Ostensibly exploring the practice of law before the internet. Heck, before good highways for that matter.
Wednesday, September 2, 2015
Tuesday, September 1, 2015
Denali
Truly, I thought the name had been officially changed way back then.
Glasses

It's interesting, however, how many people hardly wear glasses ever. Contact lenses and surgery have impacted that heavily. Some people, however, wear them for an affectation. I've thought about switching to contact lenses myself, but based on my past experiences with them, and the fact that I wear bifocals, I'm disinclined to do that. Whenever I mention it as a possibility, the family is against it as well as they're used to seeing me with my rimless glasses.
But if I could omit glasses entirely, I would.
When the big science revelation falls flat on the facts

Something that's been noted a lot recently, and which genuinely should cause people concern, is that Americans have come to have an increasing contempt for science.
That's bad.
An educated, modern people, should be informing itself by science in making important decisions. And the evidence is pretty clear that at least into the 1980s, they did. But not so much now.
And part of the reason of that is that Americans also tend to get a pretty big dose of bad science, which doesn't help to build trust in science and scientist at all.
Part of that falls into the category of the big announcement that just flatly fails to comport with actual real work observations. And we've gotten a fair amount of that in the past several decades. And I say that as a person with a science background.
We got a big dose of that the past couple of weeks. At least if you are a hunter or fisherman you did, as probably every urban dweller you know sent you the news about the study that was published in Science that humans are a Super Predator and the current methods of fish and game conservation are all wrong.
There's only one problem with that study.
It completely fails to comport with actual observed information gathered over the past couple of centuries. Or at least if the reports about what it says are correct, it does.
The study raises fears that we're going to hunt and fish all wildlife into extinction as, basically, we're a Super Predator that uses technology (i.e., tools, because it includes our distant ancestors) and we take the best of our prey, and prey on other predators, and are wiping everything out.
Except, its pretty clearly we're not.
Indeed, the evidence is highly to the contrary.
All big game species hunted in North America and Europe have increased dramatically, in numbers, and in health, over the past century. All of them. The predators we're supposedly about to wipe out have, in the same areas, increased, not decreased, in the last century as well. Large ungulates are reclaiming ground that they had retreated from a century ago, in prodigious numbers. Ungulate species that were on the brink of extinction, such as the Pronghorn antelope, now exist in huge numbers. Deer exist in insanely huge numbers. Elk have increased. About the only exceptions to these rules are wear predators (remember, which we are supposedly wiping out) have been reintroduced and there are no human controls.
And all this was due to modern game management, funded almost exclusively by hunters.
In other hunted species this si also largely true. Waterfowl populations, which were headed for a collapse, recovered with the exception of a very few species, but some waterfowl species have always gone up and down in numbers. Quite a few species of birds now exist in areas that they are not native to, and thrive, as they were introduced. Again, things are going well.
And we hardly need mention small game species, the numbers of which are exploding.
So where's the data to support the Science article in North America and Europe, as to land animals? It doesn't exist.
Indeed, what the article would largely support is the introduction of North American style game management where it doesn't exist. And where some of those influences have crept in, that has worked.
I'll not go much into South America, where once again, things are largely going fine. They are in the large landmass of Russia as well. Africa and Asia definitely have their problems, however, but that's because the hunting culture there is completely different than the one mentioned above. Having said that, in Africa, where a peculiar sort of Trophy Hunting has come in, actually sees game animal numbers increasing, not decreasing. Even animals like lions, so recently in the news, are actually increasing substantially in areas where they are controlled via legal hunting. Where trouble exists in Africa, it's due to poaching, not legal hunting.
I'll abstain commentary on fish, as I don't know enough about sport fishing to comment. Maybe the article is more accurate there. But this leads to me to what I'd next note.
I'm not a "sport" fisherman, nor am I a "Trophy" hunter. I fish and hunt but I'm more in the subsistence category. I suspect most hunters fit into my category in varying degrees, although articles of this type seem to miss that. I can't blame them too much, as writing in the big game arena tends to focus on Trophy Hunting rather than Subsistence Hunting. The difference is fairly significant, but to summarize it, I'm just as likely to take a doe deer or antelope than a buck, as I'm hunting for the table. Around here, indeed, that was the norm up until perhaps the 1970s, when people who moved in, that trophy concepts came in. But the game isn't really managed that way, and there are still plenty of Subsistence Hunters around here. We aren't in a special defined category under the law, like in Alaska or the Yukon, but we exist, and that's what most hunters actually are.
Which should be encouraged. It's hunting of that type that's preserved wildlands nature around the world. It's preserving the wild, and preserving the mental sanity of our increasingly loopy species, by keeping us in touch with what we actually are, and are meant to be by nature. Truth be known, the soccer mom driving the SUV all around during the day, and who lives in a McMansion, and doesn't raise or take any of her own food is a much bigger threat to wildlife than any hunter is.
None of which is to say that there aren't problems. The commercialization of everything in American life is introducing problems by inserting a certain manor lord mentality amongst those with means that didn't previously exist, and that does cause the reduction, ultimately, of availability of everything. Urbanization is a big problem. And technology is indeed a problem, as people are defeating the limits of the natural world, but also making themselves irrelevant at the same time in everything.
But another problem is the release, in this fashion, of science that's simply contrary to the observed data.
We've seen a lot of bad science in recent decades. Immunization causes Downes Syndrome. Aluminum cookware causes Alzheimer's. All sort of bad dietary information. Other examples could be given. And when this is the case, it causes contempt for science. And that's a terrible thing. That plays to the ignoring of real problems, which is a huge problem. Scientist ought to therefore be careful about releasing studies that the observed data just doesn't support, or which is speculative in the extreme. I'm not blaming scientist for the increasing degree of contempt of science, but stuff like this doesn't help.
Monday, August 31, 2015
Tuesday, August 31, 1915. Casper becomes a first class city.
Casper, whose first buildings had been built in 1888, became a First Class City under Wyoming law, meaning that its population exceeded 4,000 residents.
It's interesting to note that Laramie was a larger city, although only slightly, at the time.
Adolphe Pégoud, France's first ace, was killed in combat. He had six combat victories.
Jimmy Laender pitched a no hitter for the Chicago Cubs.
Last edition:
Monday, August 30, 1915. Pascual Orozco killed.
Monday at the Bar: The Op Ed in the Wyoming Lawyer on the UBE
The Big Picture: Holscher's Hub: Whittier Harbor, Alaska
Sunday, August 30, 2015
Lex Anteinternet: Lex Anteinternet: Lex Anteinternet: And the band p...
Lex Anteinternet: Lex Anteinternet: Lex Anteinternet: And the band p...: Today the price of oil actually declined below $40/bbl. This is probably temporary, but how amazing.And indeed it did prove to be temporary, but perhaps signalling how down in the dumps and perhaps permanent these price depressions may be (as in economic permanent, that is long term), a jump in the price to $45-$47/bbl was due to Saudi Arabia sending troops into northern Yemen in order to keep rebels there from consolidating their forces. So it's regional instability in the Middle East, with a major oil producer, i.e., the one keeping the price low, that's caused the price to jump.
On the other hand, it turns out that Ecuador has been producing oil below its cost. It's oil has been selling for $30/bbl, and they only break even at $39/bbl. Its crazy for them to sell it at that cost, but there must be some internal economic reason for them to keep selling it at a lost. In most real free markets, they'd shut their wells in. Perhaps they will, and indeed, they'll have to, resulting in taking that oil off the market for a time.
Monday, August 30, 1915. Pascual Orozco killed.
Mexican revolutionary Pascual Orozco was killed along with four others in a controversial gun battle against Texas Rangers and soldiers of the 13th Cavalry Regiment near the U.S-Mexican border. The pursuers had not realized they were chasing Orozco, but rather reported horse thieves. Whether or not they were stolen horses is unclear, and they may just have been set up.
Friday, August 28, 2015
Random Snippets: G.K. Chesterton: "The new rebel is a skeptic"
G. K. Chesterton
Saturday, August 28, 1915. The aftermath of tragedy.
ANZACs, bolstered by the 10th Light Horse, captured part of the summit of Hill 60, but not the north face overlooking Suvla Bay.
The aftermath of tragedy:
Free footballs and bananas.
Last edition:
Friday, August 27, 1915. The death of Frankie Pershing and her children.
Thursday, August 27, 2015
Friday, August 27, 1915. The death of Frankie Pershing and her children.
Helen Frances “Frankie” Warren Pershing, wife of the future Gen. Pershing, and daughter of Sen. Francis E. Warren, died in a fire at the Presidio in San Francisco. Three out of four of the Pershing children also died in the fire.
The British reinforced their offensive at Hill 60, but the Ottomans retained the hill.
Germany resumed submarine warfare after a brief hiatus.
Last edition:
Wednesday, August 25, 1915. Capturing Brest-Litovsk. Asking for help on the border.
Wednesday, August 26, 2015
G.K. Chesterton: "He believes in himself"
WHEELS THAT WON THE WEST®: Giant Western Freight Wagon Built By M.P. Henderso...
WHEELS THAT WON THE WEST®: Giant Western Freight Wagon Built By M.P. Henderso...: Some things are hard to forget. To that point, almost twenty years ago, I purchased a book by Don Berkebile entitled, Horse-Drawn Commerci...
That is one freakin' huge wagon.
Fickle fame
Tuesday, August 25, 2015
Wednesday, August 25, 1915. Capturing Brest-Litovsk. Asking for help on the border.
The Germans captured Brest-Litovsk
The Sheriff of Jim Hogg County, Texas, asked for assistance from Federal Troops
Last edition:




