The point is to Follow the Verbal Instructions in these videos. Full screen is easier.
Get Tested Twice
Posted by CMStewart on December 4, 2008
https://losthunderlads.com/2008/12/04/get-tested-twice/
The Nation, 15 December 2008
Highlights of this issue include a review of Passionate Uprisings: Iran’s Sexual Revolution, a study of sexual behavior among well-to-do young heterosexual Tehranis by Iranian-American anthropologist Pardis Mahdavi. In the course of extensive field work, Professor Mahdavi discovered that worries older Iranians routinely express about risky sexual behavior among the young are quite well-founded, at least as regards the population she studied. Group sex seems to be common. Evidently repressive laws against premarital sex, enforced ignorance of birth control and STDs, and an intensely patriarchal family structure don’t guarantee universal chastity after all. Who knew? The reviewer, Laura Secor, wishes for further studies that would systematically compare the experiences of Iranians of different social classes, sexual identities, and geographical locations. With that kind of research, we might be able to figure out what if anything this risky behavior means for Iranian politics. Of course, a study like that would be unlikely to take place in today’s Iran. To illustrate the difficulty, Secor begins her review by quoting Mahdavi’s meeting with an Iranian sex ed teacher who could not understand why her students were reluctant to tell her about their sex lives. The woman was wearing a double hijab that gave her such an imposingly traditional appearance that even Professor Mahdavi became self-conscious.
William Greider points out that New York Federal Reserve chief Timothy Geithner, President-elect Obama’s pick to be the new treasury secretary, was the negotiator who worked out many of the worst parts of the Wall Street bailout; Greider frets that Mr O may go down in history as the man responsible for the economic meltdown if he doesn’t withdraw Geithner’s name and rethink his approach to the crisis.
Posted by acilius on December 3, 2008
https://losthunderlads.com/2008/12/03/the-nation-15-december-2008/
Relatively Obscure Emotional States
According to this article in Slate, brain scientists have recently begun to study an emotion they call “elevation.” High-falutin’ rhetoric, like that associated with Barack Obama, can inspire it. The closing paragraphs point out that when seen in other people, elevation can look ridiculous or disgusting. Of course, the same is true of other emotions as well. But we need all of them, if not always in the ways we get them. So perhaps we need elevation too.
Posted by acilius on December 3, 2008
https://losthunderlads.com/2008/12/03/relatively-obscure-emotional-states/
Unlikely Comic Book Characters
Some time ago, LeFalcon posted a picture of a comic book cover featuring supervillain “Paste Pot Pete.” Unfortunately this image is no longer available. Here’s another:
After the jump, some other, equally unlikely, comic book characters.
Posted by acilius on December 2, 2008
https://losthunderlads.com/2008/12/02/unlikely-comic-book-characters/
Another Glaring of Cats
Posted by CMStewart on December 2, 2008
https://losthunderlads.com/2008/12/02/another-glaring-of-cats/
Ken Middleton, Master Ukuleleist
In the comments of my post that included some huge number of youtube performances of Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah,” I included probably the best of all such performances, Ken Middleton’s ukulele version. To make up for that strange oversight, I add a few more samples of Middleton’s work.
Stompin’ at the Savoy, written by Edgar Sampson
The Scientist, by Coldplay
Posted by acilius on December 2, 2008
https://losthunderlads.com/2008/12/02/ken-middleton-master-ukuleleist/
The Nation, 8 December 2008
“The Fall Books Issue“- it seems a bit late this year… but worth the wait.
Torie Osborn wonders how California could have passed anti-same sex marriage Proposition 8. Her view is that No on 8 forces neglected Los Angeles County, despite decades of experience showing that antigay measures win or lose based on the margins in that county. She also has some harsh words for the Obama campaign for allowing voters to believe (mistakenly!) that Mr O backed Proposition 8.
Christine Smallwood reviews a new edition of George R. Stewart’s 1945 book Names on the Land. A collection of anecdotes about how various places in the USA got their names, this highly regarded work inspires Smallwood’s unreserved praise. She goes on at some length about Stewart’s other works, including environmental fiction like Earth Abides, “the first American postapocalyptic thriller,” and Ordeal by Hunger, a novelization of the Donner Party. She tells us that Names on the Land was Stewart’s own favorite of his books. It raises no less a question than “what is America?,” Smallwood says. And answers that question: “Not the leader of the Free World and not the scourge of the world, but a history of settlement.” This answer would hardly have been extraordinary in 1945. The book does sound interesting. The cover of the first edition illustrates Smallwood’s review, and is reproduced below.
Posted by acilius on December 1, 2008
https://losthunderlads.com/2008/12/01/the-nation-8-december-2008/
Chronicles, December 2008
(image)
Three articles about Christmas in this issue of Chronicles. Editor Thomas Fleming, who I seem to recall occasionally describes himself as having been raised an atheist, then converted to arch-traditional Roman Catholicism, describes in the third person the attitudes of an unnamed man who was raised anatheist, then converted to arch-traditional Roman Catholicism. As a boy, this anonymous person disliked Christmas. The months-long buildup, the morning moments unwrapping toys that could never live up to the expectations that buildup engendered, the endless anticlimax of the day as of adult relatives hung on and bored him with their chatter. Far better Halloween, an ordinary day that ended with a burst of total anarchy. As he grew, he preferred the moral atmosphere of Halloween to that of Christmas. The Christians he knew pretended that death was nothing to be afraid of and embedded that pretense into the holiday, while Halloween began by taking the cold terror of death and everything touching death for granted. Evidently this preference remains with him in his religious phase, as the terror of death gives Easter its power.
Contributor Thomas Piatak defends Christmas, not against the severe theology of Fleming, but against opponents of public piety at Christmastime. Apparently it was Piatak who coined the phrase “The War Against Christmas.” While Fleming inveighs against a religious Christmas that soft-pedals or denies the hard truths of lifeand thus denatures Christianity, Piatak fears a secular Xmas that is “devoid of religious or cultural significance or indeed of beauty, with nothing left but multiculturalist pap and tawdry sentimentalism.” As examples of this creeping insipidity, Piatak cites a case in Columbus, Ohio in 2003, when the school district banned a performance of Handel’s Messiah unless equal time were given to “Frosty the Snowman” and “Jingle Bells.”
Columnist Aaron D. Wolf has little use for the idea of a secular “War Against Christmas,” though he does agree that such a thing exists. He tells us of wishing a store clerk “Merry Christmas.” “She looks directly at me, smiling, eyes narrowed, and nods. “Yes. Merry CHRISTMAS!”… It wasn’t a bright, elven (sic) “Yes! Merry Christmas!” She spoke with a knowing, in your face, liberal America air of defiance.” Later: “That Merry Christmas seemed more like a countercultural protest statement, that kind that says, yeah, you’re one of us, or yeah, I’m one of you. One of you… what? Believers in Christ Jesus? … Or perhaps it was one of you proud white Americans.” Wolf’s suspicion that many of those most exercised about the “War Against Christmas” are in fact not very much devoted to Christ at all, but are only interested in sticking it to educated secularists, gains verisimilitude from the high December sales of mugs bearing the slogan “Don’t be a Pinhead.”
Posted by acilius on December 1, 2008
https://losthunderlads.com/2008/12/01/chronicles-december-2008/
A Thanksgiving Song
Happy belated Thanksgiving and thanks to ukulelehunt for this song that proves the jumping flea’s ability to make any subject matter sound cheerful. The artist calls herself “Ukebucket.”
Posted by acilius on November 30, 2008
https://losthunderlads.com/2008/11/30/a-thanksgiving-song/




