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September 15, 2007

JAMES LILEKS: Welcome to Mordor!

INTERESTING, AND GRATIFYING, IF TRUE: "Israelis ‘blew apart Syrian nuclear cache’."

UPDATE: Much more here.

ADVICE ON FEDERALISM for Fred Thompson and Rudy Giuliani: "Giuliani and Thompson claim they want to reinvigorate discussion of the virtues of federalism. Terrific. But you can’t argue that states should be free to make their own policies without federal interference — except when you happen to disagree with them. You can be a federalist, or you can be an ardent drug warrior. But you can’t be both." Indeed.

SERVING LEFTOVERS at the antiwar protests. But there's a twist.

UPDATE: Meanwhile, in Iraq. Though to be honest, a lot of the protesters in DC look to be about triple the age of those "18 to 22 year olds."

MATTHEW HOY LOOKS AT the news industry's diversity problem and how it affects coverage.

I'VE WRITTEN BEFORE about Jeff Zaslow's reports of anti-male bigotry, but I have to say that this item in Slate's "Dear Prudence" column takes the cake:

My younger, 13-year-old sister is having a slumber party for her birthday, and invited three or so of her 13- to 14-year-old girlfriends to our house. Shortly after, "Sara's" mother suggested that my sister's party should be held at "Tammy's" house. Why? Because Tammy has a single mother. Sara's mother is concerned that my father will be in his house during the festivities. There is no reason to be concerned about my father doing anything inappropriate to any of the girls (all the parents have met each other), but she is just uncomfortable about the idea of her daughter sleeping in the same house with another nonfamily man. She has also convinced the other parents that a change of venue would be a good idea. Although Tammy's mother is willing to host the event, my family is offended that the situation has come to this. Since when is it a crime to have a happy two-parent household?

Only when one of the parents is a man. Prudence's response is excellent, though I'm not sure that anyone should even explain that they're "sensitive to such concerns." If this were a matter of race -- or of gender prejudice against women -- no one would be advising sensitivity.

UPDATE: Donald Sensing emails:

Glenn, regarding your post about the woman who objected to sending her daughter to a friend's home for a sleepover because the friend's father would be present, it's worth considering that at least 20 percent of child sexual abuse is committed by children against other children. In fact, reports StopItNow.com, "As much as half of all child sexual abuse is committed by children under the age of 18 (Hunter, J.A., Figueredo, A., Malamuth, N.M., & Becker, J.V. (2003). Juvenile sex offenders: Toward the Development of a Typology. Sexual Abuse: A Journal of Research and Treatment, (2003) Volume 15, No. 1.)."

I think an appropriate response by the original hosting parents to that mother would be to say, "I am uncomfortable with the idea of sending my daughter to spend the night in another house where only one adult is present," and put the shoe back on her foot.

Meanwhile, reader Richard Aubrey posits a PC meme-clash: "Suppose the husband/father in question were black. The SPIW (Self-Professed Incredibly Wonderful) would have a stroke trying to figure out which meme was stronger."

A HUGE CHEMERINSKY ROUNDUP at the L.A. Times.

DAVID GELERNTER: Defeat at any price.

P.B.S. makes a correction.

ALAN KEYES to the rescue!

A RUN ON THE BANK in Britain. They're doing the right thing in response: Shoveling out the cash. People will relax soon enough if that keeps up.

HSU THINK? "I've already seen this movie."

UPDATE: Strange Brew Hsu.

A ROUNDUP OF NORMAN HSU PUNS at Beltway Blogroll. Plus a poll!

My favorite: "Hsu-per California Donors Extradition Opus." If you say it loud enough you'll always sound precocious!

UPDATE: Reader Steve Galbraith emails:

I've seen this posted by several lefty posters - not bloggers - but posters. Apparently, your citation of puns on Hsu's name is racist.

Oy.

Because if he was a white American with the name of, let's say, Gene Shue, apparently you wouldn't have engaged in this wordplay. It's only because he's an Asian.

Doubly oy.

Methinks the real issue with these posters has nothing to do with the name but involves, let us say, other issues you and the Left have?

Just when you think you've seen everything on the internet.....

In Internet discourse "racist" -- like "fascist" -- is often a synonym for "someone who is winning an argument with a lefty." It's a term used with such abandon, and so little foundation, that it's largely lost its original meaning.

IN THE NEW YORK TIMES: Global warming is Jane Fonda's fault. Well, yeah.

UPDATE: Ed Driscoll notes Pete Townshend's perspicacity -- and, in the process, may explain why the anti-nuclear movement isn't doing as well as it was in the 1970s.

THERE'S NOW A TRANSCRIPT UP, of our podcast interview with Jack Goldsmith.

HAPPINESS IS A WARM ELECTRODE:

At his signal, two volts of electricity, enough to power a wristwatch, course through the wires and radiate outward from the tip a few millimeters in every direction. Millions of neurons bask in the electricity, and the effect is fairly immediate. Hire feels warm at first, a bit flushed.

And then it happens. The room looks brighter to her. The faces, the big, circular lights overhead, the ceiling—they all seem clearer. Malone asks her how she feels. "I'm really happy," she replies, clearly surprised. "I feel like I could get up and do all sorts of things." But even more telling than her words is the look on her face. For the first time in 20 years, with a halo bolted to her head and two freshly drilled holes in her skull, Hire smiles. . . . When I meet with her six months after the surgery, she doesn't look like a person who spent 20 years trapped in a dark mental cave. She's energetic. She shakes my hand firmly and looks me straight in the eye—something she says she simply wouldn't have been able to do before. She laughs often (and my jokes aren't even really funny). She now walks 50 miles a week, talks to her family constantly, chats with strangers at the post office. And her smile is a regular, everyday thing, not a freakish, fleeting appearance in a crowded operating room.

Read the whole thing.

ALAN GREENSPAN:

Mr. Greenspan, who calls himself a "lifelong libertarian Republican," writes that he advised the White House to veto some bills to curb "out-of-control" spending while the Republicans controlled Congress. He says President Bush's failure to do so "was a major mistake." Republicans in Congress, he writes, "swapped principle for power. They ended up with neither. They deserved to lose."

Hmm. That sounds kind of like my GOP "premortem," doesn't it? ("Add to this the GOP leadership's failure to follow through on promised ethics reforms, and its addiction to pork-barrel spending, and you've got lots of reason to think that they don't stand for anything except stuffing their pockets.") Haven't read the book yet, but it sounds interesting. It's currently #2 on Amazon, so I guess a lot of people think so.

FREE IPHONE UNLOCKING FOR DUMMIES: Well, that's the kind I'd need, if I owned an iPhone.

HYPOCRITICAL? OR REALIST? Google calls for Web privacy laws.

MICKEY KAUS: "Maybe Murdoch Bid on the Wrong Company: New York Times stock falls below $20 a share, down from $50 in 2002. ... Soon even Ron Burkle will be able to buy the place!"

UPDATE: Reader George Zachar emails:

Shareholder equity in the New York Times company is roughly $825 million. That's about the value of the Times' interest in its new headquarters tower opposite the bus terminal. The implicit value of the Times newspaper and other properties is therefore zero.

I blame excessive ad-discounting.

WILL SALETAN on rigged studies. Similar result-oriented sloppiness on race/IQ research would get you drummed out of the academy. But maybe not sloppiness on other topics.

GIVING A NEW MEANING to the term "breast exam."

A SHOCKING AYN RAND DEVELOPMENT: "An article in the New York Times about Rand and Atlas Shrugged that is notable for the absence of the expected condescending sneering."

COVERING the Gathering of Eagles.

UPDATE: Michelle Malkin is liveblogging it.

IN THE MAIL: Aubrey de Grey's new book, Ending Aging: The Rejuvenation Breakthroughs That Could Reverse Human Aging in Our Lifetime. Bring it on!

ANOTHER dumb McCarthyish political decision at the University of California. "After a group of UC Davis women faculty began circulating a petition, UC regents rescinded an invitation to Larry Summers, the controversial former president of Harvard University, to speak at a board dinner Wednesday night in Sacramento." First Chemerinsky, now this. People are going to be a lot slower to accept invitations from the University of California in the future, I think. To paraphrase Teddy Roosevelt, I could carve a better backbone out of a banana.

MASSACHUSETTS DECIDES THAT ROADS NEED more cowbell. Well, doesn't everything?

IN MIAMI, FRED THOMPSON SPEAKS AGAINST GUN CONTROL LAWS:

'I do not think that abrogating Second Amendment rights is a good idea,'' the Republican said at the Versailles restaurant in Little Havana.

Miami's pro-gun-control police chief is presumably too busy battling corruption charges to weigh in. But there's a lot of that going around.

CALL IT THE HSU SCHOOL FOR SOCIAL RESEARCH: Arkansas returns Hsu money, but New School doesn't. "Bob Kerrey -- head of the New School -- is considering a run for Senate in 2008. He ought to have the good sense to have returned the money already." Maybe he's not sure who it actually belongs to . . . .

JIM MORAN DOES IT AGAIN: “There are only so many mistakes he can make before it’s fair to call him an anti-Semite.” Are we there yet?

And this advice: "How should Democrats deal with this guy? Here’s a proposal: Ask Mark Warner."

WHY DO SOY BURGERS TASTE SO AWFUL?

U.C. IRVINE IS working to rehire Erwin Chemerinsky. "He is noncommittal." (Via TaxProf).

CANCER-RESISTANT MICE? Let's hope we can do the same thing with people.

STRAPON, JETPOWERED BATWINGS! Now we're getting somewhere! I think even Daniel Wilson would approve.

September 14, 2007

A ROUNDUP OF Milblogger interviews with President Bush.

RUDY GIULIANI BLASTS HILLARY ON THE WAR:

More here: "Hillary Clinton doesn’t say anything by accident. "

CHEMERINSKY UPDATE: "Right-wing bogeymen" still unaccounted for. And possibly fictional, though that raises further questions.

THOSE LAYERS OF EDITORS AND FACT-CHECKERS fail again: "A former consultant to ABC's investigative unit admitted yesterday that he put his name on a purported interview with Barack Obama that he never conducted."

And there's more here: "The French Defense Ministry on Friday debunked the credentials of a former ABC News consultant who claimed to have worked as an adviser to the ministry, saying the man was just an intern for five months."

AL GORE VISITS MINNEAPOLIS:

Brrr. Not complaining; just noting. Flower-slaying frost expected, which really is too soon. All that work, and they perish in a night.

I mean, I don't actually know if Al was in Minneapolis today, I just kind of assumed.

GOOSE CREEK UPDATE:

PVC pipe filled with homemade "low-grade explosive mixture'' and a videotape instruction for turning a remote-controlled toy car into a detonator were among the items found in the car driven by two University of South Florida students arrested in South Carolina and now facing federal explosives charges, according to a federal prosecutor. . . . They also found a laptop computer in the men's car. On the laptop they found a 12-minute video on which a man shows how to turn a radio-controlled toy car into a remote-controlled detonator, Hoffer said.

Mohamed admits that it is him in the video, although you cannot see his face, Hoffer said. In the video, Mohamed said that he was showing how to make such a device "to save one who wants to be a martyr for another battle,'' Hoffer said.

Mohamed also makes reference to a toy boat in the video.

The FBI seized a toy remote controlled boat in a box from Megahed's home.

The plot thickens. (Via Michelle Malkin).

UPDATE: A cautionary note. The point is well-taken. I suspect that If CAIR weren't defending them, people might be slower to assume their guilt. But given CAIR's track record, that's not entirely irrational.

MICKEY KAUS: "Thanks to a recent election that gave Mayor Villaraigosa's allies a majority on the L.A. school board, a large, poor-performing inner-city high school--Locke High--is being turned over in toto to a charter organization. Why isn't this the equivalent, for the education world, what the dynamiting of the Pruitt-Igoe towers was for New Deal public housing projects? Here is a unionized ghetto high school so beyond salvation by the traditional ed bureaucracy that a majority of its own teachers vote to go charter!"

THOUGHTS ON POLITICIANS AND HDTV: This was discussed here a while back.

RUDY GIULIANI gets the MoveOn discount. Advertising Age has the backstory.

THE CHEMERINSKY SCANDAL: A novel solution:

Victor David Hanson says UC Irvine Law School should re-hire Chemerinsky.

Personally, I think they should re-hire him, and then re-fire him, just for kicks. It'll be like George Steinbrenner and Billy Martin for the ivory-tower set. Fun times all around!

Who says sports don't build character?

UPDATE: More here: "Can anyone explain why Drake should not resign? After nine months of searching for a dean and recruiting a man who is highly respected throughout the law school community, he turned around and fired him in a way that has undercut the whole project of founding a law school at UCI."

Or maybe it's all a cunning effort at sabotage.

MORE ON THE MICROSOFT stealth update issue. "I know that this is a bitter pill for Microsoft to have to swallow, but no matter what spin is being put on the PR, updating files on systems where users have specifically stated they want to have the final say on what’s installed is a serious betrayal of trust, and this isn’t the first time."

BILL QUICK thinks I'm hopelessly naive.

Oh well. At least I've got company. Actually, lots of company.

DANNY GLOVER ON THE BLOGOSPHERE:

A-list bloggers who rose to prominence by fighting the establishment are quickly becoming the new establishment -- and as such they are being forced to do battle with a new generation of intraparty peasants with pixel-forks.

The Blogway Elite versus the New Netroots (need a better name for them): It's all very interesting to watch.

Indeed.

IF MOVEON HAD EXISTED 65 YEARS AGO.

SENATOR KEN SALAZAR PRODUCES the world's quietest Sister Souljah moment, by denouncing the MoveOn "Betrayus" ad, but in a newspaper with a smaller readership than many political blogs.

UPDATE: Elizabeth Edwards is criticizing MoveOn too but I don't think it counts as a Sister Souljah moment, even a quiet one, when it's your wife doing the criticizing.

ANOTHER UPDATE: Gary Harmon of the Grand Junction Daily Sentinel emails:

Prof. Reynolds: Here I sit, damned with faint praise re Salazar’s Sis Souljah? Did you have to mention the size of the readership? Now I feel like the freshman on the first day in the locker room with the seniors. Again.

Actually, we won’t apologize for the size of our readership. It’s actually growing and not many can say that in this business. What is interesting is that the comments were made in a phone conference involving almost all Colorado media, including the big dailies and AP.

That it made it to our paper might explain why we’re growing and, well, they’re not.

As Webb Wilder says: "You're never too small to hit the big time!"

HSU LOVES YOU, BABY?

When Bill Clinton received an award at a gala dinner honoring the late Robert F. Kennedy last year, the former president expressed his thanks before an audience that included a Nobel Prize winner and a glittering array of show business celebrities and Wall Street titans. Yet the second sentence of his remarks expressed special gratitude to a man almost no one there had heard of: "our friend Norman Hsu."

The story of Hsu, the major Democratic fundraiser who turned out to be a fugitive from justice, is a tangled one that stretches back more than 15 years. But more recent developments in the world of campaign finance helped create the environment in which a man like Hsu could be welcomed into the company of people like the Kennedys and Clintons.

Thanks, campaign finance "reform"! (Via NewsAlert, which notes: "To Bill Clinton Norman Hsu was a bundler of joy.")

MORE WRONG-HOUSE RAIDS IN PHILADELPHIA: And the cops even admit that they weren't sure they had the right house, and broke in anyway.

We need federal legislation stripping sovereign immunity in these cases.

INDEED: "It is the view of this column that the Times should be able to sell ads to whomever it wishes under whatever terms it wishes. But we live in an era of heavy regulation of campaign speech, thanks in part to the persuasive efforts of the New York Times. It does not seem too much to ask that the New York Times Co. adhere, with transparency and integrity, to the high standards its editorialists seek to impose by law on everyone else."

UPDATE: A message convergence. "But I think the real lesson here is for MoveOn: sure, you got a great discount, but if you'd waited a day you could have gotten the same message out for free."

PRESIDENT BUSH meets with milbloggers.

WHEN POLICE OFFICERS DRIVE DRUNK.

MORE ON S.U.V. HYPOCRISY, from Arthur St. Antoine.

SO I FINISHED JOE HALDEMAN'S The Accidental Time Machine last night. It was okay -- not in his top tier, but reasonably amusing. As one of the reader reviews says: "pleasant, although shallow."

BUY A SPORT-UTILITY VEHICLE: It's for the children! "America's car culture may be giving childbearing a big boost. Dragging a child around a city, even a family-friendly Canadian or northern European city, is a major hassle, especially since after you get home, all worn out and cranky from the expedition, chances are your urban apartment forces you to be in closer proximity to your child than is ideal for maintaining an even temper."

UPDATE: Note this comment, too.

MAKING THE MCLAUGHLIN GROUP LOOK LIKE A BUNCH OF BLOWHARDS: The new Corn & Miniter Show is up!

DAVID BERNSTEIN: "Anyone who is reasonably familiar with the history of U.S.-Israel relations knows that the pro-Israel community (and the organized Jewish community writ large, for that matter) has despised Brzezinski for at least thirty years. And it wasn’t just Brzezinski’s policies, deemed by many to be anti-Israel, it was the way he promoted them, and the way he interacted with Jewish community activists who sought to engage him."

THE REAL MEANING OF "no war for oil."

OUT-TRUTHING THE TRUTHERS: Mary Katharine Ham at Ground Zero.

HSU-LEATHER EXPRESS: Well, he's already demonstrated that he's a flight risk: "A Colorado judge set bail at $5 million in cash for Democratic fundraiser Norman Hsu on a grand theft charge, but that wasn't enough to satisfy a prosecutor who had asked for an unprecedented $50 million bail."

ARNOLD KLING ON order, disorder, and markets.

MORE ON L'Affaire Chemerinsky.

CHINESE PIRATES PRODUCE AN IPOD NANO CLONE, and get this stiff warning: "Just remember guys, you're taking food off of Steve Jobs' table... which is made of diamond-studded platinum."

IN THE MAIL: Mark Tushnet's Out of Range: Why the Constitution Can't End the Battle over Guns.

CHRYSLER SETS UP A NEW DIVISION dedicated to hybrid and electric vehicles.

VICTOR DAVIS HANSON: Hire back Chemerinsky.

IT'S ALBERTO GONZALES' last day as Attorney General.

IN DEFENSE OF ugly cars.

VIRGINIA IS FOR BLOGGERS.

BOMBINGS BY THE "POPULAR REVOLUTIONARY ARMY" IN MEXICO have idled a number of automobile plants. Show your solidarity with the workers -- put them out of a job!

What do you think the chances are that this ultimately traces back to Hugo Chavez?

LEE SMITH REVIEWS WALT AND MEARSHEIMER: "If it weren’t for its support for Israel, the United States would have gotten along just fine with Saddam Hussein and have warm ties with Iran and enjoy popularity across the Middle East… right?"

THE BLACK-EYED PEAS love Israel.

ANOTHER Google / blog freedom row.

TED FRANK: Should trial lawyers make terror policy?

MEGAN MCARDLE: "I'm so proud to have voted for a party that thinks that retroactive taxes on 'excess' profits are a good way to deal with high prices. After all, it worked terribly well in the 1970's and 1980's. I bet that will teach those nasty oil companies that there are penalties for producing a highly desireable product!"

GOOGLE FUNDS a $25 million lunar X-Prize:

The X Prize Foundation saw the new contest as one of “the grand challenges of our time that we can use to move people forward,” said Dr. Peter H. Diamandis, chairman and C.E.O. of the foundation.

The prize for reaching the moon and completing the basic tasks of roving and sending video and data will bring the winner $20 million, according to the contest rules. An additional $5 million would be awarded for other tasks that include roving more than 5,500 yards or sending back images of artifacts like lunar landers from the Apollo program.

Carnegie-Mellon is already in the game, and more will follow. But not everyone is excited. Rand Simberg writes: "I just can't get as excited about it as I was supposed to be, based on all the pre-announcement hype. I'm just not that into space science, or robots on other planets. I was hoping that it would be something that would further drive down the cost of space passenger travel. But hey, it's Google's money." He rounds up a lot of other reactions.

Meanwhile, David Nolan wonders who, if anyone, will play the Burt Rutan role this time around.

APPARENTLY, NOT JUST ANYONE can get the enviable treatment that MoveOn got from The New York Times' advertising department.

September 13, 2007

BILL QUICK ADMIRES John McCain's brilliance.

Meanwhile, Extreme Mortman offers this question: "Who would have thought John Kerry would remain the sole marquee Democrat with the courage to denounce MoveOn?"

SEPARATED AT BIRTH? Norman Hsu and Zeno the Artificial Boy.


Thanks to reader Robert Arvanitis for pointing out the uncanny resemblance.

UPDATE: It's a small world. Reader Tony Daniel -- author of Superluminal and Metaplanetary -- emails:

I wrote the content for Zeno the Robot Boy – the stuff Zeno says – under the direction of David Hanson, the robot boy’s creator, of course.

One of the many freelance gigs a mid-list SF writer must take – but a particularly fun one in this case.

Norman Hsu had other programmers…

I'll bet their stories aren't as good, either.

BLOGGING THE Sumatran earthquake.

THIS SOUNDS LIKE GOOD NEWS: "The federal deficit is running sharply lower than last year even though spending in August set an all-time high, the government reported Thursday. The Treasury Department said that the deficit through the first 11 months of this budget year totaled $274.4 billion, down 9.8 percent from the same period a year ago. Analysts believe the deficit for all of 2007 will actually be even lower because they are forecasting a sizable surplus in the final month. . . . The administration is projecting that the government's books will be in surplus by 2012 if Congress follows Bush's recommendations on spending restraint. However, the Democratic-controlled Congress is pushing for higher spending for the budget year that begins Oct. 1. Bush has pledged to veto spending bills that exceed his requests."

VIA EMAIL, the full text of Bush's speech. Click "read more" to read it.

UPDATE: So I watched the speech. It was okay -- an average performance for Bush, not especially good or bad -- but I'm not sure it really added much, post-Petraeus. It will, however, probably pull a response from MoveOn, which based on this week's experience can only help the Bush Administration.

ANOTHER UPDATE: Okay, I watched the Democratic response from Sen. Jack Reed, which seemed calculated to make Bush's speech seem lively by comparison. Not much there, either. I'm pretty sure political oratory is at a historical low point.

MORE: The Democrats in a box? "The real interesting thing to watch for in the coming months is how the Democrats will act as they are clearly unable to force a withdrawal. What further fissures will we see between the anti-war radicals and the Democrats?"

MORE: Allah has video of John Edwards' response.

Read More ?


THOUGHTS ON dogs and free will.

UPDATE: From the comments: "Dogs have free will. But cats use free will."

THE $52,000 ugly purse.

TRYING TO PREVENT FURTHER HSUNANIGANS: "The political and legal demise of major Democratic fundraiser Norman Hsu is casting attention beyond Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign, which earlier this week made the decision to return all of the $850,000 Hsu raised this year, even as he was a fugitive from a 15-year-old criminal case in California. At least two of Clinton's rivals have also been dealing with questions about their fundraising but have stopped short of Clinton's dramatic remedy so far. Shortly before Hsu's controversial efforts came to light last month, trial lawyer Geoffrey Feiger, one of the big bundlers for John Edwards' past presidential campaign, was indicted on federal charges he conspired to route more than $125,000 in illegal contributions to Edwards' 2004 bid ."

And Paul Kiel of TPM Muckraker observes: "The going suspicion in Washington has always been that politicians are not prone to ask too many questions of contributors as long as the checks keep coming. But never has a contributor's hidden past blown up in a campaign's face quite like it has for the Clinton campaign in the case of Norman Hsu. . . . Despite all the scrutiny of Hsu, a number of mysteries remain, the main one being what Hsu was after, another being where all this money came from. Hsu managed to raise the staggering sum of $850,000 in just the last eight months for Clinton from some 260 contributors, and that's not counting the money he's delivered for a long list of other Democrats since 2004."

So are there more guys like him out there, or was he flying Hsulo?

"RETURN ON SUCCESS:" Just got an email from the White House with excerpts from Bush's speech. Click "read more" to read them.

Read More ?


AUSTIN BAY doesn't like Obama's plan.

FRED-O-RAMA: Thompson on Terri Schiavo: "No role for the federal government to play." I agree.

Plus, Thompson slams MoveOn.

HERE'S MORE on the Houssein Zourkot arrest in Dearborn.

A MCCAIN SURGE? Up nine points -- that's pretty big.

"BETRAY US" at a discount!

UPDATE: Giuliani wants equal time.

Meanwhile, Uncle Jimbo files a complaint with the FEC. I disapprove of McCain-Feingold, etc., but the New York Times really wanted these laws, so I say let them get what they want, good and hard.

And Bob Owens, who noticed this first, does some well-modulated gloating.

DID TIM TAYLOR kill the do-it-yourselfer?

ADVOCATING VIOLENCE AGAINST BRITNEY SPEARS: I'll bet Britney could take this guy, though.

TECHNOLOGY MARCHES ON: Okay, I'm not sure "marches" is exactly the right word here.

JEFF GOLDSTEIN looks at the master narrative.

OUCH: "Almost immediately after the launch of Fred Thompson's long anticipated presidential candidacy, important neutral Republicans decreed privately that it had crashed and burned on takeoff. Many of these critics had wanted to board the Thompson campaign but were repelled by his 'gatekeepers.' That helps explain their attitude now, and not merely because of bruised feelings caused by their exclusion." I don't think he's crashed and burned, but I agree that the campaign has sometimes seemed curiously isolated.

Ann Althouse, however, isn't so sure about these criticisms: "It's possible that he knows what he is doing."

Meanwhile, Wired says: "It's official: Republican presidential hopeful Fred Thompson's media strategy for his campaign launch was a success. Thompson's web site Fred08.com was the most visited presidential candidate web site last week, according to Hitwise, a Web site traffic and search trends analysis firm."

KEEPING HIS MOUTH HSUT: "John Edwards isn’t exactly a shrinking violet when it comes to criticizing Hillary Clinton, or bringing up the Clintons’ past scandals – recall his 'the Lincoln Bedroom is not for rent' speech. In fact, that speech came on the 23rd of August, just a few days before the whole Norman Hsu mess exploded on the nation’s front pages. Yet John Edwards hasn’t yet commented on the Norman Hsu matter."

NORMAN HSU = Oh Man! Runs. At the Anagram Genius site.

FROM FEDERALISM TO FREDeralism. But Rand Simberg has a question. But he finds something else to like about Fred: "Fred Thompson doesn't go to church regularly, and isn't afraid to say so. I've nothing against church goers in general, or even church-going politicians, but I'd much rather have one who doesn't wear his religion on his sleeve. Particularly compared to hypocrites like Bill and Hillary Clinton, who primarily went as a photo op, Bible in hand, usually when trying to tamp down a scandal."

MICROSOFT INSTALLS SOFTWARE without users' permission.

THE FARMER'S ALMANAC predicts a warm dry winter. With oil prices going up, that's good, right?

SOMEWHAT FRIGHTENING: The Angry Pharmacist blog.

TUGGING ON SOME HSU-STRINGS.

DESPITE ALL THE TALK, Senate chooses pork over bridge repair. By a huge margin. And next time you fly, think of this: "Want to know what had to be cut from the bill in order to get the North Dakota Peace Garden? Oh, just a silly little project that would have updated technology in air-traffic control towers." Bravo for Bob Corker, anyway, who voted with Coburn.

AN OBSCURE MUSCLE CAR: "When people reminisce about classic General Motors muscle cars, the Buick GS455 isn't often the first car to come to mind. . . . Torquey and smooth, with aggressive but restrained lines (a restraint that quickly vanished with the GSX appearance package), the GS455 is one of the great overlooked hero cars from the late 1960s." IowaHawk probably has three.

UPDATE: IowaHawk himself emails:

Funny you should mention that... I've never had a Stage I (let alone three) but do have another 60s Buick of similar brute force and Rat-Packy elegance: 1966 Riviera, 425 ci Nailhead (360 hp, 465 ft-lbs torque). It's currently for sale, so someone else will be slapping Gaia around with it soon.

Check out that classic interior.

SOMETHING ELSE TO HSU ON: "Democratic presidential hopeful Bill Richardson and a host of congressional candidates from both parties accepted cash from Oscar S. Wyatt Jr. and his wife, Lynn,since the federal government accused the Texas oilman of paying millions of dollars in kickbacks to Saddam Hussein. Wyatt was indicted in 2005 on charges related to illegal payments for oil contracts from the Hussein-led Iraqi government under the United Nations’ oil-for-food program. And since then, the Wyatts have found willing recipients for nearly $22,000 in political donations." This doesn't seem to be a field where "willing recipients" are hard to come by.

LIBERTARIANS AND CULTURE: More responses to Kay Hymowitz, here and here.

"SO IT'S 'PUBLISH AND PERISH?'" That's the question asked in the L.A. Times regarding the bungled Chemerinsky deanship hire. And there's a big roundup at the WSJ Law Blog.

UPDATE: Hugh Hewitt wonders what's up with Christopher Edley.

IN THE MAIL: Eric Muller's American Inquisition: The Hunt for Japanese American Disloyalty in World War II. Do Muller's horror tales from World War II indicate that America is bad, or that war is hard and leads to lots of bad things? Watch for reviewers to insert various war-on-terror spins.

The Glenn and Helen Show: Jack Goldsmith on Law, Terror and Politics

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The sixth anniversary of September 11 is just past, and it's a good time to look at where we are, and what to do in coming years. We spoke to Harvard Law Professor Jack Goldsmith, whose new book, The Terror Presidency: Law and Judgment Inside the Bush Administration, tells the story of his experience working at the Defense Department and as head of the Office of Legal Counsel at the Department of Justice, and also looks at how the decisionmaking process relating to terror is being "strangled by law." Goldsmith talks about his experiences, his book, and what the next President and Congress should do.

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UPDATE: There's a transcript available now -- click "read more" to read it.

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