. . . as irritated, he gropes for words. Would you buy a used car from this man?
Day: January 8, 2016
Eating to live, not vice versa
If you’re like me, you want to be healthy. Are you like me? God bless you.
You are what you eat, of course. So consider some wonderful eating ideas from my Icelandic friends who don’t know they are my friends, but so what?
The ancient Greeks and Romans were not kidding . . .
. . . when they wrote about gods and religion, said this great man:
More Than Just a Witty Allegory
John Ruskin (1819-1900), Modern Painters, Vol. III, Part IV, Chapter XIII, § 4:
I do not think we ever [try hard enough] to enter into what a Greek’s real notion of a god was.
We are so accustomed to the modern mockeries of the classical religion, so accustomed to hear and see the Greek gods [written about] by men who believe neither in them nor in any other gods, that we seem to have infected the Greek ages themselves with the breath . . . of our hypocrisy; and are apt to think that Homer . . . was merely [a good story-teller];
nay, more than this, that all the nations of past time were [good story-tellers] also, to whom the universe was a lyrical drama, and . . . whatsoever was said about it was merely a witty allegory, or a graceful lie, of which the entire upshot and consummation was a pretty statue in the middle of the court, or at the end of the garden.
To which I make bold to add, they’d never have been such good story-tellers if they didn’t believe it. Which goes for the rest of us. When we don’t believe what we say, we head for a fall.
Hey, Chicago, tax man has you thirty ways to Sunday
Chicago taxpayers aren’t getting the three things that matter most to city residents: a quality education for their children, safety for their families and good jobs. What’s worse, residents have to pay more than 30 city taxes worth more than $1,000 per household – for services that simply aren’t working.
The Illinois Policy Institute added up all the local taxes, fees and fines that Chicagoans pay to finance City Hall’s operations, including those from the city’s newly approved tax hikes, and compared the totals to Illinois’ other largest cities. When measured as a percentage of household income, Chicagoans now pay the highest effective tax rate in the state.
Congratulations, you’re Numero Uno.
Peggy Noonan on Trump: The lady has it so right
A free-for-all between Christie, Rubio, Cruz and others, while Trump hovers above it all
Taking Trump Seriously
By JAMES FREEMAN
“I do not understand the inability or refusal of Republican leaders to take Mr. Trump seriously,” writes Peggy Noonan. He “touched an important nerve in opposing the political correctness that has angered the American people for a quarter century.
He changed the debate when he asked for a pause in Muslim immigration until America ‘can figure out what’s going on.’ In the age of terror, that looked suspiciously like common sense. Americans do not want America to become what Europe is becoming.”
Wow.
Rauner and the unions can be friends . . .
Like the cowboys and the farmers in “Oklahoma”