Arrogance And Condescension Are But Masks To Hide Insecurity

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As a country boy with six years of formal schooling, I am hardly the one to question the role of intellectuals in politics; however, after reading an article by Gary Gutting in the New York Times, I am reminded of a university professor who asked me to help him with a mule problem.

I love mules, but you must be careful with a mule, they can kick with lethal force if they feel they have been offended. Since most of my career with horses has been directed more toward sorting out human problems, rather than equine problems, I was a little apprehensive at the prospect of trying to help this professor and his mule. To be honest, professors tend to be among the least capable in matters dealing with animals and simple everyday problems. Problems that men of humble origins and trades can often solve with little or no deliberation, often baffle learned men, who tend to struggle with theory and morality rather than simple and obvious solutions.

In my youth, I helped several professors who wanted to be closer to the past and nature by owning and riding a horse. Fair enough, everyone needs an excuse for owning these expensive beasts, and seeking some elemental force of nature, makes as much sense as the rest of the excuses. However, mules often have a proclivity for exacting revenge on the human race for perceived injustices of a past life; therefore, I believe, mules are best handled by bona fide mule men, not university professors living in nineteenth century log houses, who want to get in touch with their roots (human not tree), but I heard a calling to help my fellow man and I saw an opportunity to make a few bucks.

I rode my Triumph motorcycle out through the country and enjoyed the colors of fall. I marveled at the beauty of the hardwood leaves after the frosts had killed them, and arrived at the professor’s farm with more than a little trepidation for what might lay ahead, hoping I wouldn’t end up like the colorful leaves.

The professor was glad to see me and dropped the standard pretensions of a tenured professor with condescension for all those who speak with country accents and wear cowboy boots. He seemed to be almost childlike in his excitement at my presence. He was proud of his farm, a former homestead, it was over 150 years old. Some poor homesteader had put his whole life into this 160 acres, a quarter section that at best, could barely yield forty bushels of topsoil an acre, it had never grown a decent crop and today it was a struggle to grow a garden, but it had once again, grown another crop of hard wood trees. But the professor owned it now, and it was a beautiful farm, despite not having crops or pasture.

He showed me, his log barn, his fine harness carriage, his buckboard, and his mule Emily. It was a match made in heaven; he loved the mule and the mule loved him. Emily was a mule that had never been abused by cruel hands and she was a model citizen. I had worried over problems that didn’t exist.

While the professor gushed over his mule and his farm, I began to wonder why I had been summoned to this farm. Everything seemed perfect, far better than most equine situations I am called to visit. The professor finally had to take a break in his speech to catch his wind and I asked why he needed me.

He apologized and said,”I need you to raise the front door of the barn.”

I was once known as a guy who could or at least try to do anything around a farm or ranch, but this seemed like ann odd request. It was an old square log barn and had large blocks of limestone located in strategic spots for a foundation. It was a good system, but not really designed to last a 150 years; the blocks had settled a little deeper every spring during the rains, and now the barn was a little lower than normal, but still high enough to function well. I tried to tell the professor the height of the lintel was well within the realm of reason, but he was agitated that I couldn’t grasp the seriousness of the problem.

He said I would need to see the problem myself, and put a halter with a lead shank on Emily and led her through the front door of the barn. I’ve only worked with thirty or forty mules, so I don’t really know if this is typical mule behavior, but when she walked through the door, she carried her ears straight up and rubbed them against the oak lintel of the door. As a horseman, I have been asked to deal with some bizarre problems, but this didn’t really seem to be a serious problem.

When I told the professor my feelings, he was incredulous, “Don’t you realize, she will wear the hair off her ears.” He showed me a vague strip of wear on the front of her ears. I wasn’t totally convinced that the perceived wear of the mule’s ears and the lintel were related, but some arguments aren’t really worth getting started.

I explained that the lintel over the door of the well made dove tailed barn was a special log, chosen for its strength, grain, and straightness. If I sawed into the log, we might be inviting trouble by compromising strength at a critical spot, that spot being the span over the door.

He was lost in deep thought over this information being added and causing complications to this unique predicament. I broke the silence by saying, “There is a much easier solution.”

With a look of incredulous exasperation, he twisted his lips to the side of his face, to hear my solution, “I can dig a trench about eight inches deep in the dirt beneath the door.”

He looked at me like I was an idiot and said, “It’s not her damn feet I’m worried about, it’s her ears.”

This professor considered himself an intellectual, and to him, I was but a mere tradesman of mortal lineage. True to the myopia of philosophy, his only concern was the ears of the mare, and he was determined to reach a conclusion by employing critical thinking: I was limited, by nature of an inferior intellect to solutions not based in theory and critical thinking, but to those related to real and practical solutions.

Mr Gutting is a professor of philosophy at Notre Dame; and is convinced of the superiority of critical thinking, but fails to mention the utter failure of the Obama Administration, an administration made up exclusively of critical thinkers from academia. Yet, after this stark demonstration of dismal failure by critical thinkers, we are supposed to be reassured by Mr Gutting’s self-serving arrogance, that seeks to legitimize a personal image of importance, after all, he writes for The Stone, “A forum for contemporary philosophers on issues both timely and timeless.”

With unabashed arrogance, Gary assures us of his intelligence, by informing us that he is among the most august of critical thinkers, “I’m an intellectual myself”; it’s just possible, that within this particular oxymoronic phrase, may be a clue to this deviant personality that is currently running amuck in government and in a permanent state of denial as to the charges of incompetence and corruption. Denial has become more than a river in Egypt, it is an endemic example of hubris among the not so bright intellectuals, currently in serving in the Obama Administration, who are teetering above the abyss of failure and humiliation.

From the nimble but dull fingers of Gutting and the pages of the NYT:

What is an intellectual? In general, someone seriously devoted to what used to be called the “life of the mind”: thinking pursued not instrumentally, for the sake of practical goals, but simply for the sake of knowing and understanding. Nowadays, universities are the most congenial spots for intellectuals, although even there corporatism and careerism are increasing threats.

It is such a joy, to read of someone describing himself as an intellectual, who writes with such finesse and precision. I am reminded of a cowardly man doing battle with a bed of rattle snakes while armed with a grub hoe. After reading this pregnant phrase of many vectors, “someone seriously devoted to what used to be called the” it’s obvious that intellectuals aren’t required or expected to write well. For reference, we know Hemingway was the master of the simple and concise sentence, and Melville was a genius with the complex double and triple entente; may we assume Gary Gutting is the champion of lost and bewildered adverbial phrases.

It would be easy enough to eviscerate Gary Gutting on the merits of his writing ability and embarrass him in front of his peers and anyone else who can read, but it is his message we seek. For if there is a protasis within this fart, stumble, fall style of writing, it evades the reader. For while his prose delights the ear of those who crave the mundane and boring, his adverbs assault our dignity in a relentless pursuit of relevance, but like the dog chasing its tail, his periphrasis becomes his catharsis. Relating to Aristotle, in Chapter VI of Poetics, “Tragedy through pity and fear effects a purgation of such emotions.”

Gary Gutting is primarily concerned with Newt or more precisely, fear of Newt. Newt is a bit of a problem for Leftists; oh fear not, they have excess baggage charges and they are ready to confront and dun him for back payments, but that is not the strategic issue. The prospect of an empty suit engaging Newt in debate is the terrifying issue. Oh dear, it brings to mind the great defeats of history, Stalingrad, Waterloo, The Little Big Horn. There is always the excitement of the contest beforehand, and the first few minutes when hope still springs eternal, before that same hope becomes a forlorn hope, but it is only a matter of time, before they are faced with the inevitable prospect of annihilation and utter defeat.

How best to neutralize the prospect of a witless pseudo-intellectual champion being embarrassed in the arena of ideas and indirectly casting aspersions toward all those who say with arrogance and condescension, “I’m an intellectual myself”; there is a simple solution, impress upon everyone, that intellectualism is a collective team effort of critical thought and that is how ignorance must be defeated. One man can’t be expected to lead a country; he needs a gaggle clueless intellectuals.

Unfortunately, Newt doesn’t need a team for a debate or a teleprompter, and pitting him against a fool who seems to be bewildered without his faithful teleprompter, will be like slaughtering lambs in an abattoir. A scene that doubtless will cause even the most cold blooded Socialist to admit the futility of resisting the epiplexis of a Newt/Hussein comedic tragedy.

Poor Gary, in an attempt to establish credibility as an intellectual and advance his vague aphorisms, he tries to use the obligatory and token reference to poor Plato, a man who understood the inherent weakness of adverbs and relied as little as possible on the ancients for guidance. We can assume that Gary not only understands the Cliff Notes version of Plato, but he is not afraid or reluctant to employ a deluge of adverbs.

In his “Republic,” Plato put forward the ideal of a state ruled by intellectuals who combined comprehensive theoretical knowledge with the practical capacity for applying it to concrete problems. In reality, no one has theoretical expertise in more than a few specialized subjects, and there is no strong correlation between having such knowledge and being able to use it to resolve complex social and political problems. Even more important, our theoretical knowledge is often highly limited, so that even the best available expert advice may be of little practical value. An experienced and informed non-expert may well have a better sense of these limits than experts strongly invested in their disciplines. This analysis supports the traditional American distrust of intellectuals: they are not in general highly suited for political office.

We now know that in a politically correct world, we need intellectuals to prescribe correct thinking and appreciation; otherwise, we might lose ourselves in original thought processes.

Intellectuals tell us things we need to know: how nature and society work, what happened in our past, how to analyze concepts, how to appreciate art and literature. They also keep us in conversation with the great minds of our past. This conversation may not, as some hope, tap into a source of enduring wisdom, but it at least provides a critical standpoint for assessing the limits of our current cultural assumptions.

Read his entire article if you must, but be prepared to ask yourself why tuition must continue to rise for your children and grandchildren, and will this dubious degree they seek at such expense, teach them to write with the clarity of Gary Gutting or will they be able to maintain the skills they acquired in high school.

But it does not support the anti-intellectualism that tolerates or even applauds candidates who disdain or are incapable of serious engagement with intellectuals. Good politicians need not be intellectuals, but they should have intellectual lives. Concretely, they should have an ability and interest in reading the sorts of articles that appear in, for example, Scientific American, The New York Review of Books, and the science, culture and op-ed sections of major national newspapers — as well as the books discussed in such articles.

It’s often said that what our leaders need is common sense, not fancy theories. But common-sense ideas that work in individuals’ everyday lives are often useless for dealing with complex problems of society as a whole. For example, it’s common sense that government payments to the unemployed will lead to more jobs because those receiving the payments will spend the money, thereby increasing demand, which will lead businesses to hire more workers. But it’s also common sense that if people are paid for not working, they will have less incentive to work, which will increase unemployment. The trick is to find the amount of unemployment benefits that will strike the most effective balance between stimulating demand and discouraging employment. This is where our leaders need to talk to economists.

Knowing how to talk to economists and other experts is an essential skill of good political leaders. This in turn requires a basic understanding of how experts in various fields think and what they might have to offer for resolving a given problem. Leaders need to be intelligent “consumers” of expert opinions.

According to Gary Gutting the intellectual philosopher, our leaders should now, not only be intelligent consumers of intellectual thought but must read the Leftist dogma of Scientific American, the New York Review of Books, and effete pseudo-intellectual rags like the New York Times, but they must also have the ability to listen to monotonous circumlocution and derive a pretense of meaning from gibberish. Intellectuals are now to be elevated to a higher standing, not only in the community, but more importantly in government and leadership. For now, they will advise and direct our leadership so they can make intelligent decisions and we are left with the story of Emily’s ears.

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Another fab read, and a great story about the prof and the barn door. I guess no one told him the anecdote about the 12 yr old girl who figured that if you let the air out of the tires of a high profile semi rig, it would fit under the overpass….

But to this, I just can’t resist:

However, mules often have a proclivity for exacting revenge on the human race for perceived injustices of a past life

More evidence that reparations are simply an ass’inine approach? LOL

Well ya know, I just did not know that most mules are sterile. Nor the delicate (or indelicate) nuances of distinction between them and other critters of bray. Inside joke you had there, and over my head, Wild Man. LOL. I confess, known quite a few asses in my time, but my exposure to mules has been limited.

INRE reparations… most people do automatically leap to slavery as it’s prime, and sole reference. However reparations is simply the act of indemnification for perceived hostile acts, and has no limits in the subject matter. Nor are all reparations monetary… apologies, or perhaps a swift kick to a vulnerable spot on a human – sans any retaliation – may be quite sufficient. Never my intent to sidle to a slavery tangent, and most would never condone ownership of another human… regardless of race, color or nationality.

Arrogance And Condescension Are But Masks To Hide Insecurity

Puppets don’t heaved feelings of any kind. They just respond to whichever string or strings are pulled.

The lintel log over the door is like the taxpayer. Cut into it far enough, or in too many places, and a lot of, or all of the building will fall. The foundation is like American businesses. You need a good foundation, or the building will sink into the ground.

A lovely piece of writing. It made my day.
I am a self taught student of history, born in the same week and the same town as Mick Jagger if that helps. As a proud conservative American and an immigrant from the old world, I understand the appeal of the frontier and the role that horses and mules have in the hearts and minds of people around the world.
Skook, you are a scholar, a teacher and a poet.
Thanks
Bob in California

Skook

Once again your way with words entertains, delights, and enlightens.

Great read!

Thank you!

SKOOKUM
HI,
I love my BLOG AT FA, because I mingle with such intelligence
AND on many other great POSTS
and get my chance to respond to it with my own opinion,
it make me feel that I have a place among the brightest minds
because their condescension make them respond with kind words,
to my arrogant effort to have them pay attention to me.
bye great POST AS USUAL.

If you told the idiot professor that you were just “lowering the bar” when speaking of the trench, he might have understood. Or not.

SKOOKUM
it would have been so much easier, if you would have just cut a tip of the ears square, all you had to do is measure the excess and cut it with a splicer, a sharp one, and watch the legs which way they go,
and get you’re tools and scram as fast as you can.
another thought , you should have put a rope around the legs and get the other to hold the rope while you snip the ears.
I forgot to say, you have to give the owner the 2 pieces
of ears cut out,
just in case he want them back on some other time

A sixth grade graduate? Well, whaddya know, lol!

Jealous, liberalmann? Fear not. I’m sure Obama has a taxpayer paid program for you to return and improve on your 2nd grade level….

@liberalmann:

And yet he can embarrass you without effort. You see, one can educate themselves as he has done which is an example of why his intelligence is far superior to yours. You aren’t capable of thinking or learning for yourself and need to be told what to think. It’s proven every time you post.
Really libtard, you are picking a fight with someone who is an intellectual Cashius Clay compared to a flyweight like you.

BTW, did you miss the memo about arrogance and condescension?

Skook, ’tis a terrible waste of mind, and words, to spend chastising one such as libman. You could combine all of his 70-80 some odd one liner comments here, and the philosophical depth, and command of language, would be little more than a sliver of river rock, skipping off the surface of the sea of communication. There are those who consider themselves intelligentsia based solely on academic pursuits and perceived accomplishments. Then there are those are genuinely of higher intellect, and have achieved that level out of intellectual curiosity and self motivation.

’tis too bad we have more of the former as Congressional elite, and not enough of the latter as a voting base. Then again, if we had more voters with intellectual curiosity, there would be no Congressional intelligentsia elite. LOL

Why does tuition keep on rising…. the system has convinced the masses that the only way they can get a good job is to get a good education meaning a university. So off to university they go… young heads full of mush, and a mountain of debt ahead of them and four or five years of leftist indoctrination. When they graduate… they are easily controlled because, they owe, they owe, so off to work they go! Degrees are drastically oversold as to the increased earning potential for having one, especially when you rack up $100,000 in student loans for a degree in “gender studies” or “underwater basket weaving”. We need to get back to a manufacturing society… one that produces real goods and real wealth. As long as people are getting degrees in fields that no one wants to pay for privately… government work will be their only alternative… and we the tax payer will pay dearly! And they the students… will be enslaved to the government for the education.

Thanks for the good read Skook

Excellent job Skook!

Great piece, Skook. As usual your analogous humor and wit is right on target.

You must have the personality of an elitist to ridicule a man’s education, is that a natural result of being a Liberal?

Yes it is. Narcissism defined= liberal. If he takes you up on a debate (we know he won’t) please post it here. I have plenty of popcorn.

I’ve delt with very ‘educated’ people and some just plain folk. Personally I generally perfer the just plain folk. They generally have the most to talk about and make the most sense. When faced with a problem they find the simplest solution. Best part is they’re real. I can also say that some of the very educated people I know are also very down to earth and don’t let their education get in the way of being able to think.

Donald Bly
hi,
some couple of years ago, I found a recipy book in a yard sale, this book from 1942, from the USA,
with 600 pages of recipys, I found this one and it’s made me think of
liberalmann
here it is; HOW TO SLICE BOIL TONGUE,
Wash, cook, and trim tongue as describe, irk irk irk
appetite and eye appeal depend on perfect cooking and slicing,
chilled tongue slice more easily than hot tongue
to slice attractively, place tongue on cutting board with large end to your right
and rounded side toward you, insert fork in center to hold firmly, use a sharp knife,
begin at large end, cut thin slices a litle on the slant, which is exactly across grain of tongue,
Near tip of tongue, slices are almost lengthwise, Slices cut across grain reveal interesting texture,
and variation in color of meat, The most desirable thickness for cold tongue slices
is 1/8 inch or less and for hot tongue 1/4 inch,
liberalmann hey hold your tongue and eat it

UpChuck.Liberals
how did you guess my profile?
bye

MATAI love to read my home paper headlines;
there wont be any APPOCALYPSE IN NEW YEAR 2012,
CAVEMEN didn’t let ancient bedbug bite,
OBAMA said, ECONOMIC FIX could take years,
relation cool between US AND RUSSIA,
I was served my food
purchase while the cashier kept licking her finger
she almost got my one finger,
it’s the full moon the moonies are out
bye

Wonderful read.
It reminded me about one of my first lessons about the Greek classic writers.
Hopefully this story was real.
Either Plato or one of the others was surrounded by all the city-state’s top intellectual men.
They went around the whole circle of them on the subject of how many teeth are in a horse’s mouth.
Finally Plato had his turn.
He did the unthinkable in a culture where 90% were slaves and the freemen didn’t lift a finger for any reason.
He went over to a horse and opened its mouth and counted.
Case closed.
All their debate points and theories fell to the fact of the counted teeth.

Obama reminds me of a man who will surround himself with all those thinker-types.
No one with the willingness to go below his station even if it might solve the problem.
Newt does NOT impress me as so lofty, despite the fact that he lectured at college and wrote many books.

@Skook:

They are sterile over 99% of the time and could never reproduce another mule.

Would it only be so with liberals.

Dr John, that is outrageous, but funny.

I was laughed at when I was younger for suggesting there was a Liberal gene; but I may yet be vindicated. They claim to have found an addiction gene, something tells me a Liberal gene may be related. LOL

Skook…. there are a lot of mental illnesses that are genetically related… I would bet liberalism will eventually be found to be one of those illnesses… my money’s on you Skook!

Perhaps with a little gene therapy we can cure their condition… and perhaps any other deviant behavior that is genetically induced.

Nan G I read the same story. It sounds like Plato; supposedly Aristotle was a horseman, relying on memory since I am on the road and on’t have time to dig through the research, but if my memory serves me well, he knew a lot about teeth like eruption schedules, problems with mastication and bite problems. One of the facts of history that left me in awe as a young guy.

It is difficult to count molars on a live horse, it is much easier to feel them and count, the tongue is huge and strong. I assume, tricky Plato counted the teeth on a cadaver and knew the answer before conducting a cursory examination of the mouth for a few seconds. A horseman can amaze non-horsemen, with little effort. I think it was a set-up, but it was a good one to have survived for 2400 years. LOL His technique is the basis for scientific inquiry; it set the stage for the scientific study of climate change. LOL

I am on the road for a few days, responses will be intermittent. Hasta la vista baby.

Don not many people know this, but the way to determine the sexual identity of a chromosome is easy, just pull their genes down.

@Skookum: It might just be that liberals are missing a gene, the conservative gene. That might account for them being so angry all the time, what with one of their genes missing. 😛

If you read carefully, you will notice the term “formal study”. I have never considered correspondence classes to be formal in the sense of sitting in class for twelve years to be indoctrinated by Socialists, to be formal education. The home study student had a lot more options for study and I made use of my options. I home schooled my kids for a number of years and they remember that time with cheerfulness.

I recommend home study for kids with parents than can and will dedicate themselves to the process. If you feel the indoctrination process to be instrumental in raising a dedicated Liberal/Socialist, public education is the best option.

I’d be p.o.’d to find out a pair of my genes were missing… If I bought cheap foreign genes I might not be so upset; I only buy American genes but what the hey… my underwear aren’t missing and they’re made in America.

I feel privileged to be writing with men of science.

anticsrocks I cannot believe it, you must have hit the nail right on the target,
and that liberal gene reside on the left side of the brain along all other corrupts and destructive genes,
you can imagine and even not imagine, but will be revealed as time pass, they cannot hide too much longer.
bye

@Skook: Pay no attention.

The storied professor must enjoy tenure at Texas A&M. There is famous story about a certain Aggie’s issue with tall mules and short doors.

Skook,
Enjoyable gem as usual.

Gutting’s intellectual deficiencies are typified with, “For example, it’s common sense that government payments to the unemployed will lead to more jobs because those receiving the payments will spend the money, thereby increasing demand, which will lead businesses to hire more workers.” . . . He should have left well enough alone and not strayed into the yard of reality. The abject stupidity of this statement, commonly recited with confidence by the ‘redistribution-of-wealth’ socialists and related manipulators, is fraught with ignorance and lack of basic common sense. This utterance of his is enough to blow the narcissistic bubble “I’m an intellectual myself,” onto the decaying heap of toxic self-admiration. Gutting lacks the ” . . . intellectual curiosity and self motivation” which Mata mentioned in #23.

one thing that keep rolling in my head,
If they are sterile, how come they are still here?
will we ever know.
would it be by infiltration.
oh, I got it,
insemination

JR:

“For example, it’s common sense that government payments to the unemployed will lead to more jobs because those receiving the payments will spend the money, thereby increasing demand, which will lead businesses to hire more workers.”

This famous Pelosi contribution to the world economics caught my attention, but the article was pregnant with too many opportunities to humiliate. I couldn’t devote enough time to all of them, to do them justice.

I can’t help but wonder, has the level of intellect among professors dropped from those days in the 60’s when I attended an ivy walled institution of intellectual flatulence. Most of my instructors were Leftists, but they weren’t stupid. Gutting casts doubt on the whole system and its, “I’m an intellectual, myself” attitude; especially, when they are published in the New York Times, and they promote him as if he is a genius of academia. Did I mention the commentary, they lined up like dutiful lemmings to proclaim the intellect of Gutting and of how they were also deep thinkers and breathers.

I read Hanson over at PJM and NRO and he reminds me of the people who taught in the 60’s; obviously, he is not a Socialist, but he is not an imbecile either.

Keema: It is sad that those Aggies aren’t more creative; unfortunately, there just aren’t that many stories to go around. I am fairly certain my mule is older than their mule. We must remember, louis lamour said there were only five stories in all of history. I wish I could have asked him to expound on that one.

Bees, this is a part of the Theory of Evolution that breaks down under scrutiny, one of several parts. It is fairly east to cross pollinate peas and come up with theories of evolution based on hybrid peas that can reproduce, like one of the monks who theorized on the subject, but the caveat remains, cross pollinating of different species of more advanced life forms, can rarely produce a viable offspring. The mule is the offspring of a jackass (burro male or donkey male) and a horse mare. This cross species matin will consistently produce a hybrid or a cross species offspring known as the mule; however, that mule offspring is sterile and cannot replicate another mule, it is genetically impossible and somethings must be appealed to God. In a rare instance, a mule mare can be bred back to a jackass (relying on memory here) and produce an offspring.

One of the few instances of cross species breeding that is viable among all the earth’s creatures, results in a hybrid that is sterile, but a good work animal with unique characteristics that man has exploited for thousands of years. Yet cross species breeding is a tenet of evolution and to doubt or question the idea is sacrilege among the Left, among people who have spent considerably less time and effort than you, contemplating the scientific facts.

There is seldom an archaeologist who finds a jawbone of a primitive ape like being, who can resist proclaiming that he has found the key to man’s biological heritage. It is a sad aspect of man’s personality, that is related to ethnocentrism; we tend to regard ourselves as being important, and damn it, if we have found a fossil it must be the key to the ascent of man from primal barbarity to modern barbarity.

Nay say I, for fossils form only in a few select places in the world, most resort to the much easier escape from life, dust to dust. but like a fool who deigns to fart himself to fame and fortune, the archaeologist who finds one of the millions of ape-like creatures that have passed over the bridge to obscurity is determined to achieve fame and notoriety with some lost and forgotten simian’s teeth.

Now Bees, you should start a study of genetics in English, for unlike the Socialists, I will not ask you to accept these facts as articles of faith that must accepted or risk being condemned as a heretic; no I beseech you to investigate and come back for debate. For to learn anything on the subject will elevate you far beyond the Liberal’s storehouse of knowledge, the same Liberal who will condemn you for doubting one of the main premises of Liberalism and Socialism.

SKOOKUM
hi,
your comment is what I take for true understanding, because you know more on the subject than me,
I was stock on the word sterile, and I thought it meant no chance to produce offspring ever,
and now, after reading you, and if I understood well, it is possible for her to produce offspring from another different similar animal, but never from a same as her mate,
if I got that right, then the word sterile as another meaning than I was led to believe,
thank you for taking the time to explain,
bye it’s appreciated

SKOOKUM
hi,
that lead me in thoughts of maybe, probably, most surely,
there was human in ancient times around the start of evolution, the human mating animal,
that would maybe produce a different evolution thread, and probably not only one, but more of it,
leading the offspring of today with different cell brains branching into behaviors of their ancient animal gene and less ancient human genes, making them drawn to destructive bestial actions including any vicious crime including following or being lead by blood thursty actions and thoughts of it more or less depending on the content of both genes being more on the wrong side,
do you find that crazy or possible?

SKOOKUM
maybe it explain messages from ancient book like the bible on CAIN AND ABEL,
ONE jealous of his brother, maybe was not as human as his brother was and knew it as he was made aware of in some way, surely not because of the lentil soup, there was more to it, I think.
bye

Bees, you are approaching the problem incorrectly. Look up inductive versus deductive reasoning, you must conduct your scientific research with a method that uses logic; otherwise, you will look as foolish as the so-called climate scientists who have a conclusion and spend their life looking for evidence to support it, a system that is laughable to “honest” scientific researchers. Read of the differences in logic and research, then go to bed and dwell upon it during your sleep, it works for me.

Skookum Thank you once again for a excellent article. Common sense one of the true lost items in todays world. Black 3/6 out

This horse-tale confuses me. At first I wasn’t sure whether it was the author or a fictional narrator that only had “six years of formal education”. But then, as I read the comments, I decided it must be the former–Skook. But then, I wondered if Skook only had a sixth grade education, how did he become an officer in the Canadian military–which I remember him mentioning a year or so ago? Oh well, I thought, maybe that’s all they require. But then, in a later comment, Skook said “he remembered his first day of formal education…at one of the foremost universities in the world….” This statement made me think that perhaps he wasn’t talking about grades 1 through 6 as being the limit of his education; but maybe a university level education comparable to at least a Masters’ degree. Then “he took a vacation in the USMC”–I don’t know many people who considered the Marine Corps as a vacation (but then this is the mighty macho Skook–who, among other triumphs, is also a skilled MMA fighter, as well as a consummate debater who threatens to “take no prisoners”). However, does that mean he was in both the Canadian and US military?

Well, I guess you can read what you want to believe. You can believe one was raised in the life of a successful ranch family, with all the privileges that money can buy; or as an example of a Horatio Alger boot-strap story.

Me thinks the one called “Liberal1” pictures a successful ranch family as something along the lines of JR Ewing and the Ewing clan from the days of TV’s Dallas.

I also believe the boy doesn’t quite understand how someone without access to formal k-12 education could be anything but an illiterate hick. These are the people that don’t think for themselves but simply parrot the ideas of others.

As usual, Skookum hits it out of the park.
The Professor and the mule. Ah, what a story!
I read somewhere about the curious distinction between an expert and a scholar.
An expert, on the one hand, knows all about his subject.
A scholar, on the other hand, is always studying and learning in his subject, and never claims mastery.
Which one will provide the better advice?
The scholar, every time. The scholar will not attempt to hammer the square peg into the round hole, and try to make a prior solution fit the new circumstances. The expert already knows what to do.
The scholar will apply the large-scale paradigms of his discipline to the question at hand, and provide a solution which is unique to the unique problem.
Experts have gotten us into trouble since the beginning of time.
The Professor is an expert, and wants to cut away the log for the sake of his mule. Skook, the scholar, wants to view the issue in the global sense: if raising the lintel endangers the structure, then lower the path!
If only we had more scholars and fewer experts flying around! I am sure that Mr Gutting worships experts. They will always lead him wrong.
Yesterday’s solutions will not solve today’s problems. Ever.

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