Money for nothing

— Senate Advances Paid Family Leave Bill SACRAMENTO — Legislation that would make California the first state to promise disability pay for workers who take time off to care for an ill family member or to welcome a newborn into the world was passed Monday by the Senate. My friend Sen. Ray Haynes calls this … Continue reading “Money for nothing”

Senate Advances Paid Family Leave Bill

SACRAMENTO — Legislation that would make California the first state to promise disability pay for workers who take time off to care for an ill family member or to welcome a newborn into the world was passed Monday by the Senate.

My friend Sen. Ray Haynes calls this a “tax on jobs” and he’s not far from the truth. But it’s still not a bad idea, as long as it’s strictly monitored. The end result of this kind of thing, however, is making employers reluctant to hire women.

Federal hate crimes bill

— Expanded hate-crime bill faces key Senate hurdle / Legislation would cover gays, disabled Washington — Calling hate crimes against gays a form of “domestic terrorism,” gay rights supporters hope to clear a major hurdle in the Senate today in their effort to strengthen federal prosecution of violent crimes against gays and lesbians and the … Continue reading “Federal hate crimes bill”

Expanded hate-crime bill faces key Senate hurdle / Legislation would cover gays, disabled

Washington — Calling hate crimes against gays a form of “domestic terrorism,” gay rights supporters hope to clear a major hurdle in the Senate today in their effort to strengthen federal prosecution of violent crimes against gays and lesbians and the disabled.

Is this the most egregious exploitation of 9/11 yet? I think it may be. The two major problems: criminalizing thought and federalizing state jurisdiction over criminal law.

Top fifteen strawmen

— Eric S. Raymond demonstrates a finely nuanced political sensibility in this post ostensibly listing liberal and conservative values. About 15 of his twenty issues are strawmen, such as the claims that conservatives are creationists and liberals communists.So here are my Top Ten Reasons for not being a Libertarian: America isn’t France: we don’t do … Continue reading “Top fifteen strawmen”

— Eric S. Raymond demonstrates a finely nuanced political sensibility in this post ostensibly listing liberal and conservative values. About 15 of his twenty issues are strawmen, such as the claims that conservatives are creationists and liberals communists.

So here are my Top Ten Reasons for not being a Libertarian:

  1. America isn’t France: we don’t do runoffs.
  2. You can’t privatize everything: nuclear power, in particular, needs to be run by government or not at all.
  3. The Free Market doesn’t give a damn about the environment.
  4. The social safety net is a moral imperative, so we have to make it work as well as we can.
  5. Most often, the truths of politics lie in the middle and not at the extremes.
  6. The only force big enough to control big business is big government.
  7. Freedom has to be balanced against justice, or the strong will exploit the weak.
  8. Some truths are self-evident: two-parent families are the best means for raising children that will ever be devised.
  9. Harry Browne is a libertarian.
  10. Libertarians are juvenile.


No strawmen, only the facts. Now a much more interesting list would be the Top Ten Reasons Why I’m not a Moderate, since that’s the dominant political point of view in this country as in all developed nations. Reason number one: Moderates are wishy-washy and have no moral compass.

Blogtopia v. Blogistan

— The New York Times story on the fight between Blogistan and Blogtopia is up, at A Rift Among Bloggers This time it is happening to Weblogs. Five years ago a few programmers pioneered this form of hyperlinked online journal, posting their thoughts on technology matters and personal musings. Later they built Weblog publishing tools … Continue reading “Blogtopia v. Blogistan”

— The New York Times story on the fight between Blogistan and Blogtopia is up, at A Rift Among Bloggers

This time it is happening to Weblogs. Five years ago a few programmers pioneered this form of hyperlinked online journal, posting their thoughts on technology matters and personal musings. Later they built Weblog publishing tools for nontechies, and a vast spectrum of Weblogs — blogs for short — quietly bloomed.

As regular readers of this blog, Ken Layne’s blog, and most other popular warblogs know, the weblog was not invented by a few web elves in Frisco five years ago, it’s a form that’s as old as the web itself, if not older. What the Frisco elves created was the name “weblog” and some scripts that made archiving old updates easier. I’d hate to have to hang my technical hat on such a thin contribution, but it that’s all you’ve got, you’ve got to make the most of it.

Now that Dave Winer has drunk the Kool-Aid, he insists that there’s no rumble between elves and pundits, but rather there’s a big showdown between amateur writers and professionals. I don’t buy this polarization either, since most of the blogs I enjoy reading are written by people who have, at one time or another, been paid for their writing. That doesn’t make these people (and I’m one of them, marginally) Big Media or some such capitalistic cabal, because they’re mainly free-lancers, but it does mean that they’re able to express their ideas coherently. Dave’s Kool-Aid inspired rant against Dan Gillmor is an embarrassment to Dave’s mama, it’s so lame. And no, Mickey Kaus didn’t suddenly become a piece of dried doggy poo just because he moved his blog to somewhere within MSN. Some jealous competitors just need to get over themselves and celebrate the man’s success.


UPDATE: Gallagher wasn’t talking about Dr. Frank, but about Max Power, whose real last name is Frank. Ken thinks the Gallagher article was pretty good, even though the dude largely ignored what Ken told him over the phone and went with some more inflammatory comments from Ken’s blog a while back. It seems odd that Gallagher didn’t get the fact that the root of the conflict between Blogtopia and Blogistan is political.

Blogtopians, to the extent that they have politics, are left-wingers, generally subscribing to a doctrine of anti-Americanism that’s not far from Chomsky — fear of large businesses, belief that Colonialism caused all the Third World’s problems, distrust of the Right-Wing bias they believe is inherent in media, and belief that we have to understand the Root Causes of terrorism (American wealth and power) before we defend ourselves. The pride of ownership issue is a smokescreen, and it’s not even factually grounded. It’s a shame that Gallagher didn’t pick up on this, but he was writing for the NY Times, so he may not have been allowed to discuss it.

Lying in Ponds

— “Lying in Ponds is an attempt to quantify and analyze partisanship in the American punditocracy.” I heard this ole boy on NPR talking about his method for rating the partisanship of America’s punditocracy. Given that it rates Krugman as the number one most partisan pundit, it must be accurate. Definitely worth a visit, despite … Continue reading “Lying in Ponds”

— “Lying in Ponds is an attempt to quantify and analyze partisanship in the American punditocracy.” I heard this ole boy on NPR talking about his method for rating the partisanship of America’s punditocracy. Given that it rates Krugman as the number one most partisan pundit, it must be accurate. Definitely worth a visit, despite the Monty Python reference in the name.

Good writing

— There’s been a lot of exceptionally crappy writing in the Blogosphere lately, so I’m going to do my little bit toward improving the quality of expression by reminding my peers of one simple little principle that will help you make your musings more palatable to others: keep it brief. Sound ideas don’t need 1000 … Continue reading “Good writing”

— There’s been a lot of exceptionally crappy writing in the Blogosphere lately, so I’m going to do my little bit toward improving the quality of expression by reminding my peers of one simple little principle that will help you make your musings more palatable to others: keep it brief.

Sound ideas don’t need 1000 words to say what 100 say just as well; crappy ideas can’t hide behind lush undergrowth of indirection and irrelevent detail, and extremely stupid ideas couched in terms that waste the reader’s time don’t endear you to anybody.


Follow the example of the professional writers — there’s a reason they get paid for doing this stuff and you pay to do it.

Nigerian developments

— Amy Langfield’s New York Notebook Six people were arrested in South Africa over the weekend on suspicion of being involved in the infamous “Nigerian” e-mail and letter fraud. Damn – I was counting on that $5M for my retirement.

Amy Langfield’s New York Notebook

Six people were arrested in South Africa over the weekend on suspicion of being involved in the infamous “Nigerian” e-mail and letter fraud.

Damn – I was counting on that $5M for my retirement.

Design rant

— A writer, a weblog, her opinions: Yourish.com does a good and proper rant about reverse text blogs: There is a really good reason why reverse type is not used in the print industry except as captions, pullquotes, and short bits of text: It is unreadable in the longer form. This has been one of … Continue reading “Design rant”

A writer, a weblog, her opinions: Yourish.com does a good and proper rant about reverse text blogs:

There is a really good reason why reverse type is not used in the print industry except as captions, pullquotes, and short bits of text: It is unreadable in the longer form.

This has been one of my favorite hobby horses for years: so many website designers seem to strive for unreadable sites. Coming from a typesetting background like Yourish (and yours truly), this is abomination.

Strive to set your blog apart with content, not with insane graphics (unless, like Laurence Simon, your insane graphics are part of your charm.)

Why blogs will win

— Implicit in the shrill anti-blog essays from Alex Beam and others in the Media Establishment is the sense that journalism is losing mindshare to blogs and other forms of new media. This isn’t just because blogs, the web, and high-tech are so all-fired wonderful. No, the backstory is the decline of journalism under MBA … Continue reading “Why blogs will win”

— Implicit in the shrill anti-blog essays from Alex Beam and others in the Media Establishment is the sense that journalism is losing mindshare to blogs and other forms of new media. This isn’t just because blogs, the web, and high-tech are so all-fired wonderful. No, the backstory is the decline of journalism under MBA control, as Kathleen Parker explains in her column at

OrlandoSentinel.com: Opinion

Thanks in part to human resources personnel — those well-meaning, misguided individuals who view writers and editors as cogs in a well-oiled machine — newsrooms have lost their souls.

Parker writes from her home in South Carolina, so for her the newsroom is already a thing of the past. So don’t get the big-head, bloggers, it’s not so much that we’re winning as that the other side has given-up and is in full retreat. And what are they afraid of? Fun, mostly.

Nigerian spam

— I’ve noticed an increase in Nigerian spam recently. Bienvenue sur Emmanuelle.net has the lowdown: Merci bien, Yves. En fait, je d?couvre que l’excellent site Hoaxbuster a recens? diff?rentes arnaques africaines en fran?ais. Aux Etats-Unis, les internautes ont une certaine affection pour les messages nig?riens. Le site Snopes a rassembl? un dossier complet. Check it … Continue reading “Nigerian spam”

— I’ve noticed an increase in Nigerian spam recently. Bienvenue sur Emmanuelle.net has the lowdown:

Merci bien, Yves. En fait, je d?couvre que l’excellent site Hoaxbuster a recens? diff?rentes arnaques africaines en fran?ais. Aux Etats-Unis, les internautes ont une certaine affection pour les messages nig?riens. Le site Snopes a rassembl? un dossier complet.

Check it out if you’re into Urban Legends. In related news, the old saw about Bill Gates giving you money if you forward junk e-mail is still around — I got it from one of my starving children yesterday.