Showing posts with label Dalrymple. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dalrymple. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 25, 2013

Dispatches from Akicistan #4

Gratitude:  Thank God for the birth of an infant boy in Bethlehem all those years ago.

Acknowledgement: I am a miserable s.o.b.
Request(s): Peace on Earth and goodwill to all.

What is Akicistan? It isn't a place. It is a state of mind that places cutting-edge state-of-the-art sticks in mud. The word Akicistan is formed from the initials AKIC and the root stan.

If Akicistan was an empire, it would comprise China, Canada, the Red States of the USA, Latvia, and the parts of the world that comprise Modern Christendom as well as ancient Christendom.

Akicistan news in brief: The Kaulins family may go to Hong Kong after the Spring Festival.

Important Akicistan Links:


In Akicistan:

Some of us can speak Chinese!  祝你圣诞快乐!!!

We sometimes pay attention to China. I was listening to an audiobook The Politically Correct Guide to Socialism on my Ipod – I got the recording via torrent. Socialism, said the author Kevin D. Williamson, has this thing for gigantic-ism. That is, Socialists like to construct buildings that are much bigger than economic necessity requires. I see this gigantic-ism taking place in Wuxi where they are erecting at least four more fifty storey skyscrapers.

We are fond of Canada! Andis wishes he was there for Christmas.

We are fond of Latvia! I am sorry to hear that Latvia is having a economic crisis at the moment. I have mixed feelings about it joining the Euro zone.

The Politics are Conservative and Reactionary! Down with Obama! Down with Trudeau! Down with Socialism! Down with Progressivism! Down with Public Sector Unions! Down with the Clintons! Down with Feminism! Down with Gay Marriage! Down with Atheism! Down with Freudian-ism! Down with North Korea! Down with Nancy Pelosi! Down with Hugo Chavez! Down with the Castro brothers of Cuba! Down with the fools who wear Che Guevara t-shirts! Down with the wild card in Major League Baseball! Down with Medicare! Down with Darwinism! Down with Scientism! Down with Liberalism! Down with the NHL giving one point for overtime losses! Down with Micheal Moore! Down with Communism! Down with the cult of the body!

Up with Love! Up with the Pope! Up with Reactionary attitudes! Up with Phil Robertson!

English is taught!
I am studying this old-school English grammar which lists thee and thou as commonly used pronouns. This grammar says that “shall” and “will” are used in future tenses. For mere futurity, this grammar states that will is used all the personal pronouns, except I and we which use “shall.” For determination, command, and promise about the future, “shall” is used for all the personal pronouns except I and we which use “will.” An example sentence to help remember this goes as follows: “I will be drowned, no one shall save me.” I am not determined to drown. I am not commanding myself to drown. I am not promising to drown. I am merely predicting I will drown because no one is to save me.
This use of shall or will is now archaic. But it is useful to know about this.
Citizens aren't freaks! We just average people trying to get through life best we can. And I am stuck in the wrong age.
Reading is the #1 Pastime! Here is what I had been working my way through the past week or so:
Don Colacho's (Nicolas Gomez Davilla) Aphorisms.  There are 2,988 of them in this book that I compiled for myself.  I try to read at least one aphorism a day.  I cut and paste the better ones -- they are all profound actually -- and I put them in the AKIC Weekly. (See below)
The Niomachean Ethics of Aristotle. After this, I will read Aquinas's Summa.

Ulysses by James Joyce.  I am following along with Frank Delaney as he slowly guides podcast listeners through Joyce's hard-to-read novel.  Delaney figures he will have the whole novel covered in about 22 years.  Delaney completed episode #183 this week and is working his way through the chapter that introduces Leopold Bloom. I am getting ahead of Delaney as far as reading the book.  I will be finished my reading of it, I figure, in a year. I read the novel despite its many blasphemies. It is best to be aware of this stuff because the world is full of it, and the world will always find a way of slapping you in the face with it

The Holy Bible (RSV-C2E version, aka the Ignatius Bible, and Douay-Rheims version).  I will read the two versions in conjunction. Last week, I was reading the Book of Genesis.

Reclaiming HistoryThe Assassination of John F. Kennedy by Vincent Bugliosi. This is a long book. I have no plan to read it in its entirety, but I will read most of it. As I have written before, I am a JFK assassination buff.

Spoiled Rotten! The Toxic Cult of Sentimentality by Theodore Dalrymple. Finished. A great book. It confirms a thought that I have had that victim-hood is coin in this day and age. I suppose Dalrymple has a lot of opponents who say he is mean, heartless, a curmudgeon, overly-negative, and prone to exaggeration. They are wrong. I see evidence of muddle-headed sentimentality in the few foreigners I meet.

Canada under British Rule 1760-1900 by Sir John George Bourinot. I feel a need to bone up on Canadian history.

The Rise of Modern China by Immanuel CY Hsu. David Warren recommended this history of China which pegs Modern China beginning with the fall of the Ming Dynasty.


Memorable quotes are presented and discussed!
Nicholas Gomez Davilla:
627 The majority of men have no right to give their opinion, but to listen. [It doesn't matter what I think. But it does matter to me if I am thinking the truth.]
629 Triviality never lies in what is felt, but in what is said. [There is a reason that I can verbalize the best moments of my life.]
632 Men disagree less because they think differently than because they do not think. [Many things that we disagree about aren't really worth the time to argue about if we really thought about them. What argue if people are racist if there isn't a chance in hell that any of them aren't going to bring back slavery or try to perpetuate the Holocaust.]
634 The goals of all ambition are vain and their exercise harmful. [Beautiful women, expensive cars, good nights at the bar. All bullshit.]
635 A man is wise if he has no ambition for anything but lives as if he had an ambition for everything. [Live each moment of life to the fullest.]
638 The future tense is the imbecile's favourite tense. [I had a student tell me that they didn't want to go to back to the past for a visit and there wasn't a time in the past that they would have liked to have lived. They said they wanted to go to the future. This was in a class where the topic was history.]
639 Modern artists are so ambitious to differ from one another that that very same ambition groups them together into a single species. [Bohemians, those ultimate individualists, move in flocks.]
640 As poor and needy as it may be, every life has moments worthy of eternity.
646 There is no stupid idea which modern man is not capable of believing, as long as he avoids believing in Christ. [What are some of the stupid ideas that Positivists have had? Socialism, Communism, Hedonism, Fascism, Public Sector Unions, Barack Obama is the Messiah....]
650 In no previous age did the arts and letters enjoy greater popularity than in ours. Arts and letters have invaded the school, the press, and the almanacs. No other age, however, has produced such ugly objects, nor dreamed such coarse dreams, nor adopted such sordid ideas. It is said that the public is better educated. But one does not notice.[One reason to watch older movies is that they are better looking.]

David Warren:
The old lady [an illiterate woman in Asia] had remembered, it seemed, every word I’d spoken, or rather tried to speak, on my last visit — so precisely that she could now do an elaborate parody. The sun shone when I heard what sounded like my own voice, played back as if on a tape-recorder. She had my number. I did not have hers. Her mind, uncluttered by the impedimenta of literacy, had taken everything in.

Teacher unions, in anything like their contemporary form, only become possible once the vocation of a teacher has been abandoned. That vocation actually required personal poverty, and simplicity of life: of being, oneself, a scholar. In that sense the unions are symptoms, not causes. [Real teachers don't go to pubs.]

By preaching moral responsibility instead, we could save about 3/4 of public spending, & at least 1/2 of the rest.


Theodore Dalrymple:
  • Not very long before the publication of Ariel [A book of poems of Sylvia Plath], at least in historical terms, self-pity was regarded as a vice, even a disgusting one, that precluded sympathy, though of course a permanent human temptation. [I am sorry for the mistakes I have made. I have come to the point of view that I have no one to blame but myself for my modest circumstances.]
  • activism is responsible also for a lot of the evil in the world as well as the good, so that activism is not in itself a good thing. The idea that activism is intrinsically good, and therefore excuses a lot, is itself a deeply sentimental one…

Lists are made:
The Reasons I Became an English Teacher and the Reasons I am Still an English Teacher.
  • My wife is Chinese.
  • My prospects in Canada are bleak.
  • Canada is still much too much of a Leftist country.
  • My job in Canada was boring. I was surviving, had a car, but no family or social life.
  • I have a son.
  • Canada is cold.
  • Chinese students are well behaved.
  • China is a traffic accident in slow motion. I can't help but have a morbid fascination about it.
  • I am too old to start in another profession.
  • I am no longer physically capable of doing my previous job.
  • I have a scholarly desire.
  • I like books. I don't like cars.
  • Teaching is a vocation and I can't become a Priest, although there are times that I wished I did.
  • There is nothing else I can or could do in China.
  • Wuxi has good public transportation.


Thoughts are thought


  • Above all else, a person should stay away from self-pity.

Sunday, December 15, 2013

Dispatches from Akicistan #3

Gratitude:  Thank God for Crown Royal drunk in moderation.
Acknowledgement: I am a prig. I don't know the exact nature and extent of how it is that I am a prig, but I know that I must be.

Request(s): Please visit my Casa Kaulins Blog.

What is Akicistan? It isn't a place. It is more a state of mind that places cutting-edge state-of-the-art sticks in mud. The word Akicistan is formed from the initials AKIC and the root stan.

Akicistan news in brief: The K family is thinking of going to Hong Kong.

Important Akicistan Links:


In Akicistan:

Some of us can speak Chinese!  我不会说中文。我可以读一点点中文词。

There is a Monarchy! Jenny is the Queen. Andis is the King, but really the consort. Tony is the prince. King Andis proudly proclaims himself a loyal subject of her majesty Queen Elizabeth II.

We sometimes pay attention to China. Andis doesn't want to be a know-it-all would-be Sinologist. The are enough on the Internet already. Andis has nothing that he can add to that pile.

We are fond of Canada! We are also fond of the USA which is a great country, perhaps the greatest country there ever was. But we have one thing the Americans don't have: the Monarchy.
We are fond of Latvia! Andis is well aware of the dark aspects of Latvian history.

The Politics are Conservative and Reactionary! Andis started out as a leftie. He even proudly proclaimed to some girl that he was a socialist. He saw Billy Bragg in concert twice and bought a t-shirt saying Capitalism is killing music. But then listening to Rush Limbaugh, and reading the likes of CS Lewis, William F Buckley, Frederic Hayek, and Milton Friedman smartened him up.

English is taught! I was reading in an English grammar that the rule when to use “more” or “er” with disyllabic adjectives is as follows: If the first syllable is stressed, you use “more:” if the second syllable is stressed, you use “er.” Example of the former is “helpful” whose comparative form is “more helpful.” An example of the latter would be “polite” whose comparative form is “politer.” But I would have thought that “more polite” was okay. Reading about it on the Internet, it seems that “politer” was the old form and now most native speakers use “more polite.”
Citizens aren't freaks! Akicistanians are what normal people should be like.
Reading is the #1 Pastime! Here is what I had been working my way through the past week or so:
Don Colacho's (Nicolas Gomez Davilla) Aphorisms.  There are 2,988 of them in this book that I compiled for myself.  I try to read at least one aphorism a day.  I cut and paste the better ones -- they are all profound actually -- and I put them in the AKIC Weekly. (See below)
The Niomachean Ethics of Aristotle. After this, I will read Aquinas's Summa.

Ulysses by James Joyce.  I am following along with Frank Delaney as he slowly guides podcast listeners through Joyce's hard-to-read novel.  Delaney figures he will have the whole novel covered in about 22 years.  Delaney completed episode #183 this week and is working his way through the chapter that introduces Leopold Bloom. I am getting ahead of Delaney as far as reading the book.  I will be finished my reading of it, I figure, in a year. I read the novel despite its many blasphemies. It is best to be aware of this stuff because the world is full of it, and the world will always find a way of slapping you in the face with it

The Holy Bible (RSV-C2E version, aka the Ignatius Bible, and Douay-Rheims version).  I will read the two versions in conjunction. Last week, I was reading the Book of Genesis.

Is Life Worth Living? by WH Mallock Finished. I don't know why this book and this author isn't more known in conservative circles. This book is a brilliant defence of Revealed Religion, particularly Catholicism, against Postivism. I have pasted a couple quotes from the book below.

Everything That Rises Must Converge by Flannery O'Connor. Finished. Good stories written from a Catholic world view.

Reclaiming HistoryThe Assassination of John F. Kennedy by Vincent Bugliosi. This is a long book. I have no plan to read it in its entirety, but I will read most of it. As I have written before, I am a JFK assassination buff.

Mere Christianity by C.S. Lewis. Finished. I read this book twenty years ago. I will read again in another year. It's a book like Road to Serfdom that changed my mind about a lot of things. [Now, if it can only change me into a new man.]

Farewell Fear by Theodore Dalrymple. Finished. This book is a collection of recent essays that I am lucky to have in e-book form. I will read anything by Theodore Dalrymple on any topic. He is that good a writer. He is also very sensible.


Memorable quotes are presented and discussed!
Nicholas Gomez Davilla:
600 The Leftist is so worried about the problems of the 19th century that he does not worry about the problems of the 20th century. The problems raised by the industrialization of society prevent him from seeing the problems raised by industrialized society. [These days, American Leftists are fighting the racism of the pre-1950s and ignoring the destructive effects of the welfare state on black people.]
610 In an egalitarian society neither the magnanimous nor the humble fit in; there is only room for pretentious virtues. [I have seen more people who spend more time saying they are good than actually doing or being good. Their actions belie their words.]
611 Man is nothing but the spectator of his impotence [I could modify that sentence and turn it into my personal motto. I could also use part of this aphorism in the title of my autobiography. I once said I was a bystander when it came to the raising of Tony.]
612 All satisfaction is a form of forgetfulness. [So is a lot of self-righteousness. I like how my memory will offer me flashes of my past that I ought to be ashamed of. I could rattle off many confessions. Once, for instance, I fired a rifle and its kick against my cheek made me cry.]
615 The calculations of intelligent men tend to fail because they forget the fool, those of fools because they forget the intelligent man. [I don't know if my calculations are those of the fool or the smart fellow. I find my calculations fail because I forget the clever people and I forget how insincere people are.]

Theodore Dalrymple (on the reading of old books):
....history should not be read as the backward projection of our current discontents, or of our grievances, that we are not just the victims of history but its principal beneficiaries so far. We have much to be grateful for because people like Messrs. Hood and Jackson labored for a better world, and others, more gifted or brilliant perhaps than them, or with better opportunities, succeeded in freeing us from the conditions that they described. If history is not merely the history of progress, neither is it the history merely of injustice reaching into the present. It should not be taught as it all too often is, as one of the subjects covered in the largest of all university departments, that of Resentment Studies.

WH Mallock:
Science is only possible on the assumption that nature is uniform. [This sentence is so pregnant with meaning for me.]

A horde of intellectual barbarians has burst in upon it, and has occupied by force the length and breadth of it. The result has been astounding. Had the invaders been barbarians only, they might have been repelled easily; but they were barbarians armed with the most powerful weapons of civilisation. They were a phenomenon new to history: they showed us real knowledge in the hands of real ignorance… [Who was the first of them? Rousseau... and they went from him.]

David Warren:
As the former prime ministrix of France, Édith Cresson, pointed out to reporters back in 1991, there has always been something of a problem with “Anglo-Saxon men.” Asked what she meant by an American reporter, she explained that, “They aren’t really men, they are all homosexual.” (As there was some surprise at this remark, she then qualified it by saying, “Well, not all the Anglo-Saxon men, of course. Perhaps only 35 or 40 percent. But you know what I mean.”) [I am not Anglo-Saxon. So, I heartily agree with this statement.]

We take our Godless Marxism so much for granted, that we cannot see through the class system. “Capitalists” and “socialists” alike have come to subscribe to Marx’s most original error. As Roger Scruton observed: “It was to Marx that we owed that first and disastrous attempt to organize society on economic principles alone.” [1)Marx invented the term Capitalism? Capitalists shouldn't use that term, even if it is a case of adopting the insult. Leftist pollution must be avoided at all costs. It pollutes thought. 2)Strangely enough, China failed first by attempting to organize a socialist society on economic principles alone and now seems to be failing again by attempting to organize a capitalist society on economic principles alone.]

CS Lewis:
If Christianity only means one more bit of good advice, then Christianity is of no importance. There has been no lack of good advice for the last four thousand years. A bit more makes no difference. [I was going to read a book called Quiet: the power of introversion. It was published in 2012 and was written by Susan Cain. But after reading CS Lewis's Mere Christianity, it seemed like it was going to be a rah-rah self help book. (It also didn't help that one of the heroes of the book was Al Gore.)]
Lists are made:
Here are some interesting moments in the life of Andis Kaulins, the king of Akicistan:
  1. Andis visited Dealey Plaza in Dallas, Texas.
  2. Andis visited the Trotsky Compound in Mexico City.
  3. Andis visited Tienanmen Square in Beijing.
  4. Andis saw Micheal Jordan and the rest of the Chicago Bulls in Vancouver, Canada.
  5. Andis saw Pope John Paul II in Winnipeg.
  6. Andis saw Queen Elizabeth II in Brandon, Manitoba, Canada.
  7. Andis saw the Sex Pistols in concert.
  8. Andis saw the Team Canada Junior Hockey Team beat the Juniors of the Soviet Union 7-0 in 1981.
  9. Andis had a blog entry mentioned in the Commentary Website.
  10. Andis got Billy Bragg's autograph.
  11. Andis got Maurice “the Rocket” Richard's autograph.
  12. Andis saw Prime Minister Jean Chrietien make a speech in Winnipeg.



Thoughts are thought
  • The more you know people, the more they decrease in your estimation.

Sunday, November 10, 2013

The Andis Kaulins in China Weekly: November 4 to November 10, 2013

Gratitude:  Thank God, colds, like the one I had this past week, are not fatal.

Acknowledgement: I can't help but think that everything and everyone is a joke, and so I can't help but treat everyone and most things with irreverence like I am unfunny version of Don Rickles.

Requests: If there are readers out there who have a mixed-blood child in a Chinese Public School, especially a primary school, I would like you to email me at andiskaulins@qq.com so we can exchange experiences. Read the AKIC diary for November 4 to 10 and you will learn about my mine.

The AKIC Week in Brief: The highlights of the week were really lowlights. I moved office at work, but the night before I did, a thief came to our school, and my desk was broken into and the paper money was taken from the can I use to save for Tony's toy fund. And for most of the week, I had a bad cold and a very bad cough which worsened as the week went on. I also got out of the habit of watching movies on my Ipad – I spend more time reading.

About AKIC: If you want to learn what Andis & AKIC are all about, you can visit here.

If there are things about AKIC you don't know about, like places and people I mention in the entries below, you can go here to find out what they are all about.


AKIC Weekly Features:

I in in China!  这个星期,我有很快感冒,但是我去了工作。这个星期,一位贼偷我的钱在我的学校。这个钱是我孩子玩具的钱。

I am Canadian! SJAM was the first PM of Canada. Who is SJAM? Sir John A McDonald. I wonder if I am the first to use the acronym to describe him.

I find myself hoping that Toronto mayor Rob Ford doesn't resign. I know this brings up the question then of how I felt about Clinton, for it can be said that Clinton was hounded by his political opponents in a manner that was similar to how Ford has been hounded more recently by the Leftists who nearly a year ago, almost pulled off a legal coup and had Ford removed from office .

Both politicians could use the defence of competence in doing their jobs. Ford has done a lot for Toronto. Clinton balanced the budget.

So, if I think Ford shouldn't resign while thinking that Clinton should have resigned, I could be labelled a hypocrite.

Were the Republicans right to pick on Clinton? Of course they were. I think there was so much more that was bad about Clinton than there is about Ford. For one thing, Ford is a right-winger and can at least claim to possess some virtues. On the other hand, Clinton was saved from becoming a left-wing disaster by the fact that he had a vigorous opposition, including Rush Limbaugh, that stopped him from enacting a blatant left wing agenda. The fact that he was able to balance the budget was because he had a Newt Gingrich led congress to force him to do so. Ford is doing similar things in Toronto without the benefit of a helping leftist opposition.

Ford's vices are those of the common man; Clinton's were those of a man abusing his position of power that a way that was the reason Feminism had any legitimacy in the first place. If Clinton's only sin was to have masturbated on the dress of an intern, he could have been forgiven. But he did very unethical things, and since leaving the presidency has had quite the lucrative racket playing on the fact that he was a president. Clinton is a shyster politician and a rapist to boot.

Clinton did have common man's vices, of course, but he was able to get away with him. Ford, being a right-winger, is getting crucified. There is no justice in this world, I tell ya.

I am also quite aware that it is Remembrance Day in Canada. A day to mark the sacrifices of Canada's soldiers has probably evolved into a festival of pacifism. Give me a break!!

I am Latvian (sort of)! I am not much of a Latvian really, but I still have a healthy distrust and hatred of Russians. Though there are many Russians, particularly classic authors and dissidents, I admire.

Wuxi Peach Maoists Update: Visit here to find out how if your Peach Maoists (0-8-1) have finally won a match-up.

Politically I am Conservative/Reactionary! I don't think gays should be persecuted, but I don't think they should be married.

I teach English! Most of my classes, however, are conversations. I really go in, hoping to learn things from the students. Often, I get inadvertent Chinese vocabulary lessons. I teach when an opportunity arises, but the students don't give me many because they are so shy to speak or are just very unimaginative in making sentences.

I am not a freak! What do freaks do? Freakish things, I would suppose. Like what? I don't know.

I like to Read! Here is what I had been working my way through the past week:

Don Colacho's (Nicolas Gomez Davilla) Aphorisms.  There are 2,988 of them in this book that I compiled for myself.  I try to read at least one aphorism a day.  I cut and paste the better ones -- they are all profound actually -- and I put them in the AKIC Weekly. (See below)

The Niomachean Ethics of Aristotle. Now that I have finished the Catechism, I will read this and then begin to read the Summa. I have cut and pasted a quote below that I very much need to heed.

Ulysses by James Joyce.  I am following along with Frank Delaney as he slowly guides podcast listeners through Joyce's hard-to-read novel.  Delaney figures he will have the whole novel covered in about 22 years.  Delaney completed episode #178 this week and is working his way through the chapter that introduces Leopold Bloom. I am getting ahead of Delaney as far as reading the book.  I will be finished my reading of it, I figure, in a year. I read the novel despite its many blasphemies. It is best to be aware of this stuff because the world is full of it, and the world will always find a way of slapping you in the face with it

The Holy Bible (RSV-C2E version, aka the Ignatius Bible, and Douay-Rheims version).  I will read the two versions in conjunction. Last week, I was reading the Book of Genesis.

Mao Zedong: Man, Not God by Quan Yanchi. A Hagiography given to me by a local.

Civilization: The West and the Rest by Niall Ferguson. Finished. This book is the basis of a Killer App lecture that Ferguson did on TED. Like most TED things, it is clever but doesn't leave one feeling fully nourished. The book is more a collection of interesting anecdotes and ideas than a fully thought out and consistent thesis. Be that as it may, it is far better then anything Paul Krugman could write.

Iron Curtain by Anne Applebaum. Finished. Good Book. Sad Story. In my mind, the book raises the following question: During the Cold War, who were more stupid: the Communists or the anti-anti-Communists?

Gulag by Anne Applebaum. I just happened to have found two e-book copies of Applebaum's books.

The Day of Sir John Macdonald: A Chronicle of the First Prime Minister of the Dominion. Finished. Too short a book in my estimation. Who says Canadian history is boring? Well, it would be for foreigners. But for Canadians who have a love or even a liking for their country, the history of Canada is the sort of history one would wish most countries to have. This book was published in 1914 and referred to Canada as a Dominion – the Dominion being established on July 1, 1867. Before that date, Canada was a single province, a union of what are now the provinces of Quebec and Ontario. And before the province of Canada there was Upper Canada and Lower Canada. So, Canada was not established on July 1, 1867. Because of confederation it became a Dominion on that day. The parliamentarians who chose to change the name of Dominion Day to Canada Day were ignorant.


I like to take photos
I publish them in the following blogs:  AKIC wordpress , TKIC blogspot, TKIC wordpress, Views of China from Casa Kaulins Blogspot and Views of China from Casa Kaulins Wordpress. It is my habit to take a least one photo of Tony a day and publish it in TKIC wordpress. I also try to capture interesting things that pass by the Casa Kaulins apartment, either on video on still image, and publish them in Views of China from Casa Kaulins.

I like to make videos

I like to cut, paste, and sometimes give my take on quotations:
Nicolas Gomez Davilla
464 A youth takes pride in his youth as if it were not a privilege enjoyed by even the most idiotic.
482 Let us not speak badly of nationalism. Without the virulence of nationalism, Europe and the world would already be ruled by a technical, rational, uniform empire. Let us give credit to nationalism for two centuries, at least, of spiritual spontaneity, of free expression of the national soul, of rich historical diversity. Nationalism was the last spasm of the individual before the gray death awaiting it.[The problem with Canadian Nationalism is that it is a socialist enterprise. The original Canadian Nationalism was loyal to Crown of England and the British Empire.]
488 In silent solitude only the soul capable of conquering in the most public disputes bears fruit. The weakling begs for commotion. [So, in one sense, I am strong]
492 The reformers of contemporary society persist in decorating the cabins of a ship that is going under. [There is a sort of prettiness to government pamphlets and reception areas. And I think of the absolutely elaborate uniforms of the major sports leagues. A stronger society with a purpose wouldn't bother much about those things... Rambling thoughts, I know...,]
493 Modern man destroys more when he constructs than when he destroys. [Is is so true in Wuxi where the modern developers have destroyed and bulldozed over so much. Old Wuxi is gone forever. And I mean even the Wuxi that was before the Commies took over.]
495 If we demand that the object have only the form with which it best fulfills its functions, all objects of the same species converge ideally in a single form. When technical solutions become perfect, man will die of boredom. [There is something to be said for the artistic flourish.]
496 Let us replace all those definitions of “the dignity of men,” which are only short, ecstatic prayers, with a simple plain one: to do everything slowly. [I have a tendency to rush through things which I should stop. I should read, for example, every passage of Aristotle very slowly.]


In my experience, TV people are as lying, insincere, obsequious, unscrupulous, fickle, exploitative, shallow, cynical, untrustworthy, treacherous, dishonest, mercenary, low, and untruthful a group of people as is to be found on the face of this Earth. They make the average Western politician seem like a moral giant. By comparison with them, Mr. Madoff was a model of probity and Iago was Othello’s best friend. I am prepared to admit that there may be—even are—exceptions, as there are exceptions good or bad in every human group, but there is something about the evil little screen that would sully a saint and sanctify a monster. [Dalrymple is definitely right about TV people. That is why TV is a Liberal Progressive medium. However, Dalrymple says TV is an unmitigated evil. I don't know if I can agree with that. For example, televised sports can be interesting. I think of what Orwell said about books. During a year, Orwell said, a lot of books are published and most of them are garbage. The same can be said about television, it is mostly trashy and garbage. However, there are a few television series that redeem the medium like that are a few books that redeem publishing... Be that as it may, one is better off reading than watching television.]

An Excerpt from Sir Joseph Pope's The Day of Sir John Macdonald / A Chronicle of the First Prime Minister of the Dominion:
This gave Sir Richard one of those opportunities to attack Sir John of which he never failed to take advantage. After saying some disagreeable things, he concluded thus: 'However, Mr Speaker, I am bound to say that I think it quite fit that a gentleman who in his day has done justice to so many John Collinses, should at last have a John Collins to do justice to him.' To the uninitiated it may be explained that 'John Collins' is the name of a rather potent beverage. [I should put this quote in context. I was reminded, in the wake of the Toronto Mayor Rob Ford controversy, that the first Prime Minister of Canada, Sir John A MacDonald (SJAM) was quite the drinker. David Warren says that half of his cabinet would be pissed in meetings. Now, Sir Richard was remarking on the fact that the author of a contemporary biography of SJAM was named John Collins. John Collins was also the name of a potent beverage which SJAM was sure to have had a not passing familiarity with.]


An Excerpt from Anne Applebaum's Gulag: For here, the lesson could not have been clearer: while the symbol of one mass murder fills us with horror, the symbol of another mass murder makes us laugh. [I will have to put this quote in context as well. Applebaum, when visiting the liberated countries of Eastern Europe, observed that after the fall of the Iron Curtain, it was not considered in bad taste to sell Communist memorabilia while it was considered very improper to sell Nazi memorabilia. I have noticed this phenomenon in China where Red Guard badges can be purchased at Nanchang Market.]




The AKIC List of the Week: AKIC's Top Ten Chinese Things
  1. Chopsticks. What an exotic way to eat food. Gives one the same satisfaction that one gets driving a manual transmission car.
  2. Bridges. I love bridges.
  3. Barges. I love to stand on a bridge and watch the canal traffic.
  4. Bruce Lee & Kung Fu. China's greatest contribution to popular culture.
  5. Tai Chi. When done well, Tai Chi is jaw-dropping to watch. I think it is great exercise – much better than pumping iron.
  6. Revolving Table Tops. The food is on the other side of table and there is no need to have to ask someone to pass it.
  7. Slim Women. I tell the female students, who think they are fat, that they would abandon the worry if they went to Canada.
  8. Easy availability of beer and cigarettes. Funny how in the land of Communism, the authorities wouldn't dare control cigarettes and alcohol that way in they do in my country.
  9. Chinese writing. To try and decipher it is now a hobby of mine.
  10. Chinese painting. There is a certain style of Chinese painting I like. It is very minimalistic without being abstract.

I fashion myself to be a 21st Century Pepys