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Thingish Things

Historic Retorts, Ed Koch

Written By: William F. B. O'Reilly - Jun• 12•12

A friend sent along some wonderful historic retorts that are well worth doling out one at a time on these pages. Here is Ed Koch to the sometimes dogged former NY1 reporter Andrew Kirtzman who was pressing the former New York City mayor with a question. 

Nipplemania in Istanbul

Written By: William F. B. O'Reilly - Jun• 11•12

http://youtu.be/NtSp3jZVYyU?t=27s

Does the reaction of this crowd to Madonna Cicconi’s nipple strike anyone else as absolutely insane?  There are an estimated seven billion people on the planet. By my count, that makes 14 billion nipples, seven billion of which admittedly are dull. This is hardly a precious commodity.

One man sounds like he’s been lit afire.  Maybe he spontaneously combusted at the sight? 

Note to self: Go to Istanbul.  Bring old Playboys.  Money bags. 

 

Time to Learn About Life, Grads

Written By: William F. B. O'Reilly - Jun• 10•12

There’s a stack of resumes on my desk almost an inch thick. I no longer know what to do with them.

They are from young people — recent college graduates mostly — willing to work for next to nothing. Many have offered to work for free. And I can’t help them.

For a time, I was meeting each of them. But when I did, I became impressed in some way with every one of them and felt a moral obligation to try to find them jobs. I don’t have time to do that anymore. So I stopped meeting with them and the resumes are stacking up.

The Associated Press reported last month that 53.6 percent of recent college graduates are unemployed or underemployed. That’s a staggering statistic, but a believable one. A whole new batch of resumes is now arriving from the graduating class of 2012 — and the economy is slowing again.

The rest of this column is available at Newsday Westchester.  Thanks for reading. 

Quote of the Day, Barack Obama

Written By: William F. B. O'Reilly - Jun• 10•12

“The weird thing is, I know I can do this job. I like dealing with complicated issues. I’m happy to make decisions.…I think it’s going to be an easier adjustment for me than the campaign. Much easier.”–Newly elected President Barack Obama to campaign advisor David Axelrod as reported by Edward Klein today.  Full story here

Historic Retorts, Miriam Hopkins

Written By: William F. B. O'Reilly - Jun• 09•12

A friend sent along some wonderful historic retorts that are well worth dealing out one at a time on these pages. Here is actress and singer Miriam Hopkins to an annoying and subpar vocalist of the day:

 

 

Saturday’s with Steyn

Written By: William F. B. O'Reilly - Jun• 09•12

This guy is so good. Here is Steyn’s lede today: 

Queen Elizabeth II celebrated her Diamond Jubilee a few days ago – that’s 60 years on the throne. Just to put it in perspective, she’s been queen since Harry S. Truman was president. At any rate, her jubilee has been a huge success, save for a few churlish republicans in various corners of Her Majesty’s realms from London to Toronto to Sydney pointing out how absurd it is for grown citizens to be fawning over a distant head of state who lives in a fabulous, glittering cocoon entirely disconnected from ordinary life.

Which brings us to President Obama.

Here’s the rest

You’re Not Special

Written By: William F. B. O'Reilly - Jun• 08•12

If you haven’t heard David McCullough Jr. give it straight to a graduating high school class in Massachusetts, here it is. Worth a look.

http://youtu.be/n5p5nufi7EY?t=2m50s

 

Historic Retorts, Thomas Reed to Henry Clay

Written By: William F. B. O'Reilly - Jun• 06•12

A friend sent along some wonderful historic retorts that are well worth dealing out one at a time on these pages over the next few days. Here is Thomas Reed to Henry Clay. 

The Sophistry of the Food Fascists

Written By: William F. B. O'Reilly - Jun• 06•12

We laugh at the food police. We are mildly annoyed by them. But they are scary mothers and they need to be engaged and defeated. If someone can tell you how much iced tea you can ingest, he can ultimately enslave you — and he will.

Today, New York Times food columnist Mark Bittman weighs in. He prefaces his argument thusly: “There actually is no right and left here, only right and wrong.” Whenever I hear or read that, I know a doozy is coming. Bittman does not disappoint.

“What, exactly, is food?,” he asks in Bill-Clintonian fashion (what is “is”?) ” My dictionary,” Bittman continues,  calls it “any nutritious substance that people or animals eat or drink, or that plants absorb, in order to maintain life and growth.” That doesn’t help so much unless you define nutritious. Nutritious food, it says here, “provides those substances necessary for growth, health, and good condition.”

Sugar-sweetened beverages don’t meet this description any more than do beer and tobacco and, for that matter, heroin, and they have more in common with these things than they do with carrots.”

In other words, according to Bittman, sugar is a drug. And as a drug, it should be regulated. But more than that, it is non “nutritious” and should therefore be verbotten (The food police are now in charge of your nutrition.)

In a single question, Bittman moves the argument from “does government have the right to tell you what to eat?” to whether sucrose  can be logically and chemically construed as a drug. He takes the sophistry a step farther:  Your drug use, he says, is costing him money through higher health care costs, so he has a right to intervene in what you eat.  If that were the case, though, wouldn’t I have the right to demand to know my neighbor’s pre-existing health conditions? How dare he cost me money by having asthma? Or shouldn’t I be able to know what his family is buying at the supermarket?  “Hamburgers again, Mr. Johnson? You’re going to get reported.”

I don’t want to live in that kind of country.  But that’s where we are headed if we don’t stand up to proposals like the one in New York City that are always being done “for the kids.”  I shudder to think what the future will look like for those kids if the food fascists get their way. Resist. Resist! With everything you’ve got. 

Quotes of the Day, Ross Douthat, Jay Cost

Written By: William F. B. O'Reilly - Jun• 06•12

Ross Douthat

“Between our slowing growth and our unsustainable spending commitments, “the days when lawmakers could give to some Americans without shortchanging others are over; the politics of deciding who loses what, and when and how, is upon us.” In this era, debates will be increasingly zero-sum, bipartisan compromise will be increasingly difficult, and “the rules and norms of our politics that several generations have taken for granted” will fade away into irrelevance.” — New York Times columnist Ross Douthat quoting Jay Cost’s essay, The Politics of Loss. (full Douthat column.)