"MOST GUNS ARE SEMIAUTOMATIC:" Mickey Kaus explains firearms technology to a bemused Robert Wright, on Bloggingheads TV.
UPDATE: Eugene Volokh similarly educates the editors of The Economist, who appear in great need of education. Really, if The Economist is going to opine on this sort of thing, its writers need to know something on the subject.
MORE CRITICISM OF NBC, this time from Harry Shearer at The Huffington Post:
Not so easy is the answer to the question: what is the possible journalistic explanation for splashing Cho's self-dramatizing poses and self-justifying bullshit over network and cable air? Did we learn anything useful during the spate of interviews of Charlie Manson years ago, except that he was one crazy motherfucker? Cho's pathetic outpourings deserved to be put back where they came from--in a small room, with FBI guys sentenced to read/see and parse them Instead, a hundred thousand self-pitying mentally ill young men (and women?) have just been shown the road to glory one more time. A society in which it's easier to become famous for killing people than for doing something useful or constructive is one remarkable place in which to live.
Create bad incentives, get bad behavior. Meanwhile, some thoughts from Dave Cullen in Slate.
BOINGBOING BANNED IN BOSTON: This is the best argument against municipal wi-fi systems -- they're sure to be run by idiots who can't resist meddling and censoring.
CLAYTON CRAMER IS STILL TOURING in support of his book, Armed America, and Eric Scheie attended one of his appearances and -- of course -- blogged about it.
SPYING FOR IRAN? "A former engineer at the nation's largest nuclear power plant has been charged with taking computer access codes and software to Iran and using it to download details of plant control rooms and reactors, authorities said." Ed Morrissey has further thoughts.
THE COLOR OF MONEY: Colbert King charges Hillary Clinton with Hip-Hop hypocrisy.
China has canceled the hosting of the 25th meeting of the Inter-Agency Space Debris Coordination Committee (IADC).
The China National Space Administration was slated to host the IADC April 23-26 at the China Academy of Space Technology in Beijing.
The IADC is a confab of countries that, in a governmental forum, discusses worldwide coordination of activities related to issues of human-made and natural debris in space.
On January 11, China created the largest debris cloud of satellite fragments in Earth orbit after they destroyed their own weather satellite in an anti-satellite test.
The April issue of NASA’s Orbital Debris Quarterly News labels the Chinese ASAT test as creating the most severe orbital debris cloud in history.
I guess they figured nobody was going to say anything good about them anyway . . . .
FROM IRAQI BLOGGER ALAA, a mixed assessment of U.S. security strategy. "However, between the extreme course of total withdrawal and the present detailed involvement with daily operations; there is a middle way that few are talking about. Complete abandon and retreat by the Americans would indeed constitute defeat and a victory for the enemy, and would turn the tables completely and ignite a larger conflagration in the region. On the other hand the level of involvement of American and other allied foreign troops with detailed street to street policing, house searches etc. etc. should not continue indefinitely. . . . What must be realized is that as long as the U.S. is strategically present, the enemy has no hope of achieving any of his objectives. This enemy knows this only too well; and his prime objective is to bring about this withdrawal and retreat by all means. He pins his hopes on the internal situation in the U.S., and this is his most potent weapon. Therefore most of his actions and attacks are basically publicity stunts aimed primarily at the MSM and American and western public opinion."
TECH ADVICE BLEG: Anybody out there own this Panasonic HD camcorder? It looks pretty sweet, and the Popular Mechanics folks like it, but what's it like in actual long-term use? We've got some video projects in mind for this summer, and I'm wondering whether to upgrade. The one we have now works quite well, but it's bulkier, tape-based (so capture has to take place in real time) and not HD. My sense is that waiting a while makes sense, but I'm not sure. Advice from those who haven't waited would be appreciated.
UPDATE: Andrew Marcus emails:
Glenn- I saw the "pro" version of this camera at NAB and was blown away! I haven't had time to check out the differences between the consumer version and the "pro" version, but if they are similar enough, it is a winner. I'll do more research later today and let you know.
Hmm. The descriptions look pretty similar. This review says: "The big difference - a portable 40GB hard drive that can store the contents of the SD cards and a color space more closely matched to their pro camcorders." Software seems not quite ready, though.
BLOGGER AND PODCASTER MAGAZINE is a new magazine for, er, bloggers and podcasters. Looks pretty interesting to me -- but then, I'm surely at the core of its target market.
LIEBERMAN ON HARRY REID: "We should not surrender in the face of barbarism."
HOW TIMES HAVE CHANGED: A look at the 1957 Far Rockaway High School Rifle Team. It's certainly a sign of how New York has changed, and not for the better.
Meanwhile, in 2007 Yale is banning fake weapons on stage. And to think that universities hold themselves out as bastions of critical thinking where people can make fine distinctions . . . .
As Sigmund Freud said: "A fear of weapons is a sign of retarded sexual and emotional maturity."
UPDATE: Perhaps the Yale cast should show up in this apparel.
ANOTHER UPDATE: Eugene Volokh: "Do Yale students have a hard time telling theater from reality? Are they so emotionally fragile that they would be traumatized by seeing a realistic sword on stage?"
MORE: Reader Ryan Robinson notes something fishy at Wikiquote:
Just wanted to point this out…
At some point since you posted the Sigmund Freud quote “A fear of weapons is a sign of retarded sexual and emotional maturity”, somebody went on to wikiquote.org and edited the page. They have that quote now marked as O“Misattributed”. Whoever edited the page says that they searched Google Print, but apparently they neglected to note that the version they searched is NOT the complete text of Freud’s work. Perhaps someone with access to a library can confirm or deny that quote.
Interesting how quickly the wikiquote page was modified… Also interesting that they *speculatively* attribute the quote to an opponent of gun control.
This is why wikis suck. That quote has been there for years -- then I link it and it vanishes. I think the quote's real -- at least I've seen it elsewhere before. But either the quote was bogus when I linked it -- which means that wikiquote sucks -- or the quote was real and has been deleted/marked as misattributed for political reasons -- which means that wikiquote sucks. And there's no obvious indication that it's changed since I cited it. Which means that wikiquote sucks.
STILL MORE: The Freud quote reappeared, but is now back to "misattributed" on Wiikiquote. Here's a suggestion that it isn't accurate from another source. What I hate is that it's very hard for readers to tell when I've linked to Wikiquote what it looked like when I established the link.
MORE STILL: I went to the library to look the Freud reference up myself. The quote above doesn't appear on p. 33 as cited. Instead, there is what's seen below, which appears right after an account of a dream in which a woman tries to unsheathe a dagger to kill herself, only to awaken and find she's tugging on her husband's penis:
This is consistent with the (currrent) WikiQuote version, saying that the Freud quote is actually quoting Kates' commentary on what Freud might think, rather than what Freud actually said.
Which doesn't make Yale look any less dumb. Any speculation on the sexual underpinnings of Yale's policy regarding swords on stage will be left as an exercise for the reader. . . .
Ramey, who won the elite beauty crown in 1944, confronted one of the three robbers on her farm in Waynesburg, Ky., about 140 miles south of Cincinnati, the Cincinnati Enquirer reported.
"He was probably wetting his pants," said Ramey, who balanced on her walking stick as she pulled out a snub-nosed .38-caliber handgun.
I HAVEN'T BEEN FOLLOWING THE WOLFOWITZ / WORLD BANK STORY very closely, but a reader sends this defense of Wolfowitz by Ruth Wedgwood that I had missed: "The most amazing thing is that all the facts were reviewed for a second time by the World Bank ethics committee last year, and again it found nothing wrong. The chairman of the ethics committee pronounced in a Feb. 28, 2006, letter that 'the ethics committee decided that the allegations … do not appear to pose ethical issues.' It is hard to square the record with the entertaining claim that the World Bank's president somehow concocted a do-nothing job for his girlfriend. It's a bum rap, and one that women professionals in dual-career families might worry about."
KATHY SIERRA ON NPR ON BLOG COMMENTS AND CIVILITY: Makes me glad I don't have comments. Especially this: "Jacquelyn Schlesier is a full-time moderator for Chowhound, a food discussion Web site. She says keeping things civil is a lot of work. She spends as many as 12 hours a day reading through posts and deleting anything offensive, abusive or off-topic. It's a food blog. How bad can things get? Really bad, Schlesier says, especially with some topics."
People just tend to get nasty on the Web; the subject at hand, whatever it happens to be, isn't so much a provocation as an opportunity.
Also, some wise thoughts on comment moderation by Teresa Nielsen Hayden, including this indisputable truth: "Furthermore, the kind of jerks who post comments that need to be deleted will infallibly cry 'censorship!' when it happens. . . . Anonymous nastiness is easy to write, and will always find an appreciative audience. I don’t care. It’s not a manifestation of the free and open discourse of the internet; it’s a thing that destroys that discourse." Read the whole thing.
Alert emailer S.F. asks if NBC, when it broadcast baseball games, refused to show video of fans running onto the field. Most broadcasters don't, on the grounds that it would only encourage more attention-seeking disruptions. ... If that's NBC's practice, why is it OK in order to prevent the disruption of a baseball game but not to prevent mass murder? Just asking.
A cynic would say that when fans run onto the baseball field NBC doesn't make money. But when copycat mass shootings occur, NBC makes money. . . .
A LOOK AT WHO'S TAKING AID AND COMFORT from Harry Reid's statements.
THE LYRID METEOR SHOWER will strike this weekend. Should be pretty, for those in the right place at the right time.
SHOTS FIRED AT JOHNSON SPACE CENTER: Reports seem pretty confused at the moment -- I'm watching CNN. Wolf Blitzer says weapons aren't allowed on the property, but it sounds like that didn't work. . . .
But early reports are usually unreliable, so stay tuned.
UPDATE: A report that it's a contract employee, plus much more, here. More reports, and live video streaming, at KHOU TV.
MORE: Gunman and one hostage dead; another hostage freed. Reports that gunman was shouting "Put me on TV, NBC!" are likely not true . . . .
FRED THOMPSON: "Some people think that power should exist only at the top, and everybody else should rely on 'the authorities' for protection. . . . Whenever I've seen one of those 'Gun-free Zone' signs, especially outside of a school filled with our youngest and most vulnerable citizens, I've always wondered exactly who these signs are directed at. Obviously, they don't mean much to the sort of man who murdered 32 people just a few days ago."
HAS OBAMA-MANIA PEAKED? "What really struck me about that audio clip though was what a gasbag Obama is. I hear a tired-sounding man, who rambles on and on. I know he's speaking before a group. I hear them respond now and then, when he mentions that Iraq is a war that should never have been waged and when he says teachers deserve higher pay. But if I didn't know who he was and that there was a crowd there, I would picture an old man slumped in an armchair, expatiating for the benefit of anyone unlucky enough to be within earshot. It's formless stream of consciousness. Oh, there is that theme of hope. The stream swirls back there at predictable intervals."
JAMES Q. WILSON: "Gun control isn't the answer." Writing in the Los Angeles Times, Wilson observes:
AS FOR THE European disdain for our criminal culture, many of those countries should not spend too much time congratulating themselves. In 2000, the rate at which people were robbed or assaulted was higher in England, Scotland, Finland, Poland, Denmark and Sweden than it was in the United States. The assault rate in England was twice that in the United States. In the decade since England banned all private possession of handguns, the BBC reported that the number of gun crimes has gone up sharply.
Some of the worst examples of mass gun violence have also occurred in Europe. In recent years, 17 students and teachers were killed by a shooter in one incident at a German public school; 14 legislators were shot to death in Switzerland, and eight city council members were shot to death near Paris.
The main lesson that should emerge from the Virginia Tech killings is that we need to work harder to identify and cope with dangerously unstable personalities.
It is a problem for Europeans as well as Americans, one for which there are no easy solutions — such as passing more gun control laws.
And read this: "We decided a half a century ago that our more eccentric and, indeed, crazy fellow citizens would not be easily locked in asylums. It was a humane decision, but with the inevitable consequence that some who really need quarantine are allowed to roam the streets."
DON SURBER on NBC's airing of the Cho video: "NBC should not have shown it. This video was a peep show, not news. There was nothing to be gained in showing it. . . .As a member of the mainstream media, please, accept my apology for the airing of this video. I’m sorry."
IN THE MAIL: The latest Harry Turtledove novel, Beyond the Gap, part of an entirely new alternate-history series.
RADLEY BALKO looks at the National Association of Broadcasters' hatred of satellite radio.
JOHN SCALZI'S NEW NOVEL, The Last Colony -- sequel to Old Man's War and Ghost Brigades -- is now officially out. I was lucky enough to get an advance copy, and I recommend it highly.
MICKEY KAUS: "The Imus affair does look kind of small in retrospect, doesn't it?"
Next month Sharp plans to send a trailer with a rooftop solar panel to sites in California, for demonstrations of how the system can run a television set and other appliances (needless to say, the trailer will be towed by a hybrid vehicle). And in August, when the current campaign runs its course, Sharp expects to send posters and lesson plans to elementary-school teachers to help them teach about solar energy.
“It was children who taught parents about recycling, and children will teach parents about solar energy,” said Ronald Kenedi, vice president of Sharp’s solar energy solutions group.
Hmm. I thought ads aimed at kids, designed to influence parents, were supposed to be bad.
A ROUNDUP ON YESTERDAY'S GONZALES TESTIMONY: It was mostly buried by the other news, but having heard a bit of it on the radio I have to say I was unimpressed.
UPDATE: A reader emails: "That's because Gonzales is unimpressive." Yes, he is -- not only were his responses unimpressive, but his manner. He came across as a mediocrity entirely out of his depth.
And there's this: "Yes, the AG has the right to fire these people for pretty much any reason, but he, at least, should know why he's firing them." The only winner in this deal is John Ashcroft, who's looking better in retrospect -- even to Democrats, I suspect.
MASS SHOOTINGS: "ONLY IN AMERICA" -- It only seems that way if you're uninformed.
HOWARD KURTZ: "In all the years I've been chronicling the media, I have rarely seen the tidal wave of resentment that has washed over television organizations that showed the now-infamous Cho video. In the minds of many Americans, this was a horribly offensive act, and no amount of explanation about the obligations of journalism is going to change that view."
UPDATE: Reader C.J. Burch emails: "The media used up its reserve of good will when it refused to show all of the 9/11 images and when it went to court to show the most offensive Katrina images. The rest of the nation has figured out that all of their claims of journalistic integrity and ehtics are simply nonsense. Journalism is about protecting media organization profits and advancing a political point of view, period."
CHO OVERLOAD: "Whenever anything really bad happens, you can be sure that 'the media' will instantly become more emetic than ever, bombarding you round-the-clock with pseudo stories that endlessly repeat the some two-and-one-half facts and skein of groundless conjecture they first broadcast 36 hours ago. The banner 'New Developments' regularly flits across the bottom of the television screen, but there are almost never any new developments, only those nauseating talking heads emanating concern and sincerity while milking the story of every last drop of sentimental indulgence."
This produces higher ratings in the short run, but I think it costs them over the long run.
This week's announcement by the Canadian government -- that it may join a U.S.-led coalition focused on voluntary emissions cuts -- could be part of a global shift away from Kyoto's binding targets.
In a somewhat surprising development, Canada, a long-time supporter of the Kyoto Protocol, announced that it may want to join the Asia-Pacific Partnership on Clean Development and Climate (AP6), a six-nation coalition focusing on voluntary emission-reduction steps and technology transfers. Many environmentalists oppose AP6 out of a fear that it may undermine political support for the legally binding Kyoto treaty.
Expect more of this kind of thing. It was a fine agreement, until it came time to live up to it!
The government is using the police and army to assist political gangs that are attacking opposition campaigning efforts. Last weekends local elections were often invalid because of the intervention of the more powerful government backed gangs. This weekends presidential elections appear to be headed in the same direction. If that is the case, the country will have un-elected government at the state and national level. That, plus the usual corruption, could be enough to trigger the long feared civil war.
I hope not, but that's becoming not-quite-unthinkable.
MICKEY KAUS: "NBC shouldn't have shown that video. It seems less like an 'ethical challenge' than a no-brainer. Why encourage other potential Cho's to try for a similar publicity bonanza? This isn't a Unabomber like case where publicizing a killer's electronic media kit might help identify him. We already know who did it. . . . NBC's responsibility seems especially heavy since, as the sole recipient of Cho's posthumous publicity kit, they had the power to keep it bottled up and deny him the reward he sought, no? That's not usually the case--i.e., when a killer is still at large or communicates through multiple media outlets."
FACT-CHECKING THE BRADY CAMPAIGN, at Reason. "In any case, note that the 'children' killed by firearms include older teenagers, among them 18-year-olds and 19-year-olds, a.k.a. 'adults.' Judging from the breakdown in 1998 (I can't find comparable data for 1997), more than 80 percent of gun deaths for the under-20 group involve teenagers 15 or older. About 58 percent of the gun deaths that year were homicides, and these included drug dealers shot by other drug dealers, violent criminals shot by police, and other noninnocent nonchildren. About 33 percent of the gun deaths were suicides; 7 percent were accidents."
Follow the link for more (Brady) errors and misrepresentations.
AUSTIN BAY SLAMS HARRY REID FOR WAFFLING DEFEATISM: "It would be refreshing if Reid even had the courage of his defeatist convictions. Thing is, his 'convictions' aren’t convictions. They are the political postures, and this statement is an example of his political game. He tosses a line to the Dems’ defeatist nuts then edges toward reality with an oily pirouette."
Ouch.
UPDATE: More here: "Those Democrats sure know how to support the troops!"
AN OCTOPUS'S GARDEN at Arms and the Law. (POST UPDATED: See the update about the VPC, which doesn't appear to have been behind this story after all, as initially reported.)
The Senate's Democratic leaders have a political problem with earmarks. Ever since the infamous "Bridge to Nowhere" in Alaska captured the public's imagination last year, they have been on record against legislators stealthily slipping in their favorite spending projects. But most senators, from both parties, really want to keep earmarks. An ingenious effort to reconcile those conflicting political desires created a remarkable tableau in the U.S. Senate Tuesday.
First-term Republican Sen. Jim DeMint of South Carolina rose on the Senate floor shortly before noon to request unanimous consent for immediate enactment of a rule requiring full disclosure of earmarks. But the Democratic leadership was forewarned. Just before DeMint took the floor, the Appropriations Committee -- led by Sen. Robert Byrd, the Senate's king of pork -- issued its own flawed anti-earmark regulation. Then, Majority Whip Dick Durbin objected to passage of the DeMint rule on grounds that ethics should not be considered on a piecemeal basis.
This Democratic scenario got rave reviews from most Republicans. Senators like to be on record against earmarks while still enjoying them. The problem is that DeMint and his fellow Republican first-termer, Sen. Tom Coburn of Oklahoma, just won't let the issue rest. Amid thundering silence from the GOP leadership after Durbin's objection, Coburn declared on the Senate floor: "I would remind my colleagues that we don't have a higher favorable rating than the president at this time . . . and the reason we don't is the very reason we just saw. . . . It's a sad day in the Senate because we're playing games with the American public." . . . This is no Democrat-vs.-Republican partisan struggle. The word in the Republican cloakroom was that a GOP senator would derail the DeMint rule if the Democrats did not. The Republican leadership is not enthralled with DeMint and Coburn, and would like them to go away. They won't. They are determined to bring into the open who sponsors and who benefits from earmarks.
Read the whole thing. It's not like the Republicans were good on this when they had the majority. But the Democrats did promise to end the "culture of corruption" and all. . . .
DANNY GLOVER HAS MORE on the "secret hold" that wasn't -- exactly -- a secret hold:
While bloggers may be wrong on parliamentary procedure, they appear to be right on the money in assuming that some Republican lawmaker -- and perhaps the Senate Republican leadership -- doesn't like yet another transparency bill and may even be working to keep it from seeing action. . . .
I entered this fray as a journalist, not as an activist for or against the particular bill in question. I just wanted to ask a question and get an answer. That didn't happen. With me at least, Don Stewart chose spin over transparency, and I'm not happy about it.
So to all of you bloggers out there, I wholeheartedly endorse the underlying message of this campaign against a non-hotlined, secret, non-hold objection: Keep calling your senators and demanding answers. I don't care whether you're doing it because you're more interested in journalism (like me) or campaign finance activism. Just do it -- and don't let anyone stonewall you.
That explanation is true, as far as it goes, but it carefully excludes mention of three significant facts. First, the objection stopped the bill's advance. Didn't kill it but put it on hold for now. Second, the identity of the objection GOP senator was not made public.
I'm just an out-of-town rube, but that sure sounds like a "hold" that is "secret" to me.
The third fact ignored in the Senate GOP rationalization is this: Feinstein's proposal is a no-brainer if you believe in transparency in government but there is a history of GOP opposition to it. That is why the proposal got nowhere in the Senate when the GOP had the majority.
The way to settle the argument here is simple: Disclose the identity of the object[ing] GOP senator who can then explain why his or her procedural argument had to be made behind a cloak of anonymity. It would also be helpful to know what possible objection there could be to having Senate campaign finance reports be made public electronically, just as they are by everybody else required to file them.
Sounds fair to me.
BLOGGING FROM THE RED ZONE: Michael Totten reports from Kirkuk: "Kirkuk’s terrorists are, my Kurdish hosts explained, mostly Baathists, not Islamists. Their racist ideology casts Kurds and Turkmens as the enemy. They’re boxed in on all sides, though, and in their impotent rage murder fellow Arabs by the dozens and hundreds. They have, in effect, strapped suicide belts around their entire community while their more peaceful Kurdish and Turkmen neighbors shudder and fight to keep the Baath in its box."
He's supported by reader donations, so if you like his work, hit the tipjar.
ANOTHER UPDATE: A lot of readers think that this is the important paragraph from Michael's piece:
Most Americans have soured on the war and want out. I was once optimistic myself, but I no longer am. I can’t help but notice, though, that those I’ve spoken to who actually live in Iraq are more confident and less fatalistic.
Well, like I always say, read the whole thing! I can't excerpt it all, you know, or, er, it wouldn't be an "excerpt," now would it?
GEORGE WILL ON LOWERING THE DRINKING AGE: Raising the drinking age was a major betrayal of federalism on the part of the Reagan Administration. It should be undone.
More here: "When it comes to alcohol, the United States is more like Indonesia, Mongolia, and Palau than the rest of the world: It is one of just four countries that requires people to be at least 21 years old to buy booze. The only countries with stiffer laws are Islamic ones."
"SOCIAL CATASTROPHE:" "The blood of the victims of the 'next one' is on the hands of everyone in the decision-making chain at NBC for this utterly inexcusable decision."
THE KILLER IN THE LECTURE HALL: An interesting piece by Barbara Oakley in The New York Times:
Still, the Virginia Tech shootings have already led to calls for all sorts of changes: gun control, more mental health coverage, stricter behavior rules on campuses. Yes, in a perfect world, there would be no guns, no mental illness and no Cho Seung-Huis. But the world is very imperfect. Consider that Britain’s national experiment with gun-free living is proving to be a disaster, with violent and gun crime rates soaring.
In other words, most of the broad social “lessons” we are being told we must learn from the Virginia Tech shootings have little to do with what allowed the horrors to occur. This is about evil, and about how our universities are able to deal with it as a literary subject but not as a fact of life. Can administrators and deans really continue to leave professors and other college personnel to deal with deeply disturbed students on their own, with only pencils in their defense?
(Via Dr. Helen). Read the whole thing. Is it just me, or is the NYT oped page getting more open-minded?
HARRY REID ON THE SUPREME COURT'S ABORTION RULING:
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) was among those who denounced yesterday's Supreme Court ruling upholding the Federal Partial Birth Abortion Act. Commenting on the decision, Reid said "A lot of us wish that Alito weren't there and O'Connor were there," indicating his desire that there has been a fifth vote to invalidate the statute, as Justice O'Connor had provided the fifth vote to invalidate Nebraska's partial-birth abortion ban in Stenberg v. Carhart.
What is curious about Reid's statement, as NPR and some news outlets have noted, is not Reid's criticism of Alito -- Reid opposed Alito's confirmation -- but the fact that Reid supported, and voted for, the federal statute upheld in yesterday's decision. . . .
So, despite his repeated support of legislative restrictions on abortion, Reid's latest comment suggests that he believes the Supreme Court's decision was regrettable and wrongly decided, and that a law that he supported is unconstitutional. To me, the latter is of greater concern. Call me old fashioned, but I believe that if a member of the Senate believes a law is unconstitutional, he or she should vote against it.
As noted, however, Reid is hardly alone in this regard. This kind of thing may explain why Congress's approval numbers are so low.
UPDATE: Stephen Gordon at The Speculist thinks that there would be enough traffic. Problem is, it's a long way from anywhere. It's nice to connect Siberia and Alaska -- making it, as Phil Bowermaster notes, possible to drive from Paris, Texas to Paris, France. But Alaska itself is a long way from anywhere, and there aren't even rail and road connections to the Bering Strait areas where the tunnel would go.
NBC AND THE CHO VIDEO: Huge roundup at BoingBoing.
WALTER SHAPIRO: Repeal the Second Amendment. This approach is at least more honest than the usual one of just wishing it away.
IS FRED THOMPSON IN? Note this observation: "The money is out there. He has plenty of time to collect it. Even if he waits until Labor Day, he will have announced 2 months before GWB did in 1999." And with Internet fundraising -- where I suspect Thompson would do very well -- he has even more room, I think.
WARNINGS IGNORED: "Cho (whose full name is pronounced joh sung-wee) appears first to have alarmed the noted Virginia Tech poet Nikki Giovanni in a creative writing class in fall 2005, Giovanni said. . . . Days later, seven of Giovanni's 70 or so students showed up for a class. She asked them why the others didn't show up and was told that they were afraid of Cho. 'Once I realized my class was scared, I knew I had to do something,' she said."
But not much happened. (Which is, sadly, typical). Giovanni is pretty tough -- she's from Knoxville and I know her slightly -- and if she was alarmed, there was something to be alarmed about.
April 18, 2007
TENNESSEE MOVES TO ALLOW GUNS IN PUBLIC BUILDINGS: "In a surprise move, a House panel voted today to repeal a state law that forbids the carrying of handguns on property and buildings owned by state, county and city governments — including parks and playgrounds. 'I think the recent Virginia disaster — or catastrophe or nightmare or whatever you want to call it — has woken up a lot of people to the need for having guns available to law-abiding citizens,' said Rep. Frank Niceley, R-Strawberry Plains."
Shortly after the Enron scandal broke in 2001, California Attorney General Bill Lockyer declared that he would love to personally escort the company’s CEO “to an eight-by-10 cell that he could share with a tattooed dude who says, ‘Hi, my name is Spike, honey.’ ” The negative reaction compelled Lockyer to offer a tepid apology in a letter to the Los Angeles Times, explaining that he had gotten carried away in righteous anger and pointing to the initiatives he had undertaken to curb prison rape.
The unusual thing about this incident was not that Lockyer made a crude joke about prison rape. It’s that he caught flak for it. While jokes about male-on-female rape are widely viewed as taboo in this feminist age, male-on-male rape in prison is a perfectly acceptable and common subject of humor on late-night comedy shows, in movies, and even in TV commercials. . . .
At present, it is very difficult—virtually impossible in some states—for inmates who have been raped to collect damages from the prison system. Guards who neglect or even condone inmate-on-inmate assaults run virtually no risk of punishment. Other serious measures to combat prison rape would include both “conservative” solutions (stricter prisoner supervision) and “liberal” ones (less overcrowding).
Even lower-end estimates given by correctional organizations suggest that 20,000 to 40,000 inmates are sexually assaulted in American prisons every year. Those are figures no civilized society should accept.
Read the whole thing. More on this subject here and in the linked posts.
A LOOK AT EMERGENCY COMMUNICATIONS in the wake of the Virginia Tech shootings. Still not working as they should be, a lesson we should have learned after 9/11 and Katrina.
THE TROOPS DON'T SEEM TO LIKE THE ARMY'S NEW "LAND WARRIOR" GEAR: And based on this story by Noah Shachtman, there's reason. A mature version of this stuff would be great, but climbing the learning curve is hard.
ZIGGURAT CON will be the first Dungeons and Dragons convention / tournament held in Iraq. (Via Boing Boing).
A REPORT ON THE TOUR DE FRED: “The conservatives say he checks the boxes but he also transcends our party. He reaches out to the middle. He brings Reagan Democrats back to our party. He has appeal that other candidates simply don’t have. . . . The man that came to see us today, in my view, is preparing to run for president.”
HILLARY PLUNGING IN THE POLLS? "A majority of Americans have an unfavorable image of New York Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, the frontrunner for the Democratic presidential nomination. Clinton's current 45% favorable rating with the American public is her third consecutive reading below 50% in the past two months, and is one of the lowest Gallup has measured for her since 1993."
I wonder why that's happened? Other than a bit of waffling on the war, I can't think of anything new that she's done in that time to push her polls down.
UPDATE: Some positive spin: "Hillary is already looking Presidential in the polls!" Heh.
ANOTHER UPDATE: Frank Newport, who knows more about polling than I ever will, is mystified, too: "This is not a one-poll phenomenon. The pattern is fairly linear and persistent. . . . But so far, as others have noted as well, there is no one explanation which can be successfully defended with the available data."
Numerous InstaPundit readers suggest that it's not anything in particular, it's just that she's been campaigning and that's focused people's thinking on what they like, and don't like, about her.
Yet again an anonymous Senator has placed a secret hold on legislation that would increase transparency. This time a secret hold has been placed on a bill, S. 223, that would mandate that Senators file their campaign finance reports electronically. This process would not only make these reports more readily available to the public but would also save money and resources. Yesterday this bill was blocked by an anonymous Senator who placed a secret hold on the bill. Secret holds are so looked down on these days that earlier this year the Senate itself banned the practice, although the bill containing that provision has yet to become law. But until secrets holds are banished forever, we need your help in exposing the culprit who is blocking consideration of the electronic filing requirement for Senate campaign finance reports. We need your help to find out who placed this secret hold! Call your Senators and ask them if they are the one with the secret hold on S. 223. Then report back here in the comments with your findings or email us at info@sunlightfoundation.com.
Follow the link for contact information.
UPDATE: A reader who works in the Senate says that there's no secret hold: "Yesterday, somebody attempted to move the Senate Campaign Disclosure Parity Act up on the schedule by asking for Unanimous Consent. One or more Senators objected to an immediate Unanimous Consent to give themselves time to review the legislation. The legislation is not blocked from receiving its regular consideration; it simply did not receive an early Unanimous Consent vote. The bill will come up in regular order."
DILIGENT CORRECTIONS at The Washington Post. Okay, it's not important, but I'm glad they fixed it.
PARTIAL-BIRTH ABORTION BAN UPHELD. I believe that the ban should have been struck down on commerce clause grounds as outside Congress's power to regulate interstate commerce. Interestingly, the opinion contains this observation from Justice Thomas:
I also note that whether the Act constitutes a permissible exercise of Congress' power under the Commerce Clause is not before the Court. The parties did not raise or brief that issue; it is outside the question presented; and the lower courts did not address it.
RUSSIA'S sense of self-esteem has long been inseparable from its relationship with America. To have America as an enemy during the Cold War gave the Soviet Union a sense of urgency and of purpose: America took Russia seriously!
The end of the cold war deprived Russia briefly of a vital adversary. It is only logical now that, as Russia tries to reassert itself on the world stage, and restore its sense of greatness, it is returning to the sort of sparring with America that it found—perversely—so comforting before.
No television chat show in Russia passes without a bout of America-bashing. Russia does not mind being resented by America. What it does mind is being ignored.
Can we set up a sort of Potemkin foreign-policy to meet the apparently inexhaustible worldwide need to be taken seriously? Kind of like a global self-esteem camp? I thought that was what the U.N. was for. . . .
A practical, commonsense way of reducing gun violence -- especially in the schools -- would be a federal law prohibiting, or at least seriously limiting, the interstate reporting of sensational gun crimes like Virginia Tech for five working days.
Such a law would not affect local coverage, where there is a need for the immediate dissemination of information, but would make the event 'old news' when it was finally reported nationally and therefore unlikely to get the massive publicity that invites further, copycat violence. Even a small reduction in today's intense coverage of such events might, by not stimulating some potential gunman to action, save lives.
While 'gun' laws are hard to enforce because of the easy concealment of firearms, the public nature of 'news' would make enforcement of this law virtually automatic.
Because the delay would be short and serve a compelling government interest, it should pass constitutional muster; the Brady law serves admirably as a precedent here. While First Amendment absolutists will cavil, the simple fact is that it is as wrong to hold that the Press Clause protects a media 'right' to lethally endanger the public as it would be to hold that the Religion Clause protects human sacrifice.
He leaves out the argument that "if it saves just one life, it's worth it," though. Plus, no explicit appeal on behalf of "the children." Also, no claim that we shouldn't let Big News profit from higher ratings even as it contributes to more violence, and hence more profits! But I give it a B+.
UPDATE: Reader Stephen Hill emails: "How about a news story buy-back? There are plenty I’d like to return…"
ANOTHER UPDATE: A few readers seem to be mistaking the above for a serious proposal, rather than a mockery of gun-controllers' constitutional style. Then again, today's politics are pretty much beyond parody . . . .
THEY call themselves pyjamahideen. Instead of galloping off to fight holy wars, they stay at home, meaning, often as not, in their parents' houses, and clatter about computer keyboards. Their activity is not as explosive as the self-styled jihadists who trouble regimes in the region, and they come in all stripes, secular liberal as well as radical Islamist. But like Gulliver's Lilliputians, youthful denizens of the internet are chipping away at the overweening dominance of Arab governments.
In Egypt, for instance, blogging has evolved within the past year from a narcissistic parlour sport to a shaper of the political agenda. By simply posting embarrassing video footage, small-time bloggers have blown open scandals over such issues as torture and women's harassment on the streets of Cairo.
Somebody should write a book about this phenomenon. But there's pushback. Read the whole thing.
PORKBUSTERS UPDATE: Okay, this isn't directly related to pork, but it's a good idea, and it's certainly in the ballpark:
But if Newmark has his way, there might be a new online venture that most certainly would be of interest to Washingtonians. At a private dinner in Manhattan over the weekend, Newmark expressed an interest in starting a Web site that would track the net worth of politicians while they’re in office. There are no concrete plans under way yet, but Newmark admitted that he’s done a lot of thinking about the idea recently.
One of the things that sparked Newmark’s interest in such a project was former Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert, R-Ill., who has seen his own personal fortune grow from roughly $290,000 when he first joined Congress to more than $6 million, 20 years later.
“I just don’t see why these guys are amassing personal, private fortunes while in office,” Newmark said.
This wouldn’t be Newmark’s first participation in an online venture designed to increase transparency: On Friday, Newmark announced that he had accepted a full board membership at the Sunlight Foundation, which seeks to “reduce corruption, ensure greater transparency and accountability by government, and foster public trust in the vital institutions of democracy.”
Yeah, it's kind of suspicious how these guys always seem to get rich on government salaries.
And here, by the way, is an interesting rumination by Craig Newmark on what he's learned from Craigslist. I heard it on the radio the other day, but now the audio's up. It's worth a listen.
AFTER I DISSED THE NEW YORK DAILY NEWS' EDITORIAL YESTERDAY, they invited me to write a column on guns. It's here.
I think Dave Kopel did a better job in this piece for the Wall Street Journal -- but he had twice the length. Yeah, that's my excuse. . . .
UPDATE: I should stress -- my formulation above isn't as clear as it should have been -- that the invitation wasn't in response to my dissing of their editorial. They had actually emailed me on Monday. It was in spite of my dissing of their editorial. Still admirable, but not quite the same thing.
MICKEY KAUS: "Barack Obama's misguided attempt to connect the Virginia Tech murders with the Imus slur ("quiet violence") and, yes, loss of health care benefits due to layoffs and overseas competition, doesn't come off quite as obscene as you'd expect when you listen to it--because Obama's delivery is too fatigued and subdued, even depressive, to trigger the sense that he's manipulating anybody. Still, it's not exactly evidence of a fresh intelligence, or even basic common sense, at work--much less rising to the occasion." But Mickey offers a charitable explanation.
THERE'S A HIT LIST? I wonder if I'm on it? If it weren't for the honor of the thing, I'd rather walk . . . .
BLOGOMETER: "If you were expecting for the netroots to join more traditional Dem calls for increased gun control following the tragedy in Blacksburg, VA, don't hold your breath. At deadline, none of the top five netroots sites (Daily Kos, Eschaton, TPM, AMERICAblog, and MyDD) have called for any changes to gun laws (CLARIFICATION: AMERICAblog does ask for a 'revisit' of guntrol but nothing specific). And don't expect them to either. The VA Tech shootings are serving as an albeit tragic marker in demonstrating just how different Dems are in '07 than they were in '99. With bloggers in the lead, Dems have gotten past the gun-control issue and helped reclaim majorities with help from netroots backed pro-gun candidates Sens. Jim Webb (D-VA), John Tester (D-MT), and Reps. Brad Ellsworth (D-IN) and Heath Shuler (D-NC). As Rudy Giuliani faces heat from social conservatives for telling them they need to 'get beyond issues' like abortion, one wonders how many elections the GOP has to lose before they embrace a similar evolution."
UPDATE: Oh, yeah, outsourcing, too. "Does this also make the poor people in developing countries who take outsourced jobs complicit in the 'violence?'" Fire Obama's writers.
ROCCO DIPIPPO reports from Baghdad: "I have observed first-hand the effects of the Bush Administration's new Iraq security plan since it began two months ago. Street violence in Baghdad and surrounding areas has declined. Shops and markets once boarded up are reopening. Iraqi civilians are venturing out onto the streets again and living their lives with less fear of being persecuted, tortured, maimed or killed. To be sure, there is still plenty of terror and violence in Iraq, but since the 'troop surge' began, it has lessened considerably." May it continue to do so.
Everyone from economists and sociologists to Oprah knows that women work more than men. Their longer combined hours, at the home and at the office, stop men from taking afternoon naps on the couch and cause fights that end with men spending nights on the couch. And yet according to new study, those longer hours are a myth, because it's just not true that women carry a heavier load.
Will Oprah be running with this anytime soon?
TIM BLAIR: "As an environmental pioneer, I long ago became accustomed to unfair abuse from planet-flushing reactionary kilowatt-burners."
GAIL HERIOT: "Here's my question: What if the University of Texas had argued for academic freedom in Sweatt v. Painter in 1950?"
PC RACISTS: "There is something pathetic, when the once mighty and feared Wehrmacht, now the declawed and idle Bundeswehr, is reduced to swearing in English about imagined enemies they will never encounter."
JOHN EDWARDS AND ME: More discussion of our haircuts.
It is true, however, that I do a better-than-average robot dance.
UPDATE: The haircut was cheaper than the bloggers: "The Edwards campaign paid Marcotte and McEwan a total of $4,769.06 between Jan. 31 and Feb. 14." Though the real cost of the bloggers was noneconomic.
THERE SEEMS TO BE A RESOLUTION in the Katherine Coble / JL Kirk case.
It was at this time that I realized that I had no viable means of protecting myself.
Please realize that I am licensed to carry a concealed handgun in the commonwealth of Virginia, and do so on a regular basis. However, because I am a Virginia Tech student, I am prohibited from carrying at school because of Virginia Tech's student policy, which makes possession of a handgun an expellable offense, but not a prosecutable crime.
I had entrusted my safety, and the safety of others to the police. In light of this, there are a few things I wish to point out.
Professor Liviu Librescu, 76, threw himself in front of the shooter when the man attempted to enter his classroom. The Israeli mechanics and engineering lecturer was shot to death, "but all the students lived - because of him," Virginia Tech student Asael Arad - also an Israeli - told Army Radio.
WHAT TO DO IN MASS SHOOTINGS: Lots of people are emailing and want to talk about this subject. Maybe later. But here's a book on self-defense that some people like. And you can't go wrong with Jeff Cooper's Principles of Personal Defense. And here are some thoughts from the Insta-Wife on the psychology of self-defense.
JOHN TIERNEY: "After reading reactions from more than 300 readers to my previous posts, I think it’s safe to conclude that research on dating has not inspired great joy among daters. So let me offer some cheerier tidings today."
SUING A BLOGGER: Bill Hobbs has a roundup on the latest on the JL Kirk affair. Plus, more thoughts from Brittney Gilbert.
HOW COMMON ARE MASS SHOOTINGS AT U.S. SCHOOLS? Not very. And they don't appear to be getting any more common, though 24/7 cable news coverage may give that impression. Ilya Somin writes: "The extreme rarity of such incidents should be kept in mind as we decide what, if any, policy changes should be made in response to the Virginia Tech tragedy. Some changes may well be warranted, but we should guard against costly overreactions such as the draconian 'zero tolerance' policies implemented in many schools after the Columbine attacks in 1999. As a professor in the Virginia state university system (of which Virginia Tech is a part), I hope we can resist the temptation to enact similar measures."
ANOTHER STUPID GUN EDITORIAL, this one in the New York Daily News. Don't they bother to get anything right?
Ah, but there are so many people with guns. And their guns are so easy to come by.
Particularly, not to put too fine a point on it, in places like the great State of Virginia, which, you'll recall, is a state so annoyed by the crackdown efforts of such anti-homicide types as New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg that it recently passed a law making it a crime for undercovers to run stings on the great state of Virginia's fine gun dealers.
Actually, it's a federal crime to lie on firearms purchase forms, and there's no exception for "undercover" private investigators working for a mayor from another state. Bloomberg's investigators did that, and the usual people who complain about "vigilantism" seem to endorse this particular instance. Given that the Daily News has covered Bloomberg's troubles in this regard, this error is particularly unforgivable.
HILLARY CLINTON, LIBERALTARIAN? "It hurt just typing that. And it's really just a shameful ploy to get you to read this post."
NEW TECHNOLOGY, OLD VALUES: I've posted a review of Michael Malone's new book over at the Pajamas Media site. I find a Neal Stephenson connection.
ROGER SIMON (THE OTHER ONE) ON WHY GUN CONTROL IS POLITICALLY DEAD: "Had Gore won his home state of Tennessee, Clinton’s home state of Arkansas or the Democratic state of West Virginia, he would not have needed to win Florida in order to gain the presidency. But he lost them all. And guns had a lot to do with it."
I DON'T LIKE THIS: "Internet radio broadcasters were dealt a setback Monday when a panel of copyright judges threw out requests to reconsider a ruling that hiked the royalties they must pay to record companies and artists. A broad group of public and private broadcasters, including radio stations, small startup companies, National Public Radio and major online sites like Yahoo Inc. and Time Warner Inc.'s AOL, had objected to the new royalties set March 2, saying they would force a drastic cutback in services that are now enjoyed by some 50 million people. "
For better or worse, we have an adversary legal system that relies for its proper operation on having competent lawyers on both sides. In every case I knew about where an innocent person had been convicted, there had been an incompetent defense lawyer at the pretrial and trial stages. . . .
The crucial importance of defense lawyers was illustrated in reverse by the Duke rape prosecution, mercifully ended last week by North Carolina Attorney General Roy Cooper's highly unusual affirmation of the defendants' complete innocence. Others are rightly focusing on the "perfect storm," generated by a local prosecutor up for election peddling to his constituents a racially-charged narrative that so neatly fit the ideological template of those who dominate academia and the media. But perhaps we should stop for a moment to consider what saved these young men: defense attorneys, blogs and competing governments.
Particularly after the O.J. trial, a lot of people seem to think that defense lawyers mostly use clever tricks to get guilty people off. In fact, that doesn't happen nearly as often as popularly believed. Instead, as Randy notes, they play an important role in keeping the innocent from being convicted. "Our criminal justice system does not rely solely on the fairness of the police and prosecutors to get things right. In every criminal case, there is a professional whose only obligation is to scrutinize what the police and prosecutor have done. This 'professional' is a lawyer."
Just another reason why Randy Barnett is my pick for the next Attorney General of the United States . . . . though I'm pretty sure he won't be George Bush's.
MICKEY KAUS: "Obama has climbed to within 2 points of Hillary in the latest Rasmussen robo-poll. Hillary has a big problem with men--Obama leads her by 11% among men."
Scientists are still studying the 1918 pandemic, the deadliest of the 20th century, looking for lessons for future outbreaks — including the possibility that H5N1, the avian influenza virus, could mutate into a form spread easily from human to human. This month, researchers published two new studies in The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences comparing public-health responses in cities like St. Louis and Philadelphia.
Using mathematical models, they reported that such large differences in death rates could be explained by the ways the cities carried out prevention measures, especially in their timing. Cities that instituted quarantine, school closings, bans on public gatherings and other such procedures early in the epidemic had peak death rates 30 percent to 50 percent lower than those that did not. . . . A two-week difference in response times, according to the researchers, is long enough for the number of people infected in an influenza epidemic to double three to five times.
Read the whole thing.
WELL, YEAH: "The powers-that-be at the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport -- the Metropolitan Airports Commission -- have voted unanimously to require airport taxis to serve all comers, regardless of their compliance with sharia law. . . . In other words, the MAC is requiring airport taxis to fulfill their responsibility as common carriers; that's what Curt Brown dubs a 'crackdown.'"
If these were Christian "bible-thumpers" wanting to refuse passengers carrying alcohol, they'd get a lot less sympathy.
ONE OF MY FORMER STUDENTS who blogs for Kos's sportsblog network sent this image, and said that a lot of the sports bloggers are observing a moment of silence for Virginia Tech. That's a nice gesture, and I'll do the same. Back later.
Actually, I'd rather we did this about 51 weeks out of the year. It's bound to work out cheaper in the end. . . .
LOTS OF PEOPLE WANT ME TO SAY MORE about the Virginia Tech shootings, but I don't have a lot more to say at the moment, particularly as it's still unclear exactly what happened.. However, Helen knows much more about school shootings, mass shootings and the like and you can read some of her writings on the subject here.
UPDATE: Rand Simberg has thoughts, though, starting with "Get ready for the political posturing."
Meanwhile, Mary Katharine Ham says that GOP candidate websites dropped the ball by, er, not posturing fast enough. You just can't win. (This was pretty fast.)
There's also much more at BoingBoing, including a -- very legitimate, I think -- worry about copycat attacks.
And there's lots of discussion in the comments here. In answer to one question about professors -- the University has never given me any training on what to do in a mass shooting situation, and I'd be surprised if very many universities train their professors in that sort of thing. These events are, of course, very rare, but in fact I haven't had any disaster or attack training from the University at all, though I've had some from other sources.
FleetAdmiralJ, a Kos diarist from Blacksburg, has been blogging this all day.
And, speaking of "copycats," a Virginia Tech alumna in Kabul blogs: "Eight years ago, after Columbine, a group of students (including myself) from my high school met with then-President Clinton to talk about gun violence. I made a comment that the media was largely responsible, with the glorification of violence in big-budget blockbusters, and constant bombardment of violent images as 'fun.' Clinton shook off my comments, and it's funny, because now something on the same terrible scale has happened at a place close to me, and I still stand by them." I actually think that the sensationalized news coverage 24/7 is worse than the entertainment products.
More thoughts here. Plus, some history. And Roger Kimball has thoughts, too: "Of the many things that can be said about the horrible shooting at Virginia Tech today, one thing that we have already heard too often is that the shooting is offers a compelling argument against citizens owning guns. . . . A famous Roman military historian noted that si vis pacem, para bellum: if you want peace, prepare for war. Good advice, that. And if you want domestic tranquillity, an armed and responsible citizenry ready and able to protect life and property is not a bad way to start."
Virginia Tech alumnus Jonathan Wilde has more thoughts over at Catallarchy.
Plus, thoughts on campus security in response to the murders. "Campuses don’t need more security. Although simply reassuring the student body probably will require some beefed up security in the short run, neither Virginia Tech nor any other college campus needs to make any long term commitment on the basis of this shooting."
OOPS: Romney post from a minute ago deleted, as I made a dumb mistake based on being distracted. I don't normally delete posts, but I'm off to class and don't have time to fix it intelligibly.
SOMEWHERE, KARL ROVE IS CHORTLING: "Sen. John Kerry (D-Massachusetts) reopened the door to a possible 2008 presidential campaign during a book signing in Denver and then again, in an interview with 9NEWS."
Plus, this very Kerryesque statement:
Afterwards, while answering a question from a viewer on the program YOUR SHOW about why he chose not to run, Kerry said he had decided it wasn't the right time.
"Could that change?" Kerry said. "It might. It may change over years. It may change over months. I can't tell you, but I've said very clearly I don't consider myself out of it forever."
Meanwhile, Neal Boortz observes: "John Kerry has a book on global warming? Why yes! It appears that he does! Isn't this the same guy who teamed up with Ted Kennedy to kill a wind power project off Cape Cod? And just what is his electric bill in his Boston townhouse?"
Jump in, John. You've been missed!
THIS IS AWFUL: "At least 20 people were killed this morning at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and University after a shooting spree at two buildings on the campus." Nobody seems to know much yet on what happened. These things do seem to take place in locations where it's not legal for people with carry permits to carry guns, though, and I believe that's the case where the Virginia Tech campus is concerned. I certainly wish that someone had been in a position to shoot this guy at the outset.
UPDATE: More here and here. And some background here. And reader John Lucas, who works with a Virginia law firm, emails that Va. Tech is a "gun-free zone." Well, for those who follow the law. There was an effort to change that but it failed: "A bill that would have given college students and employees the right to carry handguns on campus died with nary a shot being fired in the General Assembly." That's unfortunate. Had the bill passed, things might have turned out differently, though we'll never know now.
ANOTHER UPDATE: Here's a big, continuously updated roundup on the subject from Pajamas Media. And here's lots more from a Virginia Tech alumnus.
And here are more thoughts from John Noonan. And send your thoughts and prayers to Marc Danziger, who has a son at Virginia Tech. [LATER: Sorry -- I misread Danziger's post, which he's amended to clarify that his son is at U.Va., not Virginia Tech.]
The Glenn and Helen Show: Michael S. Malone on the Past and Future of Silicon Valley
Hewlett-Packard is now the biggest information technology company in the world, having surpassed both the $100 billion mark and IBM. How did it get there, over a period of time when so many promising companies fell apart? That's the topic of Michael S. Malone's new book, Bill and Dave: How Hewlett and Packard Built the World's Greatest Company. We talk with Malone about the role of old-fashioned values in surviving new-era corporate challenges, and the difficulties that HP has had in sticking to its approach as times change. It's a very interesting story, underscoring the fact that the most important part of every technology story involves the people behind the technology.
You can listen directly -- no downloads needed -- by going here and clicking on the gray Flash player. You can download the file yourself by clicking on this link -- that's easy too! -- and you can get a lo-fi version suitable for dialup by going here and selecting "lo-fi." Our show archives with past and future episodes are at GlennandHelenShow.com, and, of course, you can get a free subscription via iTunes. That's right, free! As we say in radio podcasting, "Wow, what a deal!"
And Bill & Dave is an excellent book, which I highly recommend.
This podcast brought to you by Volvo USA. Music is Indistinguishable from Magic, by Mobius Dick.
ERIC SCHEIE RECORDS THE CLIMATE CHANGE APOCALYPSE: "Right now I am blogging using my laptop, only because my modem and router are powered by the dying battery of the computer battery backup unit (which is beeping loudly and is only designed to run for ten minutes)." The end is nigh! And he's got pictures!
We were warned. We should have listened to the movie!
Everyone, including Don Imus, agrees that the remarkable women of the Rutgers basketball team were unfairly maligned by his racial slur.
But what about the living hell visited on three young men from the Duke lacrosse team? In all the coverage of the sexual assault charges that were finally dropped last week, very few have talked about how the media slimed them.
That miscarriage of justice was aided, abetted and amplified by a media that unfairly turned the men into a national symbol of pampered, out-of-control student-athletes. Prosecutor Mike Nifong might lose his law license over the botched case, but the media never get disbarred.
Imus repeatedly apologized for calling the Rutgers women "nappy-headed hos," and a national uproar prompted CBS Radio and NBC News to pull the plug on his program. But where is the apology to David Evans, Collin Finnerty and Reade Seligmann from news organizations that launched a classic feeding frenzy based on one woman's shaky allegations? Even Nifong has said he is sorry.
He's right that the media disgraced themselves -- and he's right that they won't apologize. But every time something like this happen, people trust and respect them less.
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL ON WOLFOWITZ: "The World Bank released its files in the case of President Paul Wolfowitz's ethics on Friday, and what a revealing download it is. On the evidence in these 109 pages, it is clearer than ever that this flap is a political hit based on highly selective leaks to a willfully gullible press corps."
There seems to be a lot of that.
ANDREW MCCARTHY: "I can't help but think that (a) there's undoubtedly a divide between what the raw intelligence shows and how it's been described, and (b) the motivation behind this divide is political. I'd love to be proven wrong ... but I'm not holding my breath."
The first is that the age set by the legislation is basically arbitrary. The U.S. has the highest drinking age in the world (a title it shares with Indonesia, Mongolia, Palau). The vast majority of the rest of the world sets the minimum age at 17 or 16 or has no minimum age at all.
Supporters of the federal minimum argue that the human brain continues developing until at least the age of 21.
Alcohol expert Dr. David Hanson of the State University of New York at Potsdam argues such
assertions reek of junk science. They're extrapolated from a study on lab mice, he explains, as well as from a small sample of actual humans already dependent on alcohol or drugs. Neither is enough to make broad proclamations about the entire population.
If the research on brain development is true, the U.S. seems to be the only country to have caught on to it.
Oddly enough, high school students in much of the rest of the developed world — where lower drinking ages and laxer enforcement reign — do considerably better than U.S. students on standardized tests.
In our podcast interview, Prof. Robert Epstein called the "teenage brain" claims "scientific fraud." Read the whole thing.
MICKEY KAUS: "I'm not saying theocratic incompetents from the '700 Club' aren't fanning out through the government. Maybe they are. I'm saying Paul Krugman is not convincing on this issue. He doesn't even seem to be trying to be convincing. Why should he try? There's always been a market for anti-hick editorializing in the New York Times, especially anti-Southern-hick editorializing." Well, Krugman's an economist. Supply and demand!
Tens of thousands of people rallied in Pakistan's biggest city, Karachi, on Sunday to show their opposition to a radical religious school which has begun a Taliban-style anti-vice campaign in the capital, Islamabad. . . .
Moderate Muslims in Pakistan were shocked earlier this month when a cleric announced a religious shariat court had been set up at Lal Masjid to enforce a strict Islamic code of justice, and threatened to retaliate with suicide bombers if the government tried forcibly to suppress the movement.
Lal Masjid's compound has taken on the appearance of a rebel camp in recent weeks, with young men armed with sticks guarding the entrances.
HOW EASY IS IT TO GET YOUTUBE TO TAKE DOWN VIDEOS? Way too easy, it appears.
April 15, 2007
GENERAL PAUL EHRLICH REPORTING? But remember that just because the last several times someone screamed "Wolf!" there was no wolf doesn't mean that there's not one this time. On the other hand, that's probably the way to bet.
Operators of Web sites with racy content must label their sites and register in a national directory or be fined, according to a new U.S. Senate proposal that represents the latest effort among politicians to crack down on Internet sex.
The requirements appear in legislation announced Thursday by two Senate Democrats, Mark Pryor of Arkansas and Max Baucus of Montana, that they say will "clean up the Internet for children."
How about cleaning up the Capitol for voters, first?
With a $2,000 federal tax credit and generous rebates from states like New Jersey and California, it has never cost less to install a solar power system.
And it still makes no economic sense. You might want photovoltaic solar panels to generate your own electricity out of a belief that you will save the planet. But, as is the case with hybrid vehicles, you certainly should not do it to save money.
You may go solar, though, in order to encourage the new technology, or in order to demonstrate your own commitment to clean energy. I'd guess that those are Al Gore's motivations.
DELARA DERABI IS A TEENAGE ARTIST ON DEATH ROW IN IRAN: Ali Eteraz would like your help as he tries to save her. He's particularly looking for people with Web expertise.
RON BAILEY: "By the way, a new report, Trends in Premarital Sex in the United States, 1954-2003, finds that most Americans have been enjoying premarital sex for a long time."
Actually, I haven't enjoyed premarital sex since 1994. But I enjoyed it a lot up to then!
UPDATE: In the comments, this observation: "I found that belonging to Math Club was an effective deterrent to teenage sex."
Indeed. My Libel in the Blogosphere paper has moved up over 160 places -- from 1069 to 902 -- in the SSRN rankings since the Katherine Coble / JL Kirk / King & Ballow affair broke out.
MORE ON CELLPHONES AND BEES: "Most important, bees navigate primarily via polarized light, which is in a completely different part of the EM spectrum from radio waves. How radio waves could possibly impact their use of light for navigation (any more than it does humans' use of light for navigation) is at best nonintuitive, so I would never believe it until I saw the published paper showing me the evidence. I am not holding my breath for that paper to appear."
UPDATE: Ron Bailey looks at claims that biotech crops, not cellphones, are killing bees. Why don't activist groups ever blame things that they don't already dislike?
SKYWRITING FOR JESUS at EPCOT. Good thing Disney never made a Christian film -- if they had, they'd sue that guy for copyright infringement . . . .
MORE COOL PRODUCE-BLOGGING from Rick Lee. I can sometimes take a nice photo, but Rick's in a whole different class.
IT'S A DIRTY JOB, BUT SOMEONE'S GOT TO DO IT: Mickey Kaus defends Katie Couric: "It doesn't bother me that Obama went to a mosque as a kid! I'm with the liberals who see it as a potential asset. It does bother me that Dem press watchdogs seem to be straining to brand anyone who mentions it (i.e. Couric) as a smear artist. . . And, yes, it's also troubling that CBS panicked and changed Couric's blog (rendering it near-senseless, as ETP points out). If that's the post-Imus world--corporate news even blander than before, bland as school textbooks--I'm not enthusiastic. But it will be good for the blogs."
Since we are all responsible, none of us are. If, I say *IF* Sen. Obama wants to lead on this issue, he could start by pointing a finger at some real targets. Some hard targets; waiting five days and then denouncing Imus does not merit a Profile in Courage.
Just to help him get started, I wonder whether his new friend David Geffen has any clout in the record industry; I further wonder whether Sen. Obama wants to exhort him to help clean up Hollywood.
Good question.
UPDATE: The path to Imus's redemption, plus the source of his problems. Was it "battlespace preparation" for 2008? And this question: "Our political world is full cowards and folks who are full of shit. Is Imus really the one you want gone?"
LIVING LONGER: TV doctor Sanjay Gupta has a book out called Chasing Life: New Discoveries in the Search for Immortality to Help You Age Less Today, which looks to offer sensible advice. But it's a long way from the life-extension technologies that I'd like to see. Still, if you take care of yourself now, you're more likely to still be around when the good stuff hits the market.
LET IT SNOW! "All these global warming protests have spawned a monster Gor’easter."
Hey, they said they were taking action against global warming this weekend. . . .
DON HO HAS DIED: I guess the stem cell treatments didn't fix the problem, though the article seems to suggest that they produced some symptomatic improvement.
IMAGES OF A LOST COMMUNITY: "178 family pictures, which were hidden in the walls of a house in Poland just before the Holocaust, only to be found some 60 years later and be returned to their rightful owners." Full set of pictures here.
Clinton said she had been briefed on the report, and the woman screamed back, "Did you read it?!" Notably uncomfortable, the Senator repeated that she had been briefed. This exchange went back and forth about three times.
The woman sat down and Clinton explained, "If I had known then what I know now, I never would have voted to give this President the authority." Clinton also said she believed she was giving the President the authority to send U.N. inspectors to Iraq.
UPDATE: An interesting observation from TigerHawk:
Why doesn't climate change animate the electorate in the United States the way it seems to do in Europe? I believe it is because we have not experienced it in the same way, either at the level of scientifically meaningless anecdotes or long-term temperature trends. . . .
This is not purely a reflection of piles of snow in Duluth and barely cool weather in Ireland. If we look at a generation's worth of actual data, the different impact of changing temperatures around the world probably explains why the issue inspires such passion in Europe and Asia (and among the tiny fraction of Americans who travel to those places regularly), but is a political loser in the United States. . . .
Starting in March, the United States has a very different experience from Europe and northern Asia. In general, the rest of the populated northern hemisphere is much hotter than it used to be. In the United States, the only meaningful changes have been in the southwest, which is thinly populated and only marginally influences American politics. The ugly truth is that we Americans are, in general, enjoying warmer winters without paying the price of hotter summers. In most of (unairconditioned) Europe the winters were much milder to begin with, but the summers are now significantly hotter. Therefore, speaking only for us American humans, climate change seems, so far, like a good deal for us, even if it is a bad deal for them. No wonder the subject generates so much rage in Europe, but not nearly enough concern in the United States to motivate meaningful changes in behavior or move a decisive number of votes.
Interesting. Of course, the other reason it inspires passion in Europe is that it's spun as an anti-American issue. That may also explain why so many Americans are cool to the idea.
MORE: Reader Richard Horn thinks my constant noting of cold weather at global-warming events means I dispute the existence of global warming. Jeez, how many times do I have to point out that that isn't the case?
Indeed, from my perspective we should be doing the same things -- working hard to reduce the use of fossil fuels -- regardless of what you think about global warming. But the self-righteousness and exaggeration of the global-warming advocates does set my teeth on edge, and encourage mockery. As I wrote here: "I don't know a lot about climatology. But I know a lot about media bulldozing operations, and I see one of those in action at the moment on this subject. . . . However, my own position is that it doesn't matter much in terms of policy. We should be trying to mimimize the burning of fossil fuels regardless of whether it's a cause of global warming or not. The rather patent hucksterism -- and outright bullying -- of some global warming advocates, though, will probably hurt that cause more than help it over the longer term."
And it is positively uncanny how cold weather tends to set in whenever there's a big global-warming event scheduled. They're talking about snow here in Knoxville tonight, on April 15th! You know that if this weekend had been unseasonably warm, all the press accounts would be stressing how this was proof of Al Gore's thesis, instead of meaningless noise, which is what any short-term weather fluctuation is.
France is hardly alone in struggling to redefine itself in the globalized, post-Cold War world. Britain, too, has had to digest the end of an empire. But French nostalgia for bygone glory and growth seems to hamstring its ability to face the future with confidence.
"In France, there is a particular strain of melancholy," political philosopher Chantal Delsol said in an interview. "The British tell themselves, 'We are no longer a great power, so we will live as a middling one.' But the French don't say that. They say, 'We are intrinsically a great power, so why isn't it working in reality?' For a while we try to shut our eyes, but that doesn't work for long. When reality truly dawns, then the first phase is extreme sadness, and that is the phase we are in now."
That means voters are in a rebellious mood. That's nothing new — Gen. Charles de Gaulle, the architect of modern France after World War II, once quipped, "How can anyone govern a nation that has 246 different kinds of cheese?" But the desire to protest through the ballot box is strong, and could create shocks come election day.
The sheer scale and rapid growth of America's nonprofit sector make it difficult to ignore. In most of history, private not-for-profit organizations weren't a topic of much attention because they weren't especially important compared with the markets from which people drew their sustenance and the governments that often extracted whatever they could from them. But with the growth of our national wealth, nonprofits have been expanding relentlessly. The Independent Sector, which is basically the industry group for nonprofits, reports that the combined annual expenditures of all the not-for-profit organizations required to file Form 990 with the U.S. Internal Revenue Service had grown to nearly $1 trillion in 2004. (That's about half what the federal government spends each year, not counting defense.) In 1977, nonprofits employed around 6 million Americans; by 2001, that was up to 12 million.
Look at this on funding, too. And don't miss this piece on inadequate financial regulation of nonprofits from the Boston Globe. ("A Globe Spotlight Team investigation of hundreds of foundations nationwide found that oversight is virtually nonexistent, allowing excesses and abuses to go unchecked.")
And here's an older post on the subject that's worth reading too, if this interests you. Plus, more from the Boston Globe.