KEITH MILBY GIVES THE SIMPSONS MOVIE a rave review.
STRATEGYPAGE: "In Iran, president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is rapidly losing popularity and respect. It's feared that his only option is to somehow get the United States to attack Iran. This would instantly boost Ahmadinejad's popularity, and save his political career. For a while, anyway." Read the whole thing.
Beyond illustrating the flawed conception of academic freedom too prevalent in the contemporary academy, the Churchill case illustrates what happens when universities abandon excellence as the primary criterion in the personnel process. Well before Churchill ever uttered his "Little Eichmanns" line, the University of Colorado - a Tier I research university - had hired, then tenured, and then promoted to department chairman a woefully underqualified academic charlatan. In this respect, the affair provides a case study of "diversity" hiring practices gone awry.
The Navajo president, Joe Shirley Jr., said his tribe felt similar pressure. Mr. Shirley said the plant here would mean hundreds of jobs, higher incomes and better lives for some of the 200,000 people on the reservation. The tribe derives little direct financial benefit from the operation of the existing coal-fired plants and it has not yet invested heavily in casinos.
“Why pick on the little Navajo nation, when it’s trying to help itself?” he asked. . . .
The staff of Gov. Bill Richardson, a Democratic presidential aspirant, recently issued a statement saying that the plant “would be a significant new source of greenhouse gases and other pollution in the region” and that Mr. Richardson “believes, as planned, it would be a step in the wrong direction,” undoing his proposed reductions in emissions.
Read the whole thing. Sierra Club members vote for Presidents. Navajos on the reservation do not.
ANDREW BOLT looks at Guantanamo and doesn't like what he sees.
THE KNOXVILLE NEWS-SENTINEL HAS AN EDITORIAL on the Gubernatorial Succession Committee that's had me traveling to and from Nashville lately. It's a good one, but the quote from me -- “There’s going to be a lot of scrutiny over this process” -- was actually about the process described in the proposed constitutional amendment, not the process of adopting the amendment. But it's true both ways.
SO WE'VE NOW GOTTEN TWO COPIES OF Garden & Gun magazine in the mail. It's not bad -- kind of a Town & Country for the Southern well-to-do -- part upscale Sports Afield and part less-partisan Vanity Fair or some such. It could do with a bit more gun and a bit less garden, though.
MORE VOTE FRAUD ALLEGATIONS IN FLORIDA: "Local party leaders say they found 60 instances in which people with the exact same name and birth date voted both in Palm Beach County and in New York in the November elections. . . . State and local governments are spending millions of public dollars, even dumping state-of-the-art equipment, to deliver a paper trail, hoping it brings peace of mind and confidence in voting to skeptical Floridians. Investigating complaints of voter fraud, and bringing any double-voters to justice in the land of the infamous butterfly ballot, should be a no-brainer." I'm all for a paper trail, but it doesn't matter if the voters themselves are bogus.
ANOTHER MENTAL IMAGE I DON'T NEED: "If the Senators went any wilder, they'd be raising their shirts in exchange for beads."
Is that worse than Joe Biden in a codpiece? I don't want to think about either image hard enough to be sure . . . .
THOUGHTS ON FEDERALISM FROM FRED THOMPSON: And I certainly agree with this bit:
Law enforcement in general is a matter on which Congress has been very active in recent years, not always to good effect and usually at the expense of state authority. When I served as a federal prosecutor, there were not all that many federal crimes, and most of those involved federal interests. Since the 1980’s, however, Congress has aggressively federalized all sorts of crimes that the states have traditionally prosecuted and punished. While these federal laws allow Members of Congress to tell the voters how tough they are on crime, there are few good reasons why most of them are necessary.
For example, it is a specific federal crime to use the symbol of 4-H Clubs with the intent to defraud. And don’t even think about using the Swiss Confederation’s coat of arms for commercial purposes. That’s a federal offense, too.
Groups as diverse as the American Bar Association and the Heritage Foundation have reported that there are more than three thousand, five hundred distinct federal crimes and more than 10,000 administrative regulations scattered over 50 section of the U.S. code that runs at more than 27,000 pages. More than 40 percent of these regulatory criminal laws have been enacted since 1973.
I held hearings on the over-federalization of criminal law when I was in the Senate. You hear that the states are not doing a good job at prosecuting certain crimes, that their sentencing laws are not tough enough, that it’s too easy to make bail in state court. If these are true, why allow those responsible in the states to shirk that responsibility by having the federal government make up for the shortcomings in state law? Accountability gets displaced.
But read the whole thing. And I have some related thoughts on federalism, special interests, and accountability here.
Also, Mark Tapscott has some further observations on Thompson's essay.
UPDATE: Ilya Somin comments: "I fully agree with Thompson's view here. . . . However, there is a major elephant in this federalism room that Thompson doesn't mention. He is right to note the massive growth in the federal prison population over the last 20 years, but fails to point out that most of that growth is due to the War on Drugs. As I explained here, convicts incarcerated for nonviolent drug offenses represent 55% of the total federal prison population. And it was the War on Drugs that led to the Supreme Court's 2005 decision in Gonzales v. Raich, which largely gutted constitutional limits on federal power." True. Read the whole thing.
IN LIGHT OF YESTERDAY'S POST ABOUT TV, ARNOLD KLING SENDS THIS:
Back when I had my relocation web site, we got hold of some zip-code level marketing data. When I looked for purchases that correlated with affluence, hardback books was one of the strongest.
Rich people read. Books.
I'm not surprised to hear that.
ADVERTISING AGE ON THE LATEST MOVEON STUNT: "What's left unsaid in the AP piece is that MoveOn has been pitching this story for weeks now. . . . And if the owner of a local business has gone through the trouble of specifically buying an ad on Fox News, it's because he wants to be there and he wants to target Fox News viewers. And such an advertiser more than likely has certain views about MoveOn. I can only imagine what the conversation will sound like when a self-appointed MoveOn monitor calls up Joe's Bait, Tackle & Hunting Supply to say he should remove his ads from Fox News."
SO THEY SENT ME A DVD OF No End In Sight. the documentary on Iraq that takes a rather different approach than, say, J.D. Johannes' Outside the Wire. I was too busy -- a triple deadline Friday on a law review article, a Popular Mechanics column, and a Wall Street Journal piece -- to watch it. But Tom Maguire has some thoughts and comments: "I am not sure why Bush gets a pass in this movie. It was Bush's job to know whether the reconstruction planing was getting the proper attention, focus and coordination; if Rumsfeld was putting too much effort into the invasion planning and not enough into the reconstruction phase, Bush should have re-directed his effort." But note the discussion in the comments.
Bush should make a lot of recess appointments to the courts, just to mix things up. I volunteer to fill any vacant Supreme Court slots on a recess basis. I promise to make things interesting . . . .
DRUNKEN ASTRONAUTS: The story is looking a bit thin:
For those hoping for juicy details on the drunk astronauts, there aren’t any. The review panel was told of anecdotes of two astronauts who were intoxicated just prior to flight. However, the panel did not pass on information identifying the individuals or the flights. NASA officials said they were investigating but could not say whether the incidents actually occurred.
Hmm.
UPDATE: Jay Leno: "Maybe that's why they call it the Kennedy Space Center."
Just today, I paid a compliment to a woman at the gym -- she's been working with a trainer and I commented that she was showing real progress (which she was). "You've made my day," she said, and she seemed to mean it. When I think something complimentary about people, I try to say it, if there's occasion. There's not nearly enough of that in the world.
IT'S BAD TO BRING A KNIFE TO A GUNFIGHT. It's worse to bring a soda can:
An elderly man beaten unconscious by an assailant wielding a soda can awoke and shot the man during an attempted robbery, police said.
Willie Lee Hill, 93, told police he saw the robber while in his bedroom Wednesday night. Hill confronted the man and was struck at least 50 times, police said. He was knocked unconscious.
Covered in blood, Hill regained consciousness a short time later and pulled a .38-caliber handgun on his attacker. The suspect, Douglas B. Williams Jr., saw the gun and charged the man, who fired a bullet that struck Williams in the throat, police said.
"I got what I deserved," Williams, 24, told police when they arrived, officers said.
I think he's right.
ARE REPUBLICAN CANDIDATES WUSSING OUT on the YouTube Debate? Rick Moran has been working the phones with the campaigns.
MORE BAD NEWS FOR STOCKS: "Wall Street extended its steep decline Friday, propelling the Dow Jones industrials down more than 500 points over two days after investors gave in to mounting concerns that borrowing costs would climb for both companies and homeowners. It was the worst week for the Dow and the Standard & Poor's 500 index in five years." I blame the new Democratic Congress!
THOUGHTS ON THE SCOTT THOMAS STORY, from Megan McArdle. With a followup here.
UPDATE: Actually, being married to a TNR staffer isn't a silly reason to suppose someone more credible, if you're the editor of TNR. But the whole whistleblower thing does sound like a double standard.
MY EARLIER POST ON RANDY BARNETT AS ATTORNEY GENERAL -- clearly he would have been better than Gonzales, no? -- got me reminded of the prospect that, if nominated, he might liveblog his own confirmation hearings. Even more reason to support him next time the position is open. Er, which could be soon. . . .
IN LONDON, BLAMING THE LAWYERS. When I was in law school, one of the courses was called "The Limits of the Law." Few seem to accept that law, and lawyers, even should have limits now.
These days when I fly carriers that offer seat-back TV service, I am always struck by the contrast between coach and first class. In coach it seems most people spend most of their time watching TV. But when you walk through first class, the seats are littered with well-thumbed newspapers and magazines. Is that heavy reading habit something those people acquired after they started flying first class? Or is it how they got there? My money's on the latter.
Mine too. TV's okay, but as a habit it's destructive.
IT'S SUPPOSED TO BE PART OF THE DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE:
A federal judge held the FBI "responsible for the framing of four innocent men" in a 1965 gangland murder in a landmark ruling yesterday and ordered the government to pay the men $101.7 million for the decades they spent in prison. The award is believed to be the largest of its kind nationally.
In a decision that was as dramatic as it was stern, US District Judge Nancy Gertner said from the bench that the FBI had deliberately withheld evidence that Peter J. Limone, Joseph Salvati, Louis Greco, and Henry Tameleo were innocent, and that the bureau helped cover up the injustice for decades as the men grew old behind bars and Tameleo and Greco died.
"FBI officials up the line allowed their employees to break laws, violate rules, and ruin lives, interrupted only with the occasional burst of applause," said Gertner, berating the FBI for giving commendations and bonuses to the agents who helped send the men to prison for the killing in Chelsea of Edward "Teddy" Deegan, a small-time hoodlum.
STRATEGYPAGE: "Much to Iran's annoyance, the U.S. is cracking down on financial institutions that move money to terrorist organizations Iran supports. This includes Hizbollah and Hamas. The U.S. has ramped up its intelligence effort to discover who is paying who, and is ordering banks to cease providing services to terrorist related organizations, or face being cut off from the American banking system. Iran has to scramble to find banks that do not fear U.S. banking sanctions, and is discovering that this is not easy."
THE L.A. TIMES has a big report on the Mojave / Scaled Composites explosion. Basically it's a fairly standard industrial accident, made sexier for news purposes because it's space-related:
Rutan said the suspected culprit, nitrous oxide, normally is "not considered a hazardous material." Commonly called laughing gas, it is found in dental offices and is used by hot-rodders to boost the horsepower on their vehicles' engines.
According to Rutan, company employees were examining the rate at which the propellant flows through an opening. He emphasized that the test, conducted at room temperatures, did not involve igniting the rocket motor or sparking any fire.
Probably something led to a spark in an unforeseen, and perhaps unforeseeable, way.
In a prison cell south of Cairo a repentant Egyptian terrorist leader is putting the finishing touches to a remarkable recantation that undermines the Muslim theological basis for violent jihad and is set to generate furious controversy among former comrades still fighting with al-Qaida.
The study's central findings were that 54½ percent of all bankruptcies have a "medical cause" and 46.2 percent of all bankruptcies have a "major medical cause." Even if this were true, bankruptcy law already provides adequate safeguards for the special problems posed by medical bankruptcies, as one of us (Mr. Zywicki) testified at the hearing. But it is not true. And the only way to make such a claim is to gerrymander the definition of medical bankruptcies to generate the desired results — true junk social science.
For example, the study classifies uncontrolled gambling, drug or alcohol addiction, and the birth or adoption of a child as "a medical cause." There are indeed situations in which a researcher may legitimately classify those conditions as "medical," but a study used to prove Americans are going bankrupt as a result of crushing medical debt is not one of them.
A father who has gambled away his family's mortgage payment is not the victim of crushing medical bills.
At the Mars conference, placing an expensive sample return activity on the exploration agenda, perhaps at the expense of other projects, sparked some anxieties.
"I'm cautiously optimistic," said Philip Christensen, a leading Mars scientist and professor in the Department of Geological Science at Arizona State University in Tempe. "I am concerned that the sample return mission would take over the Mars program. If you put that mission too far into the future, with not much in between, then you lose a lot of momentum ... a lot of young talented scientists and engineers," he said.
Christensen added that he sees "a real serious challenge" in carving out enough money in the near-term to pay for Mars sample return and still maintain a dynamic program.
"It's going to take a careful, delicate balance to be able to afford the sample return and yet maintain some measure of a program," Christensen told SPACE.com at the Mars meeting in Pasadena. "I have no expectation that the program will be as dynamic and vigorous as it has been if we're going to pay for a sample return. Something's got to give. But at the same time you can't just give up everything."
GOOD NEWS: "The economy snapped out of a lethargic spell and grew at a 3.4 percent pace in the second quarter, the strongest showing in more than a year. A revival in business spending was a main force behind the energized performance." I credit the new Democratic Congress!
MARRIAGE MAKES YOU HAPPIER: Especially if you start off depressed.
NOBODY LOVES ALBERTO: "Gonzo has managed to do something no one else in Washington has managed in years: create a spirit of true bipartisanship. "
He's a uniter, not a divider. The Bush Administration wouldn't have had this problem if they'd listened to me and made Randy Barnett Attorney General! But maybe they've been saving him for the Supreme Court . . . .
UPDATE: Ouch: "Gonzales has lost so much credibility that he's no longer believed even when he is telling the truth."
VOTER-FRAUD IN WASHINGTON STATE: "King and Pierce County prosecutors filed felony charges today against seven people who allegedly committed the biggest voter-registration fraud in state history. The defendants, who were paid employees and supervisors of ACORN, the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now, concocted the scheme as an easy way to get paid, not as an attempt to influence the outcome of elections, King County Prosecuting Attorney Dan Satterberg said. . . .
"Ladies and gentlemen, this is the worst case of voter-registration fraud in the history of the state of Washington. There has been nothing comparable to this," state Secretary of State Sam Reed said at a news conference with Satterberg, King County Executive Ron Sims and Acting U.S. Attorney Jeff Sullivan.
INVESTOR'S BUSINESS DAILY:Richard Milhous Spitzer: "At least Nixon waited a little while before using the tools of state against his political enemies."
MICKEY KAUS: "Will L.A. Mayor Villaraigosa hold up NBC-Universal's giant $3 billion development plan if it doesn't reinstate his honey at its Telemundo subsidiary? If NBC does take care of Mirthala Salinas, does that mean Villaraigosa owes the company? At last, some irresponsible bloggish speculation from the Los Angeles Times."
A ROCKET EXPLOSION at Mojave Airport. Scaled Composites is there, but so are a number of smaller rocket companies; not clear yet what happened. Explosions are a part of the rocket business, alas.
UPDATE: Jeff Foust posts that TV reports say that it was an accident at Scaled Composites.
STILL MORE: Via Rand Simberg, a Friday morning update. It was a "cold flow" test using nitrous oxide that appears to have accidentally ignited; since no ignition system was present it was probably a spark or something. They're now saying three dead, all Scaled Composites employees. May they rest in peace.
In truth, this is a pretty routine industrial accident, of the sort that's basically inevitable when you've got activity of any significant size using things that can explode -- it's just the space connection that gets it the attention. Let's hope the various bureaucrats and politicians don't see this as an opportunity to make themselves feel important at the expense of the industry. (Bumped).
And Professor Bainbridge adds: "Can you imagine what Attorney General Spitzer would have done to a corporate CEO who told two of his executives to stonewall and who tried to fight off an investigation?" He's got lots more -- just keep scrolling.
A VICTORY FOR FREE SPEECH: "Rep. Mike Pence sponsored an amendment prohibiting the Justice Department from spending any money to enforce the most controversial part of the McCain-Feingold campaign-finance law: the part regulating political advertising in the run-up to an election. . . . The amendment passed on a voice vote; then Chris Shays (R., Conn.), one of the two main House sponsors of McCain-Feingold, demanded a recorded vote. It passed again, 215-205."
PILOTS: "Our entire approach to airline security is almost completely ineffective."
I DON'T GET SEASICK, but please don't book me on this cruise.
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, fresh from an investigation of the student loan industry, is out with a plan he says will “help reverse the crisis in college affordability.” Kennedy’s Robin Hood approach takes $18 billion from lenders and applies it to reducing loan repayment costs for students, among other purposes.
The student loan business is a lucrative one. But the senator is going after the wrong folks if he’s trying to rein in the biggest “fat cats” in academe. That mantle should rest on the shoulders of colleges and universities themselves. Legislators setting policy with regard to higher education should realize that colleges and universities are our nation’s richest — and possibly most miserly — “nonprofits.”
Colleges and universities are sitting on a fortune in tax-free funds, and sharing almost none of it. Higher education endowment assets alone total over $340 billion. Sixty-two institutions boast endowments over $1 billion. Harvard and Yale top the list with endowments so massive, $28 billion and $18 billion respectively, that they exceed the general operating funds for the states in which they reside. It’s not just elite private institutions that do this; four public universities have endowments that rank among the nation’s top 10. The University of Texas’ $13 billion endowment is the fourth largest nationwide, vastly overshadowing most of the Ivy League.
These endowments tower over their peers throughout the nonprofit world. The Metropolitan Museum of Art is America’s wealthiest museum. But the Met’s $2 billion endowment is bested by no less than 26 academic institutions, including the University of Minnesota, Washington University in St. Louis, and Emory. Indeed, the total worth of the top 25 college and university endowments is $11 billion greater than the combined assets of their equivalently ranked private foundations — including Gates, Ford and Rockefeller.
Higher education endowments also are growing much faster than private foundations. The value of college and university endowments skyrocketed 17.7 percent last year, while private foundation assets increased 7.8 percent. Just 3.3 percent of the increase in academic endowments is attributable to new gifts. Most of the gain is a result of stingy, outdated endowment payout policies that retain and perpetually re-invest massive sums. This widespread practice results in a hoarding of tax-free funds.
Yeah, I was doing some math on Yale, trying to figure out if they could abolish tuition entirely based on their endowment earnings. I'm pretty sure the answer is yes, which makes me less interested in donating when they call.
WELL, YES: "Of an estimated 60 to 80 foreign fighters who enter Iraq each month, American military and intelligence officials say that nearly half are coming from Saudi Arabia and that the Saudis have not done enough to stem the flow."
WHEN I LINKED MY BROTHER'S NEW CD the other day, it quickly went out of stock at CDBaby. But if you were one of the ones who missed out, it's back in stock now. And their hometown paper, the Cincinnati Post, calls it "stellar."
SAMIZDATA: "The next time you watch a programme or read an article going on about the wonders of self-sufficiency and which bash supermarkets and global trade in foodstuffs, ponder what would happen if we really were reliant on the local farmers for everything we eat."
GREENHOUSE-FRIENDLY POWER! "As expected, the TVA board will consider -- and almost certainly approve -- the completion of the never-finished Unit 2 reactor at Watts Bar Nuclear Plant at its meeting on Wednesday, Aug. 1."
UPDATE: EcoTotality blog: "Most TVA-generated power currently comes from coal-fired power plants. As a user of TVA electricity, I’m happy they’re moving in a more environmentally-friendly direction."
The tax-exempt Environmental Integrity Project in Washington, D.C., issued its annual list of the 50 dirtiest power plants in America. This is illustrated by a photo showing steam — water vapor — escaping from a cooling tower. Sigh.
Power plant emissions nationally are down even as electric generation is up. The report showed. Nitrogen oxide emissions fell 28% between 2002 and 2006. Sulfur dioxide emissions fell 8%. Carbon dioxide emissions — the stuff you exhale — rose by 3%.
Electric production rose about 8% in that period, using the 2% annual increase in electric use, as the same agency “Dirty Kilowatts” cited.
Disgraced former prosecutor Mike Nifong acknowledged Thursday there is "no credible evidence" that three Duke lacrosse players committed any of the crimes he accused them of more than a year ago, offering for the first time a complete and unqualified apology.
That's nice. It would have been nicer if he'd just done his job in the beginning.
RESILIENT. "Twelve paragraphs on the remarkable resilience of al-Qaeda later, we learn that this poster-child resilient AQ unit will not fight another day."
AND YET THERE ARE PEOPLE who think that technology is dehumanizing. They're basically idiots.
I lived in Texas a few years back, and I have to say that I was impressed by Congressman Ron Paul’s originalist interpretation of the Constitution. While I do not support his foreign policy positions, I have long admired his principled stands.
What I do not admire, however, is his inability to wrest his own campaign away from the crazies who are advocating on his behalf. They, his own supporters, have defined Ron Paul negatively. And that, now, will be his lasting legacy. . . . Ron Paul’s supporters are the Republicans’ Cindy Sheehans.
Yes. I disagree with Paul on the war, but I confess that it's his poll-spamming, nasty-emailing supporters who have really turned me off on his campaign. (I disagreed with Harry Browne on defense, too, but I voted for him twice.) I can't help but feel that this stuff has given him a negative halo with the media and the political establishment.
UPDATE: Tom Elia writes: "As someone who voted for Ron Paul for president in 1988, I couldn't agree more with Krumm." I voted for Dukakis in 1988. Well, to coin a phrase: "When I was young and irresponsible, I was young and irresponsible."
DAMNING WITH FAINT PRAISE? Brendan Nyhan says that Michael Moore is getting more accurate.
Republicans are working together to earn back the majority by first earning back the trust of the American people. And while Democrats are divided and breaking their promises on issue after issue, House Republicans have repeatedly spoken with one voice. . . .
A united Republican conference also forced Democratic leaders to abandon a plan to load billions of taxpayer dollars into slush funds for secret earmarks. By standing up for taxpayers who deserve to know where Washington is spending their hard-earned dollars, we succeeded in restoring the 2006 Republican earmark reforms to appropriations bills. But Democratic leaders will continue to face a united Republican conference; we won't stop until those rules are applied to authorization and tax bills as well.
Sounds good. But there's obviously a long way to go.
DEMOCRATS SHIFTING POSITION ON ABORTION: "Sensing an opportunity to impress religious voters — and tip elections — Democrats in Congress and on the campaign trail have begun to adopt some of the language and policy goals of the antiabortion movement."
A BIODIESEL motorcycle. With video. Does it smell like French Fries? Pretty much!
Running a bike on home-brewed biodiesel can work up an appetite, particularly since the exhaust smells like a greasy spoon. "When I'm out cruising with friends and get hungry," says Hubbard, "I just pull in front to signal that it's time to eat."
Biodiesel -- fighting our addiction to oil, but adding to America's obesity problem! No such thing as a free, er, lunch . . . .
"SCOTT THOMAS" REVEALED, and the spin is as predicted. Plus, as Bruce Carroll notes: "The New Republic has still not corroborated anything Private Beauchamp wrote."
PREDICTION? Or causation? "Not to go all Occam's Razor or anything, but has it occurred to anyone to ask whether this cat might be somehow killing these people?"
ANOTHER SATISFIED READER: My earlier post on the Braun Pulsonic razor produced this email from reader Ross Woolsey:
Just a quick note. I am a regular reader, but, sadly, am of an entirely different political persuasion. I enjoy reading you because I don't feel as if I am being slapped around for having a different political viewpoint. Plus, I especially enjoy the occasional posts and pictures about life in the college town of Knoxville.
But, to the matter at hand. I noticed your post re the article in Popular Mechanics about the new Braun Pulsonic electric razor. Sight unseen, I ordered one through Amazon. (How dumb is that?) It has arrived, and it is absolutely a fantastic product. I have bought, tried, and discarded, electric razors time and again in the past, because they didn't give as close a shave and they stung my face. Not so the Pulsonic. It really is a terrific shaver, and has made reading all the posts that are so crossways from my own views well worth it!
Politics is politics, but a good shave is a good shave. And, like the Braun, I try to be smooth and non-irritating. If I don't succeed as often, well, InstaPundit is also a lot cheaper . . . .
UPDATE: Sorry, but I can't recommend this "ultimate head-shaving razor" from personal experience. It just showed up when I visited the Pulsonic page and I couldn't resist checking it out. With it are a whole bunch of specialty head-shaving products, a whole shaving-world with which I have no experience, and had never really thought about before. Plus, special shaved-head sunscreen!
ANOTHER UPDATE: Reader Eric Kuttner emails a warning:
I decided to start shaving my head last October, and can tell you that the HeadBlade sucks. I heard about how wonderful it was on the net and finally found it after checking out a few stores. I thought it was supposed to eliminate the possibility of nicking yourself, but at least on my head it does the opposite. When I first got it, it didn't seem to shave my head as well as the Gillette Fusion, and I put it aside. A few weeks back I thought I'd give it another try, and boy was I sorry! -- I gave myself three big nicks on my head and they took a while to heal up. I'd recommend the Fusion, which has never nicked me.
Funny how I got caught up in the whole shaved head look, which seems to have exploded in popularity fairly recently (at least in New York). It's almost a bit puzzling to myself, though I can think of a number of contributing factors for why I decided to do it. It wasn't something I particularly thought about doing for any duration of time, but one day I felt that I wanted to try something different and off the hair went. First I went for a buzz cut, but I thought -- "I went this far...why not go all the way?" and then shaved it all off. I was a bit ambivalent about the look at first, but now I think I prefer it, although it is very labor-intensive to keep up. It takes me about 15 extra minutes in the shower every morning to shave my head. No, I don't have to shave every day, but after one day's growth, my head feels like sandpaper, and I hate that.
One thing that's really nice about having a shaved head: you never have to worry again about losing your hair or going grey, which was definitely part of my motivation (though I haven't lost that much hair or gone very grey yet -- but it's starting). A shaved head makes for a smoother aging transition, as well as a smoother head.
Reminds me of the Seinfeld episode where, Elaine was dating the guy with the shaved head. She talked him into growing it out, but it turned out that he had gone bald during all the shaved years without really knowing it. Then she dumped him because she didn't want to date a bald buy . . . .
INDEED: "There’s nothing like living under actual socialism to drive up support for capitalism."
THE ATF'S SILLY EFFORT TO SEPARATE "REAL JOURNALISM" FROM "HARASSMENT" has people looking more closely at the agency's behavior: "The ATF’s push is nonsensical but it continues a trend of bad things for the agency in the last few years." See the links for more. No wonder they don't want to be noticed.
MY ADVICE TO UT STUDENTS: Don't buy major-label CDs after this development: "A federal magistrate judge in Knoxville has approved the recording industry's request to subpoena the identities of 33 University of Tennessee students suspected of illegal file sharing. . . . The recording industry has targeted dozens of UT students with 'John Doe' lawsuits, and the subpoenas allow the record labels' attorneys to learn the identities of the students they're suing."
SARTORIAL CRITICISM OF CONGRESS: "Another reason for contempt of Congress: They’re slobs, coming onto the house floor in beach wear and athletic jerseys. How far we have fallen."
While Townsend’s means of asking his question probably shocked your average Democrat, Biden’s response that this guy was crazy and looking at him like he had cooties probably damaged Biden (and Democrats) with gun owners. And they had been making waves lately with shedding their gun banning image. But this ain’t a post about that, it’s a post about this:
Why did CNN choose that video? My understanding was CNN chose the questions to be aired. And do you think there weren’t other people asking about gun control in a much less dramatic way? In a way that might not scare your average liberal? And this is the video they showed?
Well, can’t read too much into it since the also let a snowman ask about global warming.
Brr. Meanwhile, Dave Weigel declares victory. "It's not the O'Reilly Factor getting Ward Churchill fired, but I'll take it." And from The Economist,"That's Mr Biden's political career in a nutshell. Always (at least) one sentence too many."
RACE AND ROAD RAGE in Philadelphia. "But now that everyone's race is said to matter, I guess we need to know the race of the passengers. Will it be reported, or are we just suppose to assume they were white?"
LIMEWIRE AS A NATIONAL SECURITY THREAT: "Hmmm...does anyone want to point out that the users themselves -- you know, the federal employees who are dumb enough to install LimeWire on a computer with sensitive documents -- may bear some responsibility?"
IT'S FOR THE CHILDREN!US Senators call for universal Internet filtering. "US senators today made a bipartisan call for the universal implementation of filtering and monitoring technologies on the Internet in order to protect children at the end of a Senate hearing for which civil liberties groups were not invited." How about tar and feathers, instead?
ANOTHER CONGRESSIONAL REPORT ON THE SURGE: "I really expected the worst. Instead I am very encouraged."
TOYOTA SET TO TEST new plug-in hybrid vehicle. Not as potent as the aftermarket plugin Priuses, though in fact most of my errands would be all-electric with this.
TARNISHED INDUSTRY SPIKES COLUMN recommending improvements: "Imagine the outrage if this were RJ Reynolds or General Motors getting a column killed on the state of its industry, instead of the L.A. Times."
As Mickey Kaus observes: "They're in the business of killing stories these days, not publishing them, apparently." Good luck with that.
"They're in the business of killing stories these days, not publishing them."
That has always been the most important power of gatekeepers. Not in deciding when to open the gate, but in when to close it.
And that's the reason that the gatekeepers are so upset by the rise of blogs and other alternative media. They still have the ability to open the gate for stories they like, and to try to focus attention on those stories, but they no longer have the ability to close the gate because thousands of bloggers have dug tunnels under the fence.
Heh. Indeed.
IS THE AMERICAN LABOR MARKET MONOPSONISTIC? Not so much.
Here's an interesting point about the Eliot Spitzer scandal, which we noted yesterday: One of the aides to New York's governor who was implicated in the improper use of state police to gather material for a smear campaign against state Senate Majority Leader Joseph Bruno was William Howard, Spitzer's assistant secretary for homeland security.
Readers may remember that three years ago, New Jersey's Gov. Jim McGreevey declared himself a "gay American" and confessed to an affair with a male aide, whom the media described as his "homeland security czar." (The ex-aide, Golan Cipel, denies the affair, accuses McGreevey of sexual harassment, and says "czar" overstates his role, which was to act "as a liaison between the governor's office and the various state agencies responsible for law enforcement and homeland security.")
Homeland security is the common thread linking these two very different scandals, both involving Democratic administrations in states that were among the hardest hit by 9/11. Democrats tend to talk a lot about homeland security, because by and large they aren't wild about either military or intelligence operations. But this at least makes us wonder if they take homeland security all that seriously either.
It may be that this is a bipartisan problem, as evidenced by President Bush's abortive nomination of Bernard Kerik as secretary of homeland security.
I can't say I'm surprised. I've been saying that homeland security is a joke for quite a while.
UPDATE: Meanwhile, on the Spitzer front, Professor Bainbridge is talking about Nixon: "My gosh. If Spitzer were a Republican, people would be making comparisons to Nixon and calling for impeachment."
And Radley Balko comments: "Spitzer denies any knowledge of what his closes aide was doing, which seems improbable. But hang on. Even he didn't know, isn't this the same guy who wants corporate executives held criminally liable for the mistakes of their underlings, even if they had no knowledge of those mistakes? Isn't this the guy who wanted to make not knowing about those mistakes a crime in and of itself?"
THE FOLKS AT ATF NOW CLAIM AUTHORITY TO DECIDE who is an "authorized journalist." Apparently taking pictures and reporting by non-authorized journalists constitutes "harassment." Personally, I can't see any legitimate reason for ATF personnel conducting a routine inspection not to be photographed. What possible problem is there with photographing public employees performing a public duty in a public place? Certainly if ATF agents were photographing ordinary citizens in such a setting, we'd hear that there was "no legitimate expectation of privacy," right?
UPDATE: Reader Doss Hindman thinks they want to avoid pictures of agents with their hairdos covered in bubblewrap against the rain, like the one with this story. It's embarrassing, I guess, but hardly a reason for censorship.
IT'S NOT TOO LATE to buy your Tesla electric sports car. I'm tempted, but not that tempted given the price.
WITH THE NEW SCHOOL YEAR NOT FAR AWAY, I should mention that the Insta-Daughter read The Smart Girl's Guide to Starting Middle School last year before starting, er, Middle School and found it helpful.
Few things seem as anachronistic as an underground coal mine. Black-faced miners in lamps and hard hats; coal trains and company towns — the images are seared in our brains and in our folklore. Images of an old smokestack economy that's largely been supplanted by the industrial might of the semiconductor. Except that all those computers, HDTVs, groovy little iPods and other silicon-chip wonders would fall silent if it weren't for coal. Wind, water, nuclear, oil, natural gas, solar energies — add them all up and together they barely produce as much electricity as coal.
Last year, America consumed more than 1 billion tons of the mineral. At the present rate, using existing extraction technology, the reserves will last 243 years. Coal is dramatically cheap to mine, too: In 2005 it cost $8.66 to produce a million BTU of oil; the equivalent energy from coal cost $1.19. About two-thirds of America's favorite fossil fuel comes from surface mines (about 778 million tons); the rest is produced in underground mines, mainly in Appalachia.
As recently as May, U.S. power companies had announced intentions to build as many as 150 new generating plants fueled by coal, which currently supplies about half the nation's electricity. One reason for the surge of interest in coal was concern over the higher price of natural gas, which has driven up electricity prices in many places. Coal appeared capable of softening the impact since the U.S. has deep coal reserves and prices are low.
But as plans for this fleet of new coal-powered plants move forward, an increasing number are being canceled or development slowed. Coal plants have come under fire because coal is a big source of carbon dioxide, the main gas blamed for global warming, in a time when climate change has become a hot-button political issue.
Just remember, the electricity has to come from somewhere. And when the brownouts and blackouts start, will people blame the environmentalists, or the power companies -- and politicians?
DEMOCRATIC HOPEFULS snub party moderates: "Not a single one of the eight presidential candidates plans to attend the Democratic Leadership Council's summer meeting, a snub that says less about the centrist DLC than it does about a nomination process that rewards candidates who pander to their parties' hardened cores while ignoring everybody else. . . . That raises a challenge for Republican and Democratic presidential candidates: How do they win their parties' nomination without appearing hostage to the kind of base politics that turns off swing voters?"
Well, when has the DLC ever produced a successful Democratic Presidency? Heh. But this certainly puts Kos ahead in his declared war on the DLC.
Leaders of the anti-tax, business-friendly Club for Growth like to demonstrate their independence from the Republican Party. Their recent moves — such as commissioning a new poll that purports to demonstrate the vulnerability of two GOP incumbents in Alaska — suggest they are preparing to poke Republican officials in the eye yet again.
But the conservative group also could stymie Democrats’ hopes of capitalizing on the widening federal probe of political corruption in Alaska that has touched both Sen. Ted Stevens (R) and Rep. Don Young (R).
In a July 18 news release, the club slammed Stevens and Young as “two of the Congress’ most notorious porkers, often threatening other lawmakers while they waste taxpayer dollars.” The release accompanied the results of a voter survey commissioned by the Club for Growth Political Action Committee.
“Like the rest of the country, Alaska taxpayers are fed up with runaway spending, wasteful projects, and the corruption that they can breed,” Club for Growth President Pat Toomey said in the statement. “Defending his pork career in 2001, Stevens told National Public Radio: ‘I am guilty of asking the Senate for pork and proud of the Senate for giving it to me.
“Clearly, the sentiment isn’t shared by Republican primary voters back home,” he said.
The now-infamous “Bridge to Nowhere” championed by Stevens has become the cause célèbre for politicians of all stripes who want Congress to cut back on earmarks.
The Basswood Research poll revealed that 66 percent of GOP voters disapproved of Stevens’ proposal to spend $223 million to build a bridge from Ketchikan to sparsely populated Gravina Island.
The notion that pork is popular with "the folks back home" is a myth. It's mostly popular with a few fatcats back home. It's also a major source of corruption.
Weren’t Democrats supposed to bring honesty, ethics and openness to Congress? That was Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s promise upon taking control. But after a little more than six months on the job, the new majority is going back on its word. Transparency on earmarks appears to be just a farce.
In each house of Congress, Democrats are showing signs of returning to business as usual. In the Senate, Majority Leader Harry Reid has been holding up the ethics reform package because he wants to strip it of a earmark transparency provision that he and 97 other senators voted for in January.
Despite facing pressure from his own leadership, conservative Sen. Jim DeMint (R.-S.C.) won’t relent, insisting the language be preserved. It’s causing all sorts of headaches for Reid, who is now facing criticism from liberal advocacy groups that don’t like the fact he refuses to release the text of the legislation. . . . Trouble is that Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R.-Ky.) might just go along with it. According to Roll Call ($), conservatives fear that the consequences of Republican capitulation could be devastating. “For our leadership to vote against earmark reform and be AWOL on this debate is no way to win back the majority,” one conservative staffer told the newspaper.
Read the whole thing.
MORE ON THAT LANCET STUDY: "Much of the math here is mind-numbingly complicated, but Kane’s bottom line is simple: the Lancet authors 'cannot reject the null hypothesis that mortality in Iraq is unchanged.'" That's kind of a fizzle, isn't it?
"Trade not aid" can only work if Africans are able to effectively produce and market things to trade. So the question is not whether there should be more innovators and entrepreneurs in Africa, but how? What concrete steps must be taken in order to develop the business sector?
Read the whole thing.
SCOTT THOMAS AND JAMIL HUSSEIN: Some sensible thoughts at The Mudville Gazette. "The New Republic's new 'war hero' is not exposing bad behavior of others that's condoned by his seniors - he's confessing to that behavior himself. Since the New Republic won't release his identity, we can only conclude that either they support this sort of behavior by US troops or know that he isn't one. Neither option speaks well for anyone involved."
UPDATE: More background, including the University letter on the decision, here.
SO HOW MANY MECHANICS WILL THIS GADGET PUT OUT OF WORK? Not as many as if you integrated it with a Web service that took the codes and gave you step-by-step instructions on what to do, specific to vehicle type. I wonder if anyone will try that?
GUNBLOGGER JEFF SOYER OF ALPHECCA has fallen on some hard times and is having a fund drive. Donate if you've enjoyed his work and feel so inclined. I did.
A CONGRESSIONAL IRAQ VISIT: "Tennessee U.S Rep. David Davis returned from Iraq this week saying that U.S. troops are making significant progress there and feeling more confident than ever that now is not the time to start bringing them home."
MEGAN MCARDLE: "Not that I in any way disbelieve them, but I am flabbergasted by the number of progressives who have to wait months to see a doctor." Yeah, we see a lot of doctors and waiting a week is a big deal for us. The Insta-Daughter once had to wait two weeks to see a pediatric cardiologist, but there are only a couple in town. And for anything urgent it's quite fast. Knoxville, being a university town with cheap housing, may be a bit oversupplied with doctors. But when I lived in DC I don't remember the waits being much, and I had an HMO.
UPDATE: Reader Donald Hertzmark emails:
My ICD was implanted six days after I collapsed in my kitchen in 2005 with Sinus pause and arrhythmia (Wenkebach pause) and no diastolic blood pressure (been there, done that, got the T-shirt). The Washington Hospital center cardio unit had me in for a full day of tests five days after the collapse (there was a weekend intervening, hence the delay) with the top specialist in my particular problem. I shared a room with two uninsured patients, both of whom were receiving surgery from top cardio guys, and they were treated promptly as well. I simply do not believe these stories from the Left about medical care. In the UK they would have told me to come back in a year with a "no driving, no airplanes and no ladders" admonishment for that entire period. It is likely that part of my $29k was used to cross-subsidize the two uninsureds, but it is a lot better than waiting for a year for the hammer to drop again.
Yeah, my mother-in-law is on TennCare, and she gets in fast, too.
ANOTHER POLL SHOCKER: "Support for suicide bombings drops throughout Muslim world." But read the whole thing for more shocks.
TERRORIST DRY RUNS? "Airport security officers around the nation have been alerted by federal officials to look out for terrorists practicing to carry explosive components onto aircraft, based on four curious seizures at airports since last September."
Many public schools will stop drug testing athletes this school year after an opinion from the state attorney general's office said it violates state law.
But a few schools plan to continue testing because school officials said it deters children from drug use.
See, it's okay to break the law if . . . you really, really want to. What's telling is that nobody is arguing that the Attorney General has the law wrong -- they just don't want to follow it. That's educational, all right.
SEXONOMICS: I'm guessing it wouldn't be hard to get undergraduates to sign up for a course with that name.
July 24, 2007
THINGS ARE JUST AS MUCH FUN AS EVER over at Protein Wisdom
HELEN AND I went to Market Square Saturday night. They were doing The Tempest as part of the "Shakespeare in the Square" series. We were just there for dinner with Austin Bay and his daughter, who were passing through town, but it looked good.
ANOTHER UNFORTUNATE bear / automobile encounter, courtesy of reader Chris Greer. It doesn't say whether the Volvo was totaled, but in these encounters Mutual Assured Destruction seems to apply . . . .
POLLING SHOCKER: "Rasmussen Reports polled Ron Paul's strength against the Democratic frontrunners and the news is not good: Paul would lose to Hillary Clinton by 19 points and Barack Obama by 20 points."
So I guess if the GOP nominates him they're in trouble. Another poll shocker here.
A SLOW HURRICANE SEASON: "The 2007 hurricane season may be less severe than forecast due to cooler-than-expected water temperatures in the tropical Atlantic, private forecaster WSI Corp said on Tuesday." I hope so.
As I said last week, he ran a masterful pre-campaign, but the transition to officially running has been sloppy.
TRIPOLI SIX UPDATE: "Five Bulgarian nurses and a Palestinian doctor flew to freedom Tuesday after more than eight years in a Libyan prison, receiving a presidential pardon and bouquets of flowers at an emotional arrival ceremony in the Bulgarian capital of Sofia." It was basically a kidnapping for ransom.
A convicted felon who worked as a volunteer research assistant for a Yale Law School professor allegedly capitalized on his Yale connection to swindle millions of dollars out of undocumented Irish immigrants. Posing as an attorney who worked for the Yale Immigration Law Clinic, investigators say, Ralph Cucciniello promised to fix his victims' immigration problems and get them green cards for a fee of around $5,000.
One of the strong points of the Yale Law School is that it's a functioning anarchy. But that has its downside, as this illustrates.
SOME THOUGHTS ON "SCOTT THOMAS" from John Barnes. (Thanks to reader C.J. Burch for the link). It's all speculation, but it's interesting, and clearly labeled as such.
WARD CHURCHILL has been fired. "University president Hank Brown, in a news conference, said 'the decision was really pretty basic' based on the board's findings. Churchill was accused of plagiarism, falsification and other infractions."
UPDATE: Gateway Pundit has a roundup. And there's much more here.
During Tuesday's Senate Judiciary Committee oversight hearing, a freshman Democratic Senator stumped Attorney General Alberto Gonzales on how Vice President Dick Cheney, his chief of staff, and counsel, had been granted authority parallel with the President on intervening in pending matters at the Justice Department.
Senator Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) questioned the Attorney General about the independence of the Justice Department and communications with the White House on pending cases or investigations.
He then pointed to a May 4, 2006 memorandum signed by Gonzales which showed that the Office of the Vice President had been granted parallel privileges with the Executive Office of the President on communicating directly with the Justice Department's staff on criminal and civil matters.
Yeah, I know Cheney's office has dropped this argument, but still . . . .
STOCKS DROP SHARPLY: No gloating from Kudlow tonight; I'm watching his panel and they're blaming the anti-business sentiments in last night's Democratic debate. Kudlow doesn't seem fully persuaded.
CULTURE OF CORRUPTION: " Imagine if top aides to President Bush ordered the FBI to produce damaging but false information about Harry Reid, the Senate majority leader. Now that would be a scandal."
MORE ON NORMAN BORLAUG. "Fame is not needed to justify or validate the life and achievements of Norman Borlaug. But fame and respect are due to him nevertheless for the astonishing contribution he has made to the quality of life around the world. And yes, more people should know about him. If they do, they’ll know more about his insights, and more lives will be saved thanks to the spread of that knowledge. That would be a better idea than fawning profiles of Lester Brown and Paul Ehrlich, wouldn’t it?"
BUSH'S NEW ANTI-TORTURE ORDER: Phil Carter says there's less -- or is it more? -- to it than meets the eye. Either way, he doesn't like it.
The surge has basically been chasing the terrorist and criminal gangs around the suburbs of Baghdad, or even into northern or western Iraq. This has taken its toll. Time spent in flight cannot be spent planting IEDs or killing people. Putting all these guys on the road, also makes them more susceptible to capture. A lot of important terrorists have been captured this way. The chief liaison between al Qaeda headquarters and al Qaeda in Iraq was nabbed, as well as many mid-level terrorist cell leaders.
What most of the troops, and Iraqi civilians, notice is the lower level of violence. Since the surge offensive began four months ago, Iraqi (military and civilian) deaths have declined by more than 50 percent, and American casualties are down by over a third. U.S. troops are still taking the lead in moving into hostile areas, and being exposed to ambush and IEDs. But U.S. tactics and training have made enemy efforts much less lethal. This has helped demoralize an increasing number of terrorists. Many are tired of killing Iraqi civilians, and the increasing difficulty at getting at American troops. Look at this from the Iraqi perspective. In a very good month, Iraqis make a hundred or more attacks a day on American troops, and kill, on average, about four of them. While the terrorists make a big deal out of every American killed, they know that most of their attacks were not only failures, but got a lot of their buddies killed. On average, 10-20 terrorists die for every American killed. This has been going on for years, and an increasing number of Iraqi fighters are demoralized and quitting. Many either become informers, or surrender and speak freely. This is resulting in fresher intelligence, and raids that are catching terrorist cells preparing for operations, and in possession of weapons, bombs and incriminating documents.
Well, good.
TRANSVISION 2007: Ron Bailey reports on life-extension, and more. "One might think that longer, healthier lives should be an easy sell, but, in fact, there are people who believe that dramatically extending human lives would be a bad idea."
DAVE KOPEL ON ARMED RESISTANCE TO THE HOLOCAUST: It's a PDF file of a law review article, but it's reasonably short by law-review standards. And here's a shorter related item that Kopel and I wrote back in 2001.
Everyone was friendly. No one shot at us or even looked at us funny. Infrastructure problems, not security, were the biggest concerns at the moment. I felt like I was in Iraqi Kurdistan – where the war is already over – not in Baghdad. . . .
“This is not what I expected in Baghdad,” I said.
“Most of what we’re doing doesn’t get reported in the media,” he said. “We’re not fighting a war here anymore, not in this area. We’ve moved way beyond that stage. We built a soccer field for the kids, bought all kinds of equipment, bought them school books and even chalk. Soon we’re installing 1,500 solar street lamps so they have light at night and can take some of the load off the power grid. The media only covers the gruesome stuff. We go to the sheiks and say hey man, what kind of projects do you want in this area? They give us a list and we submit the paperwork. When the projects get approved, we give them the money and help them buy stuff.”
Not everything they do is humanitarian work, unless you consider counter-terrorism humanitarian work. In my view, you should. Few Westerners think of personal security as a human right, but if you show up in Baghdad I’ll bet you will. . . .The soldiers were talking and acting like aid workers, not warriors from the elite 82nd Airborne Division.
“Man, this is boring,” one of them said to me later. “I’m an adrenaline junky. There’s no fight here. It won’t surprise me if we start handing out speeding tickets.” So it goes in at least this part of Baghdad that has been cleared by the surge.
“When we first got here,” said another and laughed, “shit hit the fan.”
It was all a bit boring, but blessedly so. I knew already that not everyone in Baghdad was hostile. But it was slightly surprising to see that entire areas in the Red Zone are not hostile.
Anything can happen in Baghdad, even so. The convulsive, violent, and overtly hostile Sadr City is only a few minutes drive to the southeast.
Read the whole thing. He has lots of photos, too. Like Michael Yon, he's an independent journalist supported by his readers, so if you like his reporting, consider hitting the tipjar.
UPDATE: Reader Kjell Hagen emails from Norway:
It is interesting to read/listen to Michael Totten and Michael Yon. It is so incredibly different from here, where all commentators, from left to right, take it as a given that the US has lost the war, with no proof of their assertion, of course. It will be interesting to see when, or if, a more nuanced picture gets out.
The US has certainly lost the media war in Europe. Luckily, that is not a critical arena. I think the war is about to turn the right way. The ugliest year in WWII was the last. People tend to demand that wars should get gradually more peaceful. They don´t. They usually get more and more ugly, and then one side collapses. There are clear signs of Al Qaeda getting desperate and a lot weaker now.
Let's hope. I don't know if the "media war in Europe" was ever winnable, as there are plenty of people in Europe -- and some in America, alas, for that matter -- who would like us to lose in Iraq, because it would advance their own political agendas. Let's hope that they're proven wrong, though I think so many people are so invested in failure that even the greatest success won't be allowed to be portrayed as a success for years.
SCHEMA UPDATES! A year ago, I didn't know what an XML Schema was. And it appears that I wasn't alone. But now my Sister-in-Law and company not only define what an XML Schema is in plain English, but they are now also providing a free on-line tool, SchemaXplainer, that provides Schema users with 60 custom analyitics with which to understand their XML Schemas. So if you're into this stuff -- and, really, shouldn't you be? -- check it out.
UPDATE: I should have linked to her main SchemaXpert site, too.
INDEED: "The fact that our state's code is thoroughly woven with references to two specific political parties is evidence that the parties themselves act like a single, two-pronged special interest group, one that is more powerful than any labor union or trade association could hope to be." It's not much better at the national level, either.
How about just requiring them to wear t-shirts saying "The Union is paying me $__ an hour to do this job." Then we'll know what they think is a fair wage.
Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, says her deal with longtime friend and political supporter Robert Penney is entirely above board. Late last year, Murkowski paid Penney, a real estate developer, $179,000 for a 1.74-acre tract, although local real estate agents say it was worth as much as nearly double that figure.
Fishy, indeed. But do politicians engage in any other kind?
One issue Carmona didn't address is medical marijuana. Last year, the FDA put out a baldly political press release claiming that "no sound scientific studies supported medical use of marijuana for treatment in the United States."
This is flatly wrong. A wide-ranging 1999 Institute of Medicine report actually did show medical benefits from smoked marijuana while also finding minimal harmful side effects. The FDA press release was right in one respect: There have been no conclusive studies since. But there's a good reason for that: The federal government won't allow them.
Carmona didn't mention medical marijuana in his list of grievances because Carmona isn't any more interested in actual science on the medical marijuana issue than the Bush administration is. When the New York Times asked him his position on the issue, he gave the odd reply that he was against medical marijuana because, "Smoking is bad for you."
In other interviews, Carmona has said medical marijuana is a "science issue, not a political issue," which would be a great answer had Carmona actually looked at the science during his tenure and not merely at the political landscape.
Of course, merely suggesting that we study the possibility of reforming federal drug policy cost Dr. Jocelyn Elders, one of Carmona's predecessors, her job. So perhaps you can't blame him.
Claims that the Bush Administration has politicized science are correct. The implication that this is something new, however, is not. And read the whole thing for more examples involving obesity, alcohol, etc. Among the politicized sciences, "public health" has long been a top offender. As Balko notes: "The Office of Surgeon General always has been overtly political, a captive of the most hysterical public health activists. Its only real powers are tongue-clucking and finger-wagging, usually about the latest moral panic, lecturing the American public to knock off its bad habits, lest somebody get hurt. Richard Carmona's tenure was no different, which is why it's laughable to hear him lecture someone else about science."
The occasion for his latest tirade? A Republican colleague's effort to cut a federal program that adds extra education money for indigenous students in Alaska and Hawaii.
It's a helpful program for Alaska, where we struggle to find effective ways of educating Native students. But at a time when federal spending is under lots of scrutiny, it's not beyond the pale for colleagues to wonder if this special program is necessary or appropriate.
Rep. Young decried this legitimate debate as "fighting each other" and compared it to how "mink in my state kill their own."
He might have been OK if he'd stopped there. But he went on:
"There's always another day when those who fight will be killed too, and I am very good at that." . . .
Alaska has been tagged as a pork-swilling backwater that gobbles up federal money for "bridges to nowhere." Congressman Young has drawn scrutiny in the Jack Abramoff lobbying scandal. He has drawn criticism for two different instances where he did favors for Outside businessmen who also happened to raise about $60,000 for his re-election campaign. . . . If anyone in this case is helping to call the honor of the House into question, it's Congressman Don Young.
Indeed.
ANOTHER FALSE CLAIM OF AUTHORSHIP FROM JOE BIDEN? Well, a false claim of originality, anyway. "Many people associate the assault weapons ban with Dianne Feinstein, so Biden can be forgiven for pointing out that he introduced legislation before she did. However, Biden is wrong to claim credit for being the first."
Did Hillary avoid mentioning Bill in last night's debate? She sure tried! For example, in talking about sending Chelsea to private school, she said: "I was advised... if she were to go to a public school, the press would never leave her alone... So I had to make a very difficult decision." "I"? No "we"?
I'm guessing that their polls show Bill as more liability than asset. But if that's true with the Democratic primary voters who were the target of this debate, will it be truer (or less true?) in the general election?
Gov. Eliot Spitzer’s aides, including one of his closest advisers, improperly used the State Police to gather information about the governor’s chief rival, Joseph L. Bruno, the State Senate majority leader, in an effort to plant a negative story about Mr. Bruno and damage him politically, according to a report on Monday by the attorney general’s office.
In a newly released set of 2008 Gallup general election matchups, Rudy Giuliani has edged in front of Hillary Rodham Clinton among registered voters, 49-46, while Clinton has an equally thin margin over Fred Thompson, 48-45. Giuliani comes in ahead of Barack Obama, 49-45, while Obama leads Thompson 51-40.
This pattern has been pretty consistent. Is a Giuliani/Thompson ticket the Republicans' best shot?
PUTTING THE SOCIALISM back into National Socialism. "In Hitler's Beneficiaries: Plunder, Racial War, and the Nazi Welfare State, Gotz Aly argues on the basis of extensive evidence, that German support for Nazi rule was maintained by the creation of a massive welfare state funded in large part by plunder captured in Hitler's foreign conquests, but also partly by means of "soak the rich" taxation within Germany itself. . . . Like some modern opponents of globalization and free trade, the Nazis viewed economics as a zero-sum game between nations, where increasing wealth for one country could, in the long run, only be achieved by impoverishing or conquering others."
I agree that the Biden response to the gun-toting You-Tuber was revealing--it showed Biden lacks even moderately calibrated snap judgment--and it was revealing in a way that a) wouldn't have happened with a non-YouTube debate, in which the questioner most likely wouldn't have gotten past security, let alone the screeners, and b) reflected Biden's alleged fatal flaw (or one of his several alleged fatal flaws), namely his cringe-making, unhinged spontaneous reactions.
The big news isn't the diminution in Biden's already microscopic chances of becoming President, but the collateral damage to other candidates and the Democrats' brand. It's hard to win swing states if gun owners hate you. Biden just exacerbated a problem the Democrats have been trying, with some success, to ameliorate.
The historical significance of corn in the Americas is comparable to that of rice in China or wheat in the Middle East. Corn is more than a staple, it is part of the region's DNA -- which explains the hysteria in many Latin American countries over rising prices.
In just four years, leaders and organizations that style themselves as progressive have gone from denouncing the precipitous fall in the price of corn to denouncing its sharp climb -- with many of the same arguments!
Children of the Corn was also the title of a Nebraska Guitar Militia CD, though not the one with the song about farm subsidies, "Farming the Government." Nothing about dead people there, though it would have been cute.
MORE: Okay, I didn't see the whole thing but it was pretty good - except for the candidates' YouTube efforts, which were predictably lame. Probably the best debate so far, though some will say that's damning with faint praise.
And Dan Riehl emails: "Don't know if maybe I missed some, but every lib blog I visited had a CNN ad up. Understandable, but I wonder if we'll see ads on right side blogs on Sept 17 when they host the R's?"
I guess we'll find out.
STILL MORE: Ryan Sager posts some afterthoughts. He posts "Biggest Gaffes" and "Brightest Moments" -- here's one:
Biden's obnoxious response when he insulted the gun owner toward the end as being nuts. It wasn't so much a personal gaffe as a moment that projected an ugly image of the Democratic Party as out of touch with rural voters and gun owners — big problems the party has been trying to overcome. He got a huge cheer from the audience, but that just compounded the problem.
Yep. Plus, a Giuliani prediction comes true! Oh, and Dave Weigel was liveblogging it too. This link goes to his wrapup, scroll down from there for more.
STILL MORE: Biden's remarks are not playing well among gun owners, and Bill Richardson is suffering some collateral damage, too.
I JUST FOUND OUT THAT MIKE HENDRIX'S WIFE CHRISTIANA died in a motorcycle accident Friday. Please send your condolences and best wishes. Words are completely inadequate in these situations, but they're also essential.
CRITICIZE 'EM ALL YOU WANT, but with the natural predators mostly out of action, maybe SUVs are all we've got: "The crash killed the bear and totaled the SUV. The driver, Dwight Hart of Knoxville, and his passengers weren’t hurt."
Or maybe it's the bears helping to keep the SUV population under control . . ..
STEPHEN GREEN WILL BE LIVE-DRUNK-BLOGGING the YouTube debate tonight at Pajamas Media. Meanwhile, he's posted a couple of debate questions of his own at VodkaPundit.
The Glenn and Helen Show: Michael Yon Reports from Iraq
We caught up with independent journalist Michael Yon via satellite phone this afternoon. Yon, who's been covering Operation Arrowhead Ripper in the (former) Al Qaedah stronghold of Baqubah reports on how things are going, what he thinks will happen next, and his thoughts on the likely consequences of premature withdrawal.
You can listen directly -- no downloading needed -- by going here and clicking on the gray Flash player. You can download the whole file and listen at you leisure by clicking right here. And you can get a lo-fi version, suitable for dialup, by going here and selecting the lo-fi version. And, of course you can always get a free subscription via iTunes.
Indeed, the idea of admitting one’s wealth, once considered déclassé, is becoming more acceptable. . . .
“We are seeing an important cultural change,” said Eric Chaney, chief economist for Europe for Morgan Stanley. “Working families in France want to be richer. Wealth is no longer a taboo. There’s a strong sentiment in France that people think prices are too high and need more money. It’s not a question of thinking or not thinking.”
HOW TO MAKE YOUR OWN ETHANOL, though with a warning that it's dangerous and illegal. But you've got to take some risks if you want to save the planet . . . .
MORE CALLING OF BULLSHIT. Really, all this demonstrates is that they've got nothing -- kind of like trying to float the "Fred Thompson is gay" rumors.
UPDATE: Even the choirboy-like Bill Quick thinks that Giuliani's choice of language is unimportant!
UPDATE: In response to yesterday's post, John Podhoretz emails: "Gee, thanks: because of you, I had to explain to my wife why I was shopping for a book on escort services on Amazon."
AN IMPORTANT ACTION ALERT ON DEALING WITH HIGH OZONE LEVELS: "Protect yourself and your family by buying as many cans of Aqua Net as you can find, and spraying them into the sky to dispel the ozone. If you have any old freezers or AC units, crack them open and let the Freon out. Every bit helps." Grassroots environmental activism gets more and more confusing. . . .
ARNOLD KLING: "The Acton Institute has produced the most subversive movie I have ever seen. The Call of the Entrepreneur, which is being released on an agonizingly slow schedule, is a threat to tyranny everywhere, including here at home."
I'M SHOCKED, SHOCKED: "In the final poll of a series measuring perceptions of media bias, the Associated Press, local television stations, MSNBC, and CNBC are all perceived as tilting to the left when reporting the news."
THE LONDON TIMES REPORTS ON DISSENSION IN THE AL QAEDA RANKS:
Fed up with being part of a group that cuts off a person’s face with piano wire to teach others a lesson, dozens of low-level members of al-Qaeda in Iraq are daring to become informants for the US military in a hostile Baghdad neighbourhood.
The ground-breaking move in Doura is part of a wider trend that has started in other al-Qaeda hotspots across the country and in which Sunni insurgent groups and tribal sheikhs have stood together with the coalition against the extremist movement.
“They are turning. We are talking to people who we believe have worked for al-Qaeda in Iraq and want to reconcile and have peace,” said Colonel Ricky Gibbs, commander of the 4th Brigade, 1st Infantry Division, which oversees the area.
Brutalizing henchmen who are then motivated to turn on you has been a classic error of Batman villains.
And many others. But maybe we should try Rule 100.
WILL SALETAN: "Anecdotal evidence suggests healthy teenage pitchers and their parents are seeking reconstructive elbow surgery to improve their throwing speed."
IS TURKEY ISLAMIFYING? Not so much, according to InstaPundit's Istanbul correspondent, Claire Berlinski, who writes:
Hi Glenn,
Does this look like Iran to you? David took these a few hours ago at the AKP headquarters in Istanbul. Lots of women in headscarves were dancing arm-in-arm with women who looked like this, lots of women were dancing arm-in-arm with men, and lots of people -- of all ages and both sexes and in various degrees of undress -- were dancing, period, which is hardly an activity commonly associated with Islamist tyranny. I felt completely welcome and comfortable even though I was wearing the shortest skirt in my wardrobe. I don't at all dismiss concerns about the AKP, and I think my credentials as someone who takes the rise of Islamic extremism seriously are well-established, but what I saw tonight was utterly benign. Here's a short video. It won't win any cinematography awards (I took it with my digital camera and the light wasn't good) but you can definitely see that this looks nothing like Iran. Again: This is the AKP headquarters.
ADVICE TO POLITICAL STRATEGISTS: (Especially Republican) -- You might want to get this book into the hands of your guys ASAP, just in case. Looks like the authors are following their own advice already: "Kerr Fuffle"?
KEEPING THE FLYING IMAMS airborne. I really don't understand what the Democrats think they're going to accomplish here. It certainly suggests that they don't think major terrorist attacks are imminent, since if that happens and it turns out someone didn't report something, the blowback will be fierce. In that regard, at least, I hope they're right.
UPDATE: InstaPundit's Istanbul correspondent, Claire Berlinski, says fears of islamification are exaggerated. Stay tuned for a report later this evening.
BUSINESS AT THE NEW YORK TIMES: "The public editor at the New York Times on Sunday castigated the newspaper for not writing enough about its owner -- the Ochs-Sulzberger family -- and whether it will succumb to the same pressure that forced The Wall Street Journal into the grasp of Rupert Murdoch."
Hmm. The Sulzbergers have already politicized the NYT to a fare-thee-well. At least a Murdoch-type might figure out how to keep it profitable.
DOING SOMETHING ABOUT SYRIA: Seems a bit late for that, but better late than never, I guess.
Plus, "tough talk" on Iran. Well, talk, anyway. And some related thoughts here.
OIL REFINERY PROBLEMS: "Oil refineries across the country have been plagued by a record number of fires, power failures, leaks, spills and breakdowns this year, causing dozens of them to shut down temporarily or trim production. The disruptions are helping to drive gasoline prices to highs not seen since last summer’s records."
So it would probably be a good idea if we had more of them, right? And yet. . . .
UPDATE: My best concert ever? Seeing Steve Earle and The Rainmakers at the 930 Club in Washington DC -- for five bucks. I forget who opened for who; it was just before both hit it big. I found out a couple of years ago that Mickey Kaus was at the same show, though I didn't know him then. But given the small size of the 930 Club in those days, that means that at least one percent of the crowd was made up of future bloggers. . . .
AN INSTINCT FOR THE CAPILLARY: "The LAT finally puts out another Villaraigosa-Salinas story--which focuses like a laser on the least interesting aspect of the scandal, the journalistic conflict of interest! Yes, that's why Angelenos are upset--because a Telemundo reporter might have compromised her objectivity. Someone call CJR!"
I'M SUPPOSED TO BE ON HOWARD KURTZ'S RELIABLE SOURCES ON CNN today at about 10:45, talking about the YouTube Debate.
UPDATE: Here's the video of my appearance, courtesy of Hot Air.
Northrop Grumman Corp. agreed July 5 to increase its stake in Scaled Composites - the builder of the Ansari X-Prize Cup-winning SpaceShipOne and a host of record-breaking aircraft - from 40 percent to 100 percent, Northrop Grumman spokesman Dan McClain confirmed July 20.
McClain, who declined to disclose the value of the deal, said the company expects it to close in August pending regulatory approval by the U.S. Department of Justice.
Scaled Composites currently is working with Sir Richard Branson's Virgin Galactic venture on a vehicle designated for now as SpaceShipTwo, which would carry two pilots and six paying passengers into suborbital space for a few minutes of weightlessness. The company also is building a new carrier aircraft, dubbed WhiteKnight2, that will carry SpaceShipTwo to an altitude of 15 kilometers before releasing it to soar to suborbital space.
It seems that the big money wants a piece of the small-space action. Is that good, or bad? We'll see. More here.
And this bit from Rand has to be right: "The fact that such acquisitions are now occurring is to me a sign of the transition of the old age to the new."
UPDATE: Hmm. Clicking around a few sitemeters, it appears that yesterday was the slowest Saturday in a long time for the blogosphere. Coincidence? Or all those people reading Harry Potter?
Okay, I didn't check enough to be scientific, but I still think we should be glad J.K. Rowling didn't release the book on a Monday, as the economic drag would probably tip us over into recession . . . .
ANOTHER UPDATE: Advice to journalists: "For people who love their 'Question Authority' tee shirts so much, they don't seem to actually do an awful lot of it; witness how little Questioning Jesse Macbeth initially got on claiming to be an Authority on Iraq. . . . Before trying to concoct myths, you should spend some time in the company of actual soldiers. Actually knowing a soldier other than the ones you saw on the screen in Platoon or Jarhead would make your myths so much more believable. Of course, actually knowing a soldier might make you pause before concocting your myths in the first place."