Quote of the Day

In most online conversations I’ve been involved with, you eventually come to a point where the people interested in an evolving, exploratory dialogue, in learning something new about themselves and others, in thinking aloud, in working through things, find themselves worn out by a kind of rhetorical infection inflicted by bad faith participants who are just there to affirm what they already know and attack everything that doesn’t conform to that knowledge. (Or by the classic “energy creatures” whose only objective is to satisfy their narcissism.) I used to think that was a function of the size of the room, that in a bigger discursive space, richer possibilities would present themselves. Now I don’t know…

Timothy Burke

(via Megan McArdle)

Return of the Vanquished

Via Instapundit comes a story about the return of a once-vanquished  nutritional disease, rickets, due to people not watching their children’s nutrition because they assumed that breast feeding would supply all the nutrients needed. This fits a similar pattern in which health concerns that  disappeared  in most of the West by the 1960s have begun to reemerge.  

In all these cases, the cause is an  exaggerated  concern for an unrelated health matter that generates unintended side effects.  

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David Baron, Call Your Office

Llamas are rampaging through Kansas.