User loginNavigationLive Discussions
Most popular threads
For entertainment onlyWeekly Archives09/25/05 - 10/01/05
09/18/05 - 09/24/05 09/11/05 - 09/17/05 09/04/05 - 09/10/05 08/28/05 - 09/03/05 08/21/05 - 08/27/05 08/14/05 - 08/20/05 08/07/05 - 08/13/05 07/31/05 - 08/06/05 07/24/05 - 07/30/05 07/17/05 - 07/23/05 07/10/05 - 07/16/05 07/03/05 - 07/09/05 06/26/05 - 07/02/05 06/19/05 - 06/25/05 06/12/05 - 06/18/05 06/05/05 - 06/11/05 05/29/05 - 06/04/05 05/22/05 - 05/28/05 05/15/05 - 05/21/05 05/08/05 - 05/14/05 05/01/05 - 05/07/05 04/24/05 - 04/30/05 04/17/05 - 04/23/05 04/10/05 - 04/16/05 04/03/05 - 04/09/05 more... Blog linksA Skeptical Blog NathanNewman.org Tech Notes |
Google searchTip jarDropping KnowledgeLibrary of Congress African American Odyssey Link CollectionsNews sourcesOn CultureReality checksThe Public LibraryWho's new
Who's onlineThere are currently 3 users and 135 guests online.
Online users:
...Syndicate |
Week of October 19, 2003 to October 25, 2003The other futile warby Prometheus 6
October 26, 2003 - 12:40am. on News War on Drugs Takes a Toll on the L.A. Justice System October 25, 2003 Some members of the Los Angeles City Council are supporting a tax increase to hire more police on the grounds that the city is "seriously underpoliced." This is simply not true. People who work in the Los Angeles criminal justice system are well aware that the central problem with the LAPD is not a shortage of police officers but a misallocation of personnel. Instead of fully policing the most violent, gang-infested parts of the city, a vast number of officers are toiling away in the futile "war on drugs." A good questionby Prometheus 6
October 26, 2003 - 12:22am. on News Sunday, October 26, 2003; Page B06 SECRETARY OF DEFENSE Donald H. Rumsfeld asked some tough and smart questions of his top aides in the private memo that was leaked to the press last week. At the end of his missive, he told his deputies to prepare to discuss them at an upcoming meeting. Knowing Mr. Rumsfeld's reputation as a demanding boss, we cannot help wondering how he would react if his aides served up the responses he himself has provided to Congress and the media. For example, Mr. Rumsfeld's memo argues that "we lack the metrics to know if we are winning or losing the global war on terror" and asks whether a new organization, new tactics or another presidential mandate to the intelligence community is needed. What if the answer he received was: "One could make the case that what we're doing is exactly the right thing," as Mr. Rumsfeld told the House Armed Services Committee earlier this year? Or what if, in response to his assertion that "we are having mixed results with al Qaeda," Mr. Rumsfeld's aides responded that, to the contrary, "we're finding the terrorists where they are, and we're rooting them out, and we're capturing them, we're killing them." That is what Mr. Rumsfeld said Thursday when reporters asked him about his own memo. Surely no one who served up such thin gruel would survive long in Mr. Rumsfeld's Pentagon. Which raises the question: Why does the secretary think that is the appropriate way for him to talk to Congress and the country? For months, as security conditions have worsened in Afghanistan and as U.S. troops have fought a costly war against a stubborn resistance in Iraq, Mr. Rumsfeld's habit has been to insist in public that "the progress has been quite good," that "it's gotten better every week" and that nothing has happened that has surprised him or was not anticipated in the Pentagon's prewar planning. The stonewalling has cost him much goodwill in Congress, with even Republican committee chairmen chafing over the defense secretary's refusal to talk straight. More seriously, it risks having exactly the opposite effect from what might be intended: Faced with the gap between Mr. Rumsfeld's words and the obvious troubles in Iraq and Afghanistan, much of the public may conclude that the Bush administration has either lost touch with reality or has no clear sense of how to respond to the challenges it faces. This ought to please certain members of the audienceby Prometheus 6
October 26, 2003 - 12:17am. on Politics Democratic Hopefuls Play Down Gun Control By Jim VandeHei MANCHESTER, N.H. -- Democratic presidential candidates are distancing themselves from tough gun control, reversing a decade of rhetoric and advocacy by the Democratic Party in favor of federal regulation of firearms. Most Democratic White House hopefuls rarely highlight gun control in their campaigns, and none of the candidates who routinely poll near the top are calling for the licensing of new handgun owners, a central theme of then-Vice President Al Gore's winning primary campaign in 2000. Howard Dean, the early frontrunner this year, proudly tells audiences the National Rifle Association endorsed him as governor of Vermont. As president, Dean said he would leave most gun laws to the states. The federal government, Dean said in an interview here, should not "inflict regulations" on states such as Montana and Vermont, where gun crime is not a big problem. New York and California "can have as much gun control as they want," but those states -- and not the federal government -- should make that determination, he said. Rep. Richard A. Gephardt, a longtime gun control advocate, is careful to highlight his support for law-abiding gun owners. The Missouri Democrat said he is not interested in giving the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives more authority to investigate gun crimes, a top priority for the gun control activist. "They have enough," he said in an interview. As a result, Democratic strategists and several of the candidates themselves predict the debate over gun laws this campaign will be less divisive. Democrats might fight for narrow proposals to make guns safer and more difficult for children and criminals to obtain, they said, yet voters are likely to hear as much about enforcing existing gun laws as creating new ones -- a position Republicans and the NRA have pushed for years. "What you are seeing . . . is a sea change" from the 1990s, when President Bill Clinton and Gore championed several major gun laws -- and paid a big political price for it, said Wayne LaPierre, executive vice president of the NRA. Just abroad? Just human rights issues?by Prometheus 6
October 26, 2003 - 12:09am. on News Evangelicals Sway White House on Human Rights Issues Abroad WASHINGTON, Oct. 25 ? Shortly after George W. Bush took office, an odd coalition came to the White House to see Karl Rove, the president's powerful political adviser, to ask that the United States intercede in the civil war in Sudan. The group included Charles W. Colson, the born-again Christian who spent seven months in jail for his role in Watergate, and David Saperstein, a Reform rabbi and a longtime lobbyist for liberal causes in Washington. The two-decades-long war in Sudan was not a front-burner problem for the new administration, and Mr. Rove was not a foreign policy adviser. But the religious strife between Christians and Muslims in a conflict that had killed two million people was of enormous concern to American religious groups, particularly the evangelicals who make up a major portion of President Bush's electoral base. Mr. Rove, the participants in the meeting recalled, was unusually receptive during a nearly hourlong conversation. "He made it clear how seriously the administration was going to engage on this," said Rabbi Saperstein, director of the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism. Close to three years later, the White House has lived up to Mr. Rove's promise to engage not only in peace talks in Sudan, but on other human rights issues of critical importance to American religious groups, most notably sex trafficking and AIDS. Administration officials and members of Congress say the religious coalition has had an unusual influence on one of the most religious White Houses in American history. The groups have driven aspects of foreign policy and won major appointments, and they were instrumental in making sure that the president included extensive remarks on sex trafficking in his speech to the United Nations General Assembly in September. This ought to be fun to watchby Prometheus 6
October 26, 2003 - 12:06am. on News 9/11 Commission Could Subpoena Oval Office Files MADISON, N.J., Oct. 25 ? The chairman of the federal commission investigating the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks says that the White House is continuing to withhold several highly classified intelligence documents from the panel and that he is prepared to subpoena the documents if they are not turned over within weeks. The chairman, Thomas H. Kean, the former Republican governor of New Jersey, also said in an interview on Friday that he believed the bipartisan 10-member commission would soon be forced to issue subpoenas to other executive branch agencies because of continuing delays by the Bush administration in providing documents and other evidence needed by the panel. "Any document that has to do with this investigation cannot be beyond our reach," Mr. Kean said on Friday in his first explicit public warning to the White House that it risked a subpoena and a politically damaging courtroom showdown with the commission over access to the documents, including Oval Office intelligence reports that reached President Bush's desk in the weeks before the Sept. 11 attacks. "I will not stand for it," Mr. Kean said in the interview in his offices here at Drew University, where he has been president since 1990. "That means that we will use every tool at our command to get hold of every document." He said that while he had not directly threatened a subpoena in his recent conversations with the White House legal counsel, Alberto R. Gonzales, "it's always on the table, because they know that Congress in their wisdom gave us the power to subpoena, to use it if necessary." Privatizing the military IIby Prometheus 6
October 25, 2003 - 10:02am. on News The money quote: Doug Brooks is president of the International Peace Operations Association, a nonprofit organization of private companies seeking to improve international peacekeeping efforts through greater privatization. He is a specialist on African security issues. A new twist on a long military tradition By Doug Brooks, 10/19/2003 THE US MILITARY has a long tradition of utilizing the private sector for military support. Even George Washington's army included private contractors who endured many of the same hardships and risks as the soldiers they served. Today's military is more effective than ever, but more than two centuries after Washington, it still uses the private sector to support its operations with training, technical expertise, and logistical support. Other countries recognize the cost savings and capabilities benefits of outsourcing their military support requirements and are following the American example. The military services industry is evolving as well, now offering services in nontraditional areas such as enhancing United Nations peacekeeping, where the potential humanitarian benefits are astonishing. The occupation efforts in Iraq have become a display case for outsourced military services. Privatizing the military Iby Prometheus 6
October 25, 2003 - 9:58am. on News Money quote: Indeed, the ratio of private contractors to US military personnel in the Gulf is roughly 1 to 10. Overall, the private military industry is actually our largest ally in the ``coalition of the willing'' (or perhaps we should rename it the ``coalition of billing''). For example, Global Risk Managment of the United Kingdom has 1,100 personnel in Iraq, including 500 Nepalese Gurkha troops and 500 Fijian soldiers, ranking it sixth among troop donors. The Enron Pentagon By P.W. Singer, 10/19/2003 THE IRAQ WAR has been a stunning revelation of trends that could shape the next decades of global politics and conflict - from the revolution in military technologies to the challenges presented by stability operations. However, one underexplored current is the extent to which warfare itself is being privatized. Breaking out of the ``guns for hire'' mold of traditional mercenaries, corporations now sell the sort of services that soldiers used to provide. These worldwide businesses range from small firms that supply teams of commandos for hire to large corporations that run military supply chains. This huge, new ``privatized military industry'' has operated in more than 50 countries, from Albania to Zambia. But its largest client is the US taxpayer: Over the last decade our government has signed more than 3,000 contracts with private military firms. Iraq is not just the biggest US military commitment in generations, it is also the biggest market for private military services - ever. Before the war, private firms helped with the invasion's training and planning. During the war, private military employees handled everything from feeding and housing US troops to maintaining our most sophisticated weapons systems, like the B-2 stealth bomber or the Global Hawk UAV. Let's get this No Child Left Behind crap out of the wayby Prometheus 6
October 25, 2003 - 9:52am. on News Student Test Scores Jump October 25, 2003 California high schools, which had been the weak link in efforts to raise achievement levels, showed significant signs of improvement this year on state tests, according to results released Friday. More than two-thirds of high school campuses met test score goals set by the state, twice as many schools as last year, the new statistics showed. Teachers and administrators attributed the improved results on the state's Academic Performance Index to an intense focus on California's academic standards in English and math, which spell out the skills and material students are supposed to know at each grade level. For the first time, those standards accounted this year for most questions on annual standardized tests. Experts also pointed to students' growing familiarity with the 5-year-old mainly multiple-choice exams, noting that schools regularly give practice tests to get students comfortable with the format. Jack O'Connell, the state superintendent of public instruction, said that such "teaching to the test" makes sense now that all schools are aware of what students need to learn. "If you are teaching to the standards, you are simultaneously teaching to the test," O'Connell said. And how much of THIS tax cut goes to the middle class?by Prometheus 6
October 24, 2003 - 12:01pm. on News House Leaders Are Pushing to Cut Corporate Taxes WASHINGTON, Oct. 23 -- House Republican leaders are nearing agreement on a bill to give nearly $60 billion in additional tax breaks to corporations, brushing aside Democratic complaints that the measure would deepen the federal budget deficit. According to a draft circulated among Republican lawyers, the bill, which is expected to come up for a vote next week at the House Ways and Means Committee, would gradually reduce the corporate tax rate for most companies from 35 to 32 percent. It would also relax or abolish a number of longstanding tax regulations on foreign profits of American multinationals, a move that Congressional tax analysts say could save companies more than $40 billion in taxes over the next decade. The intended beneficiaries are companies that manufacture products in the United States and small businesses. But the definition of manufacturing includes movies, software, oil and gas refining and engineering services. That means the beneficiaries would also include Time Warner, Disney, Microsoft and giant engineering companies like Bechtel and Fluor. The proposals are in the latest draft of a bill to replace a tax break for American exporters that the World Trade Organization has declared an illegal trade subsidy. The European Union has threatened to retaliate with up to $4 billion a year in tariffs on American products if the United States fails to repeal the old break. But the original issue has become a magnet for lobbying from competing business groups, all looking to either protect their existing tax breaks or obtain some new ones. Welcome to the clubby Prometheus 6
October 24, 2003 - 11:56am. on News Only Ari Fleischer ever surpassed Rummy's ability to put off questions. The problem Republicans have is, they never even asked any until now. Rumsfeld Draws Republicans' Ire By DOUGLAS JEHL and DAVID FIRESTONE WASHINGTON, Oct. 23 -- Last Friday, the Republican chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee and his top Democratic colleague sent a private letter to Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld that questioned the propriety of comments made by a top Pentagon general, William G. Boykin. Mr. Rumsfeld not only did not respond, but on Tuesday, after the chairman, Senator John W. Warner of Virginia, made the letter public, the defense secretary said he knew nothing about it. "It may be somewhere around the building," Mr. Rumsfeld told reporters on Capitol Hill, "but I am not aware of it." The episode was described this week by senior Republican Congressional officials as emblematic of what some now openly call the high-handedness and lack of respect shown by Mr. Rumsfeld, whose steps and missteps in the past month have drawn increasing Republican ire. On issues that include General Boykin (who has likened the war against Islamic militants to a battle against Satan) and his own views about the war on terrorism (and the gap between Mr. Rumsfeld's glossy public assessments and the more roughly hewn private views that leaked out this week), senior Republicans have joined Democrats in openly complaining that the Pentagon has left them in the dark and vulnerable on critical and sensitive political issues. Better than expectedby Prometheus 6
October 24, 2003 - 11:52am. on News Then again, rising money is the Republican's greatest skill. Donations to Rebuild Iraq May Fall Short of $55 Billion Target By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Filed at 9:56 a.m. ET MADRID, Spain (AP) -- Nudged by the United States, donors came through Friday with pledges big and small for Iraq but were falling short of the estimated $56 billion needed to rebuild the country. While the pledges were greater than expected, many were in the form of loans or debt relief for a nation already burdened with an estimated $120 billion in debt run up during Saddam Hussein's rule. Law 'n' Orderby Prometheus 6
October 24, 2003 - 1:41am. on Random rant This essay explains my understanding the attitudes one can take toward laws in general. I think the reasoning in it has bearing on the comments to this post. I wrote it in 1995. I wrote a lot in 1995. There's a channel on my local cable system on which various What an enlightening discussion. I'm sorry, but I mustby Prometheus 6
October 23, 2003 - 2:46pm. on Seen online I just a little while ago got a visitor who was searhing for: "articles on why don,t we fall into to space" Things I'm going to doby Prometheus 6
October 23, 2003 - 2:20pm. on Tech Sometime in the next month I'm going to buy some spell-checking components for Delphi because I'm getting really pissed at these attempts at desktop clients for Movable Type. Conservative clarityby Prometheus 6
October 23, 2003 - 10:26am. on Seen online Sebastian Holsclaw is EXACTLY the type of conservative I want to see gain more exposure. That he's a regular at Calpudit and got a link from him on launching his new blog is a good start, and I meant to check him out then. But a quote on Cobb lifted my eyebrow and made me check him out just now. I suspect Holsclaw will be my conservative Safranski (who, BTW, has forced me to use Blogstreet to create an RSS feed) because when I read stuff like this: You should understand that in this context, I am writing about conservatives who truly desire a color-blind society. I am specifically not writing about those who want to use rhetoric about a color-blind society to further a racist agenda.
…I see someone I can engage honestly. Not being in denial gets you huge respect from me. The name gameby Prometheus 6
October 23, 2003 - 9:54am. on Seen online I have a problem with my last name, which is that people insist on misspelling it. I have handed people a business card and they will misspell it while looking at the damn card. Baldilocks has a different problem with her last name—being African, and therefore unfamiliar-sounding to most, it strikes many people as being Chinese. This can fuck up people's mind rather badly. Funny, You Don't Look Chinese Having an African last name that doesn?t "sound African" to the American ear usually brings questions and has brought some interesting exchanges my way. Many think it's Chinese in origin and possessing a distinctly un-Chinese appearance, I've giggled at some puzzled expressions directed at me when I say the name. I used to get annoyed when some would think it was Chinese until a Chinese guy asked if it was. Most people are polite and ask the origin straight out. Then, there are some that are just plain rude. Here's an example of the latter that occurred when I worked for United Airlines. Sis handles her business apropriately, then gives an interesting explanation of how last names work in Kenya. I ain't know that stuff. You idiotby Prometheus 6
October 23, 2003 - 8:55am. on Race and Identity Justice for Justice Brown BE CLEAR why the Congressional Black Caucus and other so-called civil-rights groups oppose California Supreme Court Justice Janice Rogers Brown's appointment to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia. It is not because Brown wrote a decision that upheld Proposition 209, the voter-approved initiative that ended racial and gender preferences in California state hiring, contracting and admissions. It's not because she was on the losing side of a 4-3 California Supreme Court ruling that overturned a law requiring parental consent for a minor's abortion. What really gets under caucus members' thin skins is that Janice Rogers Brown is a black conservative. Oh really? If a white candidate held those same positions, do you think the "so-called" civil rights organizations would oppose that candidate's nomination? Of course they would. I just LOVE it when Conservatives play the race card. Nice try, Mr. Friedmanby Prometheus 6
October 23, 2003 - 8:25am. Free Advice to G.O.P. Republicans seem to think they don't have to think when it comes to Iraq. They only have to applaud the president and whack the press for not reporting more good news from Baghdad ? and everything will be fine. Well, think again. I've often pointed out the good we have done in Iraq and unabashedly hoped for more. No regrets. But some recent trends leave me worried. Unfortunately, there are few Democrats to press my worries on the administration. Most Democrats either opposed the war (a perfectly legitimate position) or supported it and are now trying to disown it. That means the only serious opposition can come from Republicans, so they'd better get focused ? because there is nothing about the Bush team's performance in Iraq up to now that justifies a free pass. If Republicans don't get serious on Iraq, they will wake up a year from now and find all their candidates facing the same question: "How did your party lose Iraq?" Facts on the groundby Prometheus 6
October 23, 2003 - 8:12am. on News River at Baghdad Burning: Demonstrations in Baghdad... What's this about? Bookies for Bushby Prometheus 6
October 23, 2003 - 7:48am. on Politics Once at Arm's Length, Wall Street Is Bush's Biggest Donor This article was reported by Glen Justice, Patrick McGeehan and Landon Thomas Jr. and written by Mr. Justice. A day after a chilly reception at the United Nations last month, President Bush received a warmer greeting from a New York group that he had been keeping at arm's length: about a dozen leaders of the biggest firms on Wall Street. That private meeting at the Waldorf-Astoria, to discuss the economy, is just one illustration of how the president and Wall Street seem to have grown on each other. …A study to be released today shows that the financial community has surpassed all other groups, including lawyers and lobbyists, as the top industry among Mr. Bush's elite fund-raisers. The list of those generating $100,000 and $200,000 now includes chief executives like Henry M. Paulson of Goldman Sachs, John J. Mack of Credit Suisse First Boston and Stanley O'Neal of Merrill Lynch, whose firm has already raised twice the amount for Mr. Bush's re-election that it did during the entire 2000 campaign cycle. "It's really a question of policy, that's what's driving this," said Marc Lackritz, president of the Securities Industry Association, which represents more than 650 securities firms. "It's a pro-investor policy." What are the odds that there's an actual patriot in the White House somewhere?by Prometheus 6
October 23, 2003 - 12:25am. on Politics What are the odds that the leaker of the Rummy memo is connected to the party or parties that leaked to the world of the existance of the Plame leakers? Just say noby Prometheus 6
October 22, 2003 - 10:22pm. on News California Judicial Nominee Questioned Sharply 1:28 PM PDT, October 22, 2003 WASHINGTON -- California Supreme Court Justice Janice Rogers Brown, President Bush's nominee to the U.S. Court of Appeals here, ran into skeptical questioning from Senate Democrats today for speeches in which she referred to the New Deal era as "the triumph of our socialist revolution" and disputed whether the Bill of Rights applied to the States. Three years ago, Brown described herself in another speech as a "true conservative" who believes that "where the government moves in, community retreats, civil society disintegrates....The result is a debased, debauched culture which finds moral depravity entertaining and virtue contemptible." Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) said she found Brown's pronouncements troubling. "Your speeches are extraordinarily intemperate for a sitting justice," Feinstein told Brown. "Is that the real you?" Feinstein and the minority Democrats on the Senate Judiciary Committee said they would be reluctant to approve her nomination to a federal appeals court in which judges determine the fate of many government rules and regulations. Answering with a soft-spoken calm, Brown, 54, said she tried to be provocative at times, especially when speaking to groups of young conservatives. But the views she expressed were hers, she added. "I don't have a speechwriter. I do these myself. And it speaks for itself," she said of her catalog of speeches. The state justice also sought to assure liberal-leaning senators that her conservative views would not shape her rulings as a judge.[P6: How is that possible?] I can't say I have a lot of sympathy for this guyby Prometheus 6
October 22, 2003 - 10:17pm. on News Ferry Captain May Lose Job Over His Refusal to Talk City officials said yesterday that they were preparing to fire the captain of the Staten Island ferry that crashed into a pier last week, killing 10 passengers, because of his refusal to talk to investigators. The officials also said they would begin a series of new safety measures on the ferries today to ensure that no pilot is ever left alone at the wheel. Iris Weinshall, the city's transportation commissioner, said her agency was "drawing up charges as we speak" to dismiss Capt. Michael J. Gansas, 38, whose whereabouts in the minutes before the boat crashed with an assistant at the wheel remain unclear. Captain Gansas did not arrive for an interview on Tuesday with the National Transportation Safety Board, leading the agency to issue a subpoena. The captain, citing medical problems, again refused to be interviewed yesterday, and did not appear at a scheduled interview on Staten Island with a lawyer from the city's Transportation Department. Later, both Ms. Weinshall and Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg angrily criticized the captain's conduct in the aftermath of the Oct. 15 crash. "It's an outrage that somebody who can give us information to perhaps find out how we can improve service refuses to talk, and a person like that has no business working for this city," Mr. Bloomberg said. I wonder if Boykin will apologize six or seven timesby Prometheus 6
October 22, 2003 - 10:14pm. on News The way they're handling this reminds me of the way they handled Trent Lott's comments. But this article makes it clear Rummy's as much a target as Boykin. Bush Says He Disagrees With General's Remarks on Religion By DOUGLAS JEHL WASHINGTON, Oct. 22 -- President Bush said on Wednesday that he disagreed with comments by a top Pentagon general who had cast the war on terrorism in religious terms, but the Defense Department said the officer would not be reassigned. The comments by Mr. Bush were his first in public about Lt. Gen. William G. Boykin, the deputy under secretary of defense for intelligence and war-fighting. General Boykin has likened the battle against Islamic militants to a Christian struggle against Satan and said at evangelical gatherings that a militant Muslim militia leader in Somalia worshiped an "idol" and not "a real God." Mr. Bush, speaking before a group of moderate Muslims during a stopover in Bali, Indonesia, said the general's comments "didn't reflect my opinion," adding, "Look, it just doesn't reflect what the government thinks." Most Democratic senators show some senseby Prometheus 6
October 22, 2003 - 10:09pm. on News Class-Action Legislation Fails in Senate WASHINGTON, Oct. 22 -- Senate Democrats effectively killed a measure on Wednesday that would push certain class-action lawsuits out of state courts and into the federal judiciary, handing President Bush and the Republican leadership a significant defeat. The bill failed on a procedural motion by just one vote when the Republican leadership got 59 of the 60 votes needed to block a Democratic filibuster. "We just witnessed a missed opportunity to address a critically and vitally important issue," Senator Bill Frist, the majority leader, said after the vote. He said he was "clearly disappointed" by the outcome, but vowed to try to reach a compromise. President Bush has made changes in tort law a big feature of his agenda in Congress, and it is a staple of his speeches. Business groups had aggressively lobbied for the class-action legislation, which would remove most class-action suits with at least 100 plaintiffs and at least $5 million at stake from state courts and relocate them in the federal courts. Legal experts say federal courts offer a more favorable climate to corporations. The House had already approved a version of the bill. The bill would also cover "mass tort" suits involving personal injury, like those filed by women who believe they have been harmed by silicone breast implants. The mass tort provision had been stripped from the bill when it was approved by the Senate Judiciary Committee, but Republican leaders restored it before they brought the bill to the floor. "Mass tort is something most of our colleagues didn't bargain for, but it's in this bill," Senator Tom Daschle of South Dakota, the Democratic leader, said during the debate. He added, "This legislation is killing a housefly with a shotgun." …The vote was a cliff-hanger; Republicans knew going in that they had 57 votes. Business lobbyists waited nervously in the reception room outside the Senate chamber to learn the outcome, as did lobbyists for trial lawyers and consumer groups. Eight Democrats and one independent, Senator James M. Jeffords of Vermont, joined 50 Republicans in voting to allow the bill to move forward; Senator Richard C. Shelby of Alabama was the only Republican to favor blocking the bill. Several Democrats who were lobbied hard by business leaders, including Charles E. Schumer of New York, Christopher J. Dodd of Connecticut and Mary L. Landrieu of Louisiana, voted against the bill. Mrs. Landrieu cast the final vote against the bill, and complained afterward that Senate Republicans were unwilling to make certain concessions to win her vote. Among other things, Mrs. Landrieu wanted the mass tort provision stripped from the bill, and she wanted a provision that would allow unclaimed settlement coupons to be donated to charity, not claimed by the lawyers or the defendants, as is now the case. "They knew my vote was important. I knew my vote was important," she said, adding, "I wanted to go last, because I wanted to send a signal that the Landrieu vote would not have been that difficult to get." Restartin' Stuffby Prometheus 6
October 22, 2003 - 8:37pm. on Race and Identity In the "Best Of" box to the right is The Reparations Series, which links to a series of posts on, of course, reparations for Black folks. I took the original posts and the HaloScan comments and cobbled together some permanent pages. I also imported the posts, but of course they're buried under the posts that accrue like barnacles around here. Well, a couple of folks have located the imported versions. A trackback to this post and a comment to this one have been made, and since the topic is one of my favorite cans of worms I'm thinking about whether or not to revisit it. Seriously, it was covered pretty well last time, by myself and the commenters. I'll answer the commenter later, cuz I got stuff ta do right now. Good for a chuckleby Prometheus 6
October 22, 2003 - 12:18pm. on Seen online The Truth Is ? Don?t Jump Onto a Moving Truck But today in New Hampshire, his exuberance, and the lack of a ubiquitous, protective Secret Service detail, got the best of him, at least for a minute. According to one staffer's recounting of the story, Dean "just disappeared into thin air." The former governor had arrived a few minutes before he was scheduled to speak to an organizing conference at St. Anselm College near Manchester. He was chatting along the side of the entrance road with a throng of college students, all Dean supporters, when a large red box truck began a slow turn into the parking lot. By Dean's own recounting, he saw the truck slow down, and "decided to have a little fun." As the truck swung by, Dean hopped onto a running board on its rear. "I thought the guy was going to pull up 5 feet and I was going to get off and say, 'Ha ha ha,' " he said. A playful prank for the benefit of a friendly crowd. The Joke?s on Dean Speaking of Googleby Prometheus 6
October 22, 2003 - 11:42am. on Seen online I've been getting hella hits from Google, so I looked into it. If you search on "Prometheus," my old URL at earthlink.net is the third listing; right behind http://www.prometheus.com/, which is now Blackboard and sells distance learning software, and Prometheus Books. This site is number eight, and is listed like this: Prometheus 6 Open Source (and in particular, phpMyAdmin) rocks!by Prometheus 6
October 22, 2003 - 11:29am. on Tech Mysterious system outages yesterday left my server temporarily ina time warp; specifically, the system date was 9/10/2004. I posted stuff and changed the date, and some folks may have caught me before I caught it, but that's okay. What wasn't okay is that comments posted with that date as well. Which didn't bother me until today, when I realized it screwed my Live Comment Threads box. Enter Google, and from there phpMyAdmin. Schweet. Me and SQL get along pretty well. A quick update statement and a quick rebuild of the index page and VIOLA! I still don't care about the individual pages. If someone adds a comment, they'll rebuild and if not, then who cares? I deleted phpMyAdmin thought. All that power is tempting and I could screw things royally. Civil disobedience re: electronic votingby Prometheus 6
October 22, 2003 - 10:11am. on Seen online Kerim at Keywords, a blog I'm finding quite good, gives notice of the Electronic Civil Disobedience taking place at Swarthmore College. You can, and should, give the students a hand, as it can help in a whole bag of ways: We need your support! Because the Diebold memos are currently being hosted on the Swarthmore College computer network, we need messages of support for this action of civil disobedience. Please e-mail Dean Bob Gross ([email protected]) to support Why War? and SCDC?s action. We will be meeting with him Wednesday, October 22, and your emails will make a huge difference. Remember to be nice and please cc your e-mails to [email protected]
Why War? believes that what we are doing is legal ; though we see it as an issue of electronic civil disobedience we believe it is Diebold which is abusing copyright law in an attempt to shut down free speech and the democratic process. The four criteria of "fair use" copyright law are the purpose of the use, the nature of the copyrighted work, the substantiality of the portion used and the effect of the use upon the potential market of the copyrighted work. We believe the publication of these documents is integral to the function of the democratic process. The memoranda themselves are not marketable products, and in this case we believe the nature of the work, which threatens elections occurring in 37 states, outweighs the need to selectively excerpt portions of the documents. If there is anything the American people have a right to know, it is how their votes are being counted. Check the excerpts and see if you don't feel you should send that email. More peace in the works for Africaby Prometheus 6
October 22, 2003 - 9:49am. on Africa Powell: Sudanese Commit to Reaching Deal Wednesday October 22, 2003 12:01 PM NAIVASHA, Kenya (AP)- Secretary of State Colin Powell said Wednesday that the Sudanese government and rebels fighting a 20-year civil war have committed themselves to reaching a comprehensive peace deal by the end of December. Powell, who was flanked by Sudanese Vice President Ali Osman Mohammed Taha and rebel leader John Garang, promised that the United States would help implement a final agreement. …The announcement came a day after the secretary of state promised to review U.S. sanctions in Sudan if the parties reached a deal to end the conflict that has left more than 2 million people dead, mainly through war-induced famine. Garang, who leads the Sudan People's Liberation Army, or SPLA, and Taha said they were committed to peace but difficult issues still needed to be resolved. NAACP Press Releaseby Prometheus 6
October 22, 2003 - 9:44am. on Race and Identity NAACP SUES GEORGIA COURT FOR DENYING THE POOR ADEQUATE LEGAL COUNSEL The Ben Hill and Crisp County, Georgia Branches of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), allege that the indigent defense system of the Cordele Judicial Circuit Court, comprising of Ben Hill, Crisp, Dooly and Wilcox counties, systematically denies the right to counsel for indigent people accused of crimes. The counties are near the city of Albany in southern Georgia. The NAACP joins the case, originally filed in March 2003, by the Southern Center for Human Rights and numerous individual plaintiffs that challenges the Cordele Judicial Circuit's indigent defense system. The more things change…by Prometheus 6
October 22, 2003 - 8:30am. on News Wednesday, October 22, 2003; Page A28 THE BUSH administration says it now recognizes that the U.S. toleration of corrupt Arab autocracies in exchange for their oil wealth and military cooperation was a mistake -- that the lack of freedom in those countries engendered its own threat to U.S. security, in the form of terrorist movements such as al Qaeda. Yet the administration is repeating the mistake in the Caucasus and Central Asia. A string of former Soviet republics there are ruled by dictators who crush opponents by force while seeking favor from the United States with offers of energy supplies and help with Iraq and Afghanistan. Though it claims to be promoting democracy, the administration has mostly swallowed the old bargain, reaping short-term gains while storing up long-term problems. Strikes me as kind of an empty gestureby Prometheus 6
October 22, 2003 - 8:26am. on News U.N. Assembly Calls for Halt Of Israel Wall UNITED NATIONS, Oct. 21 -- The U.N. General Assembly overwhelmingly approved a resolution Tuesday demanding that Israel halt construction of a barrier intended to cut it off from the West Bank and dismantle the portion already built. The barrier, which Israel argues is needed as protection from suicide bombers, has come under stiff criticism because it dips into the West Bank and cuts through Palestinian villages. General Assembly resolutions are not legally binding, unlike those adopted by the Security Council. But the votes of the 191-member assembly are considered a gauge of world opinion. After hours of haggling over the text of the resolution, the assembly voted 144 in favor and four opposed, including the United States. There were 12 abstentions. In return for support from the European Union, the Palestinians and other Arab and Islamic nations agreed to drop a second resolution that would have asked the International Court of Justice at The Hague, Netherlands, for an advisory opinion on the barrier's legality. The resolution's backers also agreed to add a condemnation of Palestinian suicide bombings, "extra-judicial killings" by the Israelis, and the Oct. 16 bomb attack on a U.S. diplomatic convoy in the Gaza Strip that killed three American security officers. The resolution says that the barrier violates the Armistice Line of 1949 and demands that Israel halt construction and dismantle the part it has completed. Truth as strange as fictionby Prometheus 6
October 21, 2003 - 11:59pm. on Seen online The Onion's Lead story this week is Muscleman Put In Charge Of World's Fifth Largest Economy. And it doesn't look like they cracked a single joke. They didn't have to. Another Volokhian speaksby Prometheus 6
October 21, 2003 - 8:56pm. on Seen online ("Volokhian"—sounds like a race you'd meet on the Andromeda TV show. I like it.) Mr. Bernstein: Op-ed On Affirmative Action Bake Sales:
Is it a no-no for students to satirize affirmative action at UC Irvine? The answer is a resounding "yes!" Recently, the university shut down an "affirmative action bake sale" run by the College Republicans. Members of the group offered doughnuts at prices ranging from 10 cents to $1, depending on each student's race and gender. The obvious message: It's wrong to treat people differently based on immutable characteristics. But apparently you can't say so in public.
So begins my op-ed (link requires free registration) in today's Orange County Register. Feh. When they run the bake sale such that it has the intent and effect of affirmative action programs, then you can morally defend them. So let them sell their baked goods at reduced price to those who, rightly or wrongly, they feel are unable to afford them at full price for reasons outside the purchasers' control. That would accurately reflect the intent of affirmative action programs. And I don't care what cause they ascribe to the purchasers' inability to raise the cash. With that in place, let them set up any other conditions they wish, in a conscious attempt to skew the sales such that people who can readily afford the baked goods, and have the means to get them—at the bake sale, at the bakery, the supermarket six miles away, anywhere they want—wind up underserved somehow. As I said, Feh. All I need now it some nonsense by Tyler Cowen to be posted there and my day will be complete. Thank you very much, Phelpsby Prometheus 6
October 21, 2003 - 8:12pm. on Seen online My friend went all the way to Australia to find something capable of annoying me, and in the process insured my remaining a carnivore. Washington protest over 'ship of horrors' October 21, 2003 - 10:41AM American animal rights protesters, one dressed in a sheep's costume, staged a noisy demonstration outside the Australian embassy in Washington DC to condemn Australia's treatment of sheep on the MV Cormo Express. Chanting "Australia tortures animals. Stop live exports", about 30 members of the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) were involved in the demonstration. American PETA director Bruce Friedrich compared Australia's treatment of sheep to the human slave trade from Africa to America between the 17th and 19th centuries. "The level of abuse the Australian government is supporting would shock the conscience of any compassionate person," Friedrich said. "This ship of horrors brings shame on all of Australia. The live export trade is the moral equivalent of the African slave trade and it has to be eliminated." I've long suspected PETA of consisting solely of people with no life or sense of proportion. Look. Leave the widerness alone. Don't club baby seals and don't drive mountain sheep to extinction. But those mutton factories are fucking crops, and I'm about as likely to worry about their fate as I am an ear of corn. And frankly, that goes for farm-bred mink as well. If you PETA members REALLY want to get some publicity, stand in front of me while you compare my ancestors to fucking sub-anthropoid animals.The surgery required to get my foot out your ass will rival the separation of those join-at-the-head twins in complexity. Whut??by Prometheus 6
October 21, 2003 - 7:41pm. on Seen online I just saw the most amazingly…sane post on Tacitus, titled Conservative Socialism. I bow slightly in the general direction of Fabuis. Let me explain, Eugeneby Prometheus 6
October 21, 2003 - 7:37pm. on Seen online Mr. Volokh notes one of The BlackCommentator's rather harsh cartoons accompanying a press release from People for the American Way and the NAACP denouncing the nomination of Janice Rogers Brown to the Court of Appeals. I've never been quite sure what to make of complaints that cartoons exaggerate some stereotypical racial or ethnic features -- on the one hand, I can see why it might be offensive, but on the other hand, they are cartoons, and it's standard procedure for cartoonists to exaggerate everyone's features (though I've never understood why that's seen as so funny). Still, those who generally don't like cartoons that depict blacks with fat lips and vast Afros (and as best I can tell, Justice Brown has neither particularly large lips nor particularly large hair, so it's not like they're mocking her own well-known personal characteristics) might want to note this one.
Let me drop some knowledge, help bridge the cultural divide. Reality checkby Prometheus 6
October 21, 2003 - 6:59pm. on Africa IMF admits it is failing Africa The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has admitted that one of its key African initiatives is in trouble. The IMF's initiative for Heavily Indebted Poor Countries was launched in 1996. Its aim was simple: to cut the mountain of debts that countries had run up, reducing them to more manageable levels. At the same time, the programme encouraged states to increase their spending on the poor - on badly needed policies aimed at building schools and paying teachers. Lieberman's Woesby Prometheus 6
October 21, 2003 - 4:13pm. on Politics Inside Joe Lieberman's Kamikaze Campaign The listbot at meetup.com, the commercial site whose clever software facilitates face-to-face gatherings between Web surfers of like interest, sent me a forlorn little e-mail the other day. "Congratulations on a successful National Lieberman in 2004 Meetup last week! See photos from every city," it read, giving a link. Click
HREF="http://www.lieberman2004.meetup.com/photos"> lieberman2004.meetup.com/photos yourself, and you'll see the pathos: There That's not surprising. In Chicago, where I live, there wasn't any meetup. Not enough supporters RSVP'ed to trigger the software's automated threshold. Meetup.com, in fact, has registered only 332 Joseph Lieberman fans in the entire United States of America, four in Chicago. An undercover reporter from The Village Voice…uh, me…represents one quarter of the total. It could be considered comic, this abyss at the Lieberman grassroots. It could be, that is, if Lieberman showed any signs of going away. Instead, he's been ramping up: launching a splashy new tax plan; publishing a dowloadable campaign book, Leading With Integrity: A Fresh Start for America, and an accompanying website; kicking off a campaign tour…all just this past week. And that's not funny. Because it's not too early to predict that if the Democrats lose the presidential election next November, Lieberman will be the one to blame. That will certainly be so if he ends up becoming the nominee…in which Evil plans for world dominion by dark masters of eeeeeee-vilby Prometheus 6
October 21, 2003 - 4:12pm. on Seen online Cobb has an interesting post up wherein, after meandering around a bit he says: I am a willing and able participant in the system employing enlightened self-interest having been struck by:
1) the remarkable resiliancy of the American middle-class 2) regimes of tyrannical chaos elsewhere 3) the prerogatives of wisdom and age. 4) the fantastic vapidity of lefty wishful thinking 5) the concrete reality of collaborative skills and As I heard Aziz' name surfacing the other day, I am brought to mind about this Sivanandian imperative and the conspiratorial nature of big Chomsky-sized secrets. What is better at motivating strident insurgent political activism than the existence of secrets and a pledge to correct America from within? This is a potent combination. There is a huge problem with it however. It forces the insurgents to assume evil motivations and elide the complexity of real power relationships.
Nothing illustrates this quite like the gutteral noises made by lefties whenever they utter the word 'profits'. People who don't understand business generally don't understand how profits are created. The complexity of running a business is a big mystery to them. It's a secret. They just understand that people at the top get lots of money, people at the bottom don't, and that 'everything' is all about profits. That's surprisingly patronizing coming from a usually thoughtful man. Relax, Glennby Prometheus 6
October 21, 2003 - 4:10pm. on Seen online It's a good question, but do you really WANT to see a Black baby that ugly? With apologies to Ben Sargentby Prometheus 6
October 21, 2003 - 7:25am. on Cartoons The original is bigger, but I didn't want you to miss the point. LATER: I guess I should have mentioned I added the "zoom" view of the book the guy is holding. I resize and resample the cartoons I post here because I be sweating the load time dial-up users have to endure. Plus I'm really not trying to deprive the artists of eyeball and the concommitant ad revenue. That's also why I don't give links to the printable view of articles. Basically my intent is, if somebody gonna get sued, it ain't gonna be me. This is a bizarre way of thinkingby Prometheus 6
October 21, 2003 - 7:02am. on Race and Identity Unfortunately it's kind of typical. The Washington Post has an article about the rising tuition at the University System of Maryland. Yesterday's events highlighted a sharpening debate over state aid to public colleges and universities in Maryland. Since Ehrlich took office in January, he has sliced higher education far more deeply than other state programs, and officials at the University System of Maryland have responded with tuition increases that could exceed 40 percent by the time students return to campus next fall.
Ehrlich has said he would rather see campuses cut costs than raise tuition. But the debate gained intensity after the governor's closest ally on the University System of Maryland Board of Regents announced this month that he would like to see tuition double at public institutions in Maryland over the next five to six years. Richard E. Hug, Ehrlich's chief political fundraiser and one of the governor's first appointments to the university board, said raising tuition to a systemwide average of more than $9,000 a year would make public colleges less reliant on state government, pay for a huge infusion of student financial aid and enhance the prestige of the state's flagship institutions. Look at the expected "benefits" of higher tuition costs, at least in Mr. Hug's view. Less reliant on state government, okay. Not like you have a lot of choice there anyway. But paying for a huge infusion of student financial aid is a strange way of justifying the creation of the need for a huge infusion of student financial aid. But the killer to me is the last one. You increase the prestige of the schools by making it more expensive…not but immproving facilities or hiring the best professors or anything like that. Merely making it more expensive will make it more prestigious. This is probably true--the fact is, Harvard graduates aren't learning a lot that's different than, say, Brooklyn College graduates. Maybe a social gesture or two. Still, this comes pretty close to acknowledging that "highly selective" schools select on basedon economics as much as anything else. Bleechby Prometheus 6
October 21, 2003 - 6:15am. on Politics Somebody read David Brook's editorial and tell me what it says. I can't take reading that crap anymore. If you can't dazzle them with brillianceby Prometheus 6
October 20, 2003 - 11:00pm. on Seen online I'm just going to reproduce the intro on Slashdot: Your Rights Online: E-Voting Companies Answer Critics With ... Spin
Posted by timothy on Monday October 20, @08:59PM Nature vs Nurtureby Prometheus 6
October 20, 2003 - 10:43pm. on News More on the impact one's economic circumstances has on health, but this time it's emotional health. Rise in Income Improves Children's Behavior By ANAHAD O'CONNOR The notion that poverty and mental illness are intertwined is nothing new, as past research has demonstrated time and time again. But finding evidence that one begets the other has often proved difficult. Now new research that coincided with the opening of an Indian casino may have come a step closer to identifying a link by suggesting that lifting children out of poverty can diminish some psychiatric symptoms, though others seem unaffected. A study published in last week's issue of The Journal of the American Medical Association looked at children before and after their families rose above the poverty level. Rates of deviant and aggressive behaviors, the study noted, declined as incomes rose. "This comes closer to pointing to a causal relationship than we can usually get," said Dr. E. Jane Costello, a psychiatric epidemiologist at Duke who was the lead author. "Moving families out of poverty led to a reduction in children's behavioral symptoms." Can we hook one of these up for politicians?by Prometheus 6
October 20, 2003 - 10:27pm. on News Ethics 101: A Course About the Pitfalls RICHMOND, Va. -- To the uninitiated, ethics in science can sound as straightforward as the West Point honor code: a cadet will not lie, cheat, steal or tolerate those who do. Just substitute "scientist" for "cadet," and that should be it. But the 50 or so graduate students taking Dr. Francis L. Macrina's ethics course at Virginia Commonwealth University are getting quite a different view of research ethics, one that asks troubling questions about professional relationships and how to draw moral lines in the sand if their own careers are at stake. It is a view that reflects a growing realization among researchers that the real ethics issues in science are not so much the scandals that rock the field periodically -- charges of outright fabrications, invented data, theft of another's research. Instead, they say, they worry about more insidious problems that can corrupt science from within and push promising researchers who are uninformed about the rules out the door. Well, if they would just die, that would solve everythingby Prometheus 6
October 20, 2003 - 10:24pm. on News Are Those Leaving Welfare Better Off Now? Yes and No …Wade F. Horn, assistant secretary for families and children in the federal Department of Health and Human Services, said he agreed with numerous estimates that 10 percent to 15 percent of all those who have left welfare since the overhaul legislation passed in 1996 had become significantly worse off financially. There are 2.4 million fewer American families on the federal welfare rolls than in 1996, when there were 4.4 million. More than half have left welfare for work, although many who left for jobs did not keep them. Others have gone off welfare voluntarily, possibly because they chafed under the new rules or turned to other sources of support. And roughly a third have been forced out because they failed to comply with stricter state requirements or reached the five-year lifetime limit on federal benefits, although some of these become employed eventually. While there is broad agreement that some families are worse off as a result, there is extensive debate over exactly why, and what should be done about it. "We are concerned about these families," said Dr. Horn, who is spearheading the Bush administration's current effort to amend the 1996 welfare law in order to stiffen work requirements and encourage marriage. But, he added, not enough is known about the families. "There is no hard evidence that I know of that such families are less able to work, and we know a small percentage simply choose not to engage in welfare-to-work," he said. …Dr. Horn said the evidence of poorer families was no reason to soften the federal rules, like the 60-month limit on aid, or penalties for those who do not comply with increased obligations to seek work or receive training. "I am firmly against wholesale loosening of requirements and moving us toward the old program," he said. But many urban-policy researchers and advocates for the poor -- most of whom opposed the 1996 overhaul -- argue that the deepening poverty among former welfare recipients reflects flaws in the legislation that were entirely predictable and need to be corrected. How can we make folks understand this?by Prometheus 6
October 20, 2003 - 9:34pm. on Politics Having failed to create jobs with his strategy of enormous tax giveaways to the wealthy, Bush decided to ask China to increase the value of the its currency in order to give American manufacturers a boost that would presumably create jobs. But given the slim chance of success, this seemed to be little more than a political ploy designed to (a) make it look like Bush was doing something to create jobs and (b) shift the blame for America's job losses to somewhere other than 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. And as USA Today reports today, China and Japan both rejected Bush's request to increase the value of their currencies. It was quite a risk for Bush to make successful diplomacy a prerequisite of his economic policies, given the rate at which he squandered the world's goodwill after the September 11 attacks. But now that he's failed with tax cuts for the rich and pleading with other countries to help, maybe he'll hand over the economic reins to people who can do the job? Wasn't there a group that recently created the longest economic expansion in America's history? Oh, right: Democrats. People need to understand the position of weakness neocon policy has placed this country in. And because I'm convinced Bush is a sock puppet I say neocon policy here, but on the street I'll be talking Bush. Beating the Bushby Prometheus 6
October 20, 2003 - 9:25pm. on Politics MB at Wampum has some observations and some advice. After listing a large fraction of the multiple reasons Dubya's home needs to be repossessed, she notes: The central fact remains that Mr. Bush is a huge favorite to win reelection. Three related factors make Mr. Bush, despite his record of failure, a favorite to win reelection. The first is that the Republicans are united and Mr. Bush is unlikely to face a primary challenger.
In my lifetime, an incumbent President has had the opportunity to run for reelection nine times. Eisenhower (56), Johnson (64), Nixon (72), Reagan (84) and Clinton (96) won. Johnson (68), Ford (76), Carter (80) and George H.W. Bush (92) lost. …In each instance in which the incumbent president was not reelected, the primary challenge came from the more extreme wing of his own party. McCarthy and Kennedy attacked from the left, Reagan and Buchanan from the right. If Nader and the Greens had not mounted a challenge from the left in 2000, this post would be discussing the reelection prospects of President Gore. If there is one unifying political theme of the GWB administration, it has been solicitude to his right flank. The chances that a Republican will enter the primaries and attack Bush from the right approach zero. If Mr. Bush loses without a challenge from his flank, it will be the first time in at least 75 years. There's also a pretty probably breakdown of the way the electoral votes will go as well as a pairing of the Democratic candidates and the soft spots in their constituencies. A reality check of this type is always welcome, as is the pointer to Patrica Nielsen Hayden's discussion of how to get at the electoral votes in the swing states. She picked three examples from said discussion, one of which Cultivate all your potential allies. Above all, stop telling people they aren't on your side. They may never figure it out on their own, in which case they'll be indistinguishable from people who are on your side.
I've been trying to explain to Black folks for years, which is why, though least applicable to this Presidential campaign, it's the one I chose to swipe. Meanwhile, if you're not in a swing state you still shouldn't get complacent (unless you're a Bush supporter. If so, relax--you've got it in the bag!). You Middle America types should study Alabama, and draw parallels to your own states' situations. They exist, and paying close attention may well make you want to move (as in relocate) before it's too late&heiilp;but you should move (as in get active) before it's too late. And us high-income producing states can take a page from the Republican's playbook by pointing out that for all our suffering we STILL aren't getting back as much as we give the Feds…and that the only way to fix that is to fix the economy so the Middle Americans aren't so needy. I guess it's just meby Prometheus 6
October 20, 2003 - 12:32pm. on Random rant Last week's "The Boondocks" speculated on the possibility that Condoleessa Rice might be nicer if she just had someone to love. I thought the thang was funny, but the Washington Post refused to run it. And Aaron at Uppity-Negro found a discussion of McGruder's thoughts behind the series: One suggestion is given in Richard Blow's Sex And Politics over at TOMPAINE.com:
Does Aaron McGruder think that Condoleeza Rice is a lesbian? That's the question I kept pondering as I read this week's "The Boondocks," a comic strip by McGruder that The Washington Post has decided not to publish.
Amazing how many of us saw that subtext. Possible subtext.The Post's decision raises that ongoing debate about when not to publish comic strips--most recently several papers suspended a "Doonesbury" stripwhich used the word "masturbate," apparently on the grounds that there might be someone out there who didn't actually know what it meant. In this situation the Post's reasoning appears to hinge on whether Aaron McGruder is implying that Condi Rice is gay. …which leaves me feeling ignorant because it never occurred to me. This, and a recent conversation with my daughter about the speculation in Harry Potter fandom that two of the characters in the latest volume of the saga are gay (Sirius Black and somebody else), which thought also never entered my mind, made me realize something about myself. I don't seem to speculate on folks' sexuality at all. I mean, I see who's hot and all that and I'm interested or not. And you find out people's orientation when you hang with them. But I don't hit on women unless I get some sort of subtle encouragement and that sort of establishes all the gender information I feel I need be concerned with. And if I'm not hanging with you I REALLY have no business up in your business. That's how I feel, anyway. Once I've established how I'm going to relate to a person I'm just not interested in knowing (or bother by knowing) about their sexuality. And I suspect that makes me pretty weird. Inequality = illnessby Prometheus 6
October 20, 2003 - 12:12pm. on Seen online Kerim at Keywords has a post that ties in nicely to the one last week about racism correlating with high blood pressure in Black folks and the NY Times Magazine article I blogged about on how people who live in poverty suffer from health problems that you would expect of the elderly. He's got a link to a good article that discusses the problem, which is good because the Times Magazine article will vanish behind the toll wall soon. My favorite reasonby Prometheus 6
October 20, 2003 - 8:49am. on Seen online 36 Reasons To Vote For Bush and Republicans In 2004 …You don't know how much $1 trillion is. (Answer: It's $1,000,000,000,000 or a million million dollars. $1 trillion dollars could pay for 25 million jobs that would pay $40,000 for a year. $1 trillion could employ all of the 9 million unemployed for the next three years.[P6: ] The United States could probably purchase peacefully all of North Korea for $1 trillion dollars.) Libertarians take noteby Prometheus 6
October 20, 2003 - 7:36am. on News Alabama's going to look a lot like Iraq if attitudes don't change. Except they won't have an invasion to blame. Or a U.S. government whose prestige depends on their survival. Alabama has asked for it. And like Schwartzenegger, the most hostile act one can direct toward them is to let them have their way. What Alabama's Low-Tax Mania Can Teach the Rest of the Country By ADAM COHEN …One message Alabama voters needed to hear more clearly was that rejecting higher taxes costs more in the long run. Saving $10,000 by denying medicine to a poor, H.I.V.-positive woman is no bargain if she ends up in a state hospital with full-blown AIDS needing $100,000 in care. Tutoring high school students in danger of failing is cheap compared with paying for welfare -- or prison. Alabama voters also need to realize that by entrenching their state at the bottom of the national rankings in taxes and government services, they are putting themselves on the margins of the new, global economy, and sabotaging their future tax base. Businesses looking for low taxes and cheap government will pass right over Alabama and head for Mexico. And companies that want well-educated, skilled workers, the companies Alabama needs to attract, will not locate in a state where high school students do not graduate, TB cases are not tracked and the restaurants may be hazardous. The nation is facing precisely the same issues as Alabama. The Bush administration has tried to delude the public into thinking we can fight a war, rebuild Iraq, fix our schools, get prescription drug benefits and still enjoy the largest tax cut in history. But the deficit cannot grow forever. Eventually, we will have to pay more or, as "starve the beast" proponents hope, do with much less. Last month, Alabama voted for fewer social services, less education, and a shoddier legal system -- to become, that is, more like a third-world nation. But low as taxes are, the state will never be better at being an underdeveloped country than actual underdeveloped countries are. Alabama's best chance, and the nation's, is to invest in its people and civic institutions, the things that set America apart. Governor Riley's setback last month is being hailed by national antitax forces as a great victory. But if Alabama heads into next year without additional revenues, students may have to learn without textbooks, prisoners may be released early, and people may start dying of preventable diseases. We should all pay attention, because if the "starve the beast" crowd continues to prevail in Washington, as goes Alabama so may go the nation. The 21st Century Depressionby Prometheus 6
October 20, 2003 - 7:29am. on News Locked Out at a Young Age CHICAGO With the nation at war, the wretched state of millions of young people in America's urban centers is getting even less attention than usual. While the U.S. is trying to figure out how to pay for its incursion into Iraq, millions of teenagers and young adults, especially in the inner cities, are drifting aimlessly from one day to the next. They're out of school, out of work and, as I've said before in this column, all but out of hope. The latest data coming out of Chicago, which is roughly representative of conditions in other major urban areas, is depressing. The city's dropout rate is reportedly at an all-time high. And 22 percent of all Chicago residents between the ages of 16 and 24 are both out of school and out of work. The term being used to describe these youngsters who have nothing very constructive to do with their time is "disconnected youth." Many of them are leading the kinds of haunted lives that recall the Great Depression. They hustle, doing what they can -- much of it illegal -- to get along. Some are homeless. Of Chicagoans who are 20 to 24 years old, more than 26 percent are out of work and out of school. When the statistics are refined to focus on young blacks and Hispanics, they only get worse. An incredible 45 percent of black men in Chicago aged 20 to 24 are out of work and out of school. That is not a condition that should be ignored. Whose life is it anywayby Prometheus 6
October 20, 2003 - 7:24am. on News Iraq Banks on Investors in Bid to Privatize October 20, 2003 …The newly appointed Iraqi industry minister plans to lease the Baghdad plant and 17 others to investors in hopes of nudging Iraq's quasi-socialist economy toward a free market. The question now is, does anybody want them? That's just one of many challenges facing U.S. officials as they move to privatize the Iraqi economy, a process seen as crucial to rebuilding the country. Other obstacles include a budding labor movement, newly unfettered foreign competition, a lack of security and, most recently, an emerging power struggle between U.S. and Iraqi officials over how best to proceed. Hypocrisies aboundby Prometheus 6
October 20, 2003 - 7:13am. on News Congress flexes muscle on state laws By Richard Simon, Los Angeles Times, 10/20/2003 WASHINGTON -- California passes a tough financial privacy law, and Washington, D.C., moves to scuttle it. California officials propose strict antipollution standards for certain engines, and a congressional committee moves to block the new rules. California Governor Gray Davis signs into law a measure allowing illegal immigrants to obtain drivers' licenses, and within days legislation is introduced in Congress to deny federal funds to the state unless it repeals the law. When it comes to California, the Republican-controlled Congress has abandoned its natural tendency to support states' rights. Congressional Republicans are moving on a variety of fronts to rein in state actions they believe go too far, leaving Democrats to complain about federal interference with state business. African Americans used to feel this way tooby Prometheus 6
October 20, 2003 - 7:03am. on News Slaying leaves Eritreans at a loss October 19, 2003 As he sat in the parked car on an August night talking with friends in the faint glow of the dome light, a promising future was laid out before 19-year-old Filmon Tesfai. It was a future that shone all the brighter given his past. As a baby, he was a refugee in Sudan who fled war in Eritrea with his parents. Now he was a high school graduate headed for the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign on a scholarship. When a navy blue Chevrolet Caprice pulled up next to his car on Chicago's West Side, Tesfai nodded hello. The passengers stared, then fired. Nine shots later, Tesfai collapsed into a friend's lap. He was pronounced dead within half an hour. The Aug. 18 slaying--still unsolved--devastated not only Tesfai's family, but an entire immigrant community. Just as Tesfai's parents imagined their children would pursue education and prosper in the United States, the Eritreans of Chicago pin much of their hope on their youth--the first generation to go to college. Last month, the community held a town meeting at Truman College on the North Side, where many Eritreans live, to ask police not to abandon the search for Tesfai's killers. Another month went by before the family gathered for a wedding. His parents hid and cried so as not to upset the bride and groom. On Friday, his mother, Maaza Ogbasyen, finally returned to work. "It's getting worse," said Tesfai's father, Zerai. "My son died. The killers are still alive. If they arrested them it would be a good thing for me." Anghesom Atsbaha, a history professor at Truman and a leader in the Eritrean community, said an arrest would bring closure. "This community has always been one of the most loyal to the law of the land," he said. "This is not going to be another number, another statistic. ... Our criminal justice system's responsibility is to restore hope." Po' thangby Prometheus 6
October 20, 2003 - 6:56am. on News 'Caucasian Club' stresses student OAKLEY - Freedom High School freshman Lisa McClelland, whose drive for a Caucasian Club on campus put a national spotlight on the school and the issue, is considering transferring because she says she's being harassed. "Some people would say things like 'We already have a club like that, it's called the KKK, you racist ...'" said the 15-year-old. "I'd walk into the auditorium and people would start whispering." Students who transfer out of one school to attend alternative programs like La Paloma or Independence high schools are considered students of the alternative campus only, which would prevent Lisa from establishing her club at Freedom High, according to school policy. If that happens, Lisa said one of her friends might continue efforts to organize a Caucasian Club at Freedom High. The school resumed classes this week following a two-week fall intercession. Lisa has not returned because she said she doesn't want to deal with the glares and critical comments. She said she hopes her club will break down racial barriers while embracing European-American heritage. Folks should stop blocking her club. No matter how it turns out, it'll be a lesson. Assuming the chile is to young to be as cynical as I, then her club was poorly named. That's because the biggest cheaters are their friendsby Prometheus 6
October 19, 2003 - 11:38pm. on News Crackdown on Tax Cheats Not Working, Panel Says On Tuesday the Senate Finance Committee will hold hearings on tax shelters that, committee aides said, will feature testimony that tax cheating continues unabated and that the numerous crackdowns announced over the past two years by the Internal Revenue Service have had almost no impact. The committee's leaders, Senators Charles E. Grassley, Republican of Iowa, and Max Baucus, Democrat of Montana, have been frustrated by their inability to get Congress to finance a serious assault on tax cheats, aides said yesterday. This hearing, which will feature a witness hidden behind a screen with his voice altered, is intended, in part, as a well-aimed kick in that direction. In the aftermath of corporate scandals that emerged two years ago, Congress enacted changes and increased by a third the Securities and Exchange Commission enforcement budget, but it did not pass any laws to attack abusive tax shelters or finance a serious hunt for tax cheats. A consultant's report, prepared for the I.R.S., but kept secret by the agency until now, is expected to show that corporate tax cheating in 2000 cost the government $14 billion to $18 billion. I'm just sayin'by Prometheus 6
October 19, 2003 - 11:35pm. on Seen online Our hypercapitalist society likes to turn everything into a piece of financial news. Consider this past week. Intel, Howard Dean and "Kill Bill" all posted numbers that surpassed expectations. I.B.M., Joseph Lieberman and "Intolerable Cruelty" fell short. Intel said it earned $1.7 billion last quarter, while Dr. Dean raised $14.8 million for his presidential campaign, far more than any other Democrat. "Kill Bill," the new Quentin Tarantino movie, grossed $22.7 million in its opening weekend. Only recently have people been required to knowingly cite box office receipts to sound conversant with entertainment news. But money often seems the sole arbiter of credibility in our society. Sports fans must also immerse themselves in financial detail. Plenty of football fans who pay scant attention to their finances know that teams are allowed to amortize a player's signing bonus over the life of his contract for salary cap purposes, but if the player is a bust, it all gets counted if and when he is cut. Ask a San Diego Chargers fan. The key lesson to remember here is that figures alone do not matter. It's how they compare to expectations. What makes Senator Lieberman's $3.6 million haul last quarter seem meager is his high name recognition from 2000. I.B.M.'s earnings were solid, but just that. Likewise, the $62 million opening weekend box office this summer for "The Hulk" looked shabby only when compared with Hollywood's outsized expectations. Miramax wisely dampened expectations for Mr. Tarantino's film. Sabotaging others' success by taking already high expectations and raising the bar a notch is an especially dodgy part of the expectations game. The only sour note to the Dean campaign's impressive fund-raising report, for instance, was that it fell short of what on Wall Street would be known as a "whisper number" of $15 million. The bottom line? Everything has a bottom line, but if you play the game right, you can move it. Gore/Clark '04by Prometheus 6
October 19, 2003 - 11:32pm. on Politics Come January, I'm going to stop saying that so if I'm wrong no one will remember by the time the convention comes aroung. 2 Top Democrats Will Not Contest Iowa's Caucuses By ADAM NAGOURNEY WASHINGTON, Oct. 19 -- Two prominent Democratic presidential candidates, Gen. Wesley K. Clark and Senator Joseph I. Lieberman of Connecticut, have decided to bypass Iowa's presidential caucuses, angering some party leaders there and signaling what could be a very different nomination battle next year. Mr. Lieberman's advisers said on Sunday that they would pull out all but one of his 17 staff members in Iowa and send them to states considered more receptive to his appeal, like Arizona. General Clark's aides said he would maintain a minimal presence in the state, which has the nation's earliest presidential selection contest. Last week, the general hired the former Iowa coordinator for Senator Bob Graham of Florida, who quit the race two weeks ago, and dispatched her to other states. …Still, the absence of General Clark and Mr. Lieberman could plant an asterisk alongside the results of the caucuses on Jan. 19. Even Iowa Democratic leaders, eager to maximize their quadrennial exercise of influence, say it could diminish the state's role in choosing the a nominee. That could prove to be a complication for Representative Richard A. Gephardt of Missouri and Howard Dean, the former Vermont governor, who are hoping for an unencumbered victory in Iowa as an anchor for their nomination strategies. Say "Uncle," Samby Prometheus 6
October 19, 2003 - 11:24pm. on News I always figured the it to be in EVERY other nation's best interest to let the USofA, the most powerful nation, break itself on Iraq, one of the least. Yielding being shown the only way not to break is almost as good to them. And now the world know the limits of the USofA's power. I doubt that was the intent. Giving up a chunk of economic control is probably pretty painful, ego-wise, to the neocons. Still, if they fully control how "the New Iraq" is structured, long term it will pay off. U.S. Set to Cede Part of Control Over Aid to Iraq By STEVEN R. WEISMAN BANGKOK, Oct. 19 -- Under pressure from potential donors, the Bush administration will allow a new agency to determine how to spend billions of dollars in reconstruction assistance for Iraq, administration and international aid officials say. The new agency, to be independent of the American occupation, will be run by the World Bank and the United Nations. They are to announce the change at a donor conference in Madrid later this week. The change effectively establishes some of the international control over Iraq that the United States opposed in the drafting of the United Nations Security Council resolution that passed on Thursday. That resolution referred to two previously established agencies devised to ensure that all aid would be monitored and audited. But diplomats say other countries were unwilling to make donations because they saw the United States as an occupying power controlling Iraq's reconstruction and self-rule. It's official: California Democrats have no clueby Prometheus 6
October 19, 2003 - 9:20am. on News Well, it'll be official if they go for this. Top California Democrat Makes a Surprising Revelation: He Voted for Schwarzenegger
By DEAN E. MURPHY Published: October 19, 2003 BERKELEY, Calif., Oct. 18 -- The California recall election is over, but the political fallout among Democrats is not. That became clear on Saturday when one of the state's top Democrats, Attorney General Bill Lockyer, told a conference here that he not only understood why so many Californians had voted for Arnold Schwarzenegger, the Republican governor-elect, but also that he had voted for Mr. Schwarzenegger. …Mr. Lockyer, 62, is not just any Democrat breaking ranks with the party: until the recall election, on Oct. 7, he had openly set his sights on the governor's office in 2006, when the four-year term of the outgoing Democratic governor, Gray Davis, was to end. The secretary of state's office said Mr. Lockyer's "Lockyer 2006" committee had more than $10 million as of June. Asked after he spoke what effect his vote for Mr. Schwarzenegger might have on his standing in the Democratic Party and his own ambitions, Mr. Lockyer replied: "I don't know. I don't care. I am just doing what is right. It's a new me." I don't believe him. I think he's expecting Arnold to fail, and is positioning himself…with some pretty clear forethought…to run for Governor afterward. I must be missing something of significance hereby Prometheus 6
October 19, 2003 - 9:04am. on News Bush Rules Out Non-Aggression Pact With North Korea Filed at 8:19 a.m. ET BANGKOK (Reuters) - In a shift aimed at jumpstarting stalled North Korean nuclear talks, President Bush said Sunday he was willing to give North Korea security assurances in exchange for it abandoning its nuclear weapons program. Bush ruled out a formal non-aggression pact with Pyongyang, which North Korea has set as a condition for giving up its nuclear weapons program, but he acknowledged the United States was exploring a possible compromise with key allies China, Japan, South Korea and Russia. ``We think there's an opportunity to move the process forward and we're going to discuss it with our partners,'' Bush said on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in the Thai capital. ``We will not have a treaty, if that's what you're asking. That's off the table,'' he said. A disasterous lack of choiceby Prometheus 6
October 19, 2003 - 9:01am. on News There is so much I want to say about this. I've known many, many people who had to make similar choices; people with school aged children who needed two incomes to get by, single parents… If, as the authorities suggest, this was arson, she may have been able to save her children or may have been caught in the flames herself, who knows? But she shouldn't have the grief of loss compounded by accusations of wrongdoing because she made the best choice she could. Daily Choice Turned Deadly: Children Left on Their Own By NINA BERNSTEIN Last Sunday, as her night shift neared, Kim Brathwaite faced a hard choice. Her baby sitter had not shown up, and to miss work might end her new position as assistant manager at a McDonald's in downtown Brooklyn. So she left her two children, 9 and 1, alone, trying to stay in touch by phone. It turned out to be a disastrous decision. Someone, it seems, deliberately set fire to her apartment. Her children died. And within hours, Ms. Brathwaite was under arrest, charged with recklessly endangering her children. The investigation is continuing, and an arrest in the arson may soon overshadow the criminal charges against Ms. Brathwaite, who is not a suspect in the fire, investigators say. But she is now facing up to 16 years in prison for a decision that, surveys and interviews with experts suggest, cuts uncomfortably close to some choices made every day by American families. Nationwide, parents themselves report leaving more than 3 million children under 13 -- some as young as 5 -- to care for themselves for at least a few hours a week on a regular basis, according to a recent study by Child Trends, a nonprofit research organization in Washington, D.C., that analyzed census information and other data. And so the Brooklyn case highlights a much broader debate, one with few fixed legal guideposts. For state statutes typically set no age under 18 when a child is legally considered old enough to stay home alone. Thus parents are left with many case-by-case judgments, and prosecutors with vast discretion when something goes wrong. |