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.

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508 #44: Vendors

508 is a show about Worcester. This week’s panel is Brendan Melican, Cha-Cha Connor, Kevin Ksen, and Bruce Russell.

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There is a surprising amount of activity around proposed restrictions on Worcester street vendors. The Catholic Worker national gathering was held in Worcester last week. Worcester is trying to get people to buy homes.

See also: Morris Day vs. a wild animal.

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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.
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Salve Regina from mass for the 75th anniversary of the Catholic Worker movement

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Catholic Worker National Gathering, July 12, 2008, Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Church, Worcester, Massachusetts.

Sung by the congregation, backed by a great choir. The recorder was 2 feet from Fr. Carl Kabat, and you can hear him loud and clear.

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Father Bernie Gilgun’s homily at the mass for the 75th anniversary of the Catholic Worker movement

IMG_0002Catholic Worker National Gathering, July 12, 2008, Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Church, Worcester, Massachusetts.

Father Bernie Gilgun is a long-time Catholic Worker. I would welcome a transcription of this homily.

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Catholic Worker history discussion at the 75th anniversary Catholic Worker gathering

History panel

Catholic Worker National Gathering, July 11, 2008, Our Lady of Mt. Carmel, Worcester, Massachusetts.

Introduction by Michael Boover of Anna Maria College. The panel for this discussion was moderated by historian David O’Brien of Holy Cross College. Panel includes Mel Piehl, author of Breaking Bread: The Catholic Worker and the Origins of Catholic Radicalism in America, and the Dean of Humanities and History at Valparaiso University; Nancy Roberts, history professor at New York University, Albany, and author of The Influence of Dorothy Day and the Catholic Worker Movement, and American Catholic Pacifism; Rosalie Riegle, Author of Voices of the Catholic Worker, professor emerita of theology at the College of Saint Benedict; and Dan McKanan, author of The Catholic Worker After Dorothy Day: Practicing the Works of Mercy in a New Generation, and now at Harvard.

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Peacemaking discussion at the 75th anniversary Catholic Worker gathering

IMG_0055Catholic Worker National Gathering, July 10, 2008, Our Lady of Mt. Carmel, Worcester, Massachusetts.

The main panel for this discussion was Bishop Thomas Gumbleton of Detroit, Michigan, former President of Pax Christi USA and internationally recognized peacemaker; Catholic Worker Claire Schaeffer-Duffy of Worcester; and Catholic Worker Frank Cordaro of Des Moines. Many others joined in.

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Robert Ellsberg at the 75th anniversary Catholic Worker gathering

IMG_0040Catholic Worker National Gathering, July 10, 2008, Our Lady of Mt. Carmel, Worcester, Massachusetts.

Robert Ellsberg was managing editor of the New York Catholic Worker newspaper from 1976-1978, and a member of the NYCW community from 1975-1980, the last 5 years of Dorothy Day’s life. After leaving the NYCW, he became a Catholic and editor-in-chief of Orbis Books, where he is now the publisher. He most recently edited The Duty of Delight: The Diaries of Dorothy Day.

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