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Wednesday, July 11, 2007
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| Maybe Starbucks needs to buy the New York Times |
| Posted by: Billy Hollis |
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Another month, another note on financial struggles at the New York Times. This time, it's their bond rating being cut, which effectively raises the interest rate they must pay to borrow money. The dispassionate tone of the S&P; analysis is brutal:...operating performance for the month of May was lower than anticipated, with total advertising revenues down 8.5% year over year and newspaper ad revenues down 9.9%. We are increasingly concerned about the pace of decline for print advertising.
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We believe that secular declines in the newspaper industry will continue to affect top-line growth during the intermediate term. The rating could be lowered if trends related to print advertising remain in line with what was reported in the past few months, suggesting that annual revenue declines may exceed the low single-digit area...
In other words, they don't see a chance in heck that the Times will see revenue growth, and they're expecting the decline in revenues to accelerate.
Now, my first impulse is to feel some schadenfreude. The NYT has disgraced themselves so often over the past ten or twenty years that it's become a running joke. McQ blasted them recently, as they continue to plumb new depths of left-wing idiocy.
But my second thought was "How can they be doing that badly?" Every Starbucks I've ever been in carries the NYT - it's practically part of the culture there. The stereotype of the latte-sipping NYT reader is immediately recognizable.
Plus New Yorkers are notoriously some of the most liberal citizens in the nation. I would think that there's a market for a liberal newspaper there.
Sure, sure, online stuff is changing our news gathering habits. All the traditional media are suffering. But the Times seems to be particularly vulnerable, which suggests that they are run particularly badly.
I just find myself wondering if the ultimate fate of the Times is to be bought by Starbucks just to preserve the newspaper as an accoutrement of the liberal coffee-shop experience.
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Category: Media |
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| John Stossel and a primer on the "smuggled premise" |
| Posted by: McQ |
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A very good column today by John Stossel in which he takes quotes from an interview he did with Michael Moore and points out what commenter Robert Fulton would term, phrases from the "liberal narrative". Moore tells Stossel, "I watch your show and I know where you are coming from. ... ", acknowledging Stossel's libertarian roots. Moore then smuggles a few premises into the conversation. Here's a little pop quiz for you.
First Moore quote:"I gotta believe that, even though I know you're very much for the individual determining his own destiny, you also have a heart." Have you spotted it?
Stossel's reply:
 Notice his smuggled premise in the words "even though." In Moore's mind, someone who favors individual freedom doesn't care about his fellow human beings. If I have a heart, it's in spite of my belief in freedom and autonomy for everyone.
Doesn't it stand to reason that someone who wants everyone to be free of tyranny does so partly because he cares about others? Wishing freedom to one's fellow human beings strikes me as a sign of benevolence. But Moore and the left don't see it that way.
Moore thinks respecting others' freedom means refusing to help the less fortunate. But where's the connection? All it means is that the libertarian refuses to sanction the use of physical force (which is what government is) to help others. Peaceful methods — like voluntary charity — are the only morally consistent methods. I give about a quarter of my income to charities because I've seen that private charity helps the needy far better than government does.
Quote number two and besides the obvious religious pandering, what's the implicit assumption from a man who believes health care and food should come from the government?"What the nuns told me is true: We will be judged by how we treat the least among us. And that in order to be accepted into heaven, we're gonna be asked a series of questions. When I was hungry, did you feed me? When I was homeless, did you give me shelter? And when I was sick, did you take care of me?" Stossel cuts through this line of argument quickly:
 I'm not a theologian, but I do know that when people are ordered by the government to be charitable, it's not virtuous; it's compelled. Why would anyone get into heaven because he pays taxes under threat of imprisonment? Moral action is freely chosen action.
If Moore's goal is to help the less fortunate, he should preach voluntary charity instead of government action.
Last quote from Moore:"John, your way of thinking actually was great for this country. I mean it; it helped to found the country. It helped build us into one of the greatest nations, perhaps the greatest nation, that the earth has ever seen. Limited government, pull yourself up by your bootstraps, every man for himself, forward movement, pioneer spirit. That's why a lot of people in these other countries really admire us, because there's this American get up and go." Smuggled premise?
 I interrupt here to point out another smuggled premise. Did you catch that "every man for himself" line? America was never about every man for himself. A free society is about voluntary communities cooperating through the division of labor. Libertarianism is far from "every man for himself."
After acknowledging that limited government helped make America great, Moore went on to say, "But I don't think that what you believe is what's going to allow us to survive."
He means that if government does not assure people health care and food, our society will disintegrate.
But why would a philosophy that was good enough to build a successful society be unsuited to sustaining that society? Individual freedom, with minimal government, made it possible for masses of people to cooperate for mutual advantage. As a result, society could be rich and peaceful. As the great economist Ludwig von Mises wrote, "What makes friendly relations between human beings possible is the higher productivity of the division of labor. . . . A preeminent common interest, the preservation and further intensification of social cooperation, becomes paramount and obliterates all essential collisions."
Freedom and benevolence go hand in hand.
How'd you do?
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Category: Freedom and Liberty |
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| Michael Yon and a leader of the 1920s Brigades |
| Posted by: McQ |
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Fascinating follow up. Yon speaks with Abu Ali, a current leader in Burhiz and member of the 1920s Revolution Brigades:Ali said people had been afraid in their own homes because of al Qaeda. I asked if he had fought Americans and Ali laughed and said through Wallach, "What kind of question is that?" I chuckled. Unfortunately, we had to go to other meetings, so the time for taping was short. In closing, I asked Abu Ali if there was something he would like to say to Americans. The markets that had been closed under al Qaeda were bustling around us.
Ali thought for a moment as some local people tried to interrupt him with greetings, and he said, "I ask one thing," and now I paraphrase Ali's words: "After the Iraqi Army and Police take hold and the security forces are ready, we want a schedule for the leaving of the American forces."
"I will tell the Americans this," I said. Ali seemed satisfied as he went off with another American unit. We loaded back into the Stryker and headed to other interesting meetings on other interesting matters, all dealing with the grinding gears of winning or losing this war, and with catching and killing al Qaeda. Works for me.
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Category: Iraq |
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| May-December in a burqua |
| Posted by: McQ |
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Sometimes you just don't know what to say:
Omar bin Laden, the al-Qaida leader's fourth son, has married a British woman he met in Egypt last fall, British media and colleagues of the bride said today.
Jane Felix-Browne, 51, of Moulton-Cheshire, in northwest England, was in Egypt for medical treatment of multiple sclerosis, the Times and Sun newspapers reported. She told the newpapers she met bin Laden, 27, while riding a horse near Egypt's Great Pyramid. OK then ... meanwhile it becomes clear they at least have some idea of what they're getting into:This would be her sixth marriage, and she has three children by previous marriages. It would be Omar bin Laden's second marriage. *sigh*
Ain't romance, great?
Oh, and the only important thing about this?She said Omar last saw his father in 2000 when they were both in Afghanistan, Felix-Browne said. "He left his father because he did not feel it was right to fight or to be in an army. Omar was training to be a soldier and he was only 19." 2000 eh? Felix-Browne was hoping to arrange a visa for her new husband to visit Britain, but acknowledged it would be difficult. Not if British intelligence has more than one brain cell in its collective body it won't.
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Category: Terrorism |
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| The Iraq conundrum |
| Posted by: McQ |
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Kimberly Kagan outlines the ground truth about military operations in Iraq:A new campaign has just begun, it is already yielding important results, and its effects are increasing daily. Demands for withdrawal are no longer demands to pull out of a deteriorating situation with little hope; they are now demands to end a new approach to this conflict that shows every sign of succeeding. Well, that's true ... militarily. But as we've all said, that's not where the ultimate victory is to be won. That victory is in the political realm.
But if we know, and accept that militarily we're actually accomplishing something and we're no longer running around playing whack-a-mole, why the continued resistance at home?
Two reasons. One, public skepticism (mostly warranted) based in lack of progress politically, not militarily. I think we'd find very few Americans who don't believe that given the time and resources, our military could prevail militarily. And, of course, indications are that we are making progress in that direction now.
The first reason, however, drives the second reason. Even with the evidence mounting that we're being successful militarily, we see more and more Republicans jumping ship.
Why? Well again it boils down to the political arena, both here and in Iraq. In Iraq there is no visible sign that any progress is being made by the Iraqi government on critical issues. And while we see things changing dramatically at the level of the tribes and our interaction with them (and them siding with us), at a federal level, nada. Zip. Zero.
It is because of that lack of progress that Republican politicians are becoming jumpy. For the most part they understand the fact that we're making progress militarily. But they also understand that isn't enough. The most oft heard question they get from their constituents when they go home is "why are we making such an effort on behalf of the Iraqi government when it is making no similar effort on its own behalf?"
They have absolutely no answer for that, and it is that strategy for which they demand change. They, after all, have upcoming elections to win.
That, my friends, is the crux of the matter. That is the bottom line. That is what is driving the resistance to the continuation of this military strategy or any military strategy. When Gen. Petraeus makes his report in September I anticipate hearing that great progress has been made militarily. But I also anticipate a "no change" to be the report about the political realm. If that is the case, there will be a virtual war in Congress about funding Iraq, and I wouldn't be at all surprised to see enough defections among the Republicans for the Democrats to have their way. And given what I expect to be excellent military progress by that time, that would be a damn shame.
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Category: Iraq |
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| Haditha |
| Posted by: McQ |
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I wonder what Jack Murtha will have to say about this:An investigating officer has recommended dismissing murder charges against a U.S. Marine accused in the slayings of three Iraqi men in a squad action that killed 24 civilians in the town of Haditha, according to a report.
The government's theory that Lance Cpl. Justin L. Sharratt had executed the three men was "incredible" and relied on contradictory statements by Iraqis, Lt. Col. Paul Ware said in the report, released Tuesday by Sharratt's defense attorneys.
"To believe the government version of facts is to disregard clear and convincing evidence to the contrary, and sets a dangerous precedent that, in my opinion, may encourage others to bear false witness against Marines as a tactic to erode public support of the Marine Corps and mission in Iraq," Ware wrote. This is the result of the Article 32 investigation, similiar in the civilian world to the Grand Jury process.
Seems Murtha's unseemly and prejudicial pronouncements of guilt may be completely unfounded. That, of course, comes as no particular surprise given the source. But my guess is, if he says anything, it won't be an apology. Instead I'd be more inclined to believe he'd claim "whitewash" and question the integrity of the Article 32 investigating officer.
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Category: Legal Affairs |
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| The threat of Web 2.0 |
| Posted by: McQ |
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Will Hinton notes a NYT review about Andrew Keen's new book "The Cult of the Amateur". As Hinton describes him, "Keen is often referred to as the leading contrarian and critic of Web 2.0. and ironically has his own Typepad hosted blog to discuss his disdain for blogs, social media, etc."
Now I haven't read Keen's book and, for whatever reason, the NYT site isn't accepting my previous registration today and I'm not inclined to re-register, so all I have is this excerpt from Hinton's blog. That understood, let's deal with it:"Mr. Keen argues that what the Web 2.0 revolution is really delivering is superficial observations of the world around us rather than deep analysis, shrill opinion rather than considered judgment. In his view Web 2.0 is changing the cultural landscape and not for the better. By undermining mainstream media and intellectual property rights, he says, it is creating a world in which we will live to see the bulk of our music coming from amateur garage bands, our movies and television from glorified YouTubes, and our news made up of hyperactive celebrity gossip, served up as mere dressing for advertising. This is what happens, he suggests, when ignorance meets egoism meets bad taste meets mob rule. As Hinton says "I couldn't disagree more with Keen. Not because I blog. But because Keen is wrong."
I agree with Hinton, who then does a very credible job of fisking the assessments that are reflected in the review (and we assume they're accurate). I thought I'd add my 2 cents.
Let's begin with "superficial observations of the word v. deep analysis."
How does one wave their hand over 8 million blogs and make such a blanket statement? There are certainly any number of blogs, in fact, probably the majority, which indeed offer "superficial observations". However, just as Hinton did, I can offer an extended list of blogs who do excellent and deep analysis of many issues. Much more so than any MSM outlet. That has never been more evident to me than when it comes to the military and military affairs. So on its face, this one just falls well short.
And, of course, that carries over to the second point: "shrill opinion rather than considered judgment." Yes to both. You can find whatever you want, but to pretend it is exclusively one and not the other is to be totally disingenuous, or flat ignorant of the subject.
What begins to creep into your subconscious at this point is the feeling that Keen is nothing more than an apologist for the MSM and the right of journalists and MSM outlets to decide what you should see and know. It is impossible, in Keen's world view, that those who haven't been through the approved process of becoming an MSM journalist or outlet could possibly have anything worthwhile to say.
That creeping feeling finally pushes its way to the front with this line:By undermining mainstream media and intellectual property rights, he says, it is creating a world in which we will live to see the bulk of our music coming from amateur garage bands, our movies and television from glorified YouTubes, and our news made up of hyperactive celebrity gossip, served up as mere dressing for advertising. "Undermining mainstream media" is MSM apologist talk for a multitude of concerns. Fact checking, of course, undermines the MSM, by destroying its credibility and claims of editorial perfection. Offering alternative opinions and analysis undermines the MSM's monopoly on opinion and thus opinion shaping. Offering first-hand accounts of events that add too or contradict MSM stories undermines the MSM ability to slant the news. And Keen doesn't like the MSM monopoly on information and news delivery being challenged.
It's hilarious, however to contemplate his objections to music and YouTube. The complete democratization of both music and "movies and television" scares the crap out of Keen. That's because it avoids the current closed process in which the chosen anoint the next stars of music and media and benefit from doing so. His implict charge is that the public doesn't have the taste or ability to make those choices on their own. So they will choose that of "garage bands" and amateurish nonsense on YouTube over that which he and his ilk have deemed appropriate.
But have you watched or listened to much of what the process he defends is providing now? Is anyone surprised to see creativity and talent beginning to try to find alternate means to present themselves to the public rather than the traditional means which Keen prefers? For once, diversity and choice are in positive accord. And as usual, the old guard is terrified. The "suits" see their closed system dying before their eyes.
Says Will Hinton in his conclusion:Is Web 2.0 harming the establishment media, as Keen claims? Yep, you bet. Are we dumber as a result? Well, that's up to us finally, isn't it? Yup, and that drives people like Andrew Keen crazy.
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Category: Blogging |
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| Always read past the 2nd paragraph |
| Posted by: McQ |
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From Fox News: A discrimination lawsuit filed by a Muslim Dunkin' Donuts franchisee who was not allowed to renew his contract with the chain because of a refusal to sell pork products can proceed, a U.S. appeals court ruled Tuesday.
The decision reversed an Illinois federal court judge's 2004 ruling that rejected Walid Elkhatib's argument that Dunkin' Donuts discriminated against him based on his race by making the sale of breakfast sandwiches with bacon, ham or sausage a mandatory part of his franchise agreement. If you stopped reading there you'd think, "here we go again, some guy who wants the company to change to fit his religious demands". You'd also think that Dunkin' Donuts, who is the franchiser, has the right to enforce its franchise rules.
But you'd be mistaken:According to court papers, Elkhatib, a Palestinian Arab, has been a Dunkin' Donuts franchisee since 1979, before the company began selling any pork.
Once breakfast sandwiches were introduced in 1984, Elkhatib's Chicago-area Dunkin' Donuts outlets sold them without bacon, ham or sausage for nearly 20 years. The company did not object, even providing him with a sign that said "Meat Products Not Available." So his customer base already knows that the products aren't available (for over 20 years) and have adapted, and the company has, in the past, shown active support for the franchisee, even providing signs advertising the fact that pork (meat) products aren't available.
Then, there's this:"There is significant evidence that the carrying of breakfast sandwiches was not an issue of importance to Dunkin Donuts. It allowed other franchises in the area to refuse to carry any breakfast sandwiches at all, when merely relocating the stores, or in one case merely rearranging the displays, would have allowed them to carry the full line," Rovner wrote.
She added that "there is no evidence that there was any change in corporate policy, or even regional policy, on the matter." Now the suit is based in "racial discrimination". I'm not sure how that applies. But if there has been no announced corporate policy change requiring franchisees to carry the products or lose their franchise and other franchises are allowed to determine which of the products Dunkin' Donuts offers they want to carry, I'm not sure I see where DD has a leg to stand on here. A successful franchise (almost 30 years strongly suggests success) which has never carried a product line and never been required to carry it per the franchise agreement now suddenly cut loose because of a refusal to carry pork products.
Something's fishy. There may be more to this than in the news story, but based solely on the info carried in the story, I can see why the judge gave it a "good to go" nod.
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Category: Legal Affairs |
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| Michael Yon: Second Chances |
| Posted by: McQ |
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Michael Yon talks about the battle in Baquba at D+20. Some highlights include a discussion of MSM coverage, whether or not the story about al Qaeda "baking a child" is true and the fact that given their previous barbarity, it is certainly possible and some past history on Gen Petreus, one of the battalion commanders and second chances.
Again, if you're so inclined, hit the tip jar over at Yon's place.
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Category: Iraq |
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Tuesday, July 10, 2007
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| Utopian fantasies and patriotism |
| Posted by: McQ |
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Dale Franks touched on this in his post last week entitled "But Don't Question their Patriotism...".
Out there among us are the "utopians" who aren't able to acknowledge the good they see for all the bad they imagine. They are so disappointed that their internal fantasy about their country isn't reality that they are forever ashamed about who they are and where they live.
They usually exacerbate the condition with shallow analysis and the development of a one-sided narrative filled with loaded words such as "genocide" and phrases such as "ethnocentric gods" which fit their biases.
Someone named Joe Cole has managed to communicate his utopian disappointment in an op-ed. He begins by relating a terrible choice with which he was faced while accompanying his family to a baseball game:But when the announcer declared that a choir would be singing "God Bless America" (which supplanted "Take Me Out to the Ball Game" for seventh inning stretches after 9/11), I faced a dilemma: Should I stand with my family or remain seated to protest the gratuitous patriotic cheerleading? Maybe it is just me, but singing "God Bless America" has never been something I even remotely thought of as "gratuitous patriotic cheerleading" (speaking of loaded phrases). A nice song about the country. Yes. One which reinforces the ideals by which we strive to live. Of course. But patriotic cheerleading?
How? The one how that is answered in his statement of his dilemma is how extreme his position appears to be.I read about the genocide against Native Americans and the enslavement of Africans, and learned how, even in current times, the U.S. armed and supported oppressive dictatorships from Southeast Asia to Latin America to the Middle East. The knowledge gave me headaches that crying didn't relieve, but I kept reading. And because school, church and government had covered over all the blood and injustice with pretty patriotic myths about a Good America blessed by an ethnocentric god, my youthful disappointment and anger blazed even hotter. Key words: "youthful disappointment". How difficult it is to have your unsupported fantasies dashed. But note the loaded words and the contextless narrative he's put together to support his disappointment.
Not a word about where we were and what we've overcome as a nation and a people. Or how we've attempted to right wrongs. Nothing about the fact that even with the problems noted we worked earnestly to overcome them and have enjoyed a measure of success. No historical context which points out that in the case of race and gender discrimination, this nation has worked, fought and bled to change them to better reflect our ideals. None of that. Instead his anger is stoked by other myths he's made absolutely no effort to dispel, because they fit his narrative so well.
If I had to, and it's purely a guess, I'd say that Joe Cole has never once set foot outside the country in which he seems so badly disappointed. Once when I was a graduate student in philosophy at Duke, someone on my Durham summer league softball team inquired what I was doing for Independence Day.
"Asking forgiveness for a nation built on slavery, genocide, and war," I replied.
Our 40-something pitcher, who worked for the phone company and had taken me fishing a few times, glared at me. "If you hate America so much, why don't you just leave?"
"Because I want to watch this system burn." Cole says he's mellowed over the years and no longer wants to see the system burn. In fact, he even stood up during the singing of "God Bless America", while with his family at the ballgame. He claims that over the years and through his travels across and around this country, he's been awed by its beauty and majesty ... exactly those things you sing about in "God Bless America." But, he claims, he's still not turning 'patriotic":I love the land and people and potential of America. But rather than worship this nation, I'm asking it to live up to its ideals and even embrace some new ones. The irony, of course, is that's precisely what a patriot would say. Otherwise, they just wouldn't care. But in Cole's case, admitting that would mean admitting his fantasy was nonsense. In his case, and that of many like him, the problem isn't so much the patriotism of others, but instead, their unfounded and unrealistic expectations of this country. It drives them to ignore the good, focus on the bad and pretend it is they who have been personally let down by something that never existed anywhere but in their mind.
I wonder if Cole had frozen pizza and saw "Sicko" on the 4th?
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Category: Culture |
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| Hate crime laws have no business in a just legal system |
| Posted by: McQ |
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From the Chicago Tribune:The Tribune carried an interesting story recently about a particularly heinous double murder in Knoxville, Tenn. The two young victims, who were kidnapped, raped and killed, were white. The three men and a woman who stand charged with the crime are black.
The story posed some difficult questions about how this country deals with crimes that have a racial overtone — when someone of one race kills someone of another race. And it asked the question: What is a hate crime?
The definitions in federal law and various state laws differ, but generally a hate crime is considered to be any crime that is motivated by bias based on race, religion or other factors. Hate crime laws permit tougher punishment based on the motivation and broader social impact of the offense.
So did the Knoxville case qualify? "There is absolutely no proof of a hate crime," said John Gill, a special counsel to the Knox County prosecutor. "It was a terrible crime, a horrendous crime, but race was not a motive."
Yet Mary Newsom, the mother of one of the victims, told a Tribune reporter: "If this wasn't a hate crime, then I don't know how you would define a hate crime." And that is precisely the problem with hate crime legislation. What qualifies and why? What proof is required? Who gets to decide? How does one gather proof about "motivation" and "broader social impact"?
And why would you?
The crime is kidnapping, rape and murder. Clear-cut. No ifs ands or buts. While it may or may not have been motivated by some other factor, the fact remains that kidnapping, rape and murder are already crimes and proving them is much, much easier than attempting to determine 'motivation' and assessing whether or not the crimes have a 'broader social impact'.
Unfortunately, after this start, the Trib wanders away from the point. In fact, its argument is that hate crime legislation is acceptable at state level where a number of them already exist, and that's where such determinations should be left. It is actually editorializing against a federal bill now pending in Congress. But you can see, in this paragraph, the fact that the editors too, have severe reservations about not only the arbitrariness of such legislation at any level, but its relevance: Hate crime laws may be justified when the crime has a broad societal impact. A brick through the window of the first black family on a block is more than a prank. But hate crime laws raise concerns when they punish criminals differently not because of what they do, but because of what they think. In the view of Northwestern University law professor Martin Redish, it's the equivalent of tacking on extra punishment if a crime is meant to promote the cause of communism. Beat a man because he looks rich, or because he's got a Republican bumper sticker on his car, and there's no hate crime. Beat him because you think he's Jewish, or Cuban, or (under this bill) gay, and there is. No, hate crime laws can't be justified for any of those reasons, because unlike the violations of other laws, they're essentially requiring we delve into the subconscious of the criminal and determine "without a reasonable doubt" that the crime was motivated by certain external factors we deem to fall in the category of "hate". That's an impossible task. We may get all of the considered and learned opinions in the world, but none of them will meet the standard which a jury is required to use to judge the defendant before rendering a verdict.
The Trib ends with: Violence ought to be punished regardless of the motive. Hate crimes are not acceptable — but neither is any other crime. A just legal system deals with crimes it can prove and prove convincingly with hard evidence and stays out of the realm of opinion, arbitrariness and attempts to police thought. It is not a system for 'social justice'. It is a system for criminal justice. Hate crime laws attempt to introduce social justice into the criminal system and get us into areas in which we shouldn't be. That's why they should be opposed at all levels.
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Category: Legal Affairs |
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| Irony Alert |
| Posted by: McQ |
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Another "for me but not for thee" legislator:A state lawmaker who opposed a bill giving Texans stronger right to defend themselves with deadly force pulled a gun and shot a man he says was trying to steal copper wiring from a construction site, police said Monday.
Rep. Borris Miles told police he was fixing a leak on the second floor of the Houston house he's building Sunday night when he heard a noise downstairs and saw two men trying to steal the copper. After Miles confronted the pair, one of the men threw a pocketknife at him, Houston Police spokesman Victor Senties.
Miles, a former law enforcement officer, shot the man in the left leg, police said. The wounded suspect was being treated at a Houston hospital. Police were trying to identify the other suspect.
Charges of aggravated robbery are pending against the wounded suspect, Senties said.
Police said Miles, who is in his freshman term, is licensed to carry a concealed weapon. No charges have been filed against Miles, Senties said. I don't need permission or legislation to exercise my right to self-defense up to and including the use of deadly force. So don't expect me to concern myself with it. I'll take my chances with a jury if it comes down to that. But this guy is typical of those who think they should have the right to decide what you can or can't do in that regard. And hopefully, that night, Miles had an epiphaney and realized that he has no right to impose his arbitrary limits on what you can and can't do in situations he can't even imagine or anticipate.
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Category: Guns and Gun Rights |
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| I wonder about this myself |
| Posted by: McQ |
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Kevin Drum asks a question:FILIBUSTERS....I wonder how many Americans understand that you can't pass legislation in America with 50% of the votes in Congress? How many of them understand that, outside of budget resolutions, you need 60 votes in the Senate? That a filibuster isn't a matter of Jimmy Stewart talking himself ragged for hours on end, but of merely declaring an intention to filibuster? And that this is done for all but the most routine matters? With the result that the 60-vote minimum is no longer reserved for occasional high-profile issues, but has been institutionalized for virtually all legislation of any consequence?
I figure maybe 2%. What's your guess? I wonder about this myself.
The real center of power is and has been in the Senate for both the 109th and 100th Congress. And that center of power has resided in the Senate Minority leader's office, not the Majority Leader's office.
Additionally, this isn't a partisan thing. They are the rules of the Senate. That's how business is now done in the Senate. So its a bit misleading to call the requirement a 'filibuster' as that alludes to a purposeful blocking of legislation. A 60 vote majority is required to pass anything out of the Senate now, and has been for a while.
Obviously that is a boon for the minority party in this closely divided Senate. It requires the majority party to deal with them vs. being able to ignore them as is done fairly routinely in the House. Democrats must lure a dozen or so Republicans to their side to pass anything, which means ramming something through on a majority vote isn't going to happen.
To me that's a good thing. If, however, either party ever manages 60 seats in that august body, that all changes.
Another little something to keep in mind as the elections approach next year.
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Category: Congress |
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Monday, July 09, 2007
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| Silver linings involving al Qaeda |
| Posted by: McQ |
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Bet you never thought to see a title like that, but every now and then such things occur. Al Qaeda, not sufficiently pleased to be at war with everyone in Iraq is now threatening to go to war with Iran:Abu Omar al-Baghdadi, who leads the group Islamic State in Iraq , said his Sunni fighters have been preparing for four years to wage a battle against Shiite-dominated Iran.
"We are giving the Persians, and especially the rulers of Iran, a two-month period to end all kinds of support for the Iraqi Shiite government and to stop direct and indirect intervention ... otherwise a severe war is waiting for you," he said in the 50-minute audiotape released Sunday. The tape, which could not be independently verified, was posted on a Web site commonly used by insurgent groups. There's even a funny part to this:Iraq's Shiite-led government is backed by the U.S. but closely allied to Iran. The United States accuses Iran of arming and financing Shiite militias in Iraq - charges Tehran denies. So for months we've been pretending like the mullahs who run Iran really don't know about what is going on. Apparently al Qaeda Iraq has no such qualms about calling creatures who walk like a duck and quack like a duck, ducks.
The warning has been issued:In the recording, al-Baghdadi also gave Sunnis and Arab countries doing business in Iran or with Iranians a two-month deadline to cease their ties.
"We advise and warn every Sunni businessman inside Iran or in Arab countries especially in the Gulf not to take partnership with any Shiite Iranian businessman - this is part of the two-month period," he said. September 9th?
Let's see how this works out.
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Category: Terrorism |
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| Someone you should know: Purtee, Hill and Crist |
| Posted by: McQ |
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| This Someone You Should Know is about three attack helicopter pilots. Give it a listen (about 7 minutes), I think you'll enjoy it.
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Category: Podcasting |
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| Oh, man .... |
| Posted by: McQ |
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Freshman Congressman Keith Ellison, D-MN:On comparing Sept. 11 to the burning of the Reichstag building in Nazi Germany: "It's almost like the Reichstag fire, kind of reminds me of that. After the Reichstag was burned, they blamed the Communists for it and it put the leader of that country [Hitler] in a position where he could basically have authority to do whatever he wanted. The fact is that I'm not saying [Sept. 11] was a [U.S.] plan, or anything like that because, you know, that's how they put you in the nut-ball box — dismiss you." That is how they put you in the nut-ball box? Heh, yeah, comparing 9/11 to the Reichstag fire would never do that, Mr. Ellison.
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Category: Politics |
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| Is this the type of government you want to support? |
| Posted by: McQ |
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Kathleen Parker reminds us:Yet even now, federal law enforcement agents raid the homes of terminally ill patients who use marijuana for relief from suffering in states where medical marijuana use is permitted. These federal raids have become an issue in the 2008 presidential race as candidates have been asked to take a position. A summary is available on the Marijuana Policy Project Web site (mpp.org). Now like Parker, my drug of choice is completely different. Where she is enamored with what she calls a "heavenly elixir made from crushed grapes", I prefer mine contain barley, hops and, well you know. I have no dog in the "legalize marijuana" hunt, except that well known libertarian dog, "none of anyone's business what you do with your own body", which is a pretty long name for a dog so we just call her Mary Jane.
To the point:Beyond the medical issue is the practical question of criminalizing otherwise good citizens for consuming a nontoxic substance — described by the British medical journal Lancet as less harmful to health than alcohol or tobacco — at great economic and social cost. Each year, more than 700,000 people are arrested for marijuana-related offenses at a cost of more than $7 billion, according to the Marijuana Policy Project. That's simply bad policy when you're going after non-violent "criminals" whose only offense is to violate an arbitrary decision to make one substance legal and another illegal. And that's all this amounts too.
Here's the solution: If marijuana were legalized, regulated and taxed at the rates applied to alcohol and tobacco, revenues would reach about $6.2 billion annually, according to an open letter signed by 500 economists who urged President Bush and other public officials to debate marijuana prohibition. Among those economists were three Nobel Prize winners, including the late Milton Friedman of Stanford's Hoover Institution.
Friedman and others were acting in response to a 2005 report on the budgetary implications of marijuana prohibition by Jeffrey Miron, visiting professor of economics at Harvard. By Miron's estimate, regulating marijuana would save about $7.7 billion annually in government prohibition enforcement — $2.4 billion at the federal level and $5.3 billion at the state and local levels. Now I don't appreciate the fact that the fed would reap a windfall tax bonanza on MJ (will Congress hold hearings on their tax gouging?), but what I do care about is ending this stupidity we call the drug war, even if we have to give up taxes to government. And I'm all for doing it incrementally starting with marijuana.
Treat it like alcohol for heaven sake. Use the taxes for education and treatment. Minors are still forbidden from using it and will be arrested, and those who provide it to minors will suffer the same consequences - just like alcohol. And yes, it can be grown at home and minors can have access. But heck, they have access to a liquor cabinet now whether you want to admit it or not. We still punish parents and adults who allow them access. Marijuana would be no different.
The image of jack-booted thugs hauling away terminally ill people who only want to use marijuana to stimulate their appetite and perhaps ease a little pain is not one I want for my government. It is time to give serious attention to righting this wrong and ending this benighted policy of prohibition, a policy we reversed once before because we realized that isn't the function of government. I'm not sure why that lesson was so quickly forgotten.
Oh, and in case you were wondering:All eight Democratic candidates have taken positive positions on medical marijuana. Six candidates have publicly promised to end the federal raids, including Sen. Joe Biden (D-DE), Sen. Chris Dodd (D-CT), Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-OH), John Edwards (D-NC), Mike Gravel (D-AK), and Gov. Bill Richardson (D-NM), who in April signed legislation making New Mexico the 12th state to protect residents who use medical marijuana. Senators Barack Obama (D-IL) and Hillary Clinton (D-NY) have yet to clearly state their support for ending the raids, but along with Sen. Dodd, they voted in opposition to federal legislation in committee that would have increased the penalties for growing and distributing medical marijuana in states that have approved its use.
Many of the Republican candidates have also taken compassionate positions on medical marijuana, including former secretary of Heath and Human Services Tommy Thompson, who recently stated on two separate occasions that he would end the raids on patients. Last year, Reps. Tom Tancredo (R-CO) and Ron Paul (R-TX) voted with Kucinich in support of the Hinchey-Rohrabacher amendment, which would have cut off funding for federal raids on states with medical marijuana programs.
McCain and former Virginia Gov. Jim Gilmore have both taken positions protecting states' rights, with McCain saying he would, "let states decide" the medical marijuana issue.
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Neither former Gov. Mitt Romney of Massachusetts nor former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani have taken a clear position one way or another. Former Gov. Mike Huckabee (R-AR), Sen. Sam Brownback (R-KS), and Rep. Duncan Hunter (R-CA) have all stated that they would continue having cancer and AIDS patients arrested for their use of medical marijuana. Just a little FYI. Wonder what Fred's position on this is?
(HT: MacGhillielaidir)
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Category: Freedom and Liberty |
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| The myth of the U.S.’s world popularity decline |
| Posted by: McQ |
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Tigerhawk takes a very interesting look at a dominant leftist myth that America has taken an horrible hit to its reputation and moral standing exclusively since George Bush has been in office (anyone with some understanding of history know that to be nonsense on a stick to begin with, but I digress).
This is a favorite theme of Glenn Greenwald, et. al. Tigerhawk takes an in-depth look at the latest Pew Global Attitudes Project which Greenwald uses to support his thesis. This will probably come as no surprise to most, but he finds Greenwald's conclusions are overstated and wrong:Yes, the Bush administration was too damned arrogant in its relations with other countries during its first term especially and has all along simply sucked at waging the "information war". And, yes, various of its actions and omissions were destined to damage the reputation of the United States, especially among Muslims. It is not, however, at all obvious that this decline in popularity is of the great geopolitical significance that Glenn Greenwald (and, to be sure, many others on the left and in the permanent "foreign policy establishment") believes that it is. It did not prevent the election of the most overtly pro-American president France has ever produced, for example. More importantly, dislike of the United States has not prevented steep declines in the global public's regard for the likes of Vladimir Putin, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Hugo Chavez, or Osama bin Laden. American transnational progressives may prefer to claim they are Canadian at their confabs, but are we actually finding it harder to recruit enemies of our enemies? There is much less evidence of that.
Finally, Greenwald's argument that the errors of the Bush administration are the "one" reason for the decline in standing of the United States strikes me as a huge stretch and in any case not supported by the Pew Study. As the Pew Study makes clear, there are at least two other factors at work — the declining popularity of all great powers and an increasing difference of opinion between the American public and much of the rest of the world about which threats are the most pressing. That difference of opinion may one day narrow — Al Gore is working his tail off to see that it does — but until then not even a Democratic president will be able to cater to the world's preferences over those of his own electorate. As Tigerhawk points out, the myth is based in the idea that only the US's reputation and standing have declined in these past years, while, in fact, the Pew study doesn't support that assertion at all. That, of course, would argue that perhaps the decline has little to do with Bush or his policies. However, presented in splendid isolation without the context of the entire study, such a picture can and has been painted. And that naturally leads to part two: the false expectations Greenwald and his ilk are building among US voters. Their implication - that the election of a Democratic president will fix everything concerning our reputation and standing in the world - is a false one. Per Tigerhawk, and I think he supports his point, that doesn't seem founded in reality either.
Go read the whole thing ... pretty interesting analysis.
(HT: Keith_Indy)
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Category: Foreign Affairs |
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| For the English teachers out there ... |
| Posted by: McQ |
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Here's a perfect example for an important lesson.
Harry is getting along in years and finds that he is unable to perform sexually. He finally goes to his doctor, who tries a few things but nothing seems to work. So the doctor refers him to an American Indian medicine man.
The medicine man says, "I can cure this." That said, he throws a white powder in a flame, and there is a flash with billowing blue smoke.
Then he says, "This is powerful medicine. You can only use it once a year. All you have to do is say '123' and it shall rise for as long as you wish!"
The guy then asks, "What happens when it's over, and I don't want to continue?" The medicine man replies: "All you or your partner has to say is 1234, and it will go down. But be warned — it will not work again for another year!"
Harry rushes home, eager to try out his new powers and prowess. That night he is ready to surprise Joyce. He s howers , shaves, and puts on his most exotic shaving lotion. He gets into bed, and lying next to her says, "123."
He suddenly becomes more aroused than anytime in his life ... just as the medicine man had promised. Joyce, who had been facing away, turns over and asks, "What did you say 123 for?"
And that, my friends, is why you shouldn't end a sentence with a preposition...
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Category: Humor |
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| Hypocrisy and skepticism dampen Live Earth numbers |
| Posted by: McQ |
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Live Earth appears to have been a ratings flop:Live Earth has been branded a foul-mouthed flop.
Organisers of the global music concert - punctuated by swearing from presenters and performers - had predicted massive viewing figures.
But BBC's live afternoon television coverage attracted an average British audience of just 900,000.
In the evening, when coverage switched from BBC2 to BBC1, the figure rose to just 2.7million.
And the peak audience, which came when Madonna sang at Wembley, was a dismal 4.5million. Three times as many viewers saw the Princess Diana tribute on the same channel six days before.
Two years ago, Live 8 drew a peak television audience of 9.6million while Live Aid notched 10million in 1985. It is simply hard to take seriously a bunch of entertainers who leave carbon footprints the size of small towns when they gather to lecture us about our pollution output. As Rasmussen points out:Skepticism about the participants may have been a factor in creating this low level of interest. Most Americans (52%) believe the performers take part in such events because it is good for their image. Only 24% say the celebrities really believe in the cause while another 24% are not sure. One rock star who apparently shared that view is Matt Bellamy of the band Muse. Earlier in the week, he jokingly referred to Live Earth as "private jets for climate change."
Only 34% believe that events like Live Earth actually help the cause they are intended to serve. Forty-one percent (41%) disagree. Those figures include 10% who believe the events are Very Helpful and 20% who say they are Not at All Helfpul. Adding to the skepticism, an earlier survey found that just 24% of Americans consider Al Gore an expert on Global Warming. And, as if desperate to find a way to increase that skepticism:Officials at Live Earth Johannesburg have blamed the effects of climate change for poor audience attendance at Saturday's (07Jul07) South African event. Organiser John Langford believes extremely cold weather in the region - it snowed last week (ends06Jul07) for the first time in a quarter of a century - kept people away from the concert, which starred Joss Stone, UB40, Angelique Kidjo and Baaba Maal. Well, there you go. Why didn't they all just stay home and plant a tree?
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Category: Environment |
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| The Road to a Larger War |
| Posted by: McQ |
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In one of the most heartless, contemptible and short-sighted editorials written about any subject, a New York Times editorial yesterday, entitled "The Road Home", called for an immediate pull out of all American troops in Iraq.
Yes, agreed, I'm using harsh language in my description, but I think in this particular case, it is well warranted. Talking about how extracting American troops from Iraq should be the highest priority of Congress when it returns, the editorial follows with:That conversation must be candid and focused. Americans must be clear that Iraq, and the region around it, could be even bloodier and more chaotic after Americans leave. There could be reprisals against those who worked with American forces, further ethnic cleansing, even genocide. Potentially destabilizing refugee flows could hit Jordan and Syria. Iran and Turkey could be tempted to make power grabs. Perhaps most important, the invasion has created a new stronghold from which terrorist activity could proliferate.
The administration, the Democratic-controlled Congress, the United Nations and America's allies must try to mitigate those outcomes - and they may fail. But Americans must be equally honest about the fact that keeping troops in Iraq will only make things worse. The Times outlines the probable scenario which will develop if we were to leave Iraq now. Knowing that, how in the world can the Times outline that horror and then with a straight face claim that if we keep our troops in Iraq doing so "will only make things worse?"
Worse than what? Reprisals, genocide, a stronghold for the proliferation of terrorism, ethnic cleansing and destabilizing refugee flows and enemy nations making "power grabs"?
A sentence following the first paragraph should have been added saying, "But we don't care".
We don't care if our leaving destabilizes the rest of the region. We don't care if it may provide a stronghold for the proliferation of terrorism. We don't care if Iran makes a power grab. We don't care if there is genocide. We don't care if there are reprisals. And we certainly don't care if the violence in Iraq spreads to other areas in a region critical to our national security.
We just don't care.
Nope, we must bring the troops home ... that's all that matters. At least for now. At least until it is much worse and we can't ignore the problem any more and we have to send many more of them back into a much wider, volatile and lethal situation.
It is one thing to mistakenly call for such action when you don't understand or miscalculate the probable consequences. Call it ignorance or naivete. But when you are fully aware of the most likely outcome for millions of people in another part of the world, as well as the effect on your nation's security and you blow it off in such a callus and cavalier fashion as has the NYT, then you deserve nothing but contempt in return.
And that is exactly what I feel towards the editorial board of the New York Times today.
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Category: Iraq |
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Sunday, July 08, 2007
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| A Quick Note ... (UPDATE) |
| Posted by: McQ |
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I'll be on WRKO am680 at 9PM doing the Someone You Should Know Segment and then at 9:20 will participate in an interview with Michael Yon from Iraq. Should be a very interesting conversation. You can listen live here.
UPDATE: Interview, which was pretty wide ranging and very ineresting can be found at Pundit Reveiw.
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Category: Podcasting |
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| Podcast for 08 Jul 07 |
| Posted by: Dale Franks |
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| In this podcast, Bruce McQuain and Dale Franks talk about the New York Times editorial calling for an immediate withdrawal from Iraq, and deal with some...odd phone calls.  For those of you who prefer it, the direct link to the podcast is here.
As a reminder, if you are an iTunes user, don't forget to subscribe to the QandO podcast, Observations, through iTunes. For those of you who don't have iTunes, you can subscribe at Podcast Alley. And, of course, for you newsreader subscriber types, our podcast RSS Feed is here.
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Category: Podcasting |
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| See Cindy run. Run, Cindy, run. |
| Posted by: Bryan Pick |
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"I am going to take whatever I have left, and go home. I am going to go home and be a mother to my surviving children, and try to regain some of what I have lost." — Cindy Sheehan, May 28, 2007 She tired of that quickly: Six weeks after announcing her departure from the peace movement, Cindy Sheehan said Sunday that she plans to run against House Speaker Nancy Pelosi unless she introduces articles of impeachment against President Bush in the next two weeks. When she was considering running against Senator Dianne Feinstein last year, she didn't think she had a chance, but Sheehan says she would give Pelosi "a run for her money." The 8th District has given Pelosi about 80% of the vote in the last few elections, so I doubt the Speaker's shaking in her pumps, but Cindy might have convinced herself that thorough dissatisfaction with the Congressional Democrats (below 30% job approval for the last month) could translate into a victory in the Democratic People's Republic of San Francisco.
Go for it, Cindy. For those thirty-something days, the anti-war movement just wasn't the same.
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Category: Politics |
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| BlogTalk Radio - 8PM (EST) Sunday Night |
| Posted by: McQ |
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 Tonight. 8pm EST.
Call in number: (718) 664-9614
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Category: Podcasting |
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| I guess Sprint has all the business it needs |
| Posted by: McQ |
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Jon touched on customer service yesterday. From the realm of customer unservice, this from a soldier who happens to use Sprint found on a Sprint User's forum:I have been a Sprint customer for over 5 years now. Just shortly after my unit returned from Iraq, we recieved notification that we would be redeployed to West Point to train cadets over the summer. With almost 1/3 of the unit being Sprint customers, almost 200 soldiers, one of the first things we did was get online and consult Sprints coverage map to ensure that we would have service once we arrived. We where relieved to see that we would in fact have service and did not take any preventive measures in making sure that we would be able to maintain a reliable means of communication to our families back home. The area we would be staying in was actually catagorized as having "best" coverage.
After we arived however, we where disgruntled to find that the service was not "best", there was no service at all. A few of us that used Sprints free roaming feature informed others of this service Sprint offered, and many called and enrolled. Even with roaming, calls are sketchy at best, and very unreliable, but we where satisfied to at least be able to call home for a few minutes an evening and let our families know that we where well.
And now comes the kicker. Many of us Sprint customers recieved a letter at the begining of this month declaring that our Sprint account will be cancelled on July 30th due to the amount of roaming we are doing. The letter stated that they believe that another carrier will be able to serve us better and that we are recieving the boot. Keep in mind, we are not here permanently, or by choice. This is a two month obligation that we had to fulfil, and because of it, Sprint is telling us good bye. We will be returning to our home station, where we have clear Sprint service, FIFTEEN days after the cancellation of our accounts. I personally know at least 10 soldiers that called and explained this situation to Sprint and was told everything was fine. Of course there is always someone to defend actions such as Sprint's on strictly "it is written" grounds:I don't know what you expect. The fine print says not to use more than 50% roaming, and you used 100%. I can see being upset about not having coverage, when it was advertised as such, but sprint has the right to enforce their terms and conditions. The lack of coverage might even have something to do with the military not allowing sprint repeaters on the base, so if you are in the middle, you are far away from a repeater, if thats the case. Now, this person is exactly right ... Sprint does indeed have every right to enforce it's TOS. But there are times when being "exactly right" and having every right don't add up to doing something smart, businesswise. And tossing 200 soldier's accounts because they are on temporary duty hits me as not being particularly bright in that department.
Soldiers aren't the only one's being tossed. Apparently if you call their customer service center too often, well, they don't want you anymore (redacted letter here).
As Larry Dignan on ZDNet says:Here's what Sprint's customer tossing says to me:
* Call centers are so maxed out that it can't deal with a few stray high maintenance customers. Can the network be in much better shape? * Sprint is simply idiotic about public relations. * The customer isn't always right.
What's truly comical is that Sprint is trying to court higher-margin customers. You know the ones that keep up with the news and are now stunned at Sprint's customer treatment. Yes Bunky, that does mean that politicians aren't the only ones who are incompetent and inept. Any bet that Sprint CEO Gary Forsee will soon be seeking public office as an appropriate next step in his career.
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Category: Technology |
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| Impeachment: Political calculation based on polling |
| Posted by: McQ |
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From Think Progress:This morning on ABC's This Week, House Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers (D-MI) highlighted the new American Research Group poll showing that nearly half of Americans want the House of Representatives to begin impeachment proceedings against President Bush, and 54 percent favor impeachment hearings for Vice President Cheney.
ABC's George Stephanopoulos asked Conyers today about new reports that the White House will refuse new congressional requests for documents about the U.S. Attorney firings.
Conyers decried the administration's stonewalling, adding, "We're hoping that as the cries for the removal of both Cheney and Bush now reach 46 percent and 58 percent [sic - 54 percent], respectively, for impeachment that we could begin to become a little bit more cooperative, if not amicable, in trying to get to the truth of these matters." Regardless of claims to the contrary, Washington politicians are risk averse and, with the advent of polling, have used them as bellwethers for making decisions on how to act. You just don't usually here that little truth advertised as with Rep Conyers and impeachment.
And, in this case, it is actually attractive if you can get a Bush/Cheney two-fer. Not that I actually think this is going anywhere, but it certainly is interesting to watch impeachment crawl back on the table.
As to the poll, question one about impeachment was:Do you favor or oppose the US House of Representatives beginning impeachment proceedings against President George W. Bush? Keep in mind that 38% of those polled identified themselves as Democrats while only 29% identified themselves as Republicans. As it turns out, only 45% approve while 46% disapprove. Otoh, the VP doesn't do as well:Do you favor or oppose the US House of Representatives beginning impeachment proceedings against Vice President Dick Cheney? Results: A 54% for, 40% against.
Now, for those like Conyers, that's blood in the water and we all know how sharks react to that. But think about it - they get serious about impeaching Cheney and what does he do? He cites his health, resigns and Bush appoints a new VP (possibly among the present presidential candidates) and the Dems end up with Cheney gone and, worst case for them, someone running for president with much more political visibility (and the ability to claim some executive experience if necessary).
The bottom line, no matter what the poll numbers say, it's probably not a good idea to go after the VP, given the law of unintended consequences and the way it seems to end up biting political calculations such as this right in the rear end. But the leftosphere sure is having fun fantasizing about it.
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Category: Politics |
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| Libertarian? |
| Posted by: Dale Franks |
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Michael Gerson has an interesting take on libertarianism, and one that isn't unusual among traditional Republican conservatives. Writing in the Washington Post, he takes a look at the online virtual world game, Second Life.
He doesn't like Second Life life much, and apparently not libertarianism, either. In fact, he explains that Second Life shows how awful a libertarian world would be.It is, in fact, a large-scale experiment in libertarianism. Its residents can do and be anything they wish. There are no binding forms of community, no responsibilities that aren't freely chosen and no lasting consequences of human actions. In Second Life, there is no human nature at all, just human choices.
And what do people choose? Well, there is some good live music, philanthropic fundraising, even a few virtual churches and synagogues. But the main result is the breakdown of inhibition. Second Life, as you'd expect, is highly sexualized in ways that have little to do with respect or romance. There are frequent outbreaks of terrorism, committed by online anarchists who interrupt events, assassinate speakers (who quickly reboot from the dead) and vandalize buildings. There are strip malls everywhere, pushing a relentless consumerism. And there seems to be an inordinate number of vampires, generally not a sign of community health.
Libertarians hold to a theory of "spontaneous order" — that society should be the product of uncoordinated human choices instead of human design. Well, Second Life has plenty of spontaneity, and not much genuine order. This experiment suggests that a world that is only a market is not a utopia. It more closely resembles a seedy, derelict carnival — the triumph of amusement and distraction over meaning and purpose. The thing is, he invalidates his whole argument in the first quoted paragraph. In the real world, there are long-term consequences to your actions. In the real world there is human nature, not just human choices. The real world doesn't protect you from the results of bad decisions. You can't reset your character, or create a new account.
Indeed, second life is a fantasy. As such, it's meant to be a place to explore odd things; things you'd never do in real life because...well...bad things might happen.
This seems like a fairly basic consideration, yet it's one he ignores.
It seems to me that there's a certain kind of Republican that fears and/or despises libertarianism. I don't know why it is, other than an example of how some people are uncomfortable with the idea of Liberty. It's all so much easier when you can apply some external controls.
If you're the one doing the application, that is.
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Category: Philosophy |
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Saturday, July 07, 2007
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| Ready for a Trophy First Lady? |
| Posted by: McQ |
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Apparently it is now fashionable to hide cheezy hit pieces, cloaked as political analysis, in the "fashion and style" section of the New York Times:Now, with the possible candidacy of Fred D. Thompson, the grandfatherly actor and former Republican senator from Tennessee, whose second wife is almost a quarter-century his junior, comes a less palatable inquiry that is spurring debate in Internet chat rooms, on cable television and on talk radio: Is America ready for a president with a trophy wife? Probably as ready as it is to put a woman with a known philanderer for a husband in the White House ... again.
Heh ... I swear, why anyone puts themselves through these sorts of anal examinations to run for an office I wouldn't wish on my worst enemy makes me wonder at times.
And what passes for "fashion and style" news these days also falls in that category. Can the NYT set the bar any lower?
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Category: Elections |
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| Computer Customer Support |
| Posted by: Jon Henke |
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I can identify with Megan McArdle's frustration in this post about Sony VAIO customer service. I'm currently waiting on a latop - less than one year old, still under warranty - to be repaired by Acer. So far, it's been relatively painless, but I'll withhold applause until I get back a working laptop in the promised time. Experience suggests one should never underestimate the ability of computer and technology companies to mishandle a customer. Microsoft products and computer manufacturers manage to be bad, or worse, in both areas. I can tolerate electronics that break if the customer service and support is good. If products are very reliable, I can tolerate bad customer service. Unfortunately, many Microsoft products and computer manufacturers manage to be bad, or worse, in both areas.
The next time I'm in the market for a laptop, I'll probably get an Apple. I'm sure they're far from perfect, but that still makes them far better than their competitors.
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Category: Technology |
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