David :
Thanx for the kind  words. No problem Re: e-mails. But I am waiting until
I can work with a decent  mouse before reading many other e-mails
as well as yours. With this  mouse it is almost impossible to copy and paste
and I like to save things that  might have usefulness down the road.
 
 Billy
 
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
 
 
message dated 4/17/2011 9:20:25 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time,  
[email protected] writes:
 
Welcome back. I may have flooded your inbox for a  while, not realizing 
that you had computer trouble. 

I missed that  memo. :-(  

David

  _   
 
"There  is no virtue in compulsory government charity, and there is no 
virtue in  advocating it. A politician who portrays himself as "caring" and 
"sensitive"  because he wants to expand the government's charitable programs is 
merely  saying that he's willing to try to do good with other people's 
money. Well,  who isn't? And a voter who takes pride in supporting such 
programs 
is telling  us that he'll do good with his own money -- if a gun is held to 
his  head."--P. J.  O'Rourke


On 4/17/2011 3:08 PM, [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])  wrote:  
 
Centroids :
Back from cyber  purgatory . Two months of no computer. Still not sure if 
the  
more-or-less new system  is fully  functional. Still cannot get USB ports 
to work
and that makes it impossible to  use my "pet mouse," which is far better 
than
the substitute mouse I'm  compelled to make do with for now, which screws up
my inadequate  typing  skills. Some other problems too. but to give you an 
idea.
 
Question : Why does the Web  allow idiots to produce debilitating viruses 
without
severe punishment for the  hackers who create such things ?  This has 
already cost me
a small fortune. not even  counting the significant help that Barry 
extended to me that
allows computer access again.  And not counting the in-person help given me
by another friend, Valdas, who  spent several hours in person helping me 
get the new 
system up and running as much  as it is.
 
Whomever put together the virus  that caught me flat footed deserves, IMHO, 
to be
burned at the stake, after,  that is, I am allowed to punch him out for a 
full 60 minutes
with brass knuckles on my  fists. Plus a few well placed kicks to the groin 
with
steel toe work  boots.
 
Not to worry about that virus  any more, it has been confined in the old 
computer tower--
all data, as much as could be  transferred, now in the new system. It will 
be weeks before
I am able to replace all the  programs ( icons ) that were part of my 
repertoire previously.
 
Still, there were real  advantages to  being off line for 2 months, such as 
seriously catching  up
on deferred reading. I plowed  through about 25 books in that time, 
including Jonah Goldberg's
"Liberal Fascism." Very good  read, but based on false premises first 
devised by Hayek.
More about this later if anyone  is interested.
 
Lots or reading about the  Paleolithic origins of religion, roughly 50,000 
BC, all of  which
makes mince meat of the views  of religious origins in each and every Big 
Religion on Earth,
both East and West. Why bother  ?  Well, for starters, because claims about 
religious  origins
are fundamental to  Christianity, Judaism, Islam. etc. and the rather solid 
stuff that is  now
documented in spades  --as  usual,  unknown to the great unwashed--  really 
creates  major
theological problems for just  about everyone. And it does no favors at all 
to Atheists who
have their own religious  origins mythology which says that in a state of 
nature humans  are
naturally virtuous,  irreligious, and are de facto "liberal Democrats" but 
who happened  to
live in caves which they  painted with artwork worthy of the Guggenheim.
 
Actually, and alas for all, our  remote Cro-Magnon ancestors were 
Shamanists who believed
in a world filled with spirits  of various kinds who were religious 
fanatics who seemed to
have made use of a wide range  of beliefs around which to organize their 
lives from cradle
to the grave. They were also  mostly rather blood thirsty as far as 
evidence allows us to  say,
and in all likelihood   killed off the Neanderthals  plus sub populations 
of each  other.
This is NOT the Noble Savage of  yore, to say the least, even if , yes, 
some groups
were mostly hunter gatherers /  fisherfolk. who weren't all that keen on 
killing
other humans. 
 
Anyway, all the data are there  to be looked at and all it is necessary to 
do is actually
read the stuff and learn the  facts  --which was accessible to me but which 
I had put off  
reading for far too many years  for my own good.
 
Also read Ann Coulter's  "Godless, The Church of Liberalism," and was 
aghast. Sure, the 
book is filled with useful  insights and witty criticisms of the Left, much 
of which I  appreciated
greatly,but what a mess.  Coulter knows  next to nothing that can be called 
serious  knowledge
about religion and she  concluded the book with 3 chapters attacking 
evolution. WTH ?
 
It isn't just the femi-Nazi  Left that is anti-science ( especially 
anti-sociobiology ) it  seems
as if elements of the Right  have not gotten the news that the decision in 
the Scopes Trial
is now widely regarded as not  in the best interests of political 
Conservatives.
 
Also in this vein is Dinesh  D'Souza's "What's So Great About Christianity 
?"  Another very  good
read, but also a compendium of  errors on one level , with so many mistakes 
in the realm of
philosophy, on which D'Souza  rests much of his case, that I was rather 
surprised.
 
I do think he pretty much  seriously injures the case of Atheists, his 
primary objective,
which is all well and good, but  there are many problems he is simply blind 
to, in
no small part because of his  ignorance of Mesopotamian history and  
--inexplicably--
basic ignorance of Hindu and  Buddhist traditions beyond a really 
elementary level
which, in the kind of book he  was writing, is mostly useless given the 
fact that
the arguments he was making  lead in very different directions once you 
actually
know about the philosophical  traditions of India and South Asia generally.
D'Souza doesn't seem to know  that such traditions even exist.
 
Lots more to tell everyone  about, but for openers this ought to be 
sufficient.
 
What's been happening at _RC.org_ (http://rc.org/)   these past 2 months ?
 
Ciao
Billy

-- 
Centroids:  The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
_<[email protected]>_ (mailto:[email protected]) 
Google  Group: _http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism_ 
(http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism) 
Radical  Centrism website and blog: _http://RadicalCentrism.org_ 
(http://radicalcentrism.org/) 

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community  
<[email protected]>
Google Group: _http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism_ 
(http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism) 
Radical  Centrism website and blog: _http://RadicalCentrism.org_ 
(http://radicalcentrism.org/) 

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

Reply via email to