What can I say about political correctness?
Not for me.
Sunday, June 15, 2014
Monday, May 26, 2014
I Am Not A Critic But I Know What I Like
I was listening to performance of some work with the great Concertgebouw orchestra the other day - it was on YouTube. I am sure you will agree that the preponderance of listeners on that video channel are poorly-educated and small-minded persons - I am guessing about 98 percent or thereabouts. Then again, you might not agree with me about that but it matters not - not to me, anyway. I know whereof I speak and I cannot change my opinion about that. Now and again, one comes across a really intelligent comment, but those are few and far between, as the cliche goes. I am digressing. Sorry. My post is about my experience with the Concertgebouw post on YouTube. That particular performance was superb, as I expected. However, toward the end, a scramble in the strings (which probably lasted no more than three seconds but which my ear caught instantly) marred the ending just a trifle. I made a comment to that effect. Almost immediately, some person who obviously has little musical education, no ear training whatsoever, and poor manners attacked me for pointing that little fault out. Another moron jumped in and defended the first ninny. What to do? One cannot engage ignorant people in a dialogue - it would be like talking to or arguing with a chair. I enjoy pointing out errors when I hear them. Nothing is perfect - not even Heifetz. Hilary Hahn comes close - damn her.
Labels:
art,
criticism,
Hilary Hahn,
Jascha Heifetz,
learned pigs,
music,
perfection,
speech,
talent,
YouTube
Sunday, April 20, 2014
Summa Cum Laude
I was at a dinner the other evening. It wasn't for me but I was there. It was held to honor lots of people who had graduated in the top ten percentile in their college graduation classes. There was - as expected - a cocktail hour before the dinner and, by chance, a man and his sister came to sit with us at our table. The man admitted he had graduated by the skin of his teeth but he was there as his sister's guest and because he had put a video presentation together for the college. I noted that there were very, very few luminaries among the top ten. They were all successful people but nothing extraordinary. The guy who got the biggest cheers was that man who had sat with us and who probably graduated in the bottom ten percent. It is well-known that many super-successful people are often not the ones who succeed in school. This was no exception. It's not the teachers who matter; it's the pupils. You could name ten or twenty extraordinary historical figures but you could never name who their teachers were. It matters, but not that much. As the 1800 tequila commercial says, "enough said."
Labels:
1800 tequila,
coincidence,
College,
Education,
Motivation,
success,
Teaching,
tequila,
University
Saturday, January 4, 2014
Accidents
According to one very reliable source, these things happen in America every single day:
240 people die as a result of medical errors
144 people die as a result of an accident at home
130 people die as a result of a traffic accident
110 people die as a result of accidental poisoning
62 people die as a result of a fall
49 people die victims of a homicide
28 people die victims of a drunk driver
9 people die as a result of drowning
Maybe we can learn something from these numbers. They say that doctors bury their mistakes so maybe that is still true? Perhaps people should really watch where they are going to avoid being victims of accidents? People should learn how to swim or wear life jackets always? Don't hang around people who might kill you? Don't put strange stuff in your mouth and maybe, just maybe, you won't poison yourself? Nobody dies as a result of starvation so I guess that's a good thing.
Wednesday, January 1, 2014
Filling up space and time - part two
I'm writing this just to post something on the first day of the year - that's all. I have my trusty vodka by my side.
Monday, December 30, 2013
Filling up space and time
I'm just writing this to kill time and fill up some space. It will be the last post of 2013. 2013 was definitely not the best year on record - too many bad things happened. If you keep up with the news, you know what I mean. We didn't find the Forrest Fenn treasure either.
Labels:
2013,
2014,
Adolph Merckle,
Agriculture,
art,
Bernie Madoff,
blogger,
blogging,
blogs,
business,
Crime,
Dr Who,
Gene Roddenberry,
Humanity,
violence
Monday, July 15, 2013
Africa and other countries
What if every country just retreated back to its borders and decided to mind its own business? What could possibly happen? Every country would be left to figure out its own problems and manage its own prosperity. Yes, there would be plenty of commercial trade but no foreigners would remain in another's country longer than thirty days, even for tourist excursions. What could happen? Weapons would not be allowed to cross borders. Every country would have to manufacture its own weapons if it chose to do so. Defense treaties would be outlawed. Of course, strong, aggressive countries could militarily attack and subjugate other countries but they would themselves be subject to the same actions by other countries. No country would have any legal or moral obligation to step in and defend any other country. What could happen? Would things be worse than they are now?
Labels:
business,
European Union,
peace,
U.S. Foreign Policy,
United Nations,
war,
world trade
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