Gene's Footnotes

I have never been impressed by the messenger and always inspect the message, which I now understand is not the norm. People prefer to filter out discordant information. As such, I am frequently confronted with, "Where did you hear that...." Well, here you go. If you want an email version, send me an email.

April 25, 2007

Watching Greenland


Amidst all the silly "Global Warming" claims, there is the salient truth that weather and climate change. Always have, as you recall from the graphs earlier - and we are right at the end of one of the cycles. Putting aside the confounding concern over cow farts, how bio diesel CO2 is better than diesel CO2, and the benefits of using only one toilet paper sheet, there is the GREENLAND FACTOR. (I made that up.)

Paleoclimatogist observe, and take my word for it, that the "ice ages" occur rapidly as a result, it is surmised, by the shut down of the Gulf Stream. This can be accomplished, it is also suggested, by the quick melt off of Greenland, see an excellent BBC transcript called the "Big Chill" for coverage of this notion. This theory is consistent with that of the rapid warming trend that has been tracked just before each glacier period.

I don't particularly pay much attention to the howling of warming wolves, but I keep a worried eye on Greenland. There is nothing we can do, of course, as hundreds of thousands of years suggest, so the worried eye is more one of when to read real estate ads in Georgia.

The BBC is hot on the trail of the ice age. A simple Google into the area will reveal many reports of how Greenland is showing scary signs. Just below is a piece from the BBC. You can understand the BBC's interest as the first victim of a glacial age would be Great Britain - and the cooling would take place in less than a life time.

Following the BBC scare, you will find solace in a UPI report on the work of researcher Ian Howat who tells us, thank God, the Greenland ice melt rate of 2004/2005 has reversed itself and is now back to 2003 levels. I project, having a doctorate in jurisprudence, that the rate will further decrease as the solar flare activity wanes.

Finally, there is a ditty from 2005 which contradicts the scare piece, in a way, as it says the ice cap had been increasing, contrary to projection, because of more snow than usual. Yes sir, 100 percent of all scientists agree with Al Gore.

I need to document this threat of thought: I come across literature which talks of the Vikings actually being on a green Greenland, contrary to our elementary school story of how they were tricking others so they would not be attacked by some idiots who would want to engage Vikings by crossing the North Altantic. The yarn is Greenland was names thus to trick these morons; conversely, Iceland was named to avoid intgerest.

The Viking tales tell of Greenlandian villages where only glaciers now tread. The graph, above, comes from an interesting site that mulls over Viking experience in the North Atlantic starting 1,000 years ago, my kind of reading.

It would be a comforting fact to unearth, so to speak, that the warming trend, as happened ten centuries ago, does not necessarily portend a true Ice Age. Shoot, we can handle a mini ice age by burning more oil.

A Chilling Report:

Greenland's ice cap under threat
By Dr David Whitehouse, BBC News Online science editor

It could all go, say researchers Greenland's ice sheet could disappear within the next 1,000 years if global warming continues at its present rate, a report in Nature magazine suggests. [I am sorry. I don't usually like to interrupt a quote, but don't you find this a preposterous thesis? What rate? 1,ooo years? If it is the rate of the last week, we are all dead by Christmas.]

Jonathan Gregory and colleagues from the University of Reading, UK, say their studies forecast an 8C increase in Greenland's temperature by 2350.

They believe that if the ice cap melts, global average sea level will rise by about 7m (23ft).

Even if global warming was halted the rise could be irreversible, they say. [Ed. - Have a nice day!]
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The Heartwarming Report:


Study: Glacier melting can be variable
Feb 13 11:13 AM US/Eastern


BOULDER, Colo., Feb. 13 (UPI) -- A U.S. study suggests two of Greenland's largest glaciers are melting at variable rates and not at an increasing trend.

The study, led by Ian Howat, a researcher with the University of Colorado's National Snow and Ice Data Center and the University of Washington's Applied Physics Laboratory, shows the glaciers shrank dramatically and dumped twice as much ice into the sea during a period of less than a year between 2004 and 2005.

But then, fewer than two years later, they returned to near their previous rates of discharge.

Howat says such variability during such a short time underlines the problem in assuming glacial melting and sea level rise will necessarily occur at a steady upward trajectory.

"Our main point is that the behavior of these glaciers can change a lot from year to year, so we can't assume to know the future behavior from short records of recent changes," he said. "Future warming may lead to rapid pulses of retreat and increased discharge rather than a long, steady drawdown."

The research is online in the journal Science Express.
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THE PLOT THICKENS

ICE CAP HAS THICKENED
- 20 Oct 2005 - Greenland 's ice-cap has thickened slightly in recent years despite wide predictions of a thaw, scientists said today. Satellite measurements show that more snowfall is thickening the ice-cap, especially at high altitudes, according to the report in the journal Science.

"The overall ice thickness changes are ... approximately plus 5 cms (1.9 inches) a year or 54 cms (21.26 inches) over 11 years," according to the experts at Norwegian, Russian and U.S. institutes led by Ola Johannessen at the Mohn Sverdrup center for Global Ocean Studies and Operational Oceanography in Norway. [Ed again - notice why not capitalizing "Center" is a stupid rule. I thought there were two institutions.]
So, there you have it. As clear as ice.

Keep your eye on the Gulf Stream and keep your SUV loaded with snow gear.

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Capitalist Socialized Medicine in Massachussets


The drug/doctor/government complex is a powerful force. The AMA, the American Medical Association, is an effective labor union started some time ago by a con-man parading as a doctor. The second president, was also a non-doctor con-man, so you have an idea about the money culture at the AMA.

The AMA has been effective at nearly destroying homeopathic, chiropractic, and osteopathic practice through control of politicians who write "doctors," which has come to mean allopathic practitioners, into various funding streams.

The average person now equates the MD with "doctor." The AMA has won the health wars, as did teacher unions, and the losers are the people. If you think MDs are, in fact, the true arbiters of health, recall the long-lived British Royal Family is attended to by homeopathic doctors.

The drug industry, as one of my recent blogs shows, is the most profitable one in the U.S. with a return on investment of about 22%, a tad under 3 times that of the maligned oil industry.

Things are about to go from bad to worse as the government supported monopoly is no longer feeling restrained. I could go on forever about this, say discuss the Codex Alimentarius that Congress is looking at - a UN and WHO project to remove all food supplements from the shelves and make them "drugs." In this way, all those billions of dollars the drug companies can be reclaimed. This is a brilliant move, for example - Vitamin C is the only widespread available treatment for avian flu. Can't permit that treatment to be freely available.

Rather than rant at the multi-front assault on us by Big Pharma, let me just focus on a new variation of socialized medicine - forced insurance. Now, the insurance companies are in on the money grab, which makes the new system acceptable to Republicans.

Mitt Romney is supposed to be a Republican, maybe so, but he is not against forced income distribution to big business. Coming July 1, Mass residents are required to have medical insurance if they earn more than $15,000 per year. The plan seems to limit the required contribution, however, to 10 percent of your income.

The control point of this bizarre system is the creation of a new bureaucracy which will monitor citizens state income tax and data mine to see who the evil-doers are, those who are not insured. Personal, private information will now make the rounds as new agents hunt you down.

There are two ways to look at this new law: means analysis and ends analysis. Big Brother always seduces us by offering a great end, if only we accept their means of doing it. The article below goes into some detail about how Big Brother is gearing up to data mine its "bad actors" who illegally have decided not insure themselves. You will also get a feel for the chaos the structure will foster.

I suppose my main objection is that socialists never admit to what they are doing. They always create some mumbo jumbo to cover their efforts to control everyone by a central machine. Unlike in Europe, they dissemble; they know if they were honest, here, there is no chance people would accept the failed system.

In the case of forced medical insurance, the socialists have hooked big business who could care less about larger issues, apparently, as they will get their taste. For now, anyway.


Government Begins to Enforce Conventional (Allopathic) Medicine Mandates on Americans

[Author Peter Barry Chowka's web site - click on main title]

The urge to save humanity is almost always only a false-face for the urge to rule it.

Minority Report: H. L. Mencken's Notebooks (1956) p. 247


(April 15, 2007) The concept of “universal health care,” reportedly so popular with the American electorate now, may at first glance sound appealing...

As usual, however, there are prices to be paid for such a Faustian bargain, with the uncontrolled financial costs and other downsides rarely if ever made apparent, or admitted, at the onset of a new government program.

Among the indirect costs are the emerging plans to set up huge new government databases (tapping into and mining private commercial databases) and large new bureaucracies to “track down” and enforce compliance on residents who fail to buy approved medical coverage.

...In 2007, plans are moving forward in a number of states to force all residents, not just the elderly – under the threat of law – to participate in the conventional medical monopoly. (Meanwhile, all Democrat candidates for the 2008 presidential nomination have pledged to support government run universal health care.)

Such a plan is already in effect in Massachusetts. On July 1, 2007, as the result of a law passed in 2006, all Massachusetts residents will need to prove that they have state-approved conventional medical insurance. The cost of such coverage for an individual can be as high as $9,000 a year, and even more for families. None of the state-approved insurance plans covers alternative or CAM (complementary alternative medicine) modalities (with the possible exception of chiropractic) and, in addition, the more “affordable” ones have deductibles and co-payments, further burdening the alt med-favoring resident with large expenditures irrelevant to his life.

In California, the nation's largest state, where both the Republican governor, Arnold Schwarzenegger, and the Democrat-controlled legislature have proposed universal coverage, draconian schemes to enforce the proposed universal health care mandates have emerged.

“The Schwarzenegger administration considers putting teeth in its plan to require coverage for all,” reported the Los Angeles Times (April 11, 2007). “People who refuse to obtain health insurance could be tracked down by the state or a private contractor, enrolled in a plan and fined until they pay their premiums” [emphasis added]. Schwarzenegger has also proposed attaching the wages of people who don't buy health insurance and increasing the amount that uninsured people owe in state income taxes. [Quite a problem as a vast number of people are illegal aliens who are off the computers.]

Quoting the Times: “The proposal to locate people without insurance would use state or private databases and target those who lacked coverage for 60 days or more.

Peter Harbage, a senior program associate with the New America Foundation (according to the Times “Schwarzenegger has cited the foundation's research in helping to frame his plan”), commented “you're going to have some people who are bad actors, and that's where you need some sort of tracking system.” [emphasis added]

The Times reports, “The governor said he is studying as a possible model a new system the state Department of Motor Vehicles is using to locate drivers who lack automobile insurance. Another model, he [because of the confusing way the article is written or edited, it's not clear if the Times here refers to Harbage or Schwarzenegger] said, is the one the state uses to track down people who don't pay child support.

“'There's no easy way to come up with a tracking model,'” he [Harbage? Schwarzenegger?] said. 'It's going to take some thought and it's going to be complex.'”

In Massachusetts, according to the state government, “Beginning July 1, 2007, all Massachusetts residents 18 years of age and over are required to carry the minimum level of health insurance. . . Enforcement will be accomplished through an individual’s state tax return. Financial penalties will be imposed on uninsured individuals up to 50 percent of the cost of a health insurance plan” – a plan, that is, that will be chosen for the uninsured individual by state bureaucrats.

According to the American Association of Physicians and Surgeons' May 2006 newsletter, “All [Massachusetts] residents would have to indicate on their state income tax returns, under oath, whether they had creditable coverage for the entire 12 months. If they say they didn't, or if the commissioner determines that they actually didn't, any tax refund would be withheld, and if that is insufficient, all available enforcement procedures will be used to collect.”

Twila Brase, president of the Citizens' Council on Healthcare (CCHC), commented on April 10, 2006 “If Governor Romney signs this bill into law [which he did on April 12, 2006], a huge health care bureaucracy will descend on the people of Massachusetts. . . an intrusive and prescriptive bureaucracy will be authorized to ration health care and make decisions about who gets what health care when. Health care decisions will be taken out of the hands of patients and doctors as the agendas of special interests, not the needs of patients, take precedence. The legislation is extremely intrusive. State agencies will be monitoring insurance status, checking income status, and tracking the medical care of the Massachusetts people.” The CCHC published a six-page PDF, “Massachusetts 'Universal Coverage' Legislation Mimics Government Bureaucracy and Bureaucratic Controls of 'HillaryCare.'”


In the April 2006 issue of Health Freedom Watch, founder and president of the Institute for Health Freedom Sue A. Blevins writes, “It's crystal clear (upon reading the actual [Massachusetts] bill text) that the plan invades everyone's privacy by requiring insurers and health-care providers to submit patient data to a centralized clearinghouse (a new council). And it's clear that forcing Americans to buy a product from a limited number of government-approved insurers limits their freedom of choice.


“There is a huge difference between freedom and choice: freedom means one is free to choose from an array of options not artificially limited by the government, while choice may include only an artificially limited number of options.”

A search of the 145-page universal health care bill signed by Romney on April 12, 2006 reveals that the words “chiropractic,” “acupuncture,” and “naturopath” do not appear in the text.

Not to be outdone by neighboring Massachusetts, Democrat politicians in Connecticut recently proposed their own state government health care plans. One of them, SB 1371, the Connecticut Saves Health Care Program, would have established a single payer plan. The bill was passed by the legislature's insurance committee by a vote of 12-7 in March. On April 10, however, the Hartford Courant reported that “the legislature's nonpartisan Office of Fiscal Analysis estimated the costs at $11.8 billion to $17.7 billion a year, depending on variables.” The Courant added, “The cost is slightly more than the entire state budget proposed by the governor.”...


====================

ALSO recommended: “Superhighway to Dystopia

© by Simon Davies


[In the past] most writers warned that. . . computers would vastly increase the power of governments and corporations. The individual would be diminished and made to be an insignificant cog with limited independence. Privacy would be decimated as the State intruded into more and more areas of private life. Ultimately, because information is power, democracy itself would be weakened.

This speculation seeped into the public consciousness. A 1971 national opinion poll in Britain revealed that the fear of a Big Brother state was the number one public concern. In the US, Canada and Australia, a similar expression of fear began to emerge. . .


Although Big Brother might not be the threat we imagined, something far more sinister has taken his place: complacency. Technology has spawned an age of mass pacification.

The Big Brother society imagined by the world in 1970 depended on coercion and fear. The society we are developing now is more like Huxley than Orwell. It is Brave New World. Instead of the repressive tyrants and their omnipresent, brutal and intrusive technology, the public is being brought to heel by a lethal expectation of compliance. Big Brother entailed conflict. Instead, ours is becoming a society based on Harmony Ideology. Technology is our friend – our partner. Compliance and agreement are the natural order. We have, after all, become components of a new order based on the surrender of information. And it is not just governments who are to blame. The division between private and public organisations is fast disappearing, as both spheres increasingly reach accord. Public interest and privacy bodies become more ineffectual by the day as pragmatic solutions are struck in the back room by the key players. There is no disquiet over these trends, and little discussion. That is the greatest danger of all.


The history of this state of affairs is fascinating. Ten years ago, a series of events began which silently changed the course of human history. One by one, governments and corporations across the world started to reach agreement on ways to link the information contained in their computers. Isolated, cumbersome machines progressively became part of a giant web of information touching every aspect of our lives. A Global Information Infrastructure – potentially the greatest force since the birth of the automobile – is being forged. And hardly a dog is barking.

Mass surveillance is developing through a vast range of computer based information systems. Most are designed to improve efficiency, to maximise revenue, or to serve law enforcement and national security. The systems, increasingly, are linked, so that information is shared throughout the government and the private sector. The justification is seductive, and difficult to oppose. The danger in this justification is that it knows no bounds.

Within a decade most countries will have a voluntary ID card, a national DNA database, a national grid of CCTV surveillance, mass data matching between computers, and an astonishing web of computer networks linked to an international information linkage. Presently, the interests of the individual are hardly in sight.

Law has failed entirely to stem this breach to our privacy. Privacy law in every country is little more than a means of legitimising intrusion, and mandating the orderly establishment of surveillance systems. Nothing more, nothing less. . .


It's no longer fashionable amongst intelligent folk to admit being scared or even concerned about computers. Smart people embrace technology. The most drab and unimaginative politicians are advised to climb aboard the Superhighway, and get hep about new technology. Cabinet Ministers without the guts or perspicacity to deal squarely with the policy challenges in their own domain, publicly embrace computers and smart cards as a Great Solution. Young people, mesmerised by the magic of computers, fail to see the universe that lies behind the screen. But some people still feel the old nightmare as if it were forgotten wisdom from another age. Beyond the slick technology, there is an emerging Big Picture, and it is not an entirely pleasant one. . .


Planetary management involves some radical changes to the way things have always been done. No event or decision can be made in isolation. Those days have gone. Our society is becoming tuned into consensus, compromise, agreement and conformity. . .


The information revolution has three goals in mind. The first is to create maximum efficiency within each information system. The second is convergence: the achievement of perfect compatibility and communication between computers. The third goal is to create perfect and total identification of human subjects. In its quest to achieve these aims, the computer industry must bring about a subtle but profound change to the human spirit and to our way of life. . .


The most important development in computers is not their size, speed or prevalence, but the phenomenon that most of them are converging to form one mass – a sort of seamless technological web. This web is important for the organisations controlling the information systems. It will mean that computers will talk easily to one another, and it will ensure that all people are constantly visible.

Now that the bleak Orwellian image of computers has been softened and re-designed in gentle pastels, the awe and pessimism have almost disappeared. The harsh edges of technology have been smoothed; the whole concept has been made user-friendly. All around there is an air of acceptance. Slowly, however, we are being fused with the technology. And, as we become fused with the technology, human identity becomes less distinct. . .


The architects of modern computer systems have successfully argued their technology can solve the ancient curses of social dysfunction and administrative expense. Bureaucracy, they claim can be made more efficient through the automated management of information.


Society can be made safer. Economies can run more smoothly, and education conducted more effectively. Yet, in spite of its carefully crafted image, information technology is neither friendly nor neutral, and almost never benign. With notable exceptions, it is developed by unethical corporations, peddled by apathetic salesmen, and implemented by large organisations as a means of maximising control over the individual.

The widespread use of information technology is increasing the power and influence of government and corporations. One inevitable consequence is that the individual is subject to increased monitoring, regulation and control. . .


Our movements, transactions and personality are becoming known in a way that Orwell could scarcely have imagined. And yet, our dependence on technological systems is greater than at any point in history.


The key rule to ensure personal autonomy and independence is never to get too familiar, reliant, or friendly with the power centres around you. In embracing the exciting new fusion with technology, we have broken this ancient law. One result is that have now formally entered the first phase of the Post Orwellian State. The future should offer an expanding gulf between the illusion of personal autonomy, and the power of large organisations. . .


The assumption that technology is entirely good for us is misguided and dangerous. Some technologies are just plain malevolent, and their uses should have been outlawed years ago. Sadly, the people who know about the rancid underbelly of technology often reluctant to sound the alarm, for fear of being branded luddite or heretic. It is no exaggeration to say that there has been a conspiracy of silence about the threat of information technology. In the process, normally intelligent and thoughtful professionals have let us all down. The discourse and debate necessary in a free society has simply not taken place.

There is no Big Brother enforcing compliance with this New Order. People will happily surrender their most intimate data. The nightmare vision we sensed in 1971, is about to materialise.


In 1995, when Davies' article was originally published, he was the Director General of Privacy International, a Visiting Law Fellow in the University of Essex, and the author of Big Brother - Australia's growing web of surveillance (Simon & Schuster 1992).

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April 24, 2007

OBITUARY: Red China Passes Away In A Whimper

PREFACE: It seems the last time I pushed the publish button, this went on to publish in March, when I first save d it. So, my apologies to those who already got this. [Ed., no actually Gene.]
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I saved this one for a nice day when I didn't want sit inside. It is now April 22, 2007 and the sun is out for the second day in a row this year 5 GWE (Global Warming Era.)

I am happy to enjoy the solar flares, though a few more days of snow and ice would certainly assure that this the coldest April in recorded history for the entire U.S. I like going for records. Always good for a blog entry.

Speaking of cold, the cold war is over too. Haven't you heard? Probably not, as it is neither in the GOP or DEMS best interest to have lost a big commie country. So, thanks to China's own news service, allow me to issue this epitaph. Human nature eventually prevails:

OBITURARY: Red China Passes Away Peacefully
No one particularly upset at funeral

BEIJING, March 16 (Xinhua) -- China's parliament, the National People's Congress (NPC), concluded its annual session on Friday morning with the adoption of a landmark property law and a corporate income tax law.

The two laws, granting equal protection to public and private properties and unifying corporate income tax rates for domestic and foreign companies, were adopted by an overwhelming majority vote.

The NPC adopted the corporate income tax law with 2,826 votes for and 37 against, and 22 abstentions, and the landmark property law with 2,799 votes for and 52 against, and 37 abstentions.

NPC Standing Committee Chairman Wu Bangguo hailed the session as "a great success" at the closing meeting.

Observers said the laws are the fruit of China's reform and opening up and will in turn help drive the reform and opening-up of the country.

The property law showed the spirit of reform and opening up of China, since it protects the order of the socialist market economy and grants equal protection to public and private property, said Wang Shengming, vice head of the Commission of Legislative Affairs of the NPC Standing Committee.

Liu Hezhang, a member of the NPC Standing Committee, said the property law is a signal of further reform and opening up as its passage suggests China will not start a new round of "capitalism or socialism" dispute.

Meanwhile, Lu Jianzhong, NPC deputy and chairman of Shaanxi Jiaxin Group, said the corporate income tax law, which puts domestic and foreign-funded enterprises on an equal footing for income taxes for the first time since China's opening up began in 1978, brings China's economy more in line with international practice.


April 08, 2007

Blame in on the Frankfurters

Now for some deep reading. Below is a review of the book, The Strange Death of Marxism, taken from a Belgian web site. It is not the product of an American about America, though our experience is integral in the discussion. It is a warning, I suppose, to Europe about how far it has fallen and what awaits the U.S.

There is nothing I can add to the reviewer's analysis (i.e. he knows way more than I do). I didn't edit it down. Please take the time to read through the review. The links in the review died, so I have linked the review to the title above.

This review is offered toward the premise that America and Europe can find their roots of their current decline to the machinations of Herbert Marcuse and the Frankfort school, aka Frankfurt, along with their fellow travelers. It explains the mess we are in.

The interesting thing about the destruction of the family, religion, and the social contract is that is was the stated goal of this school, of Marx. These guys took control of the liberal movement, after moving to the U.S. in the 1930s.

Today's liberals have no clue they are lost children of puppets put in motion by clever social strategists. We don't think in terms of being manipulated. Today, talk of Communists and Marxists raises giggles and eyebrows among Americans. You see, the devil doesn't exist - and having convinced us of that is evil's greatest triumph. Recall my recent blog concerning the Bulgarian/KGB defector's analysis of how effective the KGB has been as turning Americans against the power of their own culture.

You may have heard Ronald Reagan's line that he did not leave the Democratic Party - it left him. Below, you will see how the West was seduced by free love (You thought it was your idea, didn't you.) The movement fostered the callous disregard for social contracts, things like raising your kids in wedlock. We heard about "Academic Freedom," but that was only for Marcuse's invaders, not for today's moderates.

You may have heard me observe that it seemed people become democrats or republicans based upon their pyscho-sexual make up. I don't mean to offend, but the vague glue holding the "left" together, as I bump into them, is not a tight understanding of any politics or philosophy, other than "Bush is dumb," it is, rather, the desire to be self absorbed in personal pleasures with few restraints, though they like governmental restraint against others.

When I sit as a spy among the hardcore "liberals," especially those over 40, the talk, through a haze of smoke, is about drugs, rock and roll, sex, alternate live styles, abortion. Aside from being so boring, like an old guy playing an air guitar, how is it so many people are obsessed with their orifices? Alas, without any moral center, they generally tend to follow Kate Millet into la la land, after a few divorces from those bitches and bastards. As Dr. Victor Frankel (also a Frankfurter) wrote, it is having a meaning in life which keeps us from cracking. It is love that is the door to personal growth. For my part, you cannot love if you don't particularly like yourself.

What I am saying about Marcuse is not the rant of the right. Those folks don't even know about this game, except for railing against the seducers who are obvious. They howl at the moon without any understanding of Newton, then go plan a shopping mall. We are a stupid people, all in all, but, as the book under review seems to say, our good natured goofiness is the "conservative reserve" that has prevented the U.S. from deteriorating as fast as Europe has, Germany in the lead.

The destructive sentiments I referred to above were stated platforms of European Marxists who found their way to NYU, the New York Times, and the NYC Board of Ed. From New York City, leading the rest of the nation was easy. Al Shanker lives. Now, recall a past blog entry where I documented the Marxist - Jihadist alliance, as described by Carlos The Jackal.

Tell me we are not on the eve of destruction - only we have been looking in the wrong direction for the devil.

The Strange Transformation of Marxism

Below is my review of Paul Gottfried’s The Strange Death of Marxism: The European Left in the New Millennium. The review can be found in the April 2006 issue of Chronicles.

I have one major problem with Paul Gottfried’s latest book The Strange Death of Marxism: The European Left in the New Millennium and that is its title, which does not really fit the book. Prof. Gottfried describes how Marxism as an economic theory has lost its appeal, even among the Left, since the Second World War. Today’s leftists no longer advocate nationalization of the economy and anti-capitalist theories. In fact, they hardly care about economics at all, but focus on changing the moral and cultural foundations of Western society. This shift, Gottfried points out, originated with the so-called Frankfurt School, a group of originally German Marxist philosophers who settled in the United States in the 1930s, where they came to dominate liberal thinking, not so much by advocating anti-capitalist economic reform but rather by propagating social engineering.

Their ideas returned to Europe after WWII, together with the wave of American pop culture swamping the Old Continent, and have thoroughly destroyed traditional European culture and morality. In this way Europe’s post-war infatuation with America has been its undoing. The “incentive to social engineering,” says Gottfried, “has gone from the Old to the New World and then back again and in the process altered Europe even more dramatically than us.” That, to me, is the important message of this book, which deserves a large audience.

Gottfried is right when he says that the multicultural orientation of the contemporary European Left has little to do with Marxism as an economic-historical theory. Indeed, the traditional electorate of Europe’s old (Marxist) Left today overwhelmingly vote for the parties of the so-called “extreme Right,” while the new (post-Marxist) Left caters for a new electorate that is hostile to the traditional moral and cultural values of the old Left’s former electorate with its conservative social attitudes. This phenomenon, to which Gottfried draws our attention, is confirmed by sociological studies of the electorate of Europe’s highly successful anti-immigration parties, such as France’s Front National, Belgium’s Vlaams Blok, Denmark’s Dansk Folkeparti, whose appeal resides in their opposition to multiculturalism and their defense of national cultural identity.

These parties are among those most critical of American liberal pop culture with its multicultural, hedonistic orientation. Interestingly, Germany lacks a similar party. Readers of Prof. Gottfried’s book will know why. He describes in detail how after WWII, American social engineers in the US occupational army in Germany applied the theories of the Frankfurt School to reeducate the Germans by developing programs designed to eradicate the cultural identity of the German people. The authorities in the former East-German GDR took greater pride in the heroes of Germany’s past than those in the West, for whom any pride in aspects of German culture and history was regarded as potentially dangerous and a highway to Nazism.

Apart from a long introduction and a conclusion, Gottfried’s book consists of four chapters, dealing with Postwar Communism, Neomarxism, the Post-Marxist Left and the Post-Marxist Left as a political religion. The latter is probably the most interesting for American readers, as it also was to me, an atypical – because pro-American – European. I think it clarifies why the post-Marxist, multicultural social engineering has wreaked such devastating damage in Europe during the past three decades, while America, where Frankfurter School philosophers such as Herbert Marcuse developed their destructive ideas, remained relatively unaffected. Instead of using the state’s power to alter the economic framework of society or promote income redistribution, the Frankfurter School proposed to use the state as a radicalizing cultural force.

According to Prof. Gottfried this shift from economics to culture means the death of Marxism, because Marxism is an economic theory. He claims that the views of the no-longer extant communist parties on women and family life resembled those of pre-Vatican 2 Catholics. On this point I disagree with prof. Gottfried. Though Karl Marx never propagated sexual promiscuity, homosexuality and other “alternative” lifestyles, it should be noted, however, that Ludwig von Mises in his 1922 book Socialism pointed out – correctly I think – that Socialism demands promiscuity in sexual life because it consciously neglects the contractual idea:

“Free love is the socialist’s radical solution for sexual problems […] The family disappears and society is confronted with separate individuals only. Choice in love becomes completely free. Men and women unite and separate just as their desires urge.”

The Socialist paradigm, which entails the deliberate neglect of any contract or moral principle that does not serve the current political objectives of the State, results in both the expansion of sexual liberty and the disappearance of economic liberty. Economic liberty and prosperity cannot exist unless people are true to their promises and the assumed set of moral rules by which partners are bound within a certain culture. Consequently, Socialism leads to the disappearance of all forms of partnership. Nothing is left but the individual and the State.

Gottfried does not address this, but it is interesting to read how Richard Posner in his 1992 book Sex and Reason observed that the U.S. Supreme Court in the 1970s became “aligned with those of the student radicals of the 1960s for whom sexual liberty and political liberty were, as they had been to their guru, Herbert Marcuse, two sides of the same coin, while economic liberty they considered a mask for exploitation.” Although Posner is a libertarian, who agrees with the outcome of the Supreme Court decisions on moral issues, he disagrees with the Court’s Marcusean arguments.

Whether or not Marcuse and the other Frankfurter School philosophers can be considered true Marxists (as Mises would argue) or not (as Gottfried implies) seems to me a matter of secondary importance. It is certainly true, as Prof. Gottfried writes, that the traditional European Marxist parties, when they had most of the votes of their traditional electorate, never attempted to change the traditional, almost Victorian social and moral behaviour of their blue-collar voters. It is also true that the European Left adopted this agenda when its leaders became white-collar intellectuals infatuated with what they perceived to be American culture, but what in essence is only the liberal fringe of American culture. An icon of the latter, for example, is the montly magazine Playboy, which is generally considered to be as American as apple pie and which is never regarded as a socialist, let alone Marxist, social engineering vehicle.

Nevertheless, in its editorial articles (which, I know, are not what the magazine was bought for) Playboy always clearly stated that its primary objective was to change traditional culture and morality. “Playboy,” said its founder Hugh Hefner in its 30th anniversary issue in January 1974, “is one of the most important and influential magazines in the world, in terms of the impact it’s had not only on social mores but as a champion of individual rights. We’ve supported countless civil liberties organizations, political reform, sex research and education, abortion reform before it became popular, prison reform, and the continuing campaign to reform our repressive sex and drug laws, as well as any number of charities and community-fund efforts.” This list reads like the typical political agenda of the European Left today. In another anniversary issue, in 1979, Playboy described its own history as “A Chronology of Social Activism.”

In his book Prof. Gottfried quotes the sociologist Arnold Gehlen, an old-fashioned anti-Communist German, who in 1972 expressed his anxieties as he looked at his people’s moral and cultural frailties. It was not the Soviet Union, but America that threatened Western Europe, Gehlen said:

“In Germany one sees the scrupulous absorption of American manners, illusions, defense mechanisms, Playboy and drug culture, and open enrollment in higher education, for here no less than there the intellectuals are directing the destinies of the countries more than anywhere else. Nonetheless, what we lack are the American reserves in national energy and self-confidence, primitiveness and generosity, wealth and potential of every kind. With our beaten-down history and our youth seduced by volatile phrases, with the top-heavy industry, which is international in character, nothing can keep us from losing our national identity.”

Contrary to what the title of Gottfried’s book proclaims, I do not think that Marxism is dead in Europe. It has only shifted its emphasis. When the Communists came to power in Russia in 1917, they tried to impose their economic as well as their social agenda. They abolished private property and also the family. In her 1969 book Sexual Politics the American feminist Kate Millett wrote about this episode: “After the revolution every possible law was passed to free individuals from the claims of the family,” including the legalisation of “free marriage and divorce, contraception, and abortion on demand.” As Millett explained: “Under the collective system, the family began, as it were, to disintegrate along the very lines upon which it had been built. Patriarchy began, as it were, to reverse its own processes, while society returned to the democratic work community which socialist authorities describe as matriarchy.”

Because these reforms were far too radical and unrealistic, the Soviets abolished a number of them after a few months, reinstituting marriage for instance. Today, it looks as if the economic agenda of Communism has become too radical and unrealistic, prompting the Left to accept the market economy. The radical social agenda of the Russian Communists in the 1918-1920 period which Millett praised – free marriage and divorce, contraception, abortion on demand – has, however, become fact. The disintegration of the so-called oppressive patriarchical society has become the realistic agenda that the Left is today pursuing to its extremes.

Gottfried’s book explains how this agenda came into being and how those who shaped it brought their ideas from Europe to America in the 1930s and 40s and then back again in the 1960s and 70s. Consequently this book is a must-read for anyone interested in understanding what is going on in Europe today. Instead of calling it The Strange Death of Marxism, I would call it “the transformation of Marxism”, which has made socialism an even more dangerous monster than it used to be. Though these ideas, developed by European intellectuals in America, infected Europe via America, they have all but killed traditional European culture. Only a few remaining pockets have been spared. These we can find, as Prof. Gottfried explains, in social classes that have succeeded in preserving traditional class loyalties, whether these be aristocratic, bourgeois, or working-class. The latter explains the paradoxical phenomenon that the former Communist electorate of the now defunct traditional Marxist parties has remained relatively immune to the social engineering projects. As Gottfried says:

“Both inherited social roles and the accompanying behavioral models render problematic the inculcation of contemporary state-enforced creeds. It is hard to recode bureaucratically those who have learned to think and act as members of a functioning stratified society.”

The reason why America was not infected to the same devastating degree by what I would call the Playboy philosophy and what is basically the Frankfurt School ideology, is also answered in this book, though less explicitly. It has to do with what Arnold Gehlen in the quote above called “the American reserves.” America’s “conservative reserves” are far stronger than Europe’s, because America, unlike secular Europe, has remained rooted to a larger extent in traditional Christian values. I do not doubt that if these values continue to decline, American culture will collapse as European culture and civilisation have collapsed. The disappearance of Christianity in Europe has left a religious vacuum, which has been filled by Islam on the one hand and by what Gottfried calls “the post-Marxist Left as a political religion” on the other hand. What we will witness in Europe in the coming decades is a cultural war between the values of Islam and the secular “values” of the decadent, hedonistic post-Marxist Left.

The Strange Death of Marxism: The European Left in the New Millennium
Paul Edward Gottfried
University of Missouri Press, Columbia and London, 2005, xii + 154 pp

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Last Two Winters Colder than Average


Happy Easter.

It snowed last night and the wind is howling. This being a cold April, I took a look at NYSERDA's heating degree days for this winter - through March. The numbers below are for Albany, NY.

Notice this winter was much cooler than the 30 year average of 1971 -2000. Wait until next month when I can average in April.

Hey, last year was significantly colder than the 30 year average. That is not supposed to be happening.

You may well say that this is hardly a trend; it is only a snap shot in time. OK.

Keep that thought when you come upon anecdotal judgments about the Earth from bureaucrats who want billions of dollars for their NGOs. Einstein once remarked that if you can't trust someone with the little things, you can't trust them with the big ones. Making up stuff to create a stampede is not the basis of credibility, even if it works.

Making bold and sweeping claims about humans and climate change requires powerful data, not an NGO committee vote, not a lie about the Aral Sea by Al Gore, and not personal attacks on those whose votes were never solicited.

It looks like we had a good recent December, unless you were a skier.

Monthly Heating Degree Day
Month: Current Year: Last Year: Normal:
October 500 410 463
November 608 674 787
December 918 1179 1085
January 1160 1031 1257
February
1275
1040
1070
March 1027 895 889

Note: Normal is a 30-year degree day average value for the period 1971-2000.
Source: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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April 07, 2007

Taking GAIA's Temperature


I am very busy today trying to figure out what I was to do last week, so, thanks to Irene, I have a quick and dirty data capture regarding a journal article based on work from three universities.

I have to guess, these guys are not part of the 100% of all "scientists" Al Gore says agrees with him. These guys are named and have identifiable relevant specialties not related to psychology and chimpology. They are doing their work, non pontificating in areas beyond their specialties. That is my job.

Bjarne, as I like to refer to him, has an academic vitae online with 83 peer reviewed papers. This distinguishes the author from the unnamed "scientists" quoted in reports written by unnamed functionaries with active political agendas. Bjarne is a fan of aqua vit and long walks along the fiordes, as I understand.

I examined the list of articles carefully and assure you I would have no idea what Bjarne is talking about - and he writes in English. I like the idea of non-equilibrium, however.

I didn't see a paper on denying the Holocaust.

Journal of Non-Equilibrium Thermodynamics.

Danish scientist: Global warming is a myth

COPENHAGEN, Denmark, March 15 (UPI) -- A Danish scientist said the idea of a "global temperature" and global warming is more political than scientific.

University of Copenhagen Professor Bjarne Andresen has analyzed the topic in collaboration with Canadian Professors Christopher Essex from the University of Western Ontario and Ross McKitrick of the University of Guelph.

It is generally assumed the Earth's atmosphere and oceans have grown warmer during the recent 50 years because of an upward trend in the so-called global temperature, which is the result of complex calculations and averaging of air temperature measurements taken around the world.

"It is impossible to talk about a single temperature for something as complicated as the climate of Earth," said Andresen, an expert on thermodynamics. "A temperature can be defined only for a homogeneous system. Furthermore, the climate is not governed by a single temperature. Rather, differences of temperatures drive the processes and create the storms, sea currents, thunder, etc. which make up the climate".

He says the currently used method of determining the global temperature -- and any conclusion drawn from it -- is more political than scientific.

The argument is presented in the Journal of Non-Equilibrium Thermodynamics. Good luck finding it.

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April 06, 2007

Why Pelosi should be arrested


§ 953. Private correspondence with foreign governments.
Any citizen of the United States, wherever he may be, who, without authority of the United States, directly or indirectly commences or carries on any correspondence or intercourse with any foreign government or any officer or agent thereof, with intent to influence the measures or conduct of any foreign government or of any officer or agent thereof, in relation to any disputes or controversies with the United States, or to defeat the measures of the United States, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than three years, or both.
This section shall not abridge the right of a citizen to apply himself, or his agent, to any foreign government, or the agents thereof, for redress of any injury which he may have sustained from such government or any of its agents or subjects.
18 U.S.C. § 953 (2004).

As usual, the law does not apply to the oligarchy.

[Thanks Ken]

April 04, 2007

The Commacide Conspiracy


Well, last night, three lawyers at the Tasting Room agreed the comma is not to be used before the "and" at the end of a series. Fortunately, I am internally driven and need no external confirmation as to my theories, which is often very amusing for all involved.

While I appreciate the inklings of democratic rule, one should be well advised that the Greek philosophers listed democracy as one of the worst forms of government - where mob rule reigns. The Tower of Babel comes to mind.

I came across more on my comma use and found that MY comma is called the "Oxford" comma, being required by the Oxford University Press. It is called the "Harvard" comma in the U.S. after the Harvard University Press. What's your missing comma called? The Eats & Shoots Black Hole?

I also learned that the impetus for removing the comma comes from newspapers, notably the New York Times, keeping true to its conspiratorial nature. The theory Oxford proponents propound is that the papers like to save space. Me, I think they are trying to save ink. You may remember the recent attempt to foist the spelling "employe" upon us.

Below are the style manuals which insist upon MY comma being used. Before that, consider:

"I would like to thank my parents, Ayn Rand and God." (An actual dedication.)

The Times once published a description of a Peter Ustinov documentary: "highlights of his global tour include encounters with Nelson Mandela, an 800-year-old demigod and a dildo collector."[8]

"Tom, Peter and I went swimming."

I ordered turkey, salami, peanut butter and jelly and roast beef."

Style guides supporting mandatory use

The following American style guides support mandatory use of serial comma:

The United States Government Printing Office's Style Manual

After each member within a series of three or more words, phrases, letters, or figures used with and, or, or nor.

  • "red, white, and blue"
  • "horses, mules, and cattle; but horses and mules and cattle"
  • "by the bolt, by the yard, or in remnants"
  • "a, b, and c"
  • "neither snow, rain, nor heat"
  • "2 days, 3 hours, and 4 minutes (series); but 70 years 11 months 6 days (age)"
Wilson Follett's Modern American Usage: A Guide (Random House, 1981), pp. 397-401

What, then, are the arguments for omitting the last comma? Only one is cogent – the saving of space. In the narrow width of a newspaper column this saving counts for more than elsewhere, which is why the omission is so nearly universal in journalism. But here or anywhere one must question whether the advantage outweighs the confusion caused by the omission ...

The recommendation here is that [writers] use the comma between all members of a series, including the last two, on the common-sense ground that to do so will preclude ambiguities and annoyances at a negligible cost." [1]

Chicago Manual of Style, 15th edition (University of Chicago Press, 2003), paragraph 6.19

When a conjunction joins the last two elements in a series, a comma ... should appear before the conjunction. Chicago strongly recommends this widely practiced usage....

  • "She took a photograph of her parents, the president, and the vice president."
  • "I want no ifs, ands, or buts."
  • "The meal consisted of soup, salad, and macaroni and cheese."
Kate L. Turabian, A Manual for Writers, 5th Edition, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987, Chapter 3.68:

A series of three or more words, phrases, or clauses (like this) takes a comma between each of the elements and before a conjunction separating the last two:

Dishes had been broken, cutlery lost, and carpets damaged.




William Sabin, Gregg Reference Manual, 8th Edition, New York: Glencoe, 1993, paragraph 162:
When three or more items are listed in a series, and the last item is preceded by and, or, or nor, place a comma before the conjunction as well as between the other items.


Council of Biology Editors, Scientific Style and Format, 6th Edition, NY: Cambridge University Press, 1994, Chapter 4.15.6:
To separate the elements (words, phrases, clauses) or a simple series of more than 2 elements. A comma should precede a closing "and" or "or." This rule applies to adjectives each modifying the following noun.
The tomatoes, beans, and peppers were planted in April.
The American Medical Association Manual of Style, 9th edition (1998) Chapter 6.2.1

Use a comma before the conjunction that precedes the last term in a series.

  • Outcomes result from a complex interaction of medical care and genetic, environmental, and behavioral factors.
  • The physician, the nurse, and the family could not convince the patient to take his medication daily.
  • While in the hospital, these patients required neuroleptics, maximal observation, and seclusion.
The Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association, 5th edition (2001) Chapter 3.02

Use a comma between elements (including before and and or) in a series of three or more items.

  • the height, width, or depth
  • in a study by Stacy, Newcomb, and Bentler
The Elements of Style (Strunk and White, 4th edition 1999)

In a series of three or more terms with a single conjunction, use a comma after each term except the last.

Harvard University Press
Then, there is the British:

1. A Dictionary of Modern English Usage,
by Fowler, who is my favorite. I like his attitude - like get rid of the French spelling of "colour," etc. His view is the British should get over it - the American spelling is better. Damn snobs.
2. Oxford University Press, see above, style manual

The enemy

Those against the Oxford comma: New York Times, The Economist (which is very disturbing), Associated Press Stylebook (p. 274)., and Eats, Shoots & Leaves.

I suppose my surprise at flagrant commacide is that I rarely touch a New York Times and rejected the stupid style manual for journalists we had at the Tech Valley Times. Please, when you are talking about a specific person in a specific job, she is the Dean. How much more ink does a capital D cost? For more on the conspiracy, see Case of the Serial Comma

For the the case involving the origins of the spelling of "employe" you can look to a big business conspiracy - General Motors wanted to save money in its printing! Now, they are cutting corners in their publications - Unsafe At Any Read.

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April 03, 2007

Sits, burps and farts


The use of the comma in a series has become a hot topic at the Olde (sic) Saratoga Brewery.

The modern, thereby sloppy and imprecise, failure to use a comma before the "and" is being defended in the same way is the theory that Antarctica sea ice is going melt and flood New York City because of global warming - both are wrong and matters of religious faith, see prior blog entries.

The instigator of the comma problem is Kim, who shall remain nameless, who insists the comma before the "and" in the series is "wrong."

This curious notion came from some teacher who is running a class for inmates, or some such thing, and is a true believer in Lynne Truss' Eats, Shoots & Leaves. The position posited by the Kim Camp, which was joined by Dale, who should know better, is the book establishes the proper use is that in a series, there is no comma before "and." Something about not being necessary and should not be used. [Apparently, Lynne is too bored to even use the word "and," preferring to use "&."]

Rather than succumb to pure logic about the subject, we few, we tipsy, we English fans entered the democratic voting method used by Al Gore to prove reality. For example: 4 times in the past 15 years 100 percent of all scientists agreed with me. (Yes, he said basically that). Thus, if 2 out of 3 beer drinkers don't like the comma, then, there you have it. Democracy at its finest. However, outside the Tasting Room, reality may differ.

As I noted previously in these electron-based pages, if there were a vote of scientists and journalists in 1976, we would be in Global Cooling right now. I am not much a fan of avoiding the essence of the argument in favor of the opinions of others, but let me provide some living proof that the comma before the "and" is traditional and logical.

The book Eats, Shoots & Leaves was written by Lynne Truss. Permit me to quote an excerpt of Lynne that is found on the Eats, Shoots & Leaves web site.

Talk to the Hand

The Utter Bloody Rudeness of Everyday Life
(or six good reasons to stay home and bolt the door)

LYNNE TRUSS

Introduction – When Push Comes to Shove

...However, just as my book on punctuation was fundamentally about finding oneself mysteriously at snapping point about something that seemed a tad trivial compared with war, famine, and the imminent overthrow of Western civilisation, so is Talk to the Hand. I just want to describe and analyse an automatic eruption of outrage and frustration that can at best cloud an otherwise lovely day, and at worst make you resolve to chuck yourself off the nearest bridge....

If the author actually said that the comma should not be used, Truss fails to practice what she wrote, edited, and preaches.

This blog, being dedicated to ferreting out sources for use in dialectic, rather than voting on consensus opinion, cannot in good faith use the politician's approach to logic and attack the messenger for being a hypocrite, liar, and fundamentalist Christian. Indeed, I sympathize with anyone taking on grammar as a subject of discourse. So, let us leave, abandon, and set aside Truss' subconscious preference for that comma and see what others say - working my way up the scale of authorities.

I went to the Oxford U site and was referred to the University of Calgary's English web site where I located, found, and reprint part of the punctuation primer:

How do I use commas with items in a series?

  1. Use a comma to separate items in a series.
    Example:
    The Calgary summer is short, sunny, and windy.

    NOTE:
    The comma before "and" is preferred, but not mandatory.
  2. Use commas to separate two or more items modifying the same noun.

    Example:
    Calgarians eagerly await their short, sunny, windy summer.

Well, the comma is "preferred." So, it is not "wrong," is it? Why is it preferred, I will venture to show you later. Why is it not mandatory - because Americans insist of watering down composition because we want to be inclusive of dolts, dummies, and dupes. Of note, the other sources do not even give wiggle room by stating there is a "preference."

"OK," you are thinking, "That's just Oxford and Calgary."

Well, since we are in the mode of quoting others in order to support a position, rather than understanding the matter, let me point out another source.

The Blue Book of Grammar and Punctuation

Rule 1 To avoid confusion, use commas to separate words and word groups with a series of three or more.
Example My $10,000,000 estate is to be split among my husband, daughter, son, and nephew.
NOTE Omitting the comma after son would indicate that the son and nephew would have to split one-third of the estate.

I hope the NOTE demonstrates the preference for the comma. Lawyers are comma sensitive. Take a look back at the sentence. In a proper analysis of the sentence, each person receives one fourth of the estate.

If you take out the "unnecessary" comma: My $10,000,000 estate is to be split among my husband, daughter, son and nephew.

Ooops.

Now what? Are we to assume each is to get 1/4 of the estate because we found Eats, Shoots and Leaves in the chambers of the drafting lawyer? Under traditional use, the failure to put in the comma means the son and nephew share one third of the estate. Sloppy writing makes for long legal careers in litigation.

As an aside, this is a good example of why "legalese" routinely appears. Lawyers will add something to make sure there is no confusion resulting from language: My $10,000,000 estate is to be split among my husband, daughter, son, and nephew in four equal shares in common.

Here is a story of an interesting sentence where the comma error will cost millions of dollars. From the Globe and Mail:

...Rogers (a large communications company in Canada) thought it had a five-year deal with Aliant Inc. to string Rogers' cable lines across thousands of utility poles in the Maritimes for an annual fee of $9.60 per pole. But early last year, Rogers was informed that the contract was being cancelled and the rates were going up. Impossible, Rogers thought, since its contract was iron-clad until the spring of 2007 and could potentially be renewed for another five years.

Armed with the rules of grammar and punctuation, Aliant disagreed. The construction of a single sentence in the 14-page contract allowed the entire deal to be scrapped with only one-year's notice, the company argued.

Language buffs take note — Page 7 of the contract states: The agreement “shall continue in force for a period of five years from the date it is made, and thereafter for successive five year terms, unless and until terminated by one year prior notice in writing by either party.”

Rogers' intent in 2002 was to lock into a long-term deal of at least five years. But when regulators with the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) parsed the wording, they reached another conclusion.

The validity of the contract and the millions of dollars at stake all came down to one point — the second comma in the sentence.

This Roger's story was quite the buzz in Toronto where folks seem more attuned to the Queen's English. I fear in the U.S., one would need to call an expert witness on the use of commas in order to sort out the confusion - back to experts voting on reality, rather than understanding what is going on. Let us return to the argument, at hand.

Permit me to apply the coup de grace: William Strunk's The Elements of Style:

In a series of three or more terms with a single conjunction, use a comma after each term except the last.

Thus write,

red, white, and blue
honest, energetic, but headstrong
He opened the letter, read it, and made a note of its contents.

This is also the usage of the Government Printing Office and of the Oxford University Press.

In the names of business firms the last comma is omitted, as

Brown, Shipley and Company

The abbreviation etc., even if only a single term comes before it, is always preceded by a comma.

==================

My only objection to the Strunk observations is the use of the word "usage," which is pedantic, unnecessary, and smarmy usage. It is much better usage to use "use" in place of "usage."

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