Kevin Ksen: sexiest of men

from Kevin Ksen Polka
(copyright 2008 Nat Needle)

Oh, lots of folks love soccer, they play it every day
But Kevin loves his soccer so, it carries him away
He butts his head, he kicks his legs, and if by chance he falls
The women rush the field so they can play with Kevin’s balls

CHORUS: Oh…
Kevin Ksen, he’s the sexiest of men
Kevin Ksen, he’s the sexiest of men
Kevin Ksen, he’s the sexiest of men
And if you don’t believe him, he will tell you once again
And if you don’t believe him, he will tell you once again

(Happy birthday, Kevin!)

Two comments on two quotes from Nassim Nicholas Taleb

The first quote is from NNT’s book The Black Swan:

These were the days when it was extremely common for traders to break phones when they lost money. Some resorted to destroying chairs, tables, or whatever would make noise. Once, in the Chicago pits, another trader tried to strangle me and it took four security guards to drag him away. He was irate because I was standing in what he deemed his “territory.” Who would want to leave such an environment? Compare it to lunches in a drab university cafeteria with gentle-mannered professors discussing the latest departmental intrigue.

This reminds me of part of the reason I miss living in a Catholic Worker community in those times (like now) when I’m not. The world of finance gave NNT plenty of firsthand opportunities to practice his philosophy of uncertainty, just like a CW house gives someone interested in ethics/religion/politics more than enough real world confrontation with these issues in a given day. Praxis, praxis, praxis.

Also reminds me of a quote from this interview with Steve Van Evera on Iraq:

I felt the neoconservatives were the wrong crowd to be assigned a tough task like this. I think they’re almost congenitally incompetent. For reasons having to do with the way they function as a group. They’re kinda like a cult. They don’t talk much to outsiders. They have great suspicion of the rest of the foreign policy community, so they don’t rub shoulders with others. They don’t share thoughts with people they don’t agree with. And to me, if you want to be smart, you’d better talk to people you don’t agree with. Cause that’s the way you get smart.

The second quote comes from the profile “Nassim Nicholas Taleb: the prophet of boom and doom.” He explains why he’s still a practicing Christian:

Scientists don’t know what they are talking about when they talk about religion. Religion has nothing to do with belief, and I don’t believe it has any negative impact on people’s lives outside of intolerance. Why do I go to church? It’s like asking, why did you marry that woman? You make up reasons, but it’s probably just smell. I love the smell of candles. It’s an aesthetic thing.

I admire his honesty and self-awareness.

Continue reading “Two comments on two quotes from Nassim Nicholas Taleb”

Jägerstätter, now with better subtitles

The Center for Christian Nonviolence has released a new version of the Franz Jägerstätter movie The Refusal, with clearer English subtitles. (YouTube version)

Every time I’ve screened this, people have complained about the subtitles, so this is a welcome improvement.
Continue reading “Jägerstätter, now with better subtitles”

Peter Maurin speaks

According to Tom Cornell, the only recording of Peter Maurin’s voice was taken from a wire recording made circa 1946-47. Several copies of this were pressed to 78rpm and sent to supporters of the Catholic Worker. He’s reading his easy essay “Makers of Europe,” or “When the Irish were Irish.” (The Catholic Worker archives lists this as c. 1939.)

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Download the mp3 or see other formats.

Book: Justice Seekers, Peace Makers

Another Michael True work posted online this week: PDFs from his book Justice Seekers, Peace Makers. Don’t be surprised if some of these chapters show up as future posts on Pie and Coffee.

  1. Martin Luther King, Jr. (1929­-1968)
  2. Howard Zinn (1921-)
  3. Fr. Daniel Berrigan, S.J. (1921­-)
  4. Muriel Rukeyser (1913­-1980)
  5. Mulford Sibley (1912­-1989)
  6. Hannah Arendt (1907­-1975)
  7. George Orwell (1903­-1950)
  8. Dorothy Day (1897­-1980)
  9. Ammon Hennacy (1893­-1970)
  10. Wilfred Owen (1893­-1918)
  11. Elizabeth Gurley Flynn (1890­-1964)
  12. Randolph Bourne (1886­-1918)
  13. Bertrand Russell (1872­-1970)
  14. Mohandas Gandhi (1869­-1948)
  15. Eugene Victor Debs (1855­-1926)
  16. Leo Tolstoy (1828­-1910)
  17. Abigail Kelley Foster (1811-1887) and Stephen Symonds Foster (1809-1881)

Theorists of Nonviolence: Ballou, Tolstoy, Gandhi, and Sharp

Adin Ballou is a truly revolutionary figure, deserving of serious public and scholarly attention. I want to focus on his achievement as a theorist of nonviolence: how his life and writings contributed to a clarification of language and thought in the long effort to find the most suitable name for the concept often called nonviolence.
Continue reading “Theorists of Nonviolence: Ballou, Tolstoy, Gandhi, and Sharp”

Patrick Duffy is confirmed

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Patrick Duffy was one of 25 confirmed today at St. Peter’s in Worcester. I was honored to be his sponsor.

I occasionally see an article about what baby names are popular, but never confirmation names. So for the curious, here were the confirmation names: Patrick, Marcella, Sophia, Anne, Dwayne, Beatrice, William, John (Pat Duffy’s), James, Arthur, Angelica, Andrew, Christopher, Emmanuel, Marie, Elizabeth, Mateo (first name: Matthew), Concepcion, Andre, Clare, Manami, Sebastia, Daniel (first name: Daniel), Thea, Del Transito.

(We weren’t allowed to pick confirmation names when I was confirmed. Yes, I’m still bitter about that.)

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