We are surrounded by lunatics
with delusions of grandeur
The Editor’s Notes
by Ken Holder
[email protected]
Attribute to L. Neil Smith’s The Libertarian Enterprise
I read a lot. In fact that’s about all I do. Trying to find a way to read and take a walk at the same time. Talking books might do that, but I read a lot faster than people talk. Or I could just treadmill it. Or I could just forget about it. Thinking.…
Here’s something I read:
Footnote to CHAPTER 19
1. The distinction between the serious and the solemn is essential to
the theory of comedy. Russell Baker has addressed this distinction in “Why
Being Serious Is Hard,” New York Times Magazine, April 30, 1978. I am
indebted to Naomi Solo for her recollection of this column. Baker begins,
“Here is a letter of friendly advice. ‘Be serious,’ it says. What it
means, of course, is ‘Be solemn.’… Children almost always begin by being
serious, which is what makes them so entertaining when compared to adults as
a class. Adults, on the whole, are solemn … In politics, the rare candidate
who is serious, like Adlai Stevenson, is easily overwhelmed by one who is
solemn, like General Eisenhower. This is probably because it is hard for most
people to recognize seriousness, which is rare, especially in politics, but
comfortable to endorse solemnity, which is as commonplace as jogging. Jogging
is solemn. Poker is serious… . Playboy is solemn. The New Yorker
is serious. S. J. Perelman is serious. Norman Mailer is solemn…. Making
lists, of course, is solemn, but this is permissible in newspaper columns,
because newspaper columns are solemn. They strive, after all, to reach the
mass audience, and the mass audience is solemn, which accounts for the
absence of seriousness in television, paperback books found on airport
bookracks, the public school systems of America, wholesale furniture outlets,
shopping centers and American-made automobiles. I make no apology for being
solemn. Nor should anyone else. It is the national attitude … It is hard to
be serious.”
-- Watson, Walter. The Lost Second Book of Aristotle’s “Poetics”.
Chapter 19. Footnote 1.
So now we know!
Distributed encrypted file system:
The Interplanetary File System: How you’ll store files in the futureby Shubham Agarwal
A Deepening Crisis Forces Physicists to Rethink Structure of Nature’s Laws, by Natalie Wolchover.
I recently posted a link to an article by some left-winger about how awful libertarians are. It’s not just left-wingers who hate libertarians, lots of right-wingers do to:
’We the people’ are in dangerous territory, by Jay Bookman, and also ROBERTS: One Simple Law Could Give Working Americans A Much-Needed Advantage Over Massive Corporations, by James Roberts.
Looks like they hate us for our freedom. Where have I heard that before? But wait, there’s more:
Supreme Court to decide whether the state can override your freedom to choose what you say by Kristen Waggoner
But enough of that. On to funny, etc., pictures:
This really just about defines America and
Americans:
Stay DEPLORABLE, my friends!
Was that worth reading?
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