Easterbrook


Adam Smith: The invisible hand 
is the pickpocket's best friend

Kevin Michael Grace, 6.48 pm, 23 January 2008

POUR LE CONNAISSEUR

I'd hoped that the boys from FireJoeMorgan.com would take this on, but they didn't. So here, for your delectation, is the stupidest column ever written by anyone on any subject at any time.


Patriots: What's perfect? Well, I'll tell you what isn't: 
anything less than winning every game Infinity-0

Kevin Michael Grace, 6.39 pm, 23 January 2008

PENSÉE

Stalin was wrong. Jews aren't the real rootless cosmopolites; Canadians are. 

Kevin Michael Grace, 12.15 pm, 17 January 2008

AND HERE'S TO YOU, MRS WILKINSON, HEAVEN HOLDS A PLACE FOR THOSE WHO BRAY, HEY, HEY, HEY

Stop being a scold. Get over your pinched and neurotically ideological notion of freedom, and start paying attention to the further freedoms that matter much to people actually trying to live their own singular lives.

No, Dennis Rodman is not a worthy role model. Nor is a man, such as Thomas Jefferson, who was so irresponsibly prodigal that he allowed his self-imposed financial ruin to override his acknowledged moral duty to release his slaves from bondage. Yet despite a flaw far deeper and more grievous than any Dennis Rodman could conceive in his fevered dreams, we can see fit to give him his due.

Lord knows it feels so good to be so right about so much. But instead of rote, ham-handed, moralizing ideology why not try a bit of actual moral discernment, instead? I think you'll find it quite suitable for adults.
Will 'As Mises And I Understand It' Wilkinson


Deplore this, you big girl's blouse

Kevin Michael Grace, 11.58 pm, 16 January 2008

THE PRICE OF RECTITUDE IS ETERNAL SANCTIMONY

One of the embarrassments of the American libertarian movement is its failure to sufficiently acknowledge how collective bias against blacks, women, gays, immigrants etc. deprives blacks, women, gays, immigrants, etc. of their freedom. To my mind, serious forms of structural discrimination are much worse for liberty than certain kinds of coercion. Libertarians make themselves look ridiculous when they claim that everyone is fully and equally free as long as no one is coercing anyone. Now, this isn’t obvious. At least it wasn’t to me. It took me a good while to come around to this view—to see just how much structural bias does deprive people of their freedom or of the value of their freedom. But I am embarrassed that it took me as long as it did.
Will 'As Mises And I Understand It' Wilkinson


Wilkinson: Oh, the pain, the pain!

Kevin Michael Grace, 11.23 pm, 16 January 2008

POETRY CORNER

When I Came Back To Fleet Street

When I came back to Fleet Street,
Through a sunset-nook at night,
And saw the old Green Dragon
With the windows all alight,
And hailed the old Green Dragon
And the Cock I used to know,
Where all the good fellows were my friends
A little while ago.

I had been long in meadows,
And the trees took hold of me,
And the still towns in the beech-woods,
Where men were meant to be;
But old things held; the laughter,
The long unnatural night,
And all the truth the talk in hell,
And all the lies they write.

For I came back to Fleet Street,
And not in peace I came;
A cloven pride was in my heart,
And half my love was shame.
I came to fight in fairy tale,
Whose end shall no man know
To fight the old Green Dragon
Until the Cock shall crow!

Under the broad bright windows
Of men I serve no more,
The groaning of the old great wheels
Thickened to a throttled roar;
All buried things broke upwards;
And peered from its retreat,
Ugly and silent, like an elf,
The secret of the street.

They did not break the padlocks,
Or clear the wall away.
The men in debt that drank of old
Still drink in debt today;
Chained to the rich by ruin,
Cheerful in chains, as then
When old unbroken Pickwick walked
Among the broken men.

Still he that dreams and rambles
Through his own elfin air,
Knows that the street's a prison,
Knows that the gates are there:
Still he that scorns or struggles,
Sees frightful and afar
All that they leave of rebels
Rot high on Temple Bar.

All that I loved and hated,
All that I shunned and knew,
Clears in broad battle lightening;
Where they, and I, and you,
Run high the barricade that breaks
The barriers of the Street,
And shout to them that shrink within,
The Prisoners of the Fleet!

GK Chesterton

Kevin Michael Grace, 10.55 pm, 15 January 2008

THOUGHT FOR THE DAY

Frankly, I'm kind of tired of the continuing one-upmanship in violence and perversity among the recent generation of directors. I think it's become the other side of the coin of sentimentality. The classic definition of sentimentality is "unearned emotion"a privileged, unreal, self-indulgence in the sugary sadness of things. There are a lot of recent movies and books I'd call excremental for their unearned disgusttheir privileged, self-satisfied wallowing in the gruesome shittiness of it all. David Fincher is a prime example of an excremental director.
Richard Hell


Spacey in Se7en (sic): Dr Evil sez, 'Ooh scary, kids!'

Kevin Michael Grace, 10.45 pm, 15 January 2008

THOUGHT FOR THE DAY

Most species within nature aim not at unlimited growth but rather at optimum growth; that is, a condition of stability, fulfilling but not destroying the species’ appropriate niche within the larger life-system. Likewise, the individual organism, if it is healthy, seeks not endless growth—which is monstrous and suicidal—but rather maturation and reproduction, which also coincides with the “ideal” of the species. Both tend to serve and sustain the ends—whatever those may be—of evolutionary change as a whole.

Cancer is distinctive and pathological precisely because it does not conform to this pattern, or recognize any limitations; the disease with—as well as of—hubris. Delighting in nothing but multiplication, cancer ends by destroying both its host and itself. The analogy to our modern planetary growth-devoted techno-industrial society (whether capitalist or socialist makes no difference) is complete and exact. Like cancer, expansionist industrialism believes in nothing but more expansionism. Growth equals power: power equals growth. Again like cancer, the process will self-destruct. Not, however, without human suffering, which will be great until a different kind of society based on a more stable adaptation to the earth’s thin skin is somewhat achieved.
Edward Abbey, Letter to the Editor of the New York Review Of Books, 30 March 1973

Kevin Michael Grace, 9.32 pm, 1 January 2008

POETRY CORNER (THE AMBLER 5TH ANNIVERSARY EDITION)

On The Spirit of Getting-On-Ed-Ness

["The Sailor: 'She whom we rail at in this song is that Spirit of getting-on-ed-ness and making out our life at the expense of our fellow men and of our own souls.'"]

Thou ugly, lowering, treacherous Quean
I think thou art the Devil!
To pull them down the rich and mean,
And bring them to one level.
Of all my friends
That found their ends
By only following thee,
How many I tell
Already in Hell,
So shall it not be with me!

I knew three fellows were in your thrall,
Got more than they could carry,
The first might drink no wine at all,
And the second he would not marry;
The third in seeking golden earth
Was drownded in the sea,
Which taught him what your wage is worth,
So it shall not be with me!

There was Peter Bell of North Chappel,
Was over hard and sparing,
He spent no penny of all his many,
And died of over caring;
He saved above two underd pound
But his widow spent it free,
And turned the town nigh upside down,
So it shall not be with me!

Then mannikins bang the table round,
For the younger son o' the Squire,
Who never was blest of penny or pound,
But got his heart's desire.
Oh, the creditor's curse
Might follow his hearse,
For all it mattered to he!
From worshipping Mammon,
So it shall not be with me!

And Absalom,
That was a King's son,
Was hangéd on a tree,
When he the Kingdom would have won,
So it shall not be with me!

Hilaire Belloc

Kevin Michael Grace, 10.04 pm, 4 November 2007

PENSÉE

Actors can cry on cue, but they cannot blush on cue. This proves that embarrassment is the most honest emotion.

Kevin Michael Grace, 8.27 pm, 4 November 2007

Friends
Colby Cosh
Jay Currie
Dennis Dale
Michael Dougherty
Edward Michael George
Lorne Gunter
Gregory Hartnell

Rick Hiebert
Michael Jenkinson
Sarah Eve Kelly
Jeremy Lott
Steve Sailer
Kevin Steel
RJ Stove
Tom Piatak

Useful Information
All Music Guide
American Conservative
American Renaissance
American Spectator

Antiwar.com

Arts & Letters Daily
ArtsJournal.com
Back Of The Book

Pierre Bourque
Chronicles
Conservative Times
CounterPunch
Daily Mail
Drudge Report
First Post
Globe & Mail
Google Pedometer
Guardian
IMDB
Immigration Watch
Independent
Majority Rights
Megapundit
National News Watch
National Post
New Criterion
New English Review
New Oxford Review
Lew Rockwell
Remnant
Shotgun
Spectator
Spiked
Taki's Top Drawer
Telegraph
Times
Turner Classic Movies
Tyee
VDARE
WWWTW
Wikipedia

Selected Writers
2Blowhards
Lawrence Auster

Paul Belien
Christopher Booker
Charlie Brooker I
Charlie Brooker II
Patrick J Buchanan
Kevin Carson

C Van Carter
Alexander Chancellor
Gregory Cochran
AC Douglas
Dawn Eden
Edward Jay Epstein
Guido Fawkes
Norman Finkelstein
Former Beltway Wonk
Glaivester
Stephen Glover I
Stephen Glover II
Godspy
GoFugYourself
Paul Gottfried
Mark Gordon
Leon Hadar
Jim Henley
Peter Hitchens
Armando Iannucci
Richard Ingrams
Jay Jardine
David Jones
Jim Kalb
Martin Kelly
James Howard Kunstler
Daniel Larison
Norman Lebrecht
London Fog
Daniel McCarthy
Man Who Is Thursday
Eric Margolis
Allan Massie
Michael Monastyrskyj
Pith And Substance
Jerry Pournelle
Rick Salutin
Roger Scruton
Chris Selley
Somena Media
Joseph Sobran
Norman Spector
Clark Stooksbury
Superfish (NSFW)
Damian Thompson
Thrasymachus
Udolpho
Unqualified Reservations
Jesse Walker
Paul Wells
Geoffrey Wheatcroft
AN Wilson
James Wolcott
Peregrine Worsthorne
Antonia Zerbisias
Fr John Zuhlsdorf

.......