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September
27, 2002 9:00 a.m.
September
Diary
Another
month in blogs.
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CHILD
ABUSE
I am on
record as having said: "In the matter of parental discipline,
I'm a parents-rights extremist. All but the very worst parents are better
for kids than institutional care. I would smack my kids in public if I
thought it necessary, though it never has been." So where am I on
the case of Madelyne Toogood, who walloped her four-year-old in an Indiana
parking lot and was caught on videotape? In the same place, that's where.
For God's sake let the kid go home. Mrs. Toogood slapped the child around,
which is a thing some parents sometimes do. It ain't nice, but to read
the newspapers & watch TV, you'd think the silly woman was Bluebeard
reincarnated. The child suffered no harm not even a bruise, so
far as anyone has been able to discover. I think Mrs. Toogood should be
punished: a nasty fine, or some humiliating parole procedure. But to put
the kid in care? To be molested by low-grade community-college-diploma
"social workers" and have her poor little head filled with gibberish
by crank anti-family "child psychiatrists"? Not on my dollar.
I once worked with kids from these kinds of families, and I can tell you
with no doubt at all, that poor tot cries herself to sleep every night,
missing her mother. I'm not defending Mrs. Toogood, who I have already
said I'd like to see punished: but she'd have to do a whole lot worse
than that to the kid before I'd surrender that child to the tender
mercies of institutional "child care." Let the poor little thing
go home.
A
MAN IS NOT A POT
So said Confucius (Analects, 2.xii). I am certainly not a pot,
but I have recently acquired a pot. It was a gift from a friend,
a collector of old and beautiful things. This one is old all right: It
is Chinese, and dates from the Han dynasty I would guess, from
the painted design, the Western Han, which makes it over 2,000 years old.
It is by far the oldest thing I have ever owned, and I am filled with
awe every time I look at it. Imagine: a man, kitted out with the same
basic appetites, longings, joys, miseries, dreams, and toothaches as myself,
yet living in a society inconceivably remote from mine, made this thing
with his hands, and decorated it from his own imagination, and sold it
for profit. (Well, perhaps I shouldn't over-romanticize this. They guy
was probably running some sort of primitive pot production-line, and using
designs he'd used so often he could paint them in his sleep. Still...)
The thing about antiques is, you don't feel you own them; you have just
borrowed them. After I'm dead, gone, and forgotten, someone else
will own this pot. I have "my" pot for a while; then someone
else will have it. It gives you some perspective, having a 2,000-year-old
painted pot in your wall unit.
GRACE
NOTES
We are one of those families that sit down together round a table for
dinner every day, come hell or high water. No TV, just a little background
music if we feel like it, and some exchanges of views and the day's experiences
over the cruet. Before commencing the meal, we bow our heads and thank
our Creator for what's in front of us. I generally say the grace, and
most often it's just the basic English one: "For what we are about
to receive, may the Lord make us truly thankful." Sometimes I vary
it a bit. If I'm really hungry, or if we have visitors whose precise confession
I am unclear about, I chop it down to the all-purpose grace we used to
say for lunch at my secondary school: Benedictus benedicat
"May the Blessed One bless." Very handy, that; suitable for
Christians, Jews, Muslims, Hindus, Buddhists and Zoroastrians. (Don't
know how it would go down with a Wiccan guest; but when it happens, I'll
let you know.) Sometimes I let the kids say grace. My seven-year-old particularly
likes the Marine Corps Grace that I picked up from an ex-USMC buddy and
transmitted to the child: "Good food, good meat, thank God!
Let's eat." So far I have spared my family my own personal favorite,
the Selkirk
Grace. I am on the lookout for some new graces, though, so any reader
with an especially original or colorful grace is welcome to send it in.
R-E-S-P-E-C-T.
I am devastated, shattered and discombobulated. SurfControl,
which filters out websites that might bring a blush to a maiden's cheek,
has flagged occasional-NR-contributor Steve
Sailer's site as "hate speech"; but they haven't flagged
mine! What's going on here? What do I have to do to get respect from these
people? I urge those readers they are legion who have taken
gross offense at something I have written, to get in touch with SurfControl
and demand that I be accorded the same privilege as Steve. I want to be
"hate speech." If I don't get my rights here, I shall be even
more offensive. You have been warned.
The London Times
columnist Bernard Levin threw a party when he learned that the apartheid
government in South Africa had banned him from entering the country. He
considered it a great honor. I feel the same way about being flagged by
the PC police. Get on it, readers.
(Added later in
the month: Steve tells me he got in touch with SurfControl and complained.
They looked at his site again and agreed that it is "news,"
not "hate speech." Still, you have to wonder how they came up
with that original judgment. Steve is the nicest guy you'll meet in a
month of Sundays, and as far as I know doesn't hate anybody. This "hate"
business is totally out of control.)
NIGGARDLY
In my
September 17 columnabout the word "niggardly," I said that
the whole controversy started with a piece in The Economist seven
years ago. Reader Kevin Hawley in Ohio has trumped that with a much earlier
reference: In Sinclair Lewis's 1947 novel Kingsblood Royal, there
is a character named Winthrop Brewster, son of the Reverend Evan Brewster,
a black Baptist preacher and Columbia PhD. Winthrop, back from his freshman
year at the University, greets Neil Kingsblood's recent discovery of his
1/32 black heritage with enthusiasm, expanding upon the positive contribution
that Neil might make to the cause of civil rights for blacks. In this
regard, he then says:
"Neil! Maybe you'll really get into the race-struggle and be able
to give us some new slants. I wish you could do something with the racemen
that are too touchy, and insist that the colored press spell That Word
as n-blank-r, and have a cat-fit when they hear a bunch of innocent white
kids doing some corny old song like 'You could hear those darkies singing.'
I'll bet some of 'em insist that Niggardly ought to be pronounced Negrodly.
Couldn't you make fun of them? Gee, you know, you could maybe become one
of the leaders of the race."
KNOWING
WHERE TO LOOK
"Knowledge is of two kinds: there is knowing a thing, and there is
knowing where we may find information upon it." Thus the great Samuel
Johnson. I'm constantly discovering new sources of information. One of
the best I've got acquainted with recently is the China e-Lobby, an e-mail
list sending out news clips about China and North Korea from an anti-communist
viewpoint. Their mission statement says: "The China e-Lobby is an
organization dedicated to exposing the abuses of human rights, threats
to American security, and attacks on general decency committed by Communist
China, and to influencing U.S. policy to ensure these egregious acts do
not go unopposed." They are currently organizing a petition for a
U.S. boycott of the 2008 Olympic Games in Peking. Lots of luck, guys...
but it's a praiseworthy effort, and should be supported by all who love
liberty. To sign up for the China e-Lobby postings, send an e-mail to
them at "china_e_lobby@yahoo.com."
THE
DREADFUL DAYLIGHT
Several readers wanted to know where I got the snippet of verse in my
August blog, the bit about "the peace, before the dreadful daylight
starts." Well, it was from a poem by the English poet John Betjeman
(1906-84). Betjeman was a very fine poet, but unfortunately a very local
one: if you were not born in England between about 1880 and 1970, and
entirely raised there, most of his stuff is (I would guess) nearly incomprehensible
without footnotes. Well, here's the poem. I couldn't find it on the Internet,
so I've just copied it out from Betjeman's Collected Poems. (Which
includes an "Index of Places and Counties" covering five
pages. Derbyshire is mentioned twice.) The poem was published in 1954.
I've put the footnotes in front of it making them, I suppose, head
notes.
Head notes.
Norfolk is an English county. It is, as a character in one of Noel Coward's
plays points out, very flat. One part even flatter than the rest goes
by the name "the Norfolk broads." This refers not to the female
inhabitants of the region, but to the numerous canals, rivers, marshes
and small lakes that are found there, all interconnected. For at least
a hundred years, renting a houseboat for a few days on "the Broads"
has been a popular way for the English middle classes to take a vacation.
Betjeman is reminiscing about such a vacation. The Bure is one of the
rivers that make up the Broads. Betjeman was, as well as being a poet,
an expert on old English country churches, and those Victorian architects,
like James Fowler (1828-1892), who restored them. OK, here's the poem.
Norfolk
by John Betjeman (1906-84)
How did the Devil
come? When first attack?
These Norfolk lanes recall lost innocence,
The years fall off and find me walking back
Dragging a stick along the wooden fence
Down this same path, where, forty years ago,
My father strolled behind me, calm and slow.
I used to fill
my hands with sorrel seeds
And shower him with them from the tops of stiles,
I used to butt my head into his tweeds
To make him hurry down those languorous miles
Of ash and alder-shaded lanes, till here
Our moorings and the masthead would appear.
There after supper
lit by lantern light
Warm in the cabin I could lie secure
And hear against the polished sides at night
The lap lap lapping of the weedy Bure,
A whispering and watery Norfolk sound
Telling of all the moonlit reeds around.
How did the Devil
come? When first attack?
The church is just the same, though now I know
Fowler of Louth restored it. Time, bring back
The rapturous ignorance of long ago,
The peace, before the dreadful daylight starts,
Of unkept promises and broken hearts.
SEPTEMBER
11
I KBO-ed, as promised.
Finished some book reviews that had been hanging over me for weeks, did
my end-week column for NRO on a totally non-war-related theme, got a little
further with a speech I'm giving in England next month, got a little further
with my current D.I.Y. project, scraping and sanding my front door. No
break from regular routine. Defiant normality.
FROM
THE CUTTING-ROOM FLOOR
I have just lost a minor battle with the editors of my book about math.
I wanted to add a six-page appendix on Chebyshev's Bias. They: "No!
The darn book is already too long! No! No! NO!!! OK, fine. Chebyshev's
Bias deserves to be much better known than it is, though, so to get the
word out, I'm going to blog it, right here. This is absolutely the
only conservative website where you get serious math.
Write down the first
few prime numbers:
2 3 5 7 11 13 17 19 23 29 31 37 41 43 47 53 59 ...
Divide each one by
4 and note the remainder:
2 3 1 3 3 1 1 3 3 1 3 1 1 3 3 1 3 ...
Once you get past
p = 2, the remainder must be either 1 or 3. Which one is "ahead"
at any point? Denoting the answer by 1, 3, or T (for "tie"),
the answer is:
T 3 T 3 3 3 T 3 3 3 3 3 T 3 3 3 3 ...
That's a Chebyshev
bias. Do the 1's ever take the lead? Yes, they do; but not until p
= 26,861. And that's nothing: if you divide by 3 instead of 4, the remainder
(once you get past p = 3) must be either 1 or 2. The bias is to
2; and that bias doesn't get violated until p = 608,981,813,029
! (This result wasn't found until 1978, by Carter Bays and Richard Hudson.)
If you divide by
10 instead of by 4 or 3, you will just get the last digit of your prime
number. (659 divided by 10 leaves remainder 9.) Once you get past p
= 2 and p = 5, every prime number must end in 1, 3, 7, or 9. Is
there a Chebyshev bias? I ran through all the primes up to p =
100,711,433, which is as many as I keep handy on disk. That's the first
5.8 million primes. Threes and sevens were in the lead roughly 2.8 million
times each, ones had 113,922 leads, nines had 357, and there were 26,776
ties. Notice, by the way, that these "who's ahead" biases arise
from very small margins. The actual counts for ones, threes, sevens and
nines as last digit in those first 5.8 million primes were: 1,449,824
ones, 1,450,185 threes, 1,450,153 sevens, and 1,449,836 nines a
variation of only 361, a niggardly 0.025 percent. The situation resembles
those "first past the post" election systems, where a nationwide
majority of 51 percent can give your party a landslide in terms of parliamentary
seats; or a foot race with very well-matched runners, in which one runner
manages to stay slightly ahead for most of the race, and gets all the
glory.
The English mathematician
J. E. Littlewood proved in 1914 that any Chebyshev bias gets violated
infinitely often, if you go far enough. Michael Rubinstein and Peter Sarnak
proved in 1994 that the violations have nonzero density, a fascinating
and counter-intuitive result... But that's about as much math as I can
get away with on NRO. You'll have to read the amazing Rubinstein-Sarnak
result for yourself: "Chebyshev's Bias," in Experimental
Mathematics, Vol.3, 1994 (pp. 173-197).
Mr.
Derbyshire is also an NR contributing editor.
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