Saturday, November 22, 2025

The Best and Worst Hit Songs of the 1960s

 The Best and Worst Hit Songs of the 1960s Ted Golia. This list is way too skewed to the early 1960s. And even for the earlier 60s, what about Downtown? For the later 60s, how about icons like Age of Aquarius? Bridge Over Troubled Waters? Proud Mary? American Woman? Eli’s Coming?


The songs celebrating the love among friends and showcases shared adventure and camaraderie



The Monks in the Casino: A brief theory of young men, “the loneliness crisis,” and life in the 21st century Derek Thompson 




The Old Farmer’s Almanac – 234 Years and Still Going Strong

“You may have heard that the Farmer’s Almanac, based out of Lewiston, ME, is ceasing publication after an incredible 200+ year run. Over the years, there has been some confusion between different almanacs, so to be clear: 

The OLD Farmer’s Almanac isn’t going anywhere.  As we have since 1792, during George Washington’s presidency, we will continue to publish our annual edition, while educating and entertaining readers online at Almanac.com. Learn more about the differences between The Old Farmer’s Almanacand other almanacs.


The Librarians

As part of the fascist war on “woke”, tens of thousands of books have been pulled from the shelves of libraries around the country over the past few years. On the front line are the nation’s librarians, “first responders in the fight for democracy and our First Amendment rights”. The Librarians is a documentary film about this latest wave of censorship & persecution of librarians; here’s the trailer:


From a review on RogerEbert.com:

“The Librarians” is a documentary about the hysterical, unfounded, personal, and sometimes violent attacks on librarians. It is also about their unwavering commitment to making facts, literature, and inspiration available to anyone.

And:

The film has some indelibly searing moments, linking these efforts to Senator Joseph McCarthy’s Red Scare, to Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels’ burning books by Jewish authors, and to the Twilight Zone episode “The Obsolete Man,” with Burgess Meredith as a librarian sentenced to death. There is a quote from President Eisenhower: “Don’t think you’re going to conceal faults by concealing evidence they ever existed. Read every book.”

The Librarians is out in theaters now but not very widely, so you’ll have to check the list of screenings on their web site.

Target Practice

DON’T LET THE OLD MAN IN

We’re invisible

When was the last time

Anybody turned their head

Crossing us down main street?

We’re ghosts

Some kind of walking dead

We made it this far

That’s no mean feat

It’s not too late

Nor too soon

It’s not too late

Now is the time

Never surrender, never quit

Clench your teeth with grit

Shout Alalalalai

Alexander’s battle cry

Since you must be eighty

To make it to president

There’s mileage ahead of us

Come on cheer up matey

We’re in the zone, the right segment

The age of the really strong

More often right than wrong

It’s not too late

Nor too soon

It’s not too late

Now is the time

Never wiser, never better

Still the same go-getter

We’re shepherd dogs not sheep

A promise we must keep

It’s not too late

Nor too soon

Not too late

Don’t let the old man in


Alan Bennett, now 91, is one of the last living writers who grew up in the shadow of not just the Second World War – but the First World War too. He was brought up in Leeds, surrounded by First Word War veterans and war widows.

Bennett is completely drenched in the past, but not in a rose-tinted version. It’s more nostalgia in its original Greek sense – the pain of going back.

No wonder he is pitch perfect in The Choral, a quite wonderful film. It’s very moving and very funny – the rare combination that Bennett specialises in, where the poignancy heightens the humour and vice versa.

It’s the story of the Choral Society, set in 1916 in a Yorkshire mill town – filmed in Saltaire’s splendid, robust classical terraces and mighty Salts Mill. 

The tragedy of war is the ever-present background to the story but, cleverly, you never see a single scene on the Front.

Because the upmarket male singers of the Choral have joined up, the society must recruit rough teenagers – and a new choirmaster, in the shape of Dr Henry Guthrie (Ralph Fiennes).

 The Choral (12A). Film Review. By Harry Mount


Luis Alberto de Cuenca


William of Aquitaine Returns 

I’m going to make a poem out of nothing.
You and I will be the protagonists.
Our emptiness, our loneliness,
the deadly boredom, the daily defeats: 
all these things will go into the poem,
which is bound to be short, since they  
fit in a few lines, maybe as few as seven,
or perhaps eight, if this last line counts.

—Translated from the Spanish by Gustavo Pérez Firmat
  

These Anemones, Their Song Is Made Up As They Float Along 

In 1954, in June
I saw a total eclipse of the sun by the moon.
I saw the flowers fold up, the birds
Stopped singing to the morning, the grass
Grew wet, and it was dark.
I was awake, but when I was awake
A while longer I woke up and said
“I have slept until now,” and now
I have stopped sleeping altogether.

 



“I’ve never thought of myself as a translator, more as someone who has done some translations,” Eliot Weinberger says in his Art of the Essay interview, which appears in our new Fall issue. “Of course, I worked with Paz for thirty years, and I did Huidobro’s Altazor, three times actually, and Villaurrutia’s Nostalgia for Death and some other things.” This week, we’re featuring some of those Paz translations.


Octavio Paz


Target Practice

The tide covers, discovers, recovers, and always walks in the nude.
The tide weaves and unweaves, embraces and separates, is never the same and
never another.
The tide, sculptor of forms that last as long as their surge.
The tide breaks rocks, polishes conchs.
The tide always assaults itself.
The tide, surge of syllables of the interminable word, without beginning or end, spoken by the moon.
The tide is angry, and on some nights, beating against the rock coast, it ­announces the end of the world.
The tide, transparency crowned with whitecaps that vanish.
The perpetual tide, the unstable tide, the punctual tide.
The tide and its daggers, its swords, its tattered flags, the conquered, the victorious.
The tide, green spittle.
The tide, sleeping on the chest of the sun, dreaming of the moon.
The tide, blue and black, green and purple, dressed in the sun and undressed in the moon, spark of noon and heaving breath of night.
The tide at night, murmur of bare feet on the sand.
The tide, at dawn, opens the eyelids of the day.
The tide breathes in the deep night and, sleeping, speaks in dreams.
The tide that licks the corpses that the coast throws at it.
The tide rises, races, howls, knocks down the door, breaks the furniture, and
then, on the shore, softly weeps.
The tide, madwoman writing indecipherable signs on the rocks, signs of death.
The sand guards the secrets of the tide.
Who is the tide talking to, all night long?
The tide is honest, and eventually returns all of its drowned.
Storms come and go, the tide remains.
The tide, hard-working washerwoman of the filth that people leave on the beach.
The tide does not remember where it came from or where it’s going, lost in
its coming and going, between itself, among itself.
There, at the cliffs, the tide closes its fist and threatens the earth and sky.
The tide is immortal, its tomb is a cradle.
The tide, chained to its surge.
The melancholy of the tide under the rain in the vagaries of dawn.
The tide knocks down the trees and swallows the town.
The tide, an oily stain spreading with its millions of dead fish.
The tide, its breasts, its belly, its hips, its thighs, beneath the lips and between
the arms of the wind in heat.
The spring of sweet water leaps from the rocks and falls into the bitter tide.
The tide, mother of gods and goddess herself, the long nights weeping on the islands of Ionia, the death of Pan.
The tide contaminated with chemical waste, the tide that poisons the planet.
The tide, the living carpet on which the constellations walk on tiptoes.
The tide, lioness whipped into fury by the hurricane, panther tamed by the moon.
The beggar, the nuisance, the bore: the tide.
Lightning splits the chest of the tide, plunges, disappears, and is reborn, turned into a little foam.
The yellow tide, the hired mourner and her flock of laments, the bilious and her wealth in complaints.
The tide: does it walk asleep or awake?
Whispers, laughter, murmurs: the coming and going of the tide in the coral gardens of the Pacific and the Indian Ocean, in the cove of Unawatuna.
The tide, horizon that drifts off, hypnotist’s mirror that mesmerizes lovers.
The tide with liquid hands opens the deserted lands populated by the gaze of the contemplative.
The tide lifts these words, rocks them for a moment, and then, with a swipe, erases them.

—Translated from the Spanish by Eliot Weinberger

  
 

John Hatton: the case that almost broke me

John Hatton: the case that almost broke me

QUESTIONS: Former member for South Coast and anti-corruption crusader John Hatton has not been surprised to learn of a possible new investigation into the 1989 murder of assistant police commissioner Colin Winchester.

At 81, John Hatton is learning to ski and has returned from six weeks in New Zealand, which is why he missed the ACT Supreme Court’s reference last month to Mafia involvement in Colin Winchester’s murder.


Organised crime figures who believed they had been double-crossed were said to have a motive for killing assistant federal police commissioner Winchester, but police had been unwilling to reinvestigate Mafia links.

Clive Small who was Huge - Give Until it Hurts: We’re not a cult’ and a call for $250 million

The policeman who held the thin blue line - But Clive Small


High crime courses through Australian generations like a never-ending story, with sometimes interchangeable heroes and villains. But Clive Small, who died this week, rose from the lowest ranks to assistant commissioner and stood tall for truth and justice, a singular paladin in a NSW police force once seared by corruption.
He cleaned up Cabramatta after police had allowed drugs to turn the suburb into a hellhole and cleared NSW policeman Harry Blackburn – wrongly charged with rape, robbery and kidnapping – despite pressure from higher up to drop the case. His investigations over three decades included the murder of anti-drugs campaigner Donald Mackay, the Nugan Hand bank scandal involving money-laundering, drugs and illegal tax avoidance schemes, the shooting of police officer Michael Drury, the murder of Cabramatta MP John Newman and, his most famous case, the backpacker murders, which led to Ivan Milat’s eventual conviction.
In 1994 Small was appointed to head a 20-strong team, Task Force Air, to investigate the murders of young backpackers reported missing between 1989 and 1992 after their bodies started turning up in shallow graves in the Belanglo State Forest. At the outset there was no suspect, the first victim had vanished years earlier and five of the seven victims were from overseas, their movements in Australia unclear. Seven months later, Small had got his man. Milat was found guilty after a 15-week trial and jailed for seven consecutive life sentences. He died in prison in 2019.
The high-profile cases made Small a much-admired officer and exemplar. He was the antidote to his contemporary, the bad cop Roger Rogerson, and over the years was portrayed in law and order series and commentaries, not always to his liking. Small co-authored a number of books on his career to put the record straight.
And his fame certainly threatened his seniors and jealous rivals in NSW Police, who either moved him out of the way or undermined him.
Small’s high media profile rightly or wrongly made him a clean cop when much of the police force smelt to high heaven, and the people of NSW knew it. The Wood Royal Commission, conducted between 1995 and 1997, found widespread corruption, with people murdered by police and many illegal activities, including prostitution, drugs and gambling, supported by the police. An outsider, Peter Ryan, was brought in from England as police commissioner to clean up the force, and he named Small his chief of crime agencies to upgrade investigations into organised crime.
He served as a special adviser on crime prevention to the Premier’s Department for two years. But amid murky claims that he was a contender for the top job and allegations of undermining officials and politicians, Small left the police force after 40 years when the then commissioner Ken Moroney, the man selected by the Labor state government to replace Ryan, did not renew his contract.
Small went on to become chief investigator for Irene Moss’ NSW Independent Commission Against Corruption in 2004, before retiring in 2009.
NSW needs more officers like Clive Small.


Give Until it Hurts: We’re not a cult’ and a call for $250 million: Inside Exclusive Brethren’s rallying call to members

Leaked recordings reveal the church’s leadership swinging back at the Prime Minister labelling it a cult and how it plans to deal with a tax office probe. 

By Michael Bachelard 
22 NOVEMBER 2025

The leaders of extremist religious sect the Plymouth Brethren Christian Church this week tightened their grip over every aspect of their members’ lives and finances, while rejecting the prime minister’s accusation that they’re a cult.
Leaked audio from the church’s annual conference, Strive 26, held on Monday and obtained by this masthead, features Dean and Charles Hales – two of the ultra-wealthy sons of the “Man of God”, Bruce Hales – pressuring the Brethren “saints” to give more money and to hand over more financial information to centrally controlled companies.
The church is facing an ongoing Australian Taxation Office investigation, scrutiny from a parliamentary committee over its widespread support for Peter Dutton at the last election, and a number of audits of its publicly funded school system.

Friday, November 21, 2025

Revolutions Mike Duncan - Lucifer bee

‘We’ll die before we run out of history - Sydney 26 and 27  Nov 2025 sold out’


Michael William Duncan (born February 14, 1980) is an American political history podcaster and author.  Revolutions, ran for ten seasons over the course of nine years, covering the AmericanFrench, and Russian revolutions, among others.

Mike Duncan discusses the Velvet Revolution and "Velvet Divorce" in a podcast episode of 
"Everything Everywhere Daily". The Velvet Revolution was the 1989 non-violent transition of power in Czechoslovakia, while "Velvet Divorce" refers to the subsequent peaceful split of the country into the Czech Republic and Slovakia. Duncan is the host of the history podcasts "Revolutions" and "The History of Rome". 
  • Velvet Revolution: A non-violent, peaceful transition of power in Czechoslovakia that occurred from November 17 to December 28, 1989.
  • Velvet Divorce: The subsequent, equally peaceful separation of Czechoslovakia into the two independent countries of the Czech Republic and Slovakia, which took effect on January 1, 1993
  • On Bluesky bsky.app/profile/theresthistory.bsky.social

We’re insanely hubristic’: how The Rest Is History became the world’s biggest history podcast


Dominic Sandbrook: “I want to understand the past through the past’s own eyes”

The_Rest_Is_History 

Hosted byDominic SandbrookTom Holland


IS THAT WORSE THAN MURDER HORNETS:  New ‘Lucifer Bee’ species discovered in Australia.


Aussies erupt over luxury unit complex with a 'rich door' and a 'poor door' that stops wealthy residents having to interact with those who are 'less important'



“The reason there are no weird blogs anymore is that it’s more fruitful to drive them out of business.” Private equity is ripping media into shreds.


THE NEW SPACE RACE:  China’s Shenzhou 20 astronauts return to Earth after space debris scare: The trio returned to Earth more than a week late — and aboard a different spacecraft than the one that carried them up to orbit


 Jerry Douglas on dobro


John Cochrane on causal identification.


What are the density trends in major cities around the world?


You Can Now Invest In A Hedge Fund Dedicated To Hermès Bags.


What does it mean for an experiment to be beautiful?


In Cambridge [UK], even a 10-home scheme can trigger a requirement for a public art strategy that should equal 1% of the construction cost!


Andrej on his Tesla ride


New Yorker fact checkers confirm that AI song really did hit #1 on the C&W charts


 Here is the 5.1 Thinking model on different kinds of humor in Woody Allen movies, and then a follow-up question on the influence of Bergman.  Impressive, as is the model more generally

Australia finds that AI can clone voices from just a photo

 


Google says its new AI powered defenses block 10 billion scam calls and texts on Android each month
 
China sentences five to death for operating scam compounds
 
Europol takes down three large credit card fraud operations; 18 arrested; used stolen card numbers to launder fraud money; over €300 million in losses
 
Digital Arrest Scams.  There is much angst in India about this type of fraud. But from reading articles about this, I’m not sure there is agreement about just what this consists of. It does seem to begin with a call from a law enforcement impersonator, claiming that the victim has been involved and threatening arrest. Beyond that I’m not sure if this is actually a different pitch than the scams we see that tell victims that they need to move their money to the caller to keep it “safe.”  So it may be just a new term for a fraud that we already see. But I’m be interested in hearing from anyone that knows more than I.
 

Fraud Studies: Here are links to the studies I’ve written for the Better Business Bureau: puppy fraudromance fraud; BEC fraudsweepstakes/lottery fraud,  tech support fraudromance fraud money mulescrooked movers, government impostersonline vehicle sale scamsrental fraud, gift cards,  free trial offer frauds,  job scams,  online shopping fraud,  fake check fraud and crypto scams
 
Fraud News Around the world Humor Artificial Intelligence and deep fake fraudBenefit Theft Scam CompoundsBitcoin and Crypto FraudRansomware and data breachesRomance Fraud and Sextortion