Signs of life

Unlike George Will, LA Times columnist George Skelton understands California politics. Skelton’s impressed that Cal Reeps are piping down on social issues, evidenced by the recent state convention: Said Assemblyman Ray Haynes of Murrieta, another unabashed conservative who backs Schwarzenegger: “We social folks realize that being in your face all the time is a turnoff.” … Continue reading “Signs of life”

Unlike George Will, LA Times columnist George Skelton understands California politics. Skelton’s impressed that Cal Reeps are piping down on social issues, evidenced by the recent state convention:

Said Assemblyman Ray Haynes of Murrieta, another unabashed conservative who backs Schwarzenegger: “We social folks realize that being in your face all the time is a turnoff.”

Haynes says “pro-choice” and “right-to-life” Republicans have reached an “accord.” The former will help move the latter’s agenda when there’s no political cost, and the latter will stop constantly harassing the former — like slipping those “baby killer” fliers under delegates’ doors.

If Republicans really have stopped railing about social issues, the politicians and activists who will miss it most are Democrats.

These are signs of intelligence, showing that even the hard right can learn a lesson every once in a while. Let’s hope it sticks.

George Will likes McClintock

In the Washington Post, Will compares McClintock to Thatcher and predicts a delay will help his campaign: McClintock has risen from 8 to 13 to 18 percent and can reach a tipping point — “I don’t know where it is, but I’ll know it when I see it” — where “pent-up” conservatives now gritting their … Continue reading “George Will likes McClintock”

In the Washington Post, Will compares McClintock to Thatcher and predicts a delay will help his campaign:

McClintock has risen from 8 to 13 to 18 percent and can reach a tipping point — “I don’t know where it is, but I’ll know it when I see it” — where “pent-up” conservatives now gritting their teeth and supporting Schwarzenegger will switch to him. The later the vote, the more Davis will be mired in making unpopular budget choices.

He’s right on a couple of counts: McClintock would be a better governor than Arnie, Cruz, or Gray, and the longer the campaign drags out, the better the chances are that the voters will see that. The better too, that Arnie will lose interest and take up sky-diving. But is a McClintock win the best thing for California?

I like McClintock, and he’s head and shoulders above the other candidates. He’s got a wealth of experience and a sound, coherent theory of government grounded in the Federalist Papers. He’s the only candidate that I’ve ever met and talked with, other than Gray at a campaign stop where I did get to roast him about Singapore. And Will’s right that California needs his medicine. But Will’s missing one thing, and it’s a very big thing: this is California, not Kansas, and the long-term health of California depends on a Republican Party that can put up socially liberal and fiscally conservative candidates. And as good as Tom is on the fiscal side, he’s not the man with the finger on the pulse of California’s social malaise.

I’d vote for Tom over Gray or Cruz, but it’s still hard for me to choose him over Arnie for these reasons. But I suspect I’ll come around if Arnie doesn’t start campaigning like a man possessed, and that means showing up at the debates. He’s missed three so far, and it’s starting to look like he’s got something to hide. Arnie has to shake off the dilettante factor, and so far he’s not making any headway.

A milestone in blogging history

Eugene Volokh points out that Costa’s brief on the en banc review of the 9th Circuit’s activist delay of the California Recall cites one of his blog posts. Here’s the relevant part of the brief: [5] See also Howard Bashman, Meet hanging chad?s relatives, scribbled oval and hacked touchscreen, <http://appellateblog.com/2003_09_01_ appellateblog_archive.html#106365589040317778> (Sep. 15, 2003), Eugene … Continue reading “A milestone in blogging history”

Eugene Volokh points out that Costa’s brief on the en banc review of the 9th Circuit’s activist delay of the California Recall cites one of his blog posts. Here’s the relevant part of the brief:

[5] See also Howard Bashman, Meet hanging chad?s relatives, scribbled oval and hacked touchscreen, <http://appellateblog.com/2003_09_01_
appellateblog_archive.html#106365589040317778> (Sep. 15, 2003), Eugene Volokh, California Recall and Technology <http://volokh.com/2003_09_14_ volokh_archive.html#106365996330480386> (Sep. 15,
2003);

Bashman’s blog cite wasn’t even his own thought, but an e-mail he received from an anonymous reader. (My argument to the error business is here.) We’ve come a long way in intermingling the public policy dialog with blog ranting, haven’t we?

After perusing the briefs on the Activist Ninth Circuit’s web site, it’s apparent that the ACLU has no case, as they’re wrong on the facts and wrong on the law.

On the facts, the activist panel confused “residual ballots” with “errors”, a basic rookie mistake. Residuals include undervotes (i.e., ballots where no mark is made), most of which are cast as “none of the above” votes, and truly represent the voter’s intent. That’s not an error, of course. The activist panel also incorrectly imagined that the first run with new equipment would be less error-prone than voting on the same equipment that’s been in use for 35 years would be, and they reached this amazing conclusion without any evidence.

On the law, the Sec’y of State points out that the court failed to find grounds for appeal in the first place, which would be “abuse of discretion” on the part of the trial court, so they didn’t establish there was a reversible error. Costa argues that the activist panel erred in misapplying Bush v. Gore in a way that would invalidate virtually all elections held in the last 25 years, despite clear statements in the opinion and in all the dissents that it should not be applied in such a way as to ban all punch-card voting. Then there’s the issue of the consent decree dictating that all such arguments are moot as the remedy has already been set in place beginning in March and we aren’t there yet.

The arguments on the other side are beyond weak. Rick Hasen filed another empty amicus brief the sole purpose of which is to tout his textbook, and the ACLU argued that it would be wrong to delay a decision a few days after they successfully argued that it’s cool to delay an election a few months beyond its constitutionally-specified timeline. The ACLU brief is so weak it borders on legal malpractice.

The county elections officers from Sacto and LA are the most scathing in their rebuke of the activist panel. The delay will now go down in history as the most idiotic decision by a federal court since Plessy.

Interviews you can use

Take your pick: Right Wing News inteviews Milton Friedman on tax cuts, and left-wing blogger Calpundit interviews Enron adviser Paul Krugman. They’re both softball interviews, but I found the Krugman interview particularly offensive. Calpundit allows comments in-line, but Right-Wing’s are at a different place.

Take your pick: Right Wing News inteviews Milton Friedman on tax cuts, and left-wing blogger Calpundit interviews Enron adviser Paul Krugman. They’re both softball interviews, but I found the Krugman interview particularly offensive. Calpundit allows comments in-line, but Right-Wing’s are at a different place.

Dean’s campaign too “blog-centric”

Some pols notice that Howard Dean’s supporters are all professionals, just half of the traditional Democratic constituency that usually encompasses working and unemployed people alike. See Howard Kurtz, just over half-way down: This concern, which has popped up repeatedly in the media, is shared by many other Dean supporters, including Richard Hoefer, a San Francisco … Continue reading “Dean’s campaign too “blog-centric””

Some pols notice that Howard Dean’s supporters are all professionals, just half of the traditional Democratic constituency that usually encompasses working and unemployed people alike. See Howard Kurtz, just over half-way down:

This concern, which has popped up repeatedly in the media, is shared by many other Dean supporters, including Richard Hoefer, a San Francisco filmmaker who believes that the campaign has been too ‘blog-centric.’ Asked if he thinks there’s a homogeneity to Dean’s base, Hoefer responds, ‘You mean whitey?’

We know that blogging, like political giving, is only for white professionals, but voting is something everybody gets to do, so Dean may not be as strong as he looks based simply on fundraising.

Good place to work

Now this sounds like a good place to work: (Patent Factory: Camas lab churns out new ideas to keep Sharp on cutting edge) In the super-competitive marketplace of the early 1990s, Japan’s Sharp Corp. sought to quicken the pace of product innovation by diversifying its brainpower. America, a fast-food nation fueled by instant coffee and … Continue reading “Good place to work”

Now this sounds like a good place to work: (Patent Factory: Camas lab churns out new ideas to keep Sharp on cutting edge)

In the super-competitive marketplace of the early 1990s, Japan’s Sharp Corp. sought to quicken the pace of product innovation by diversifying its brainpower. America, a fast-food nation fueled by instant coffee and sugar-coated breakfast cereal, a land of rock stars, risk-takers and entrepreneurs, was the place to turn.

Sharp Laboratories of America in Camas, established in 1995, has pretty much met the need.

Researchers working on the Sharp campus at 5750 N.W. Pacific Rim Blvd. have won 286 patents over the past eight years. Last year alone they filed 199 patent applications, keeping Sharp ahead of the curve on a number of competitive fronts — liquid crystal display technology, software design for multipurpose document imaging systems, semiconductor materials research, wireless phone technology and advanced television systems.

Sharp executives in Japan appear satisfied and are funding laboratory operations to the tune of $50 million a year. It’s an employment gold mine for Camas. Starting salaries for the lab’s research and development people range from $75,000 to $100,000 a year, depending on experience and education, with senior people in much higher salary categories. Total Camas employment: 183.

Gee whiz. Here’s the rest of the article:
Continue reading “Good place to work”

The Conservatism of the Anti-American Left

The Ian Buruma article in the Financial Times is great stuff. He makes the point, quite convincingly, that the isolationism and anti-Americanism that’s so fashionable on the left these days is more reminiscent of conservatism than liberalism. Gore Vidal is now a blood-brother of Henry Kissinger, in other words. But you knew that. Via Roger … Continue reading “The Conservatism of the Anti-American Left”

The Ian Buruma article in the Financial Times is great stuff. He makes the point, quite convincingly, that the isolationism and anti-Americanism that’s so fashionable on the left these days is more reminiscent of conservatism than liberalism. Gore Vidal is now a blood-brother of Henry Kissinger, in other words. But you knew that.

Via Roger L. Simon, et. al.

Calling Justice Scalia

So a three-judge panel of the ultra-left Ninth Circuit wants to delay the California recall until March, the better to keep Davis and the unions in power. The argument? Punch-card voting disadvantages minorities: SAN FRANCISCO (AP) – A federal appeals court postponed California’s Oct. 7 gubernatorial recall election, ruling the historic vote cannot proceed as … Continue reading “Calling Justice Scalia”

So a three-judge panel of the ultra-left Ninth Circuit wants to delay the California recall until March, the better to keep Davis and the unions in power. The argument? Punch-card voting disadvantages minorities:

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) – A federal appeals court postponed California’s Oct. 7 gubernatorial recall election, ruling the historic vote cannot proceed as scheduled because some votes would be cast using outmoded punch-card ballot machines…

In other lawsuits, civil rights groups unsuccessfully fought to move Proposition 54 to the March ballot to give minorities more time to study it. In addition, some counties, to cut costs and conduct the election on a hurry-up schedule, were reducing the number of polling places, a move civil rights groups said would disenfranchise minority voters in areas with low voter turnout.

This is an absurd ruling because it fails to balance the real harm done by leaving Davis in power another five months with the imaginary harm of punch-card voting, which we’ve used for years. The first time voters use touch-screen voting, errors will be higher than they’ve been with punch cards, but the Ninth is a little too lame to see that.

It’s an idiotic decision. Read it here.

A lesson on copyright

Law professor Jim Maule tries to convey a lesson on copyright to the zealots on Wellbert Declan McCullagh’s Politech e-mail list. Here’s one of his yeoman efforts: Whatever Jefferson has said, the Constitution gives Congress the power to give copyright protection to the fixed forms of ideas. It is the fixed manifestation and the right … Continue reading “A lesson on copyright”

Law professor Jim Maule tries to convey a lesson on copyright to the zealots on Wellbert Declan McCullagh’s Politech e-mail list. Here’s one of his yeoman efforts:

Whatever Jefferson has said, the Constitution gives Congress the power to give copyright protection to the fixed forms of ideas. It is the fixed manifestation and the right to copy it that is protected, not the idea or the thought. Hopefully Declan will post this so that the discussion can re-focus on the point I think you made and that I think you made again (in your suggestion that the pirates aren’t the cause of revenue loss and in your point concerning the burden on the owners of information to invent new business models).

When the law grants a right, whether in title to real property or the right to copy, it is a violation of that law to act, without permission and without privilege, in a manner that denigrates those rights. In this regard, it makes no difference whether a right attaches to physical property or the manifestation in physical or digital form of an idea or the intangible “right” to own real property or to copy or fix an idea. The specifics of remedies, proof, and procedure may vary, but an intrusion on a right is an intrusion whatever the right.

I am not arguing for a perpetual copyright, as my careless articulation in my original posts seems to say. I corrected that in a followup.

Nor am I arguing that the term provided under existing law necessarily is the best, or ideal, or good for business or the economy. But I do argue that just because a person does not agree with a law is not in and of itself justication to ignore it.

The notion that the owners of copy rights need to rethink their business model because modern technology has made it easier for pirates to steal the profits flowing from the right to make copies (and that their failure to do so excuses the theft) is like saying that the creation of better lock picking tools means that those who don’t change their security system excuses the thieves. This is a natural consequence of the “blame the victim” mentality that permeates our culture. Sure, some copyright owners have exploited artists and consumers. That’s not enough to sanction P2P schemes that infringe on all sorts of artists, publishers and copyright owners (many of whom are not big Disneys).

How you can suggest that file swappers aren’t eating into CD sales boggles me. Who has to prove what is a different matter, and yes, the burden is on the RIAA. That the decline in sales matches the growth in the Internet and P2P and other file sharing schemes isn’t a coincidence. No one believes that in the absence of the technology the swappers would not have purchased CDs.

So I’d be happy to hear you say that you think the file swappers are violating the law and violating the copyrights. And then say you understand why they do that although you don’t think that makes it right. Then we’d be fairly close to having the same position. If that is what you are saying, then I apologize for mis-interpreting your earlier post and this one.

Declan’s people are mighty dense, so you have to admire the Professor’s patience. Music stealers know what they’re doing is wrong, which is why they try to justify it by claiming to be stealing only from the Big, Evil RIAA. But they’re also stealing from the little artist dudes, and they need to be reminded that that’s wrong.

Fisking PBS

Mr. Jarvis takes down a pompous and smarmy PBS show blaming 9/11 on globalization in the New York Post today: No, on that day, 19 fanatics killed 3,000 innocents. That is the story of 9/11, not this PBS version. I haven’t seen the PBS who yet, but the title- The Center of the World – … Continue reading “Fisking PBS”

Mr. Jarvis takes down a pompous and smarmy PBS show blaming 9/11 on globalization in the New York Post today:

No, on that day, 19 fanatics killed 3,000 innocents. That is the story of 9/11, not this PBS version.

I haven’t seen the PBS who yet, but the title- The Center of the World – annoys me. I have the sole copyright to this term outside of Delphi, and PBS didn’t ask for permission to use it.