Bunker Mulligan "Let us endeavor so to live that when we come to die even the undertaker will be sorry." ~Mark Twain

April 23, 2004

A Rival Magician

Filed under: Bunker's Favorites,Mark Twain,Politics — Bunker @ 6:38 pm

Mark Twain wrote about this Presidential election in 1889.

Sir Boss has just performed a miracle (using his practical scientific skills), yet the very next day everyone shuns him in favor of a “great new magician.” Sir Boss trips up the impostor with several simple tests, yet the fraud continues to hold his audience.

How quick some are to abandon what we know for what we hope, in spite of overwhelming evidence contrary to that hope.

Bush is Sir Boss. Kerry plies many incantations to no real effect, yet people still follow.

The extended entry link below contains Twain’s text.
(more…)

Pat Tillman

Filed under: Bunker's Favorites,Society-Culture — Bunker @ 5:14 pm

Pat Tillman.

I don’t think I need to say much more than that. Birdie wanted me to write about his fellow Ranger, but I really have no more particulars to offer than most of the other sites reflecting on his death.

I have written about the sense of honor that basic military training instills in our young people. Pat had it before he went to training. It is what made him volunteer. It is what put him in harm’s way in a foreign land.

I had an affinity for Pat. My oldest is like him in many ways. Slice was a very good linebacker in high school, he was recruited by Division I schools to be a safety because of his size. He played Division III instead so he could stay at linebacker, and get the education to go to medical school. Instead, he became a Marine. He is also in Afghanistan.

My youngest is, like Pat, a Ranger. He is now back in the US after tours in both Afghanistan and Iraq. Pat’s death touches me a little more deeply because I feel I knew him through my boys.

According to AP, “Tillman carried a 3.84 grade point average through college and graduated with high honors in 3 1/2 academic years with a degree in marketing.” So much for the military being the refuge for losers.

Sometimes it takes something like this to bring people to their senses and make them realize this is not some imaginary war, and we need to get the job done right. Rick left a comment at LGF quoting a man who had a tremendous sense of these things, and the ability to verbalize the right feeling:

It is foolish and wrong to mourn the men who died. Rather we should thank God that such men lived.
General George S. Patton

David has started a campaign to have the NFL retire #40 as baseball did with Jackie Robinson’s number.

Commissioner Paul Tagliabue
National Football League, Inc.
280 Park Avenue
New York, NY 10017
(212) 450-2000.

UPDATE: The Drill Sergeant has a wonderful piece on this.

Algeria II

Filed under: International — Bunker @ 2:11 pm

Wretchard compares Kerry to De Gaulle. Appropriate.

Classic Courses

Filed under: Bunker's Favorites,Golf — Bunker @ 11:09 am

Judging golf courses as “classic” has become a bit of a fireside hobby. It is a marketing tool for resorts and daily fee courses around the world, so there is often some propagandizing that goes along with the effort. Golf Digest and Golf Magazine often publish articles citing the Top 100, Top 25, or Top Courses You Can Play. They?re tedious, in my view, and serve primarily to boost advertising revenue.

In The Classic Golf Course, Trevor Ledger puts in his perspective: history, harmony, and location. Of the three, I would substitute course strategy for location.

As an example of location, Ledger cites the Old Course at St. Andrews.

Take St Andrews Old Course for example; that exact layout could be reproduced anywhere in the world if enough money and expertise were available but would it be as popular? Would it be as ‘good’ a golf course? Would it be a new ‘Mecca’? Nay, nay and thrice nay. The replica would not have the Eden Estuary to provide the scenic backdrop and coastal weather systems.

I agree that the location in this instance adds something, but that single attribute is completely overshadowed by his two other parameters. In fact, it is more closely aligned with harmony, as location could be any shoreline locale that offered similar aesthetics. It is classic partly due to the harmony with existing terrain.

History is essential. A course must stand up to play over decades, showing a challenging and different face with changing conditions and players. I?ve played Pasatiempo in Santa Cruz, California, recently, and can agree with Ledger and Tom Doak on many points regarding this Alister MacKenzie design:

Mackenzie had intimate knowledge of the ground at Pasatiempo in California, loving it so much that he built his last home there in 1932 and his ashes were spread across it in 1934. Doak himself is refreshing in his admission of awe at the subtlety that Mackenzie employed, finishing his review with: “True to Mackenzie form, it plays much longer than the 6,400 yards on the scorecard; I wish I knew how he managed to do that.”

It plays long because MacKenzie understood the terrain he built the course on, and used it to “lengthen” the course. One example is the third hole, a par 3. It is 217 yards long, all uphill. You must hit the green or the rough around it, else you find your ball rolling back down the approach about 30 yards. The left front of the green has a bunker, so a high fade is in danger of landing in sand. It all seems so logically simple, yet required solid understanding of local wind and rain patterns to build.

That, to me, highlights what is classic. Pasatiempo, Augusta National, Pinehurst #2, the Old Course, and Pebble Beach all have endured. But that endurance requires ability to change. Each was considered a work in progress for years. Augusta National still is. That is based not on changes necessary for golf, but changes necessary for Tour golf.

Classic courses all challenge the golfer with different shots. Nothing is more tedious than playing a course with a driver and a sand wedge all the way around. This is emphasized in many newer courses on the par 3 holes. Most new courses have four, five, or six sets of tee boxes to accommodate golfers of all skill levels. But four par-3s on any given course will all measure about the same distance from the back tees?something close to 200 yards. Every one. On a calm day, they all require the same club off the tee.

My home course is far from being a classic, but the architecture certainly has the potential. We have several risk-reward holes, some par-5s that can be reached in two (with out of bounds and other trouble as risk), and a variety of par-4s. If played down the fairway, as designed, it can yield some low scores. Go at it from the wrong direction, double bogies ensue. But even so, there are a few clubs in my bag that never come into play unless I do something stupid.

Golf is a mental game above all. There are certainly physical skills involved, but the mental is overpowering. A classic course is one where you are challenged to keep your mind focused on the shot at hand. A classic course offers distractions in the form of scenery, predominant winds, deceptive slopes, and optical illusions. It offers some risk and reward options. It must challenge your mind, but be a pleasure to play even when your score isn?t as good as it might be. History plays a big role in that aspect. When I played Pebble Beach, I shot 103. But I enjoyed every one of those strokes. I insisted on playing across the cliffs on #8, and put two balls in the ocean. But it was something that I had to do for myself?make it across to the green like Nicklaus or Palmer.

Shinnecossett in Groton, Connecticut, is a classic. It isn?t well-known, but it is still a classic. Donald Ross designed it, which gives it instant credibility. But is has been in operation for more than a century. And it offers a challenge along with scenery. It is typical Ross, with domed greens, hidden bunkers, and false fronts. Its holes are varied, yet all come together as a whole. It isn?t long, but can play that way if you stray.

This appreciation and knowledge of the bare canvas from which a golf course develops is seemingly passed on to the golfer who plays it. Perhaps this is that indefinable ‘something’ which marks a course as a classic, the subconscious knowledge that the course is at one with the land whence it came.

A course that flows gently through the landscape while providing a full range of challenges is the goal of every quality architect.

Honor

Filed under: International — Bunker @ 6:19 am

Honor is something ingrained in every military man and woman from the beginning. Our nation was founded by men of honor, who saw themselves not as future rulers, but guardians of liberty for all. The concept of service was more than lip service.

The American Thinker carries an article by Christopher Orlet that puts the insurgency in Iraq into proper perspective as regards honor.

Coffins

Filed under: Society-Culture — Bunker @ 5:48 am

What is the fascination with coffins all about?

A small group of people became very incensed that a Bush campaign ad showed a flag-draped body being carried away from the World Trade Center rubble, yet now (and even before) are crying and filing FOI requests to get photos of flag-draped coffins at Dover AFB. This morning on a call-in show on the radio, I listened to some man froth at the mouth as he complained that we all need to look at these coffins to see what the war is costing us.

Let me give you losers a clue. I do not want to see them. Seeing them serves no purpose. When I do see these pictures, I honor in my heart the person who lost his life. Doing something for me.

Seeing the coffins steels my resolve. It does not diminish it. I think it does the same for most Americans. For that reason, I don’t get upset one way or the other about the issue. I just can’t understand the emotion these folks feel who insist we look at the photos.

I do understand their logic. They want Bush to lose. They have no concern for our men and women in the field. They are simply symbols to serve this group’s emotional need. I’ve dealt with this type before. I’ve been spat on by their brethren. “Baby-killer” is an archaic phrase. If they had any brain cells that functioned, they would come up with something new. But, that’s what their professors told them to say. And think. My oldest, a Marine captain in Afghanistan, replies to people who ask him how he could kill babies, “It’s not all that difficult. They really can’t defend themselves.” That pretty well ends the conversation. If a Marine or soldier is a baby killer, what is an abortion doctor? Can you say “Hypocrisy”?

Look, if you want to froth at the mouth, please feel free to do so. If I don’t care to join you, I really don’t have to. But at least I didn’t spit on you.

April 22, 2004

Training for War

Filed under: Military — Bunker @ 6:50 pm

Drill Sergeant Rob has his new platoon beginning to shape up. For any of you who have not been through basic training in the military, it is time for you to learn something.

The Drill Sergeant explains how the training he’s giving these young studs will serve them well in the future when they may very well come under fire. But the lessons go far beyond that.

About day 3 everyone starts wondering “What the hell am I doing here?!” What they’re doing is learning life lessons. Those lessons can be beneficial on the battlefield, in business, or even in discussions about the current war against terrorists.

That’s where the Drill Sergeant takes the message.

Read it. Now.

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