ADRIANA LUKAS remembers the Velvet Revolution. "A couple of weeks ago I was visiting Eastern Europe and despite the trickle of bandwidth available where I was staying, I found myself watching old clips from the communist era on YouTube. The most surreal was not the absurdity of their content, the ridiculous gravitas of the communist propaganda but the memory of this rubbish being taken seriously and accepted as the norm."
Some of the things she links remind me of a song I used to listen to a lot: "Czech This Out," by Frequency X. (Real names: Nicolai Vorkapich & Ray Castoldi). It takes a phrase from Moscow radio in 1968, "The defense of socialism in Czechoslovakia is more than the concern of the Czechoslovak people," and gradually remixes it to "The defense of Czechoslovakia, the defense of people, the defense of the Czechoslovak people." Subversive. And you can dance to it!
IT'S A QUAGMIRE: Troops have kept the violence down, but the political solution is still a mess. In Kosovo.
SEARCHING FOR GUNS IN BOSTON: "Boston police are launching a program that will call upon parents in high-crime neighborhoods to allow detectives into their homes, without a warrant, to search for guns in their children's bedrooms. . . . In the next two weeks, Boston police officers who are assigned to schools will begin going to homes where they believe teenagers might have guns. The officers will travel in groups of three, dress in plainclothes to avoid attracting negative attention, and ask the teenager's parent or legal guardian for permission to search. If the parents say no, police said, the officers will leave."
OUCH: "Even The New York Times and Daily Kos are reporting on the CNN imbalance in the post debate analysis."
VIDEO UPDATE: Following up on my earlier video post, I was at the mall this afternoon and picked up a copy of Final Cut Express 4 HD, and installed it on my Macbook Pro. Once I figured out that the files came in via "log and transfer" rather than "import" or "capture" it was fine -- brought over a couple of clips from the camera and fiddled with them a bit. I'm not as fluent in Final Cut as in Vegas or Premiere, but it seems to work well. Helen thought the video looked better in Final Cut than in Vegas, though that may just be a function of the different monitors.
Note, by the way, that you must have an Intel-based Mac to handle AVCHD in Final Cut. Don't ask me why.
A new war in the Horn of Africa would destabilize the region and bolster radical Islam’s push to build a Muslim caliphate.
Sadly, Congress is poised to fuel the march toward war by passing a bill that threatens to cut off technical assistance to Ethiopia, one of our closest allies, if it does not, among other things, release political prisoners, ensure that the judiciary operates independently and permit the news media to operate freely. Ethiopia has already freed opposition leaders, reformed parliamentary rules to give opposition parties greater legislative responsibility and approved a new media law that meets international standards. By singling out Ethiopia for public embarrassment, the bill puts Congress unwittingly on the side of Islamic jihadists and insurgents.
The new Congress seems to be putting itself unwittingly on these guys' sides pretty often.
America Supports You is a Defense Department program connecting citizens and corporations with military personnel serving at home and abroad.
Getting this project, which combined the music of Billy Joel, Brooks & Dunn, the Goo Goo Dolls, Jewel, Josh Groban, Los Lonely Boys, Melissa Ethridge, the Neville Brothers, Sarah McLachlan, the Lt. Dan Band, Montgomery Gentry, The Fray, and Five For Fighting, to troops’ ears took true teamwork. John Ondrasik, the singer-songwriter who performs under the stage name “Five For Fighting,” was intimately involved with making sure that happened.
SPITZER UPDATE: "Not that the moribund New York State GOP has had much to celebrate, but the recent foibles of the inept Eliot Spitzer have sure provided an opening for them."
MY EARLIER POST ON VIDEO SOFTWARE prompted some questions -- what did I get? My problem is that although I've got an old version of the pro Vegas Video, and Adobe Premiere Professional, neither will edit the AVCHD files from the new Sony HD camera. So I ordered Vegas Movie Studio 8, which is under a hundred bucks. It's likely to do everything I need -- Helen isn't planning to make any documentaries in the near future -- and the interface is the same as the big-brother version of Vegas so it's familiar. In the unlikely event I need to work on Adobe, I can always save the files in some other format and reopen them there. Note that neither Final Cut Pro HD nor Final Cut Express HD will handle AVCHD files yet, so if you use those platforms you might want to hold off on buying an AVCHD camera. (iMovie '08 will handle AVCHD, I'm told, but only after a fairly laborious transcoding process. My version of iMovie, which is still '06, doesn't recognize the files.)
I haven't done much with it yet, but it opens the AVCHD files fine, and working with them is quite familiar to me, since I've used Vegas before. Some people don't like Vegas, but I find it quite intuitive -- the first thing I ever did with it was this trailer for Helen's film, and I found it easy and fun.
Although I'm pretty happy with the camera, and the software is familiar, my advice to people looking for a camera for the holidays is to go with something a bit farther back from the cutting edge. Looking around at the message boards, etc., I'm finding that there are still a lot of teething problems with the AVCHD format. This isn't an issue for me, really, but it might be for you.
UPDATE: Reader John Gibson emails: "Apple just released Final Cut Express 4. It handles DV, HDV, or AVCHD,
with the ability to edit all three formats in a single timeline. Price is $179.99 at Amazon."
Huh. I just asked at the Apple store last week and they didn't know anything about it. But you're right, here it is. Says it doesn't ship until next week, though.
A "STUNNING MOVE" in financial sanctions against terrorism. My guess is that deals are being made, sub rosa, and this is payoff for one of them. But that's just a guess.
MICKEY KAUS: "I have seen the new nose ("front clip") for the Pontiac Solstice. It's ugly! They've styled it along the tongue-thrusting lines of the G6 GXP. If I had a cell phone camera I'd be rich." That's too bad. As Kaus notes, the current version of the Solstice, while unreliable, is gorgeous.
MORE: Ouch: "From what I've seen, the Clinton campaign successfully neutered the Wolf last night."
THE NEW YORK TIMES REPORTS ON FEMALE CONDOMS, but Michael Petrelis says something's been left out: "Whether you're a woman or a man who engages in sodomy, the pouch can also stop diseases from spreading through the back door."
QUESTION FOR HARRY REID: "As the situation on the ground in Iraq continues to brighten, and a light begins to appear at the end of the war tunnel, is it the brightest thing in the world to starve the military at this juncture?" If, as seems likely, Iraq succeeds, Republicans will be able to say it was in spite of the Democrats' efforts. If, as remains possible, it fails, Republicans will be able to say it was because of the Democrats' efforts.
UPDATE: A clueless lefty reader emails to complain, so let me be clear: I don't think this is a good thing. I think it's a bad thing. I just think it's evidence of Reid's ineptitude, which passeth my understanding.
FRED THOMPSON ON who should control the Internet. "My hunch is that we’d see the same level of management of the Internet from the U.N. that we’ve seen when it came to peacekeeping operations in Africa. Or its management of Saddam Hussein’s 'Oil for Food' program. Or its monitoring of Iran’s nuclear program."
A COLUMBIA BUYOFF: "Five students drinking Gatorade and water for a week are apparently all it takes to bring a major university to its knees. Columbia has had more than its share of lunatic events this year - the noose, the cancellation of the Minuteman speakers for the second time, inviting and then abusing the Iranian madman, and last week another controversy over a biased comment someone had scrawled into a library book. But the collapse of the university in the face of five student hunger strikers - the number was reduced to two students before the university folded - makes all the previous lunacies seem sane." I don't think Columbia really minded.
NIGELLA LAWSON has a new cookbook out, focusing on quick recipes. I'm a big fan of her laid-back cooking philosophy -- er, and of her -- and I'll probably order it. I'm watching her on TV now, and I wish we could snag her for a podcast interview.
UPDATE: I'm bumping this to the top again, in light of the email below from reader Sarah Wells:
I picked up this cookbook lately, and made several of the dishes, which are so lusciously presented and easy to make that I can see dangerous curves ahead for my wardrobe.
Another danger: I already find all sorts of gorgeous, juicy "Nigella-isms" melding into my speech, and things in general are oozing welcomingly; offering succor. Indeed, my husband approves.
One note - the baking recipes, simple as they are, I find are more consistenly and satisfactorily prepared when the UK gram and ml measurements are used. So I got online and transcribed some measurements straight into my cookbook along side the converted-for-US measurements printed on the page. ( A UK version of the book is available on Amazon, too.)
I have a chill that's going around, and last night retreated to my bedroom, closed the door, and gave myself succor from a spoon with a roly-poly pudding from the book. A step up from Nyquil, I think, and is the best rescue I've ever had from the glottal wodge.
P.S. The ginger pear muffins were all that was promised.
SCOTT JOHNSON: "If my friend Rachel Paulose were a liberal Democrat, she would be a celebrity. Serving as the United States attorney for Minnesota, she is the first woman, the first immigrant (Indian), the first Asian, and, at age 34, the youngest attorney ever to hold the position. A graduate of Yale Law School, she has compiled an impressive academic record and stellar professional credentials. She’s not a liberal Democrat, however, she is a conservative Republican, and she has been the subject of an old-fashioned, low-tech media lynching."
IF YOU MISSED IT ON XM SATELLITE RADIO, the latest edition of PJM Political is now online for your listening pleasure.
AUSTIN BAY: "Today, I put a note on a bomb. To be specific, I took a jet black marking pen and inscribed a 500-pound Joint Direct Attack Munition — JDAM, in the jargon."
MICHAEL YON POSTS another dispatch from Iraq. He emails: "This must have been the best day I have had in Iraq. Our soldiers were happy, Iraqi soldiers were very happy, and the Iraqi civilians were happiest. Truly this was a great day." May there be many more like it.
NUMBERS: "The Congressional Research Service, which compiled war casualty statistics from the Revolutionary War to present day conflicts, reported that 4,699 members of the U.S. military died in 1981 and '82 — a period when the U.S. had only limited troop deployments to conflicts in the Mideast. That number of deaths is nearly 900 more than the 3,800 deaths during 2005 and '06, when the U.S. was fully committed to large-scale military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan."
I CALL THIS PROGRESS: "A U.N.-sponsored Internet conference ended Thursday with little to show in closing the issue of U.S. control over how people around the world access e-mail and Web sites."
International resentment about U.S. control of the domain name system is sure to grow, and I can understand that. But on the other hand, while my trust in the U.S. government is not extensive, it's infinitely greater than my trust of the Russians, the Chinese, or the United Nations. And the longer that the internet remains relatively open and uncensored, the harder it will be for them to put the genie back in the bottle later. Some related thoughts can be found here.
PAPERS FROM THE HARVARD BLOGGERSHIP CONFERENCE have now been published in the Washington University Law Review.
USING AND ABUSING THE ELECTORAL COLLEGE: Jennifer Hendricks has thoughts on the "Agreement Among the States," in which states pledge their electoral votes to whoever wins the national popular vote.
STEPHEN GREEN IS liveblogging the Democratic debate. ("Three out of four undecided voters on CNN are pear-shaped middle-aged women with a tendency to ramble, and who want things from the government. Don't blame me if you think that's cruel--I'm just reporting what I see.")
UPDATE: More here. I'll just add that the lighting seems awfully unflattering. Who was in charge of that?
Last word goes to Stephen Green: "Lots of fireworks, yet still the worst debate I've seen all season. The blame rests squarely with CNN. They ran a bad debate on a bad stage with stupid questions from insipid people in a format that was neither fish nor fowl but spoiled meat nonetheless. Horrible, even by the low standards set by Fox News and MSNBC. Horrible, horrible." Yeah, that's pretty much what I thought. I haven't seen all the debates, but of the ones I've seen this was far and away the worst.
UPDATE: Mickey Kaus flips the emphasis on the pardon story: "Out of 177 recipients of Bill Clinton's last-minute pardons, Jake Tapper could find only 3 who've contributed to Hillary's campaign? Ingrates! "
IN THE MAIL: America, An Illustrated History, from the folks at Time. A lovely coffee-table book with pretty pictures, though the text is a bit vapid.
REP. WILLIAM "FREEZER CASH" JEFFERSON'S creative bribery defense. Hmm. Can Congress's approval go to single digits?
WOLF BLITZER'S BIND: If he doesn't pound on Hillary tonight, it'll look like he's given in to intimidation. If he does, of course, Clinton fans will call him names, or say that he should be shot.
The lab version doesn’t look particularly menacing—more like a long, belt-fed airport screening device than like a futuristic cannon—but the system will fire rounds at up to Mach 8, drawing on tremendous amounts of electricity to generate the current for each test shot. That, of course, is the problem with rail guns: Like lasers, they’re out of step with modern-day generators and capacitors. Eight and 9-megajoule rail guns have been fired before, but providing 3 million amps of power per shot has been a limitation. At 32 megajoules, this new system appears to be the most powerful rail gun ever built, and the Office of Naval Research is installing additional capacitors at the Dahlgren facility to support it. The planned 64-megajoule weapon, if it’s ever built, could require even more power—a staggering 6 million amps.
According to Dr. Amir Chaboki, the program manager for Electro-Magnetic Rail Guns at BAE Systems, “The power is available. The challenge is how you use it.” The Navy’s electrically-propelled DDG 100 Destroyer, Chaboki says, is a prime candidate for the final 64-megajoule system. Around 72 megawatts (MW) of the vessel’s power can be used for propulsion. But during combat, the destroyer’s speed could be brought down, freeing up energy for a rail gun. Chaboki calculates that firing the 64-megajoule weapon six times per minute would require 16 MW of power, which would be supplied by either onboard capacitors or pulsed alternators. The more daunting challenge is the force of the rail gun itself: A few shots can dislodge the conducting rails—or even damage the barrel of the gun.
ANOTHER CLIMBDOWN: Spitzer abandons Amazon tax: "In a second major policy reversal in less than a day, Governor Spitzer is backing down from a plan to require Amazon.com and other online retailers to charge state and local sales taxes on all purchases from New York." Jeez, it's just one stumble-and-reverse after another for this guy.
HEH: "Students have complained on blogs about the secrecy, noting the irony of a journalism school asking its students to refrain from asking questions."
WELL, THIS IS ENCOURAGING: "The U.S. military is examining different contingencies for supplying American troops in Afghanistan if supplies can no longer be shipped through Pakistan, Pentagon Press Secretary Geoff Morrell said today." More at the link.
NOVEMBER 19TH IS NATIONAL AMMO DAY: Pick up a box or two. Hey, get some Chinese-made ammo and at least it'll be something that's supposed to contain lead!
A lawyer from D.C. and a few cooks and waitresses stopped him. Cold.
Huntington Police Lt. B.J. Wamsley told the Herald-Dispatch: “When we got there, waitresses, cooks and managers were piled on top of him near the front sidewalk. It was amazing because the man is 6-foot-2-inches and about 200 pounds — that’s pretty big for those small waitresses.”
Heh.
JOHN DICKERSON ON Hillary's planted questions. "And it's an anecdote that involves a real, live Iowa voter. A lot of media firestorms take place in Washington green rooms and cable chat shows, but this event took place in their state and to one of their own."
VIDEO UPDATE: So I tried out the bluetooth wireless microphone that goes with my new HD video camera and it's great. Very simple setup -- just turn both units, the microphone and the one that goes on the camera, on. Even from across a large room the sound was excellent. My only complaint is that you can't easily stick-mount the microphone, which would be handy. But I'm sure I'll figure out a way.
I SUGGEST "HEH, HEH, HEH," instead: "THERE'LL be no ho, ho, ho this Christmas. Aspiring Santas have been told not to use the term 'ho' because it could be seen as derogatory to women."
PRAISE FOR THE GUARDIAN'S IRAQ REPORTING, but not for its photo editing.
We have a president with a near record-low job performance rating – 24 percent. (The record lows were Harry Truman after he fired Douglas MacArthur, and Richard Nixon the day before he resigned. Both were at 23 percent. )
But the Democrats who run Congress have an 11 percent job approval rating. Let’s just note that in my polling in 1995, O.J. Simpson was at 16 percent.
Ouch.
BROTHERLY LOVE, at the State Department. I haven't really been following this particular scandal, but this is odd.
RON PAUL: Jews love him! Nazis love him! He's a uniter, not a divider!
A BIOFUELS SCAM? "The government has picked the winner--even as senior policy makers issue bland pronouncements about finding new technologies to help break our energy dependence on foreign oil. Between now and 2012, biofuel subsidies will total more than $92 billion, according to a recent report conducted under the auspices of the Global Subsidiaries Initiative."
GOVERNOR BON JOVI? New Jersey is unlikely to do better. It's certainly done worse . . . .
Factoring in all those contingencies, the authors find that a containment policy would cost anywhere from $350 billion to $700 billon. Now when you further factor in that 1) a containment policy might also have led to a higher risk premium in the oil markets if Iraq was seen to be gaining in military power despite our efforts to box it in, and 2) money not borrowed and spent on Iraq might well have been spent on something else given the White House's free-spending ways, it's easy to see that doing a cost-benefit analysis on "war vs. containment" might have left administration officials with no clear-cut economic answer.
ELLIOT SPITZER wants to collect taxes on Internet sales. "The policy, based on a novel legal theory, could hasten the end of the Internet's era as a duty-free marketplace if other states follow New York's lead." He's going to be Mr. Popularity at this rate! But, for reasons briefly spelled out in this article, it seems unlikely that Spitzer's "novel legal theory" will withstand Dormant Commerce Clause analysis.
A NUCLEAR POWER RENAISSANCE, fueled by global warming concerns:
This resurgence of commercial attention to nuclear power is coming about for several reasons. The increased attention on greenhouse gases and their effects on the global climate is spurring interest in carbon-neutral power-generation technologies, including nuclear power. Improved technologies make new nuclear plants safer and more reliable, supporters say. And federal tax credits and subsidies (.pdf) tucked into the Energy Policy Act of 2005 have kick-started a once-dormant industry.
"The performance record from an operational point of view is extraordinary," said David Crane, the CEO of NRG Energy, of the next-generation plants currently operating in other, more nuclear-friendly countries such as Japan, China and France. "The U.S. has missed two generations of design that's been carried out in other countries -- they're simpler to maintain."
Can someone sue the antinuclear movement for worsening global warming by imposing a decades-long moratorium on clean, greenhouse-friendly nuclear power? Surely there are some state AG's out there somewhere . . . .
Yes. "We are winning" isn't the same as "we have won." But it's a cruel blow to those who've had a lot invested in the notion that we've lost, something that's even been noted on the left. If things continue to play out as they are, Iraq will be stable, and its people will remain deeply unhappy with Al Qaeda, and those -- in Iran and Saudi Arabia -- who have backed its violence and the effort to keep Iraq chaotic and deadly. It'll be for the next President to take proper advantage of that, if he or she is smart enough to.
And Klein is surely right in saying that "A renewed campaign on the part of the hapless Democratic leadership to cut off the supplemental funds will only increase the public sense of Democratic futility. It will also play into the very real, and growing, public perception that Democrats are too busy wasting time on symbolic measures (like trying to cut off funds for the war) and shoveling pork (the water projects bill) to pass anything substantive for the public good."
UPDATE: Greyhawk on what it all means, at The Mudville Gazette.
ANOTHER UPDATE: More here: "No one is declaring victory, but cautious optimists on the U.S.-led war in Iraq suddenly find themselves armed with a growing number of indicators that the fighting has taken a new, more hopeful turn." Iraqi internal politics are looking better, too, though that's less quantifiable.
A TROUBLING REBOUND IN STDs: Use a rubber, folks. Back when people were more worried about AIDS, they did.
A SPITZER CLIMBDOWN: "New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer has decided to abandon a plan to issue driver's licenses to illegal immigrants, officials familiar with the decision told The Associated Press Tuesday night."
SOME PEOPLE WHO HAVEN'T READ A LOT OF LAW REVIEW ARTICLES -- and some others who have -- were suprised at how short my Cheney piece was. It was shorter than a lot of law review articles, including a lot of mine, but not as short as all that. Shorter pieces are in now, with law reviews like Northwestern's, or Yale's, having special sections. But I was writing short articles long before that: My Chaos and the Court, applying chaos theory to the Supreme Court in the Columbia Law Review, was equally short; likewise Penumbral Reasoning on the Right, in Penn's law review, or the piece on judicial confirmation from the Southern California Law Review that I linked a bit ago. And I was hardly a pioneer -- my heroes Charles Black and Arthur Allen Leff were known for their interesting short pieces, but the world of law-review writing moved away to massive tomes for a while. I think it's shifting back, and I think that's a good thing. Short pieces aren't inherently superior to long ones -- and I've written plenty of long ones myself -- but a piece should be as long as it needs to be, and no longer. For a while, we lost sight of that.
PHIL BOWERMASTER: Three things cloning isn't. You can't produce an "Insta-Army"? Dang. I kind of liked the sound of that . . . .
JAMES TARANTO criticizes an outbreak of gay-baiting in the current election. It's especially admirable that Taranto is willing to criticize a fellow conservative for bigotry.
COOKWARE UPDATE: So after my pressure-cooker post I decided to give it a try myself, and ordered this 6 quart pressure cooker from Presto (cheap!) bundled with this cookbook. So far, so good. I've made some of the standards (Chicken Cacciatore, anyone?) to good reviews from the Insta-Wife and Insta-Daughter. But what I like it for most is making fast sides -- I made new potatoes in a trice last night. It's not as fast as they claim -- "cook time" may be 5-6 minutes, but you have to let it cool for another 10 or 15 -- but it's still a lot faster than the old way. I don't think it will be my main cooking tool, but it's handy and it was worth the money. The cookbook is good, too, and has handy cooktime tables in the back.
CHARGES AGAINST ARMED REPORTER DROPPED: Would they have been dropped for somebody else? Probably.
HOMER SIMPSON'S UNILATERAL CONTRACT WITH GOD: Having spent some time with Boyce Martin back in the day, I suspect he authored this himself.
JOHN EDWARDS' IMPOSSIBLE PROMISE: "The Democrats often criticize Bush for having an overbroad theory of executive power, but at least when Bush grasps for power, it's for things the President can do."
Howard Kurtz comments: "John Edwards's new Iowa ad is very effective rhetorically--and based on a false premise. A president has absolutely no power to rescind federal health insurance for members of Congress, as the Edwards campaign admits."
Meanwhile, Cass Sunstein weighs in: "'It’s a stunt,' Sunstein said. 'Congress isn’t going to enact legislation taking away its own health care.'" It's just not a very good stunt.
THEY TOLD ME THAT IF GEORGE W. BUSH WERE RE-ELECTED, the morality police would be wielding a heavy hand. And they were right! "The Boston Globe reports that Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick is trying to sneak a provision to criminalize online gambling. The bill, if passed, would make online gambling punishable by up to 2 years in prison and $25k in fines."
But there's more: "Ironically, the provision is buried deep within a bill to allow the construction of three new casinos in Massachusetts to bring more gambling revenue into the state." As Rev. Lovejoy says, if the state does it, it's not immoral!
UPDATE: Reader Glenn Howe emails with the correct Lovejoy quote: "Once something has been approved by the Government, It's no longer immoral."
A LOOK AT "EGO PORK" for members of Congress. "Name the pig after me!"
And the new Congress doesn't seem any better: "The newest member of Congress, Representative Niki Tsongas, a Democrat, took the oath of office on Oct. 18, but has already won an earmark, to provide $240,000 for a community health center in her hometown, Lowell, Mass."
Here, FYI, is our podcast interview with WSJ publisher Gordon Crovitz.
THE POLITICO: "As the congressional session lurches toward a close, Democrats are confronting some demoralizing arithmetic on Iraq. The numbers tell a story of political and substantive paralysis more starkly than most members are willing to acknowledge publicly, or perhaps even to themselves." Fortunately, the war has gone well in the interim, the polls have turned around, and that may even turn out to be good for the Democrats. The system works!
LAW SCHOOLS THAT ARE ranked higher than their parent universities. I'm at one of 'em. It would be interesting to do this again, comparing law schools' SSRN rankings with both their U.S. News rankings and their parent universities' U.S. News rankings.
HOW TO LEAD A CARBON-FREE LIFESTYLE: "That means no flying to the US for $50,000 speeches."
MORE ON DIGITAL CAMERAS FOR COMBAT, from Michael Yon.
SAMIZDATA: "The smoking ban was a mere tasty morsel. It has roused the appetite of the beast without bedding it back down again. The hungry beast has drawn blood and it wants more."
I THOUGHT THE DEBATE ON GLOBAL WARMING WAS OVER, but The New York Times notices that it's still going on.
MORE SPITZER PROBLEMS: "Gov. Eliot Spitzer's plan to provide illegal immigrants with driver's licenses has sunk his favorability rating to an all-time low of 41 percent, and has left only 25 percent of voters planning to re-elect him, according to a poll the Siena Research Institute released Tuesday." That's on top of the scandals I've linked earlier. He's really gone down fast. Is he the East Coast answer to Gray Davis?
THEY TOLD ME THAT IF GEORGE W. BUSH WERE RE-ELECTED, independent filmmakers whose documentaries threatened the established order would be silenced by the minions of the state. And they were right!
FRED THOMPSON SPOKE AT THE CITADEL JUST NOW, and his campaign sends some excerpts of his speech on national defense and the war on terror. Click "read more" to read them.
· …In my view, the first priority of the federal government is the defense and security of its citizens and should be reflected in everything we do in government. We must begin by rebuilding our military with the full recognition that national security comes at a price…
· …We have major shortcomings in U.S. defense capabilities. To confront these shortcomings, we must address several key priorities,
· First, we must spend more on defense, and we must do so carefully and wisely. Spending today as a percent of GDP is estimated at 4.1 percent – and that includes funding for the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.
· According to the Office of Management and Budget, defense spending is expected to decline down to 3.1 percent in 2011. I believe we must be prepared to increase defense spending to at least 4.5 percent of GDP, not including what it takes to fund operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. When it comes to matters of budgets with Congress they say all numbers are fungible. But in this area of appropriation, there should be little room for negotiation.
· Second, we must admit to ourselves, as Iraq and Afghanistan have demonstrated, that our military is simply too small. Too many commitments today leave our Armed Forces capable of meeting too few contingencies tomorrow. I propose today that we build a “Million-Member” ground force. We should increase Army end strength to 775,000 organized into 64 brigade combat teams and increase active duty Marine Corps forces by 50,000 to 225,000. Half-measures and small increases will no longer do. We need the best all-volunteer force that can meet the security needs of this country, and they must be organized, trained and equipped to deal with tomorrow’s threats as well as today’s.
· Third, we must modernize our Armed Forces. The average age of our military aircraft is 24 years; some are over forty years old…twice the age of most of you. The Army’s main battle tank and fighting vehicles were designed in the 1970s and 80s. And the entire fleet of vehicles is not aging gracefully either, with an average age of 13 years, made worse by years of tough use.
· We must fully field and fund the next generation of military systems to ensure U.S. forces retain dominance in the full battle space: On the battlefield, in the skies above it, and in the waters surrounding it. The investments we make today provide the means to defend our nation tomorrow. They will make our military personnel more effective and safer. We need sustained technology development, and we need the best and brightest working on our defense programs.
· Finally, and most importantly, we must take better care of our soldiers, sailors, airmen and marines. They are the life-blood of our defense establishment. Whether they are active duty, Guard or Reserve, they are entitled, as well, to expect the best pay and benefits our country can afford, including a modern GI Bill with educational assistance that will help us recruit and keep our nation’s finest in uniform. They also deserve the best healthcare and the best support possible for their families.
· And for those who have already served, we need to fix the VA system and implement many of the recommendations of the Dole-Shalala Commission and the Veteran's Disability Benefits Commission report.
· These four pillars of a revitalized national defense are part of a much more detailed plan that must include, among other initiatives, enhancing the capabilities of our Special Operations Forces to hunt down terrorists; rebuilding the Navy to show American resolve, full time, in trouble spots; strengthening our intelligence gathering and analysis; procuring modern long-range cargo aircraft to project power anytime, anywhere; building a robust missile defense system to defend our homeland, our troops and our allies from ballistic missiles; and ensuring the means to protect our space-based assets and cyber systems.
SOME PEOPLE ARE HAVING TROUBLE finding the discussion of the D.C. gun-ban case in the Cato article that I linked yesterday. Sorry -- the article surveys a bunch of cases before the Supreme Court this term and you have to scroll down quite a bit. The discussion starts at p. 347 of the journal, which will be page 13 in your Adobe reader.
So far the Court hasn't acted on the cert. petition. (Via Howard Bashman). As I mention in the piece, there are good reasons for them to not want to hear it.
The California Highway Patrol was recently forced to turn over the largely pre-written police reports officers use in DWI cases. The templates come already completed with boilerplate language like, "As I spoke with the driver I smelled the strong odor of an alcoholic beverage emitting from his/her breath. I noticed that the driver had red watery eyes, as well as slow and slurred speech," and "eyes showed lack of smooth pursuit, distinct nystagmus at the extremes and an onset prior to 45 degrees."
Well, for higher DUI revenues, anyway.
A SERMON on the way to jail: "Even before the ink dries on his guilty plea, William S. Lerach is trying to rehabilitate his shattered image as the heroic defender of little guys suffering at the hands of nefarious corporate titans. . . . out of more than 1,500 words lambasting greedy Fortune 500 executives, Lerach devoted only four sentences to his Sept. 18 admission in federal court to having conspired, according to his plea deal, 'beginning on or before 1981 and continuing through at least 2002 ... to obstruct justice by corruptly influencing, obstructing and impeding, and endeavoring to influence, obstruct and impede the due administration of justice in lawsuits filed and litigated in the courts of the United States.'"
BATTLING TOY HELICOPTERS: There's amusingly overwrought video.
ALL THE GOVERNOR'S MEN: The Spitzer scandal news just keeps on coming. You have to wonder if this fast-and-loose approach to the law suddenly started when he became Governor, or if it characterized his behavior as a prosecutor, too. Governor Nifong?
Hey there. I've been reading your site for years, and I'm a big fan. I'm also a TV writer/producer on the NBC show "My Name Is Earl." So guess what this is about? That's right, the writers strike.
I don't know if you've seen this YouTube video, but it's pretty amazing when you consider that the Producers' insistence there is no money in digital media is the reason thousands of people will lose their jobs in Los Angles in the coming months.
Plus, rebuilding Hollywood in Silicon Valley's image. But right now, I think the governing philosophy comes from Governor LePetomaine: "Gentlemen, we've got to protect our phony-baloney jobs!"
Abdel Karim Soliman, famously now known as Karim Amer, who got jailed for "disdain for religion" and "insulting the president" on his blog, is reportedly getting tortured by the Prison authorities.
Contact information for the Egyptian embassy:
The Embassy of the Arab Republic of Egypt
3521 International Ct. NW
Washington DC 20008
Phone (202) 895 5400
Fax (202) 244 5131
(202) 244 4319
Email: embassy@egyptembdc.org
MICKEY KAUS: "I bristled at Chris Matthews' breathless pumping up of Obama's Jefferson-Jackson speech on MSNBC yesterday. Then I read it. It's a very skillful speech."
PEOPLE HAVE BEEN ASKING FOR MY COOKWARE POSTS: There are a lot of 'em. Here's the one on kitchen mixers. Here's one on pots and pans. Here's one on kitchen knives. Here's one on nonstick pans. And if you want more, try entering "cookware" in the search windows - you should find most of 'em that way.
WHAT HAPPENED TO ALL THE Jena 6 money that was raised? "Just weeks after some 20,000 demonstrators protested what they decried as unequal justice aimed at six black teenagers in the Louisiana town of Jena, controversy is growing over the accounting and disbursing of at least $500,000 donated to pay for the teenagers' legal defense."
HILLARY CLINTON attacked by American flags! Video at the link. Alternative spin: Hillary Clinton saves the flag from collapse!
REPORTING LIVE FROM THE LAUNCH OF LAPHAM'S QUARTERLY: What a party! Once again, I was lucky and my flights to and from New York were perfect. The party was lavish, though I thought the larger-than-life nude ice sculptures of Lapham were in questionable taste. Lapham roused the crowd with a stirring speech including this unforgettable line: "One of the problems with contemporary media is it's without context. In the eternal now of 24-seven, there is no past and no future. The news comes in short phrases or paragraphs, and it's without the back-story. Without that, how can you write the front story?”
I like to write the front story in advance, from the press release. There's no past and no future anyway! Lewis should understand. It was the most unforgettable November 14th any of us had ever experienced! Finding the present in the past, and the past in the present. And the future in the present!
RON PAUL: TRIMMING HIS SAILS? Well, more like trimming the tree, as he's not really changing his message, just, um, decorating it. But driving home this afternoon I heard a Ron Paul radio commercial on XM and he's downplaying the war issue, which was his big schtick not long ago. Now it came third, after "amnesty" on immigration and uncontrolled federal spending. And the commercial never used the words "Iraq" or "war" -- it was all about opposing "nation-building" in foreign countries.
Apparently the Paul campaign shares my view that the improving situation in Iraq can be turned into a plus for Paul's candidacy, not a minus, if the issues are pitched right.
Meanwhile, note this sensible antiwar take from AlterNet, which notes that it's hard to be against a war that seems to be drawing to a successful close:
All in all, violence in Iraq has dropped precipitously since late summer. With Al Qaeda declared dead, former Sunni resistance fighters wearing American-supplied uniforms, and the Mahdi Army lying low, killings in Iraq are way down. The security situation in Iraq is far better than it's been at any time since 2005. Many American antiwar critics, who are invested in the notion that no good news can come out of Iraq and who (secretly or openly) revel in the Bush administration's Iraqi failures, are reluctant to admit that things are getting better.
Perhaps they worry that, if the situation in Iraq improves, the prospect of Democratic gains at the polls next November will diminish. Perhaps they've convinced themselves that Iraq's ethnic and sectarian divide is so enormous that partition is the only solution, and that Iraq doesn't deserve to be a country anyway. Perhaps their distaste for President Bush (which I share) is so all-consuming that they fear any improvement in the situation will be credited to the President -- something they can't tolerate.
If so, that's perverse. The fact is: There is a critical window of opportunity opening for the United States to withdraw and for Iraq to hold itself together and rebuild. To the extent that things are getting better, that's good news.
Yeah, it is. Nice that people are noticing. But it's also, paradoxically, bad news for the Republicans in that those who have held their nose and stuck with the GOP because of the war are likely to feel freer to vote for people they agree with on other issues. And while it's true that Iraq is not the war on terror, it's also likely that the post-2009 phase of the war on terror will involve less outright war and more spying, backstabbing, subtle undermining, bribery, extortion and cooptation. Hmm. What candidate might be good at that sort of thing?
MY IS DICK CHENEY UNCONSTITUTIONAL? PIECE has been published by the Northwestern University Law Review in its Colloquy section. You can get a PDF of the final version -- with the benefit of their editing, which was quite good -- right here if you're interested.
It's also available in HTML form, and in a PDF version that doesn't require you to go through SSRN, if that's giving you problems, at the Northwestern University Law Review's Colloquy site. There's a lot of other interesting stuff there, if you're legally inclined. (Bumped).
POLITICO:"'Betray Us' backer to lead pro-Dem group." It's worth noting that the ad was not only a shameful attack on patriotism -- that's supposed to be bad, right? -- but also factually wrong insofar as it claimed that things in Iraq weren't improving. Pretty much everyone admits otherwise, now.
BLOOD-BLOGGING: I donated blood again for the Blue/Orange blood drive. (This picture is actually from last year because -- yes, it's humiliating to admit -- I didn't have a digital camera on me. But it looked about the same, except that I was wearing a Tennessee Law Review t-shirt this time.)
As I've noted before, the extremely strict rules on blood donation nowadays mean there's often a shortage of donors. I try to give whenever I can to help make up for that, and I encourage you to do the same if you're eligible to give blood.
COULD TIM RUSSERT please be more boring? Call me crazy, but I think he could rise to the challenge.
But hey, if candidates want gotcha-free, expository, Brian-Lamb style questioning they can always come to The Glenn and Helen Show! Now on XM, too!
QUESTIONS ON LAW AND RELIGION: "If the state can get into the institution of ordination, and regulate credentials of ministers, what's to stop it from getting into the credentials of journalists, and regulate online journalism? I better ordain myself as an online journalist fast, before they close the 'loophole.'"
GINA ELISE AT PINUPS FOR VETS is putting out a new calendar for 2008. Money goes to help wounded veterans. [Pic of Gina removed because it was big, and there are better ones at her site.]
WOMEN GATHERING AT HOMES FOR . . . TASER PARTIES? "Events Called Tupperware Parties Of 2007."
Hey, you can get them in pink. And they do seem to work.
MORE SPITZER SCANDALS: He's really managed to run up an impressive degree of chicanery in short order. Normally, you have to wait 'til the second term for this kind of thing, except maybe in Louisiana.
UPDATE: More here: "The Governor has some explaining to do."
A FAILED CONGRESSIONAL PLOY: "The ploy had been hatched behind closed doors by Democratic leaders of both houses. A pork-laden appropriations bill filled with $1 billion in earmarks would combine with veto-proof spending for veterans. Instead, the two measures were decoupled in a Senate party-line vote last Tuesday. The Democratic scheme to present President George W. Bush with a bill that he could not veto seemed a clever strategy, but it was based on presumption of Republican ignorance and cowardice." So you can see why they thought they had a shot . . . .
An Italian musician and computer technician claims to have uncovered musical notes encoded in Leonardo Da Vinci's "Last Supper," raising the possibility that the Renaissance genius might have left behind a somber composition to accompany the scene depicted in the 15th-century wall painting.
"It sounds like a requiem," Giovanni Maria Pala said. "It's like a soundtrack that emphasizes the passion of Jesus."
Read the whole thing.
GEORGE WILL: Peru, and other menaces. Apparently, some people are scared of Colombia's economic might, too. I'm told that union opposition to the Colombia free trade deal -- which is very important for foreign policy reasons -- stems not so much from the merits as from a desire to show that they can stop something.
As the veterans of World War II pass too quickly into history, their ranks are being replaced by a new "greatest generation." The war on terrorism is creating veterans at a rate not seen in decades.
Yet the military is much smaller now than during World War II, leading some analysts to posit that a rift exists between soldiers and citizens and that those making sacrifices on the battle front are disconnected from the society whose freedoms they defend. The American people are oblivious to the war, they claim, as well as to the men and women who are fighting it. Some have even suggested that the only way to close the gap is to return to conscription.
But these observers of the social scene have never served in Iraq.
Those of us overseas know that "support the troops" is more than a slogan. Here we are besieged by what my master sergeant calls "paper love," the cards, letters, posters and other gestures of support sent by people across America. The paper love is often accompanied by packages of snacks and comfort items. Some mail comes from family members, but even more is sent by private citizens and troop support organizations. The war has inspired a remarkable level of civic involvement that goes largely unnoticed -- except by those of us in the field or recovering stateside.
Read the whole thing, and note the links that will let you help, if you like. And contrast it to Hollywood's response. Or, as the article does, with the much lower level of support in Britain, something I've observed myself
UPDATE: Heh. And a reader from North Dakota emails:
Re your Armistice Day post headlined, "Thanks for the troops," I was wondering if your readership has suggestions on how we Americans could best show support for the soldiers who are serving in Iraq who are notAmericans.
I do my small bit to show support for our folks (sending letters,cards, DVDs, books etc.) Reading your post and the Washington Postarticle you linked made me think, I should also try to do something for the soldiers from other nations who are fighting the fascists and terrorists in Iraq. Maybe other readers had the same thought.
I will do some research on this myself, but I was thinking some of your readers may be able to provide information on showing support for other nations' troops more quickly and comprehensively.
Several other readers had similar questions. I don't know. Any suggestions? (Bumped to top).
P.J. O'ROURKE: "If I had a computer I would do nothing but play with it all day." Funny, I once had a girlfriend who said that about . . . well, never mind.
There is now “no doubt” that some of the effects of human-induced climate change could be offset with engineering fixes, according to David Keith, an expert on climate and energy at the University of Calgary.
ARMITAGE ON PLAME: "He took the blame for leaking Valerie Plame Wilson's identity, but he also gave us a bit more evidence to show that, from his perspective at least, it was entirely unintentional. But there must be a conspiracy in there somewhere."
As chairman of the House transportation committee, Alaska Congressman Don Young flew at least three times to upstate New York aboard a jet owned by Robert Congel, an ambitious shopping mall developer seeking federal highway money.
With Young's help, Congel got millions of dollars to boost his dream of building the largest mall in North America. The veteran Republican congressman got something, too: more than $33,000 in political contributions from Congel, his family and his associates.
For Young, the Congel story was hardly unusual. Time after time in recent years, Young approved millions of dollars for highway projects for people who in turn fattened his campaign treasury. . . . During his six years as chairman of the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, Young transformed the massive 2005 highway spending bill by dramatically increasing the use of earmarks, which set aside billions in federal money for pet projects.
With Young in charge, the number of earmarks more than tripled -- from 1,850 projects worth $9.35 billion in 1998 to 6,371 projects valued at $24.2 billion in 2005. Federal auditors have found that thousands of these new earmarks weren't priorities for state transportation officials.
A McClatchy Newspapers investigation has found just how lucrative Young's earmarks were.
Read the whole thing. Remember, it's not just the waste. It's the corruption.
RON PAUL is up to 7% in New Hampshire. I actually think the war issue is breaking perfectly for him -- antiwar people can still support him as payback, while people who might otherwise be leerier of him on his war stance can feel more comfortable as victory appears to be in sight, making "send a message" voting more palatable than it was in 2004.
PEOPLE WANT TO KNOW HOW I LIKE my new Sony HD video camera that records to flash memory. I didn't take it to Las Vegas with me, so I only got to play with it a bit, but I like it a lot, so far. Image quality is good -- I hooked it to the HDTV and toggled back and forth between its image and the MOJO HD show Three Sheets, which comes in 1080i, and there wasn't a lot of difference, and the slightly greater softness in the camera image may be explainable by the fact that I was using an analog connection because the HDMI connector hadn't arrived yet. (Sony should've included one). Color rendition wasn't as good as Three Sheets, but neither was my lighting setup. Ease of use is good, though the camera could actually be a bit larger to fit my hands. The optical image stabilization is excellent. Sound quality through the builtin 5.1 microphone setup is decent, and there's no motor noise since there's no tape. I also ordered this bluetooth wireless microphone, which hasn't arrived yet either. So far, so good; I'll let you know more when I've had more time to play with it. But for the moment, I'd say that it's not an HD version of my Canon GL2; it's more like an HD version of my Sony Digital 8 consumer-level camera. Which makes sense, in light of the price.
ADVICE TO HOLLYWOOD: "Want to make some money? Make a movie where Americans are the good guys and the terrorists are the bad guys. It’s not like there’s a shortage of stories that fit the bill." Yeah, they seem unconcerned with maximizing shareholder value. I'm surprised there haven't been shareholder lawsuits over that. Related thoughts here.
UPDATE: An amusing suggestion via email: 'They need to make some gag movies about this, like Scary Movie or Not Another Teen Movie. How about Not Another Anti-War Movie?"
A commenter has already answered Ron Coleman's problems with my statement that "I would venture that the real problem isn’t sex as such, but the puerile way it’s treated. I think actual porn is more honest and healthy than the pop-culture treatment of the subject." Ron's commenters observed:
I thought he was saying that “real porn” is probably less damaging than the kind of crap that Brittany, Madonna, gangsta rappers, etc. flout to our young folk as “sexuality”.
Look at soap operas, primetime shows like Desperate Housewives, most movies, etc., and the sex isn't about sex -- it's about manipulation, domination, or display. In porn, people actually act like they're doing it for fun. I think that's better. And, anyway, we've already established that porn is good for America. And personally, I love America!
UPDATE: Another virtue of porn is demonstrated in this comment from Ace's place, where they're, um, experts.
RAND SIMBERG: "Even the BBC has figured out that things are going pretty well in Iraq. How long will it take the Gray Lady and the networks to figure it out?" Until there's a Democrat in the White House?
SO, HOW WERE MY FLIGHTS? Fine, this time. Continental got me to Las Vegas smoothly and a few minutes early. Northwest got me back to Knoxville smoothly, and a few minutes early. And I managed to snag an upgrade to first class, which was nice. This has me feeling a bit better about flying, but it's probably just some sort of cruel trick . . . .
WITH THANKSGIVING COMING SOON, several people have asked me to re-post my recipe for Thanksgiving leg of lamb. There are some other recipes at the link, too.
I'm told that the Hollywood/Big Media moguls were pissed as hell that Barack Obama got out in front of the other Democratic presidential candidates and issued what they considered "a totally knee-jerk response" taking the writers' side. And they let him know it, too. I can't believe the CEOs are naive enough to think that just because they've been hosting political fundraisers and giving donations to him that gives them any clout. UPDATE: Obama's LA staff and volunteers will be joining the strikers tomorrow.
It is extraordinary how President Bush has streamlined the Senate confirmation process. As we have seen most recently with the vote to confirm Michael Mukasey as attorney general, about all that is left of “advice and consent” is the “consent” part.
ANOTHER UPDATE: Reader William Casey emails: 'I just finished reading your paper, "Taking Advice Seriously,...." and I agree with you that it is advice that should be considered. It's getting ridiculous. The Democrats pound Mukasey on waterboarding but when they had a chance in 2006 to make it illegal, they refused." As Dan Rather used to say, "Courage!"
MICKEY KAUS: "Are Hollywood's Iraq dramas bombing because a) people don't want to hear about Iraq or b) people don't want to hear about Iraq from Hollywood liberals?"