Week of April 16, 2006 to April 22, 2006

You will likely find the author on Free Republic

Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 21, 2006 - 7:49pm.
on

This is Colorado, not DC. And it is seriously not good.

Threatening e-mail decried on floor
By Chris Frates
Denver Post Staff Writer
DenverPost.com

Democratic House Speaker Andrew Romanoff told his colleagues on the House floor today that he was "profoundly disturbed" by a threatening e-mail sent to Democratic Rep. Terrance Carroll earlier this week.

"I have never in my six years here seen a message that comes as close to a death threat against a member of this body," Romanoff said.

Carroll, a black Denver lawmaker, received an e-mail that supported his lynching after making a joke suggesting the state build a wall around its borders to keep out the Minutemen, armed citizens who patrol the border between the U.S. and Mexico.

This is truly a "holy shit!" moment

Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 21, 2006 - 7:42pm.
on
Viruses "trained" to build tiny batteries
Fri Apr 7, 2006 10:30 AM ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Researchers trying to make tiny machines have turned to the power of nature, engineering a virus to attract metals and then using it to build minute wires for microscopic batteries.

The resulting nanowires can be used in minuscule lithium ion battery electrodes, which in turn would be used to power very small machines, the researchers report in Friday's issue of the journal Science.

The international team of researchers, led by a group at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, used the M13 virus, a simple and easily manipulated virus.

The Men's Rights Movement, explained

Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 21, 2006 - 6:41pm.
on
Why women are changing their minds about men
06 April 2006

WHAT do women want from a man? In the past, surveys have overwhelmingly shown that women want a rich man, and men want a good-looking woman. While not much has changed for men, as women's financial independence has increased, it seems that their preferences have changed.

Fhionna Moore and colleagues at the University of St Andrews, UK, analysed questionnaires from 1851 heterosexual women between the ages of 18 and 35. They found that as a woman's level of "resource control" increases - in other words as they become more financially independent - so does their preference for physical attractiveness in potential partners.

It also helps you vote Republican

Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 21, 2006 - 6:34pm.
on

Quote of note:

The brain’s ability to “switch off” the self may have evolved as a protective mechanism, he suggests. “If there is a sudden danger, such as the appearance of a snake, it is not helpful to stand around wondering how one feels about the situation,” Goldberg points out.

Watching the brain 'switch off' self-awareness
18:00 19 April 2006
NewScientist.com news service
Gaia Vince

Everybody has experienced a sense of “losing oneself” in an activity – being totally absorbed in a task, a movie or sex. Now researchers have caught the brain in the act.

Goldberg found that when the sensory stimulus was shown slowly, and when a personal emotional response was required, the volunteers showed activity in the superfrontal gyrus – the brain region associated with self-awareness-related function.

A new rhetorical attack

Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 21, 2006 - 11:53am.
on
Rachel's Tavern:
This weekend a terrible assault was caught on surveillance video in Las Vegas. The lone suspect arrest in the case, probably with others to follow, is a Black man. The reports such as the one above from CBS describe this attack as part of a new trend--swarming. The reporter says that in swarmings the suspects "move like a pack of wolves." One thing that is common when Black men's bad behavior is referenced is analogies to animals. In the case swarming in an obvious reference to bees, and the further description describes the group of attackers as wolves. This seems to be quite common in the descriptions of Black men's bad behaviors.

Another county heard from

Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 21, 2006 - 7:15am.
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Lissa at A Nerd's Haven responded to the poll question "What is Black folks' most pressing need?" by long distance. Temple3 gets props for precision.

Of the options, the one I most agree with is, “Develop or increase control of our lives”. Like Temple 3 suggests in his comment:

I believe that economic freedom, physical safety and spiritual/cultural continuity requires discipline. I selected “Develop or Increase Control Over Our Lives.” I chose this option because self-control is the cornerstone of these three imperatives.

He honestly hit the nail right on the head for me. It is discipline and self-control that lead to personal responsibility, and that, I think, is the cornerstone of a healthy community, as it opens the door to the “economic freedom, physical safety and spiritual/cultural continuity” Temple 3 mentions.

A strong sense of personal responsibility and accountability keeps a community aware, and an aware community is more likely to be critical/considering of its actions and choices and dealings with others. Many of the the other options in that poll then become possible, if one wants them to be–I’m not convinced that “Become as independant [sic] as possible from others” should be a goal, especially if it is the separatist sort of sentiment I’m interpreting it to be.

Somebody need to tell me about them [sic] spelling errors...

Anyway, she goes on quite thoughtfully, and I really appreciate the input. What I's like is for any Black blogger or Black person that blogs to go into the topic as Lissa did. If I see it on Technorati, I'll link it. If for some reason you're not pulled into Technorati's digital vacuum cleaner, hit me by email.

And Lissa's interpretation of the [sic] option is closer to correct than not. Not everyone that will select that is a seperatist but they will at least have sympathy for the position.

...and no sound scientific studies supported global warming and climate change

Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 21, 2006 - 6:47am.
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...or abstanance-only sexual education, or evolution,right?

F.D.A. Dismisses Medical Benefit From Marijuana
By GARDINER HARRIS

WASHINGTON, April 20 — The Food and Drug Administration said Thursday that "no sound scientific studies" supported the medical use of marijuana, contradicting a 1999 review by a panel of highly regarded scientists.

Good night, sweet prince of evil

Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 21, 2006 - 6:44am.
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Robert J. Samuelson is right

Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 21, 2006 - 6:28am.
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There IS a Conspiracy Against Assimilation.

We have a conspiracy against assimilation. One side would offend and ostracize much of the Hispanic community. The other would encourage mounting social and economic costs. Either way we get a more polarized society.

And it's been waged by the mainstream.

It's sometimes said that today's Hispanics will resemble yesterday's Italians. Although they won't advance as rapidly as some other groups of more skilled immigrants, they'll still move into the mainstream. Many have -- and will. But the overall analogy is a stretch, according to a recent study, "Italians Then, Mexicans Now," by sociologist Joel Perlmann of Bard College. Since 1970 wages of Mexican immigrants compared with those of native whites have declined. By contrast, wages of Italians and Poles who arrived early in the last century rose over time. For the children of immigrants, gaps are also wide. Second-generation Italians and Poles typically earned 90 percent or more compared to native whites. For second-generation Mexican Americans, the similar figure is 75 percent.

Watch this

Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 21, 2006 - 6:11am.
on | |

U.S. Crackdown Set Over Hiring of Immigrants
By ERIC LIPTON

WASHINGTON, April 20 — The apprehension on Wednesday of more than 1,100 illegal immigrants employed by a pallet supply company based in Houston, as well as the arrest of seven of its managers, represented the start of a more aggressive federal crackdown on employers, Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said Thursday.

Describing the hiring of millions of illegal workers, in some cases, as a form of organized crime, Mr. Chertoff said the government would try to combat the practice with techniques similar to those used to shut down the mob.

"We target those organizations, we use intelligence to define the scope of the organization, and then we use all of the tools we have — whether it's criminal enforcement or the immigration laws — to make sure we come down as hard as possible and break the back of those organizations," Mr. Chertoff said at a news conference.

Do not confuse the fiats of a bureaucrat, no matter how high;y placed, with the law.

Math Prof Apologizes for Test Question

Submitted by ptcruiser on April 20, 2006 - 4:02pm.
Condoleezza tosses a watermelon into the air

A community college math instructor has apologized for a test question invoking Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice that students complained was racially insensitive.

Peter Ratener, 60, who has taught at Bellevue Community College for more than 25 years, said Wednesday night at a trustees meeting that the question on an exam last month was an "egregious mistake."



Watermelons? I'm sure that many folks will disagree with me but I am having a hard time understanding why people are so angry with this instructor. The  head of the local Urban League is calling for this instructor's dismissal because he placed a watermelon in Condi's hand on a test question. Folks are getting wind in their jaws about this issue? Give me a break.

The behinder I get

Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 20, 2006 - 11:50am.
on

I got some down time. Took a glance at me normal online haunts...I got some catching up to do. Fortunately, ptcruiser spotted the inevitable response to Ishmael Reed's rant against who are insufficiently supportive of Black folks.

Isn't that just the most elegant way of saying "sell-out" you ever heard?

Anyway, Richaard Prince reports from the heart of the NABJ's discssion listserver, and serves up Michel Martin's response to it all at the very end of the page.

The other biggie is Michael Tomasky's essay in The American Prospect, which magazine I've watched since they advised minorities to just shut up and let us win these white votes. Normally I'd wait until I had a chance to read the damn thing, but Digby's coverage of it at Hullabaloo showed me not a lot has changed in their analysis of things.

One more day

Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 20, 2006 - 11:04am.
I'll be back on the air tomorrow.

Thatnks to everyone for the condolences.

Dispassion may not always be appropriate

Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 19, 2006 - 5:50am.

Riding five and a half hours in an SUV, I don't care how comfy or how well kept the roads are, sucks. Another hour and a half of assorted traffic delays means it's not even as pleasant as sucking.

I feel like I should write a big dramatic thing. See, I'm the family stoic. I'm a bit more precise online...the best of us must reach for a word or stumble over one's own tongue once in a while...but my real life persona is pretty close to what you get here. Only in a crisis, I'm worse. ALL emotion shuts down and I drop into pure computation mode.

No, all emotional expression shuts down.

I rode down with my sister and her husband. Sis and I are pretty close, but she really would like to see me become more humane.

Case in point:

When we got here, I met my niece's husband of two years for the first time. We go with him to the hospital to sign the organ donation forms...he sees the adminitrator, we go see the body. Though the brain activity is gone it looks alive...it's on a ventilator, and under a heated wrap to keep the body at normal temperature, and the nurse is explaining all that...and I say, "That's all for our benefit, isn't it?" Everyone jumped. After a pause, the nurse smiled and said, "yes."

Have some culture

Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 18, 2006 - 1:00pm.
on

I can't be creative here, but Opal's my girl (that picture is just about life-sized) so I'm posting this cut and paste job on the way out the door.


Opal Palmer Adisa is in NYC this week promoting her latest publication, EROS MUSE

She will be reading at
Fordham University
113 wEST 60TH sT. nYC 10023 (South Lounge)
Wednesday April 19th
Reading Begins at 1pm and Reception is to Follow
 
Opal Palmer Adisa is an award-winning poet and prose writer who has eleven titles to her credit, including the novel, It Begins With Tears. Please see Adisa's complete biography attached and learn more at www.opalwriters.com.  Adisa's work is quality and has been recognized by some of the leading authors of our time, including Alice Walker  who describes her work as “solid, visceral, important stories written with integrity and love.” Adisa's poetry was also recognized by Essence Magazine and was featured in their December 2005 and February 2006 issues. Please see Adisa's complete biography attached and learn more at www.opalwriters.com..

Nevermind

Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 18, 2006 - 10:49am.
It would seem there's no reason for my trip.

This sucks

Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 18, 2006 - 9:39am.
on

I would watch this if I could. I'll probably see if I can get a review copy of the book.

Help at Any Cost: How the Troubled-Teen Industry Cons Parents and Hurts Kids
(Riverhead Books, 2006)

BOOK FORUM
Thursday, April 20, 2006
12:00 PM (Luncheon to Follow)

Featuring the author Maia Szalavitz, Senior Fellow, Stats.org; and with comments by Evan Wright Contributing Editor, Rolling Stone Author, Generation Kill: Devil Dogs, Iceman, Captain America, and the New Face of American War.

The Cato Institute
1000 Massachusetts Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20001

tv Watch the Event Live in RealVideo
Listen to the Event in RealAudio (Audio Only)

As the War on Drugs continues to fill America's prisons with nonviolent offenders, many cities and states are looking at mandatory treatment as an alternative to incarceration. Although treatment is generally preferable to prison, not all methods of treating drug addiction are the same. Some methods, particularly the "tough love" programs aimed at teens and adolescents, have documented records of mental abuse, physical abuse, and even death.

In her new book, Help at Any Cost, Maia Szalavitz takes a critical look at the history, controversy, and effectiveness of "tough love" rehabilitation programs. Blending personal stories and anecdotes with the detached narrative of a reporter, Szalavitz paints a troubling picture of the increasingly popular "get tough" approach to drug abuse.

Cato events, unless otherwise noted, are free of charge. To register for this event, please fill out the form below and click submit or email [email protected], fax (202) 371-0841, or call (202) 789-5229 by 12:00 noon, Wednesday, April 19, 2006. Please arrive early. Seating is limited and not guaranteed. News media inquiries only (no registrations), please call (202) 789-5200.

If you can't make it to the Cato Institute, watch this forum live online.

If you plan to watch this event online, there is no need to register.

Gone for a while

Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 18, 2006 - 8:32am.
My niece in Virginia turned up with a brain tumor this weekend, fell into a coma. It does not look good. So I'm outta here in the next few hours until I'm not sure when. I may get to check in to approve comments from unregistered folks and such, but that's about it...and even that's not sure.

This shit ain't no fun. people. I'm feeling rather detached at the moment out of necessity.

You can tell by the terminology we're going into permanent denial

Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 18, 2006 - 7:42am.
on

Battle Rages in Baghdad Neighborhood
Iraqi security forces fight gunmen for nine hours, leaving at least three people dead. Some residents, apparently fearing attack, join in.
By Louise Roug
Times Staff Writer
April 18, 2006

BAGHDAD — Intense fighting broke out between Iraqi security forces and gunmen in a volatile Sunni Arab section of the capital, leaving at least three people dead and terrifying residents during a battle that began during the night and extended into the daylight hours Monday.

Authorities said about 50 Sunni gunmen had fought the country's Shiite-dominated security forces for nine hours in the northern neighborhood of Adhamiya, forcing U.S. troops supporting the Iraqi forces to close down streets and entrances to the area.

Some residents entered the clash, exchanging gunfire with Iraqi soldiers and police they believed to be members of a death squad.

"Gunmen" jumped out at me. I noticed years ago that Palestinians aren't rebels or in militias, they are gunmen. And the last line in the excerpt is so sad it's almost funny.

Were the security forces wearing uniforms? I don't think so...I'm certain Iraqi would recognize the uniforms. In a running battle in a Sunni neighborhood, essentially Shiites vs Sunnis, ya damn skippy they thought it was a death squad. May well have been without them uniforms...

Ooooh, look what I found!

Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 18, 2006 - 7:31am.
on

About New Horizons for Learning

Since 1980, New Horizons for Learning has served as a leading-edge resource for educational change. We have identified, communicated, and helped to implement successful educational strategies through:

Our role has always been to give visibility to effective teaching and learning practices and explore and to help implement ideas that have not yet reached the mainstream, and to work in coordination with other reputable networks and learning communities. New Horizons for Learning is often a "launching pad" for new educational organizations and projects.

Racially profile THIS

Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 18, 2006 - 6:45am.
on

Quote of note:

Terrorists have been working to recruit non-Arab sympathizers — so-called "white Muslims" with Western features who theoretically could more easily blend into European cities and execute attacks — according to classified intelligence documents obtained by The Associated Press.

Terrorists Recruiting 'White Muslims'
By WILLIAM J. KOLE
Associated Press Writer

SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina — His code name was Maximus, and he held secret meetings in a shabby room at the Banana City Hotel on the outskirts of Sarajevo.

Bosnian police put him under surveillance, and in a raid last fall on his apartment on Poligonska Street, authorities seized explosives, a suicide bomber belt and a videotape of masked men begging Allah's forgiveness for what they were about to do.

Get the money back

Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 18, 2006 - 6:29am.
on

Enforce the laws on the books.

An estimated $8 billion was paid in award fees from fiscal 1999 to 2003, when many of the projects involved were over budget and behind schedule. Bethesda-based Lockheed Martin Corp., for example, collected $1.5 billion in award fees on three major programs, the F/A-22 Raptor jet fighter, the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, and the Space-Based Infrared System High satellite, despite cost, schedule and reliability problems, the GAO found.

Big Rewards for Defense Firms
Extra Fees Paid Regardless of Performance, GAO Finds
By Charles R. Babcock
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, April 17, 2006; D01

Why am I not surprised their stated reasons have nothing to do with reality?

Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 18, 2006 - 6:08am.
on

Oh, HELL no...

Much of the rail line along the Gulf Coast would remain in hurricane danger, and the proposed rerouting would affect only a small part.

The real impetus appears to be economic. For more than half a dozen years, Mississippi officials, development planners and tourism authorities have dreamed of the complex restructuring of Mississippi's coastal transportation system that Lott and Cochran now want to set in motion. Under the plan, the CSX line -- which runs a few blocks off the coast line -- would be scrapped. CSX would move its freight traffic to existing tracks to the north owned by rival Norfolk Southern.

Then U.S. 90, a wide federal highway that hugs Mississippi's beaches, would be rebuilt along the CSX rail bed. The route of the federal thoroughfare would be turned into a smaller, manicured "beach boulevard" through cities such as Biloxi, where visitors could "spend more time strolling among the casinos and taking in the views," as the Governor's Commission on Recovery, Rebuilding and Renewal put it.

"There's nothing wrong with this if Mississippi wants to do it. Mississippi wanted to do it before the hurricane," Coburn said. "But why is it a federal responsibility? Why should our grandchildren pay for it?"

Mississippi Senators' Rail Plan Challenged
War Bill Includes Millions to Move Just-Rebuilt Line
By Jonathan Weisman
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, April 18, 2006; A01

No one is treating you like a terrorist, Ms. Malkin

Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 18, 2006 - 5:39am.
on

Ms. Malkin:

The unhinged lefty bloggers who did and said nothing to condemn the violent tactics of the UC Santa Cruz thugs are treating me like I'm the terrorist.

Seems a number of your readers deserve such treatment. But not you.

You're not a terrorist, you're a cell leader.

No, but seriously, your plaintive cry shows an interesting redefinition of the word "terrorist," apparently to "he or she that terrifies."

Turns the "War on Terror" into something else entirely...

Is this good? I don't think this is good...

Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 17, 2006 - 10:22pm.
on
By EDWARD WONG

BAGHDAD, Iraq, April 17 — American and Iraqi troops sealed off one of Baghdad's most prominent Sunni Arab neighborhoods on Monday after a night of raging gun battles that left homes and storefronts riddled with bullets and at least one civilian dead, Iraqi officials and witnesses said.

The closure of Adhamiya, in northern Baghdad, seemed to signal deteriorating security in a neighborhood where attacks on American and Iraqi forces had ebbed in recent months. The area is home to hard-line Sunni Arabs who remain hostile to the Shiite-led government and American presence. At its center is the well-known Abu Hanifa Mosque, where Saddam Hussein made his final public appearance in April 2003 before fleeing Baghdad and the American invasion force.

Great Job Michelle

Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 17, 2006 - 9:05pm.
on |

A real newspaper would be reporting this rather than putting crap on the front page.

Malkin knows her audience.

In her update to the post Michelle writes:

      "SAW has removed the contact information from its press release and is now lying about the fact that it made the info publicly available on the Internet. I am leaving it up. If you are contacting them, I do not condone death threats or foul language. As for SAW, my message is this: You are responsible for your individual actions. Other individuals are responsible for theirs. Grow up and take responsibility."

Obviously the death threats are emanating from her blog and she knows it. Malkin understands the nature of the fear and outrage she causes. Will she take responsibility when somebody gets hurt? Here's another example of the fear-mongering she causes. Read Cathy Young's Boston Globe column.

Here's an article about the affair.


Death Threats and Harrassment
Submitted by studentsagainstwar on Fri, 04/14/2006 - 12:00am.

After our successfull counter recruitment action on Tuesday, the right wing decided to resort to personal threats and intimidation. SAW Press team members received hundreds of threatening emails and phone calls, after inflammatory blogger Michelle Malkin put the students' personal information on her blog. More than a dozen other websites followed suit. She refused to remove the information, even after she was politely asked and the safety concderns were brought to her attention. Below is a small sample of the emails. Voicemails coming soon.

By the way

Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 17, 2006 - 7:16pm.
on
I don't remember if I made the specific point of linking Temple 3's new blog, Thought, Word and Deed. Just in case, though, here you go.

I don't think Bob will mind me stealing the whole post

Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 17, 2006 - 3:59pm.
on

Mind the auto-play soundtrack...(I hate that, by the way...and the player is all the way at the bottom of the page.)

WHAT IS THIS SITE? (It's Jazz for people who say that they don't like Jazz)

Soul-Patrol Jazz I grew up listening to "jazz music". It was played in my household, in my neighborhood, on the radio and on TV. It was played at family gatherings, it was played at block parties, barbeques, subway stations, street corners, weddings and even funerals. The term "jazz" back in those days meant everything from Doc Severenson to Dr. Lonnie Smith, from John Coltrae to John Scofield, from the Heath Brothers to the Brecker Brothers. In my neighborhood, Gil Scott-Heron and Gil Evans co-existed as did Herbie Hancock and Herbie Mann. In my universe CTI was just as great a jazz label as Impulse or Blue Note and I saw no conflict whatsoever between Sun Ra, Dave Brubeck and Grover Washington. Of course that world of jazz all disappeared sometime during the 1980's and it became stratified and subdivided into many different sub genres and in doing so lost touch with "regular people".

The scope of Soul-Patrol Jazz is inspired by a great radio station that existed in NYC back in the 1970's called WRVR-FM. One of the things that made WRVR so great was that it focused on presenting jazz music and commentary that was "in touch with regular people". The real brillance of WRVR was that not only was it able to connect with "regular people", but it also educated listeners about "deeper music" at the same time, without "pandering" or becoming "condesending". That's what we are going to do here at Soul-Patrol Jazz.

One of the things we will be doing here is updating the site often with new releases, so bookmark the page and also sign up for the Soul-Patrol Newsletter (where we will be announcing the updates) using the form at the top of the page. This time out we have features on Miles Davis, Herbie Hancock, Chip Shelton, Frank McComb, MFA Kera/Mike Russell, Spirit of Life Ensemble, Bill Godwin's Ink Spots, The Rebirth, Onaje Allan Gumbs, Jason Miles, Louise Perryman, Marlon Saunders, D-Erania. Soon be updating these pages with info on upcoming jazz releases from Smokey Robinson, Diana Ross, Gladys Knight, Billy Griffin (yes I said Jazz), File Under G, Monet, Janis Siegel, Jazzhole, "V", Eric Person, Hill St. Soul, Shilts, Vernon Reid and Masque, Frank McComb, SounDoctrine and more. We will also be having some offline events. For example we will be hosting the CD release party for longtime Soul-Patroller Chip Shelton's new CD called "Peacetime" @ Trumpets Jazz Club in Montclair, NJ on Apr 27, 2006 7:30 PM. And of course we will continue to do jazz on internet radio at Soul-Patrol as well as featuring our jazz programming here on this page.
So stay tuned and if you have any ideas or suggestions for me, please let me know...

--Bob Davis
[email protected]

It's been a while since I've seen Ishmael Reed quite this annoyed

Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 17, 2006 - 12:30pm.
on

How the Media Uses Blacks to Chastize Blacks
The Colored Mind Doubles
By ISHMAEL REED

I'll bet the executives got the idea from the cynical packagers of President Bush's political strategies. The administration's advocates of torture for example are Vietnamese, Chinese and Mexican Americans. The former domestic policy advisor who was recently arrested for scamming a department store is black, and the secretary of state is black. When they come before congressional committees, the idea is that congressmen would be reluctant to submit them to harsh questioning for fear of being called racist. That way, they can promote the administration's megalomaniac foreign policy with very little criticism. I'm sure that's Karl Rove's thinking.

Unlike Ms. Rice, who I, in a heated public exchange with her, dubbed "the Manchurian Candidate" about a year before she joined the Bush campaign, journalist Barbara Reynolds is a progressive. She said that she was fired from USA Today because she didn't appeal to the demographic group from which the paper gets its sales: Angry White Men. Those black syndicated columnists who have remained must fit the bill. They have become the go-fers for backlash journalism, all of them competing with each other to blame the country's social problems on black behavior.

There's a SERIOUSLY interesting article at The New Republic.

Submitted by Prometheus 6 on April 17, 2006 - 10:06am.
on |

In The Beginnings by Richard Primus starts like this:

American constitutional law has never come fully to grips with the Civil War. A constitution is a system of government, and no system of government fulfills its basic purposes if it cannot settle divisive political issues by non-violent means. In other words, a civil war is a constitutional failure. In the American case, it may be said that the Civil War of 1861-1865 marked the catastrophic failure of the Constitution of 1787.  

Given the enormity of the collapse, it is remarkable that American civic culture has not internalized any real sense that the Constitution failed. One reason, of course, is that the victorious North did not tear up the written Constitution and start completely afresh. But there are also deeper reasons why Americans have been reluctant to see the Civil War and Reconstruction as regime-changing events. Long after Appomattox, the issues of the Civil War remained explosive in American politics. The status of African Americans was still a fighting matter one hundred years later, and even today national political cleavages track the geography of the old sectional division. Many Americans romanticized the Confederacy right through the twentieth century, suggesting that they could not wholeheartedly endorse the results of the Civil War. To ground the modern constitutional order in the Civil War and Reconstruction, therefore, would be to build the republic on a foundation about which many powerful people were at best ambivalent.

To regard the Founding as the one true source of our Constitution, by contrast, offers a great deal of comfort. If we are the direct successors to 1787, it must be the case that nothing earth-shattering has intervened. Celebrating the Founding allows us to repress the memory of slavery, of early America's failure to deal humanely and peacefully with that problem, and of the mass bloodletting that followed. The desire to erase that awful memory has been prominent for more than a century, ever since waving the bloody shirt ceased to be an effective electoral strategy for Northern Republicans. Woodrow Wilson, the first Southerner elected president after the Civil War, spoke on the fiftieth anniversary of Gettysburg of "the quarrel forgotten." And when the world war that followed Wilson's expression of relief spawned a tendency among historians to see mass warfare as the pointless tragedy of a blundering generation, the idea that the Civil War could have been a heroically generative event became less attractive still.