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DEVIL'S
DICTIONARY
Note that word "simplistic." This is now a key word in the vocabulary of modern leftist nihilism. When I can get round to it, I am going to produce a glossary, like Ambrose Bierce's Devil's Dictionary, of these cant words that mark the user as being an elite lefty nihilist. The devil's-dictionary definition of "simplistic" will be something like: "Implying a belief that good and evil differ from each other in some way." "Mean-spirited" is another one I shall list, with a definition along the lines of: "Nursing irreverent or disrespectful feelings towards some Designated Victim Group (blacks, homosexuals, illegal immigrants, etc.) Failing to acknowledge the superior moral status of such a group. See also: hurtful, insensitive, -bashing,..." ACTUARIAL
HUMOR Q: What's the difference between an American actuary and a Sicilian actuary? After trying this out on some other readers, one of them came back with this internet mine of actuarial humor. The jokes aren't terrific, but, as Dr. Johnson said in a different context, actuarial humor "is like a dog's walking on his hinder legs. It is not well done, but you are surprised to find it done at all." FAMILY
HUMOR WHAT
COLOR IS YOUR UNDERWEAR? PROUD
PARENT Because of the mechanics of book production, Prime Obsession won't actually ship to your local bookstore until around May 9th. (Amazon.com, by the way, has been showing "August" as the publication date. This is wrong.) Then the bookstore manager has to unpack boxes and rearrange displays on his own highly individual schedule, so you may not actually see Prime Obsession on the shelves till sometime in the week of May 12th. Remember my outstanding offer to NR and NRO readers: If you mail the book to me care of National Review (the address is right there on the contents page of your subscription copy), or even to my home address if you are Internet-fluent enough to find it (not that difficult nowadays), I'll inscribe it with the words of your choice and mail it back to you at my own expense. You will notice that two other books on the same topic have come out at about the same time. Did the three of us know about each other's efforts? You bet. Was there a bit of a race? Yes there was. In fact my publisher originally signed me up with a 15-months-ahead delivery date for the manuscript. Then they found out about the other two books and renegotiated my contract down to an 8-month delivery date, cutting me a deal on the advance to make up for the rush. Never a dull moment in the writing business. (I confess I haven't read either of the other two books, for superstitious reasons, and therefore cannot fairly comment on them.) INTERNET
DROPOUTS Why do I find this so cheering? I suppose because I am starting to hate the Internet. Familiarity has bred contempt. The intimacy of the thing has been destroyed by intruders pop-up ads, spam e-mail, and, I see (this is Sunday afternoon) lefty hackers bringing down NRO. "Feature fatigue" has eroded my sense of control who can be bothered to learn a new trick three or four times a year? (The boy who shouted out "Madonna!" will please go and stand in the corner.) I used to hang out all day at my tube, leaving it powered up all the time. Now I switch the wretched thing off firmly when I've done what I need to do, and go play Chinese Checkers with the kids, or fiddle with DIY chores, or read a book. I need the Internet for my work. That aside, I'd live happily without it. The novelty and charm have worn off long since. I feel about it the way I feel about my car: a great convenience, to be sure, but not lovable in any way, demanding frequent injections of time and money I am reluctant to spend, and liable to go wrong unpredictably in ways I can't be bothered to understand. I envy that 42 percent. TOP
OF THE SUMERIAN POPS Well, if you would like to hear some songs sung in ancient Sumerian, permit me to introduce you to Dr. Jukka Ammondt of the University of Jyväskylä, Finland. Dr. Ammondt spent much of the 1990s translating classic 1950s rock songs into Latin and recording them. Sample tracks: Nunc distrahor (All Shook Up), Quate, crepa, rota (Shake, Rattle and Roll), Non adamare no possum (Can't Help Falling In Love). Then, reaching even further back into the past for inspiration, Dr. Ammondt came out with his first CD in Sumerian. In his own words (cleaned up a bit I am not competent to judge the good doctor's Sumerian, but his English needs work): "On 5th July 2001, the first-ever album sung in Sumerian was released at the 47th Recontre International Assyrologique, a conference held at the University of Helsinki. One of the best-known classic rock songs of all time, Carl Perkins' 'Blue Suede Shoes' will stir listeners' hearts when sung in the world's oldest known language. On the CD you'll also find Unto Mononen's 'Satumaa' (Land of Dreams), known as the national tango of Finland." You cannot make this stuff up. FAY
CE QUE VOUDRES Now this denial is I shall try to be nice about it infantile. Every society that has ever existed has regulated private sexuality. A society that did not do so would quickly degenerate into a Hobbesian nightmare, with aggressive men prowling and fighting while women cower in fear and submission. Our present American society regulates private sexuality by promoting monogamous heterosexual marriage and fortifying that institution with legal, financial and testatory privileges. We also regulate private sexuality in other ways, some of them ("sexual harassment" laws, for example) urged upon us by the political Left the very people who are now in howling pursuit of Rick Santorum for his "intolerance"! It is easy to think of very large and disastrous social consequences that have followed from private sexual activity. There is, for example, the great explosion of illegitimacy that followed the sexual revolution of the 1960s, and that has wreaked such havoc on our society. There is also the dreadful AIDS epidemic, spread in the USA mainly by private sexual activity, which has killed tens of thousands of people. There is of course a great deal more to be said on both these topics, and room for plenty of opinions about the proper scope and authority of the state in these things. I am only pointing out that the proposition: "Society at large has no legitimate interest in citizens' private sexual activities" is so obviously false as to be, well, infantile. And yet, amazing to say, a lot of grown-up people seem to believe it. Back in the 18th century there was a clique of aristocratic English libertines who styled themselves the Hellfire Club. To "rid themselves of the day" (Dr. Johnson again, describing the frivolities concocted by the idle rich to fill their time) they conducted sex orgies, black masses, and the like, in the seclusion of a large country estate. Their motto was Fay ce que voudres "do what thou wilt." I sometimes think that when our civilization sinks into the sand at last, this will be its epitaph. HUMAN-RIGHTS
CAMPAIGN Readers, I have decided to launch a movement for the legalization of dog meat as a marketable foodstuff. My movement will be named: "The Campaign for Truth, Justice, Harmony and Peace." Everyone OK with that? BRING
ON THE GOULASH Case in point: Hungary. I am, as I have probably mentioned before, a mild Hungarophile, mainly because I was exposed to the incomparable Hungarian cuisine at an early age, my London college being within walking distance of two fine (in fact finom, the Hungarian word for "delicious") Hungarian restaurants. It's not just the food, though. If you mix much with Hungarians, or browse their literary productions,* you get a strong impression of a very distinctive Hungarian way of looking at things. All things love, business, war, politics, history, science... History, especially. The old dame has been horribly unkind to the Hungarians, right down to the 20th century. (If you want to see a Hungarian's jaw clench, just say the word "Trianon.") That is one half of Hungarian particularism. The other half is their language, a bizarre oddity whose only relatives are some scattered tribal tongues in Siberia.** The two things together have given the Hungarians a powerful sense of their own identity and separateness, a proud, defiant patriotism, and a rather bleak style of national humor. All that is by way of recommending Paul Lendvai's new book The Hungarians: A Thousand Years of Victory in Defeat, which gives a comprehensive portrait of this improbable nation. The book's subtitle was (I'm guessing) inspired by the following quote from Hungarian writer Géza Ottlik, which Lendvai includes at the end of Chapter 8. The battle of Mohács (August 29, 1526) was followed by the loss of much Hungarian territory to the Ottoman Turks. "The 400th anniversary of the battle of Mohács was approaching. It seems a remarkable thing to celebrate a defeat, yet the mighty Ottoman Empire, which could have celebrated its victory, no longer exists. All traces of the Mongols have also vanished, as indeed almost in front of our very eyes have those of the tenacious Habsburg Empire. We have therefore got used to celebrating on our own our great lost battles which we survived. Perhaps we also got used to regarding defeat as something exciting, made of more solid material, and more important than victory at any rate we regard it as our true possession." INCOME
TAXES And yet, just look at the stuff we have to file! As well as the 1040, there are Schedules A, B, C, D, and SE, Form 1116, Form 8812, Form 8829, and supporting statements a total of 15 pages altogether. And that's just my federal return... It is easy to imagine a quite ordinary middle-class person filing 100 pages or more. I have a degree in math, and I don't understand this stuff. How do nonmathematical people cope? I suppose by doing the same thing we do paying a licensed expert to figure it all out. Our man got us a rebate of $4,727, though he charged us $1,056.25 for his trouble. (That includes a 25-percent surcharge for audit insurance.) What a waste of human intelligence and effort! Billions of man-hours, billions of dollars for what? To keep the country going, of course; to fight its wars, guard its coasts, pave its interstate highways, and so on. Yet all that could be accomplished with much simpler systems. Several have been proposed in detail. The one I personally like best is the national sales tax, but there are simple income tax systems worked out, too. None of them has a hope in hell of being adopted, of course. The lefty elites would raise a fuss about "fairness." Fairness, schmairness: What about privacy? Funny: These same people who are tearing Rick Santorum limb from limb because he thinks the government might, under some circumstances, have the right to invade my sexual privacy, have no problem with that same government demanding to know about the new cesspool I installed last fall ("Statement 2 Business Use of Home Depreciation"). Around mid-April each year I find myself thinking that I wouldn't much mind having Suffolk County police officers break down my bedroom door now and then to make sure that I conduct my sex life from the approved firing position, if only the bureaucrats in Washington and Albany would get their noses out of my financial affairs. Possibly this is a middle-aged point of view. THE
REST IS SILENCE Now, then. I did a column a few days ago about a Doonesbury comic strip that insulted George W. Bush. That quickly got picked up by readers interested in the Creationist vs. Evolution controversy, even though that was not the main point of my column. Several hundred readers e-mailed me with opinions on Creationism, or Evolution, or both trying, without much success, to get me interested in the fine details of the issue. As always when you get a lot of responses to some topic, the Creationist e-mails (they were, by the way, almost uniformly courteous and thoughtful which reinforces the point I was making in my article) could be gathered under four or five headings. I posted blanket responses to some of those headings in The Corner, but here is one more. Lots of people wanted to tell me that the sort of super-complex molecules found in living things could not possibly have arisen by random chance in a universe a mere 13.7 billion years old, as the probabilities concerned are so immense 10 to the power of 40,000, according to one reader. There are several things wrong with this line of reasoning. In the first place, it is based ultimately on a common statistical fallacy one so common that it has a name: "the fallacy of numerators without denominators." (The numerator is the top number in a fraction; the denominator is the bottom one.) Consider, for example, the New York State lottery. I believe the probability of any one ticket winning the lottery is around one in twelve million. And yet, most weeks, someone wins it. How? The answer, of course, is that twelve million is merely the numerator here. The denominator is the several million people who buy lottery tickets every week. Divide the numerator by the denominator, and you have a reasonable-sized number: 1, or 30, or 0.5, or something similar. The probability of any particular thing happening is microscopically small. The probability that I flicked my eyes away from the screen to glance out of my study window just then, rather than a millisecond sooner or a millisecond later, is very tiny. However, in a busy universe, something must happen. In fact, untold trillions of things are happening all the time that's the denominator. The physical universe is a far, far bigger assemblage than the population of New York State (it may in fact, for all we can prove to the contrary, be infinite!) so that extremely, extremely, extremely unlikely things are happening all the time. A second problem arises from the term "random chance." In fact, even the most materialist of scientists does not believe that the universe is governed by random chance. There are organizing principles everywhere: subatomic particles organize themselves into atoms and molecules, interstellar gas organizes itself into stars and planets, and so on. Science consists of the search to understand how these organizing principles do their work. Why they are present is a very interesting question, but outside the scope of science. However, no thoughtful scientist, not even the most materialist atheist, thinks that the universe is the result of purely random processes. A third problem is the one raised by the so-called "anthropic principle." However improbable you may think it was that human intelligence arose from inanimate matter, if it hadn't happened, we wouldn't be here to discuss it! Possibly the Big Bang happened 10 to the power of 40,000 times before we showed up. Now that we have shown up, we can sit around and discuss the whole business. The other (10 to the power of 40,000, minus 1) occurrences of the universe were as an atheist friend of mine likes to say about the Afterlife very quiet. ** There is a much remoter connection with Finnish, but it is visible only in a scattering of archaic words concerned with fishing and hunting, and in some points of grammar. Quote from a Hungarian friend: "Yes, Hungarian and Finnish are related. As are English and Farsi." Which is true. |
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