February 2025 Archives
Matt Goodwin: Kemi Badenoch is not going to save the Tories
"Had the Tories remained committed to this realignment by supplying it with the right policies, including slashing immigration, defending the borders, and vigorously opposing the Woke then, like Trump has done, they would have completely realigned British politics around an entirely new political and cultural zeitgeist.
"But the Tories did not remain committed --quite the opposite. Instead of representing and respecting their new voters, the status-conscious Tory elite class did what the status-conscious Tory elite class always does --it preferred to listen to the likes of Gavin Barwell, William Hague, Iain Martin, Fraser Nelson, Rory Stewart, and countless other urban liberals who masquerade as conservatives and have never come close to actually winning a general election....
"In this way, a once solid and structurally sound electorate completely imploded because these voters can now sense what the Tory elite class knew all along -- the people who run the Tory party never really wanted these voters, nor even liked them. Having to pander to pro-Brexit, anti-immigration, cultural conservatives, having to actually 'be conservative' was just too inconvenient and low-status for the Tory elite class in London. Better to hold one's head up high, put in some leaders who are fashionable in SW1, and definitely not be like Nigel, even if the end destination is total electoral oblivion."
Hand & Racquet : London Remembers
A real-life Leicester Square pub beloved of comedy greats like Tommy Cooper and Tony Hancock, it was forever memorialized by writers Ray Galton and Alan Simpson as Tony's local in Hancock's Half Hour. Closed circa 2008, demolished for new development in 2015.
This is a listing for an antique radio that has already been sold. The Etherical Radio Company of Bristow, Oklahoma, was the owner of radio station KFRU, which moved to Tulsa to become KVOO. They also made radios.
Leslie Marsh's review of Cory MacLauchlin's biography of John Kennedy Toole, with a critical focus on Simon & Schuster editor Paul Gottlieb's decision to keep Confederacy in limbo.
A Memory Keeper of New Orleans
Much respect to the biographer of John Kennedy Toole for his marathon, week-long, one-man digitizing effort in Tulane's Special Collections. I have had similar (but not as lengthy) sessions of photographing court files, newspaper articles, city directories, and microfilm for later reading and research.
"I spent five full days at the archive, from opening to closing, hunched over a table with my camera, capturing every page of the twenty-six boxes of the collection. At the end of the week, I had not read a single word from the archive. I flew home exhausted and sore. But I had gained something invaluable--a digitized version of the Toole Papers. And that became the backbone to Butterfly in the Typewriter."
Plutarch, De defectu oraculorum, section 17
The Greek historian Plutarch recounts a visit to Delphi and a dialogue about the disappearance of prophecy from once famous oracles. This section is an anecdote about a ship sailing in the Ionian Sea. A voice on the island of Paxi calls the ship's pilot by name and commands, "When you come opposite to Palodes, announce that Great Pan is dead." The pilot, Thamus, was summoned by the Emperor Tiberius, who commissioned an inquiry. Via Charles Haywood on X. Josh Centers replied to Haywood, "It was widely reported in the ancient world that the old pagan rituals stopped working after the resurrection. Christ overthrew the pagan gods and trampled down death by death." The death and resurrection of Christ occurred during the reign of Tiberius (AD 14 - AD 37).
John Milton's poem, "On the Morning of Christ's Nativity," concludes with a description of the downfall of Satan and the old pagan gods at the birth of Jesus:
And then at last our bliss
Full and perfect is,
But now begins; for from this happy day
Th'old Dragon under ground,
In straiter limits bound,
Not half so far casts his usurped sway,
And, wrath to see his kingdom fail,
Swinges the scaly horror of his folded tail.The Oracles are dumb;
No voice or hideous hum
Runs through the arched roof in words deceiving.
Apollo from his shrine
Can no more divine,
With hollow shriek the steep of Delphos leaving.
No nightly trance or breathed spell
Inspires the pale-ey'd priest from the prophetic cell.
"Move those things out: Bob Wills Invades the Grand Ole Opry, 1944": The oft-embellished story of the Texas Playboys first appearance on the Opry, December 30, 1944, with Monte Mountjoy on a drum set that the Opry crew insisted would be behind a curtain, which Bob Wills ordered to be moved into full view. The band that night consisted of Bob Wills and Joe Holley on fiddle; Ted Adams and Rip Ramsey on bass; Jimmy Wyble and Cameron Hill on electric guitar; Noel Boggs on steel guitar; Alex Brashear on trumpet; Monty Mountjoy on drums.
(Southwest Shuffle also includes chapters about Tommy Duncan, Jimmy Wyble, and Luke Wills. You can borrow the book for online reading for up to two weeks with a free Internet Archive account.)
MIT Facilities - Maps & Floor Plans
This is fun: Current floor plans of MIT buildings. You need MIT login access (current student/staff or alumni). Would even be more fun if they had historical floor plans.