Tuesday, November 29, 2005

The Moon Climbs the Midnight Sky

You need to read this. It's the least you can do.

I've been asking myself a lot about the least I can do. Some of you know I've been pressed by this question for a long time. Even more of you know that the question was exacerbated when hundreds of my neighbors, people I don't even know, were devastated by a massive, deadly tornado a few weeks back. You've seen the pictures.

I think you should know that I've decided to do all that's in my power to become a volunteer firefighter here in Newburgh. I tell you this not because I'm particularly proud of myself (although I will say that I am proud), but with hopes that it might inspire in even one of you a crescendo of those feelings which led me to the disaster area that Sunday morning, which led tens of thousands to Ground Zero on and after 9/11, and which now lead me to brave one of nature's most brutal, untame elements simply because I consider myself able and willing to preserve my fellow man's life, limb, and property when he needs these things most.

I have to wait and see if I'll be given the opportunity to go through with this, but if not today, then tomorrow, or next year, or five years from now. My heart and my mind are set in stone. If God is willing, I will fight fires.

There's a lot more I could talk about, but I worked 12 hours today, and as my last post will testify, I have some reading to do.

Tonight, I need not venture outside to seek out the moon in the midnight sky. I have faith in its everlasting glow.

Sunday, November 27, 2005

Reading List

I need to keep track of the books I've read/want to read while I'm out here. If you're wondering why I'm still not posting, the list below has a lot to do with it ;-) I'm on a pilgrimage, if you will. Formatting and links coming soon. The book(s) I'm currently reading will be in blue. So, without further ado...



  • Viktor Frankl
    • Man's Search for Meaning


  • Barack Obama
    • The Audacity of Hope


  • Norton Juster
    • The Phantom Tollbooth


  • Ann Coulter
    • Slander
    • Treason
    • How to Talk to a Liberal (If You Must)


  • J.K. Rowling
    • Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince


  • John Bunyon
    • The Pilgrim's Progress (Part 1: Christian's Pilgrimage)
    • The Pilgrim's Progress (Part 2: Christiana's Pilgrimage)


  • Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner
    • Freakonomics


  • Christopher Moore
    • Lamb: A Novel. The Gospel According to Biff, Christ's Childhood Pal


  • Robert A. Heinlein
    • Stranger in a Strange Land
    • The Moon is a Harsh Mistress
    • Time Enough for Love


  • Bill O'Reilly
    • The O'Reilly Factor: The Good, the Bad, and the Completely Ridiculous in American Life


  • Chuck Palahniuk
    • Fight Club


  • The Qur'an


  • Ayn Rand
    • We The Living
    • Anthem
    • The Fountainhead
    • Atlas Shrugged
    • For the New Intellectual
    • The Virtue of Selfishness
    • Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal
    • Philosophy: Who Needs It?


  • Robert M. Pirsig
    • Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance
    • Lila: An Inquiry into Morals


  • Plato
    • (The) Republic
    • Everything Else


  • The Bible

    • Old Testament
      • Genesis
      • Exodus
      • Leviticus
      • Numbers
      • Deuteronomy
      • Joshua
      • Judges
      • Ruth
      • 1 Samuel
      • 2 Samuel
      • 1 Kings
      • 2 Kings
      • 1 Chronicles
      • 2 Chronicles
      • Ezra
      • Nehemiah
      • Esther
      • Job
      • Psalms
      • Proverbs
      • Ecclesiastes
      • Song of Solomon
      • Isaiah
      • Jeremiah
      • Lamentations
      • Ezekiel
      • Daniel
      • Hosea
      • Joel
      • Amos
      • Obadiah
      • Jonah
      • Micah
      • Nahum
      • Habakkuk
      • Zephaniah
      • Haggai
      • Zachariah
      • Malachi

    • New Testament
      • Matthew
      • Mark
      • Luke
      • John
      • The Acts
      • Romans
      • 1 Corinthians
      • 2 Corinthians
      • Galatians
      • Ephesians
      • Philippians
      • Colossians
      • 1 Thessalonians
      • 2 Thessalonians
      • 1 Timothy
      • 2 Timothy
      • Titus
      • Philemon
      • Hebrews
      • James
      • 1 Peter
      • 2 Peter
      • 1 John
      • 2 John
      • 3 John
      • Jude
      • The Revelation


  • C.S. Lewis
    • A Preface to Paradise Lost
    • The Pilgrim's Regress
    • Reflections on the Psalms
    • A Grief Observed
    • The Abolition of Man
    • Letters to Malcolm: Chiefly on Prayer
    • The Great Divorce
    • The Allegory of Love: A Study in Medieval Tradition
    • Spirits in Bondage
    • The Screwtape Letters
    • Screwtape Proposes a Toast
    • The Problem of Pain
    • Till We Have Faces
    • Mere Christianity
    • The Joyful Christian
    • Miracles
    • Surprised By Joy
    • All My Road Before Me: The Diary of C.S. Lewis 1922-27
    • God in the Docks
    • The Four Loves
    • Readings for Meditation and Reflection
    • Essay Collection: Faith, Christianity, and the Church
    • Essay Collection: Literature, Philosophy, and Short Stories
    • The Chronicles of Narnia
      • The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe
      • Prince Caspian
      • The Voyage of the Dawn Treader
      • The Silver Chair
      • The Horse and His Boy
      • The Magician's Nephew
      • The Last Battle


  • John Milton
    • Poems of Mr. John Milton, Both English and Latin (1645)
    • Poems, etc., Upon Several Occasions (1673)
    • The Reason of Church Government
    • An Apology for Smectymnuus
    • The Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce
    • Of Education
    • Areopagitica
    • The Tenure of Kings and Magistrates
    • Second Defence of the English People
    • The Ready and Easy Way to Establish a Free Commonwealth
    • Paradise Lost
    • Paradise Regained
    • Samson Agonistes
    • Christian Doctrine


  • Dan Brown
    • Digital Fortress
    • Angels and Demons
    • The Da Vinci Code
    • Deception Point


  • Karl Marx
    • Das Kapital
    • The Communist Manifesto


  • Dante Alighieri
    • The Divine Comedy


  • Immanuel Kant
    • Oh man, there's a lot of these


  • Dan Millman
    • Way of the Peaceful Warrior


  • Winston Churchill
    • The Crisis


  • Sun Tzu
    • The Art of War


  • Che Guevara
    • Self-Portrait: Che Guevara
    • The Diary of Che Guevara
    • The Motorcycle Diaries
    • The African Dream: The Diaries of the Revolutionary War in the Congo
    • Bolivian Diary
    • Guerilla Warfare
    • Critical Notes on Political Economy
    • Our America and Theirs
    • Manifesto: Three Classic Essays on How to Change the World


  • Whittaker Chambers
    • Witness


  • Phyllis Schlafly
    • Not sure yet...


  • Tom Robbins
    • Even Cowgirls Get the Blues


  • John Eldredge
    • Wild at Heart


  • Ernest Hemingway
    • For Whom the Bell Tolls
    • The Sun Also Rises
    • More...


  • Hunter S. Thompson
    • Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas
    • Fear and Loathing on the Campaign Trail


  • Adam Smith
    • The Wealth of Nations
    • The Theory of Moral Sentiments


  • David Hume
    • A Treatise of Human Nature
    • An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding
    • An Enquiry Concerning the Principles of Morals
    • Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion
    • Essays Moral and Political


  • Joseph Addison
    • Cato, a Tragedy


  • Thomas Reid
    • Inquiry Into the Human Mind on the Principles of Common Sense
    • Essays on the Intellectual Powers of Man
    • Essays on the Active Powers of Man


  • John Locke
    • A Letter Concerning Toleration
    • A Second Letter Concerning Toleration
    • A Third Letter for Toleration
    • Two Treatises of Government
    • An Essay Concerning Human Understanding
    • Some Thoughts Concerning Education
    • The Reasonableness of Christianity, as Delivered in the Scriptures
    • A Vindication of the Reasonableness of Christianity
    • First Tract on Government (the English Tract)
    • Second Tract on Government (the Latin Tract)
    • Essays on the Law of Nature
    • Essays Concerning Toleration
    • Of the Conduct of the Understanding
    • A Paraphrase and Notes on the Epistles of Paul


  • René Descartes
    • Compendium Musica
    • Rules for the Direction of the Mind
    • Discourse on Method
    • La Géométrie
    • Meditations on First Philosophy
    • Principles of Philosophy
    • The Singing Epitaph
    • Comments on a Certain Broadsheet
    • The Description of the Human Body
    • Conversation with Burman
    • Passions of the Soul


  • Saint Thomas Aquinas
    • Everything... and there's a lot


  • Thomas Hobbes
    • The Elements of Law, Natural and Political
    • Elementa Philosophica
    • Leviathan
    • Questions Concerning Liberty, Necessity and Chance
    • Behemoth (or The Long Parliament)


  • John Calvin
    • Institutes of the Christian Religion
    • His biblical commentaries


  • Aristotle
    • Everything, and there's a lot


  • Socrates
    • Everything, and there's a lot


  • Niccolò Machiavelli
    • Everything (and there's a lot)


  • Thomas Malthus
    • Everything


  • Adolf Hitler
    • Mein Kampf


  • Nelson Mandela
    • In His Own Words


  • The Federalist Papers


  • The 9/11 Commission Report

Monday, November 21, 2005

Behold The Wrath of God


The Wrath of God
Originally uploaded by adamnationx.
I know it's been a while. I've obviously been pretty busy lately. First there was a giant tornado, then the lack of internet thereafter, then I escaped to Purdue for the weekend, and then I was just reeling from it all. I'm here now, though. Go check out the photo set from the tornado. I'm going to read and go to bed. Tomorrow, posting commences full force. Tonight we dine on turtle soup.

Wednesday, November 02, 2005

An Elephant and a Rhinoceros? Elephino...

So I created a new blog today, called Elephino. It's so I can post all my political stuff somewhere that I can send the general public and avoid having them read about how drunk I got last night, or how confused I am about life, or whatever today's thing is. You know how it goes. Nonetheless, I will probably cross-post everything here so you guys don't have to jump back and forth, but I ask that if you want to send anyone else to read any of my political whatnot, send them to LFIKnow.blogspot.com. A fun time will be had by all. (hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha..... hahahahahaha.... *sniff* *wipes a tear* hahahahahaha.... sorry..... that's not true)

Fiscal Responsibility and Student Aid

Yesterday, Marshall University's student newspaper, the Parthenon, published (essentially) an op-ed by the federal issues coordinator of the West Virginia Citizen Action Group that caught my interest and drove me to do some research. The column concerned the House Education and Workforce Committee's budget cut proposals, made at the request of GOP leaders in Congress to curb the widening budget gap. Initially, Congress had been asked to shoot for $35 billion in reductions, but the rising costs of hurricane relief have driven Congressional leaders to ask for an extra $15 billion in reductions from a wide range of committees.

The Education and Workforce Committee was tasked with finding $18 billion in net savings from direct spending programs. In the course of its investigation, it discovered some inefficiency in the federally-subsidized student aid programs in place under the Higher Education Act. To quote the Committee's report from October 25, 2005, (emphasis mine)

Since 1965, the federal government has invested hundreds of billions of dollars in higher education on the premise that all students, regardless of financial circumstance, should have the opportunity to pursue postsecondary education. Four decades later, taxpayers are spending more than ever before on higher education, yet the goal of higher education access remains elusive to far too many American students.

There is no question that an investment in higher education pays dividends for the future. An educated workforce drives economic growth. Scientific breakthroughs keep America on the cutting edge of technological advancement. Children whose parents are college educated are more likely to pursue postsecondary education themselves, continuing the cycle of success and prosperity. Yet despite the clear imperative for an effective and efficient investment in higher education, billions of taxpayer dollars are being wasted through inefficiency and unwise public policy.
After more than a decade of tuition increases that have far outpaced the rate of inflation and growth in family incomes, it has become clear that blindly increasing federal student aid is doing nothing to solve the challenge of skyrocketing college costs. Indeed, the vast increases in federal student aid have coincided with these tuition increases, calling into question whether the current federal investments in higher education may actually be a contributing factor to the college cost explosion that is squeezing the budgets of hard working low- and middle-income American families.

Taxpayers are carrying a tremendous higher education cost burden on many fronts. In addition to the more than $70 billion in direct student aid paid for by taxpayers in FY 2005, American families are subsidizing aid to institutions, research, and numerous federal programs outside the Higher Education Act that award funding to colleges and universities. Moreover, higher education consumes a significant portion of the taxes paid at the state level, and even after all of this, families with children enrolled in college are paying more than ever before for their own tuition bills.
To ensure the federal investment in higher education is made in the best interests of students, families, and taxpayers, the Committee has developed comprehensive reforms that will expand college access for low- and middle-income students while simultaneously generating savings for taxpayers by eliminating program waste and inefficiency, trimming excess subsidies paid to lenders, and placing the aid programs on a more stable financial foundation to ensure their long-term viability and success for future generations of American students.

The Congressional Budget Office estimates these reforms would save between $14 billion and $15 billion over five years, eliminating waste on behalf of taxpayers while expanding student benefits. Taken together, these reforms will help put student aid programs on a strong financial foundation to ensure their stability now and into the future, protecting both students and taxpayers.

In short, the people who proposed this (read: Republicans) are not anti-education. They're not even trying to keep poor and middle-class West Virginians from going to Marshall. More importantly, this legislative proposal doesn't have any such results. Let's break it down.

First, let's look at the efficacy of trimming government spending on student aid while maintaining or improving the level of service. More and more American students are pursuing higher education every year. At the same time, over the last decade, tuition costs have continued to rise steadily. As such, student loan programs have grown significantly over recent years. Through investment in technology and refining its programs to maximize efficiency, loan programs have been able to provide better services to borrowers and to do so at reduced costs. The loan programs, however, are still collecting subsidies from the federal government well in excess of today's required costs for running the programs. The new proposal requires all funds acquired above the minimum guaranteed be returned to the federal government to be reinvested in the student aid program.

Today, borrowers who wish to consolidate their student loans must lock on to the prevailing fixed-interest rate of the day, regardless of whether interest rates will go down in the future. The Committee's proposal offers borrowers, for the first time in history, the opportunity to choose between keeping the variable interest rates of their student loans when consolidating or selecting a long-term fixed rate that suits each borrower's financing plans. Most consumer loan products (like mortgages) charge a 2% premium to lock in long-term fixed rates, whereas the Committee's proposal will cost the borrower 1% above the variable interest rate of the year the loan is consolidated. A one-time 1% offset fee by the borrower will allow the federal government to secure the fixed rate for up to thirty years.

Another area the Committee's proposal targets is the security of tax-payers in responsibility for loan defaults. The proposal reduces the amount of money the federal government will pay to loan companies on defaulted loans, increasing the incentive for loan companies to work with borrowers to prevent defaults in the first place so tax payers aren't forced to bear the burden.

Student borrowers pay up to 4% in loan fees today, including a 3% origination fee and a 1% default fee charged to some borrowers. With a stronger default fee structure, the Committee's proposal was able to reduce origination fees for all borrowers, resulting in total loan fees of 1%.

The proposal also attempts to compensate for tuition inflation by increasing the borrowing limit for first and second-year students (from $2,625 to $3,500 and $3,500 to $4,500, respectively), although aggregate limits will remain at $23,000. Graduate limits will increase from $10,000 to $12,000 annually.

In addition, the "single holder" rule, which which limits consumers’ ability to consolidate with the lender of their choice by requiring consumers who have all of their loans held by a single lender to consolidate with that lender, even if they could obtain better terms and service elsewhere.

There are more benefits to the Committee's proposal, all of which you can read about in their report, from which a great majority of this information was acquired.

In my next post, we can talk about why the op-ed concerns me and why it concerns me even moreso that no one (no political groups on campus, no student interest groups, no Student Government official, and certainly no one on the Parthenon's staff) found the column's egregious claims even remotely newsworthy, warranting any kind of comment or rebuttal. If student financial aid isn't important to college students, who do you think's going to care? (Wrong answer: Their parents. You don't belong in college. Go get a real job.)