Quotes

  • The cure for boredom is curiosity. There is no cure for curiosity. — Dorothy Parker

Books I Own

Current Affairs

05/01/2008

Short-Sighted Leadership?

"It is great to see that we finally have some national unity on energy policy. Unfortunately, the unifying idea is so ridiculous, so unworthy of the people aspiring to lead our nation, it takes your breath away. Hillary Clinton has decided to line up with John McCain in pushing to suspend the federal excise tax on gasoline, 18.4 cents a gallon, for this summer’s travel season. This is not an energy policy. This is money laundering: we borrow money from China and ship it to Saudi Arabia and take a little cut for ourselves as it goes through our gas tanks. What a way to build our country. . .
But here’s what’s scary: our problem is so much worse than you think. We have no energy strategy. If you are going to use tax policy to shape energy strategy then you want to raise taxes on the things you want to discourage — gasoline consumption and gas-guzzling cars — and you want to lower taxes on the things you want to encourage — new, renewable energy technologies. We are doing just the opposite."

~ Thomas Friedman, New York Times

10/02/2007

Jena, O. J. and the Jailing of Black America

"Jesse Jackson, Al Sharpton and other leaders of the Jena demonstration who view events there, and the racial horror of our prisons, as solely the result of white racism are living not just in the past but in a state of denial. Even after removing racial bias in our judicial and prison system — as we should and must do — disproportionate numbers of young black men will continue to be incarcerated.

Until we view this social calamity in its entirety — by also acknowledging the central role of unstable relations among the sexes and within poor families, by placing a far higher priority on moral and social reform within troubled black communities, and by greatly expanding social services for infants and children — it will persist." [NY Times]

07/26/2006

Doonesbury 7/26/06

Text of today's Doonesbury strip:

[Scene: The White House]
Sir, our only choice to stem the violence is through negotiation, so you need to know the players.  Hamas is aligned with Hezbollah, which is also supported by the Shi'ite militias in Iraq, as well as the Assad and Ahmadinejad regimes. . .
Hell, that's much too confusing!
Sorry, Sir, but. . .
Why can't I just keep calling 'em all terrorists?
Because we don't negotiate with terrorists.

07/21/2006

Who supports cease fire?

Jason Kottke points to the front page of The Independent today as a great use of a graphic to convey information.  It shows the flags of all the countries that support an immediate cease fire in Lebanon and the flags of those that do not.  [Independent infographic (kottke.org)]  Guess which side -- yes or no -- has the most flags?

05/04/2006

Judge Sends Moussaoui to Prison for Life

"U.S. Judge Leonie Brinkema sent Zacarias Moussaoui to prison for life Thursday. . . for his role in the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. . . [A] jury rejected the government's case to have Moussaoui executed, deciding instead to sent him to prison for life without a chance of parole. Not all jurors were convinced that Moussaoui, who was in jail on immigration charges Sept. 11, had a significant part in the attacks . . . Brinkema firmly refused to be interrupted by the 37-year-old defendant as she disputed his claim that his life sentence meant America had lost and he had won. "Mr. Moussaoui. . . [y]ou will spend the rest of your life in a supermax prison. It's absolutely clear who won." And she said it was proper he will be kept away from outsiders, unable to speak publicly again. "Mr. Moussaoui, you came here to be a martyr in a great big bang of glory," she said, "but to paraphrase the poet T.S. Eliot, instead you will die with a whimper." At that point, Moussaoui tried again to interrupt her, but she raised her voice and spoke over him. "You will never get a chance to speak again and that's an appropriate ending." Brinkema sentenced Moussaoui to six life terms without the chance of parole." [AP/Yahoo!]

02/24/2006

Port Security Humbug

"You know there's something suspicious going on when multiple members of Congress -- House, Senate, Democrat, Republican, future presidential candidates of all stripes -- spontaneously unite around an issue that none of them had known existed a week earlier. That appears to be what happened last weekend after politicians awoke to the fairly stale news that the London-based P&O navigation company, which has long managed the ports of New York, New Jersey, Baltimore, New Orleans, Miami and Philadelphia, had been taken over by Dubai Ports World, a company based in the United Arab Emirates. . . At stake -- in theory -- is the question of whether we should "outsource major port security to a foreign-based company". . . [T]he deal cannot "outsource major port security," because management companies that run ports do not control security. The U.S. Coast Guard controls the physical security of our ports. The U.S. Customs Service controls container security. That doesn't change, no matter who runs the business operations. . . None of the U.S. politicians huffing and puffing seem to be aware that this deal was long in the making, that it had been reported on extensively in the financial press, and that it went through normal security clearance procedures, including approval from a foreign investment committee that contains officials from the departments of Treasury, Commerce, State and Homeland Security, among other agencies. Even more disturbing is the apparent difficulty of members of Congress in distinguishing among Arab countries. We'd like to remind them, as they've apparently forgotten, that the United Arab Emirates is a U.S. ally that has cooperated extensively with U.S. security operations in the war on terrorism, that supplied troops to the U.S.-led coalition during the 1991 Persian Gulf War, and that sends humanitarian aid to Iraq. U.S. troops move freely in and out of Dubai on their way to Iraq now.  Finally, we're wondering if perhaps American politicians are having trouble understanding some of the most basic goals of contemporary U.S. foreign policy. A goal of "democracy promotion" in the Middle East, after all, is to encourage Arab countries to become economically and politically integrated with the rest of the world. What better way to do so than by encouraging Arab companies to invest in the United States? Clearly, Congress doesn't understand that basic principle, since its members prefer instead to spread prejudice and misinformation." [Washington Post Editorial; emphasis mine]

02/21/2006

Bush & Cheney

". . .[N]o superior in their right mind would continue to rely on a subordinate who has been as spectacularly wrong as has Mr. Cheney. Mr. Bush's continuing to depend upon him -- even after the indictment of Mr. Cheney's chief of staff for actions Mr. Cheney clearly sanctioned, and now even after he has become a national laughingstock for shooting Mr. Whittington -- raises serious questions about Mr. Bush's ability to function as President in his own right." [Fred Branfman: What Must Mr. Cheney Do for Mr. Bush to Disown Him -- Shoot Somebody? | The Huffington Post]

02/17/2006

Bob Herbert: 'It's time for Dick Cheney to step down'

"Respected New York Times columnist Bob Herbert called on the vice-president to resign in a column on Thursday.

He said the shooting imbroglio was the last step in a career sullied by scandals over the failure to find weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, leaks of classified information and a penchant for secrecy.

"It's time for Dick Cheney to step down for the sake of the country and for the sake of the Bush administration," Herbert wrote, citing "Cheney's controversial and even bizarre behavior as vice-president." [Mail & Guardian Online; note: I'd have linked directly to Herbert's column, but the NY Times restricts access to some content to paying subscribers]

12/06/2005

Should We Stay or Should We Go, Now

"I began to warm to the idea of writing short but pointed responses to these common criticisms of antiwar positions because, I realized, they are the bread and butter of daily Iraq discourse in our country. When the war comes up in the media or in casual conversation, these are the issues raised by those who think we have to "stay the course" -- and among those who oppose the war, these are the lurking, unspoken questions that haunt our discussions. So here are my best brief answers to these key issues in the crucial, ongoing debate over Iraq." [Salon.com; nonsubscribers can access article by viewing an ad first]

12/05/2005

Blurring the Lines Between News and Entertainment

It's a tradition for me to watch the Macy's Thanksgiving Day parade every year.  I usually watch it on NBC -- a habit from my childhood when that was the most reliable of the few channels we received.  During commercials, I flipped to CBS, which was also broadcasting the parade, but from a different point on the parade route.  I was confused when CBS was covering the story about the M&Ms balloon that accidentally caused injuries to two people and the NBC broadcast not only didn't mention it, but, later on in their broadcast, actually showed the balloon in question, which had supposedly been deflated and pulled from the parade.  The article which I quote from below sheds light on what happened.  (I didn't hear Couric mention that the footage was old. . . that would have cleared up some of my confusion.)

"The new president of NBC News sees no reason to change a policy that allows his anchors to front entertainment events like the recent Thanksgiving Day parade that saw Katie Couric and Matt Lauer miss an obvious news story. . . Even though news personalities were on the air, the parade coverage was produced by NBC's entertainment division. . . When the giant "M&M's Chocolate Candies" balloon was disabled following the accident, NBC inserted footage of the balloon taken a year ago. Couric didn't explain what had happened to the balloon but, to her credit, told viewers it was old footage." [Newsday]

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