I have a question for those who want to continue feeding Terri Schiavo: in your opinion, is Darwin’s theory of evolution by natural selection right or wrong?
Just curious.
I have a question for those who want to continue feeding Terri Schiavo: in your opinion, is Darwin’s theory of evolution by natural selection right or wrong? Just curious.
I have a question for those who want to continue feeding Terri Schiavo: in your opinion, is Darwin’s theory of evolution by natural selection right or wrong?
Just curious.
Dr. Krauthammer reflects on the the state of the Middle East: As an advocate of that notion of democratic revolution, I am not surprised that the opposing view was proved false. I am surprised only that it was proved false so quickly — that the voters in Iraq, the people of Lebanon, the women of … Continue reading “The Arab Spring”
Dr. Krauthammer reflects on the the state of the Middle East:
As an advocate of that notion of democratic revolution, I am not surprised that the opposing view was proved false. I am surprised only that it was proved false so quickly — that the voters in Iraq, the people of Lebanon, the women of Kuwait, the followers of Ayman Nour in Egypt would rise so eagerly at the first breaking of the dictatorial “stability” they had so long experienced (and we had so long supported) to claim their democratic rights.
This amazing display has prompted a wave of soul-searching. When a Le Monde editorial titled “Arab Spring” acknowledges “the merit of George W. Bush,” when the cover headline of London’s The Independent is “Was Bush Right After All?” and when a column in Der Spiegel asks “Could George W. Bush Be Right?” you know that something radical has happened.
It is not just that the ramparts of Euro-snobbery have been breached. Iraq and, more broadly, the Bush doctrine were always more than a purely intellectual matter. The left’s patronizing, quasi-colonialist view of the benighted Arabs was not just analytically incorrect. It was morally bankrupt, too.
Mass demonstrations in support of emerging Arab democracies would be appropriate indeed.
The politically correct faculty of Arts and Sciences at Harvard passed a surprise no-confidence vote against Larry Summers last night: Summers’ January remarks — off-the-record, he believed — prompted angry criticism from many faculty, students and alumni; others, however, defended him, saying Summers was simply engaging in a legitimate academic debate. The criticism quickly expanded … Continue reading “Lynch mob active in Cambridge”
The politically correct faculty of Arts and Sciences at Harvard passed a surprise no-confidence vote against Larry Summers last night:
Summers’ January remarks — off-the-record, he believed — prompted angry criticism from many faculty, students and alumni; others, however, defended him, saying Summers was simply engaging in a legitimate academic debate.
The criticism quickly expanded into a broader attacks on the president’s allegedly blunt management style and his vision for the university, including major projects to expand Harvard’s campus across the Charles River in Boston, and his ideas about what direction scientific research should take.
J. Lorand Matory, the anthropology professor who introduced the measure, called on Summers to resign.
“There is no noble alternative to resignation,” he said.
Dr. Matory, the motion’s author, is an interesting fellow. He’s a student of cross-dressing, a voodoo expert, a director of the ethnic studies department, an adviser to GLQ, a Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies, a great admirer of matriarchy, and an apologist for the corrupt and brutal Nigerian dictator Ibrahim Babangida, about whom he’s writing a sympathetic book:
The next book will be a collaborative effort with my wife, a presidential protocol officer during the rule of Nigerian president Ibrahim Babangida. We have planned it as a culturally sensitive account of the inner workings of the dictatorship that ruled Africa’s largest nation from 1985 to 1993. It is intended both as a corrective to standardized journalistic and political science clichés about the nature of autocracy and corruption in Africa and as a historical study of the genesis of Nigeria’s current political crisis.
Here’s what Nigerians say about Matory’s hero:
In closing, as a nation – we are not faced with many choices in who becomes our president. However, ponderability that Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida is not the best choice is simple. If we seek a nation, which produces leaders that must not be emulated or trusted – then we must allow his choice. If we seek a leader who is not ashamed to live opulently in a grand house where citizens of the nation he governed are reduced to abject poverty – Mr. Babangida must remain our choice. If we seek a commander-in-chief that will once again destroy the team spirit essential to every modern military might – Mr. Babangida must be our choice. If the office of the president is open to a man that would waste funds on political experimentation – our choice must remain Mr. Babangida. If we seek to experience closure of Universities and accelerate brain drain – Mr. Babangida is our choice. However, if our resolute is for a change of direction – we should seek Mr. Babangida to assist the nation to elect a man or woman without his qualities; and one to whom he can serve as an elder statesman or maybe – Kingmaker. And, whilst serving as a Kingmaker – he must promise never to conduct himself as another Balogun of Owu.
What kind of a man supports the presidency of Babangida but not that of Summers?
Not anyone that I’d want educating my children.
UPDATE: Not all Harvard profs are as lame as Dr. VooDoo; see Professor Motl’s blog.
Read the comments to this post and you’ll see there are more of us than anybody imagined.
Read the comments to this post and you’ll see there are more of us than anybody imagined.
I always giggle at the complaints our traditional civil libertarians make about the PATRIOT Act because any abuse of essential rights and freedoms in the name of anti-terrorism pales in comparison with the things our government has been doing for twenty years in the name of child support collection. Every month each bank, public utility, … Continue reading “Crushing civil liberties”
I always giggle at the complaints our traditional civil libertarians make about the PATRIOT Act because any abuse of essential rights and freedoms in the name of anti-terrorism pales in comparison with the things our government has been doing for twenty years in the name of child support collection.
Every month each bank, public utility, and state employment commissions has its records searched for names matching a deadbeat dads database; child support levels are set ex parte some 40% of the time, with no provision for correction; arrearages pile up if the dad loses his job or has to take a lower paying one (like our reservist soldiers in Iraq) and the law forbids correction of provable errors. That’s right, the so-called Bradley Amendment forbids courts from correcting injustices in child support matters no matter how thoroughly they can be proved.
Radley Balko has stumbled onto the issue thanks to an excellent column by Phyllis Schlafly,which Matt Welch posts to the restricted-comment Hit and Run board.
The child support collection system is a nightmare created by some people who had good intentions and some who didn’t. It’s a perfect example of why we need a meaningful dialectic in Washington, because more or less all of it was passed without debate.
The horrendous abuses contained within this system are the main reason I support Republican politicians and people like Schlafly even though they have weird ideas about evolution and the planet. The alternative is just too vile and hateful for me to countenance.
Schlafly’s column is unusual because it gets all the main issues and gets them right. It’s well worth reading:
Although there are no official statistics, estimates are that more than 100,000 fathers are jailed each year for missing their child-support payments. Another perverse feature of the current system is that child-support payments have nothing to do with whether the father is allowed to see his children and there is no enforcement of his visitation rights.
Debtors’ prisons were common in colonial times, but they were abolished by the new United States government, one of the great improvements we made on English law. Then we adopted bankruptcy laws to allow people a fresh start when they are overwhelmed by debt, but child-support debts are not permitted to be discharged in bankruptcy.
The federal Bradley Amendment, named for the liberal Senator Bill Bradley, takes us back to the cruel days of debtors’ prisons. It requires that a child-support debt cannot be retroactively reduced or forgiven, and the states enforce this law no matter what the change in a father’s income, no matter if he is sent to war or locked up in prison, no matter if he is unemployed or hospitalized or even dead, no matter if DNA proves the guy is not the father, and no matter if he is never allowed to see his children.
Charles Dickens famously said, “The law is an ass.”
This issue is not completely foreign to Democrats. When I lobbied the California legislature, two of my best allies (Sen. Charles Calderon and Assemblyman Rod Wright) were Democrats, but their efforts were frustrated by members of their party, primarily the infamous Sheila (Zelda Gilroy) Kuehl.
When Democrats start to address the injustices in this system, I’ll reconsider my party membership, but I’m not holding my breath. It’s been screwed up for 20 years and it just keeps getting worse.
Alas, another attack on free speech comes down the pike from the heinous George Soros, toppler of governments, destroyer of currencies, champion of democracy and employer of partisan attack dogs. His minions at Media Matters are upset that a technology journalist left comments on blogs expressing political opinions last year. Shocking, huh? Doncha know that … Continue reading “Love that freedom”
Alas, another attack on free speech comes down the pike from the heinous George Soros, toppler of governments, destroyer of currencies, champion of democracy and employer of partisan attack dogs. His minions at Media Matters are upset that a technology journalist left comments on blogs expressing political opinions last year.
Shocking, huh? Doncha know that when you go to work for a paper they own you? See BuzzMachine and prepare to laugh.
Stefan Sharkansky has looked at the final numbers in the Washington state governor’s race and reached a conclusion: I’ve revised my analysis of the King County vote discrepancy, based on some slightly improved source data files. The differences from my earlier analysis are minor, but this does represent the best analysis based on the data … Continue reading “Our Stolen Election”
Stefan Sharkansky has looked at the final numbers in the Washington state governor’s race and reached a conclusion:
I’ve revised my analysis of the King County vote discrepancy, based on some slightly improved source data files. The differences from my earlier analysis are minor, but this does represent the best analysis based on the data that King County has released. I’ve also added some new illustrative statistics. My conclusion: Former Attorney General Gregoire “won” with the help of hundreds of unexplained ballots (along with all those felons, dead people, double voters, non-citizen voters, etc). The election was genuinely stolen.
His analysis looks correct, and I believe his conclusion is reasonable. Partisan Democrats won’t accept it, of course, but why would they?
One of the most common methods for increasing blog traffic was inherited from print: pick somebody bigger than yourself and launch a withering attack. With any luck, they’ll defend themselves, driving traffic to your site and making you look more consequential than you are. Jeff Jarvis, the current Voice of the Blogosphere, is the object … Continue reading “Biting the big dog”
One of the most common methods for increasing blog traffic was inherited from print: pick somebody bigger than yourself and launch a withering attack. With any luck, they’ll defend themselves, driving traffic to your site and making you look more consequential than you are. Jeff Jarvis, the current Voice of the Blogosphere, is the object of such an attack by young Mr. Willis, the employee of David Brock who’s become an increasingly shrill member of the lunatic fringe of the Democratic Party since the invasion of Iraq shook his grasp on reality.
Willis’ remarks aren’t especially newsworthy to most, but I’m known to never ignore a blog-snit and therefore have to comment. Willis is typical of an element of the national Democratic Party, the Deaniacs, that resembles the pre-Arnie California Republicans more than anything else: a group that’s given up on winning elections and is therefore dedicated to losing with principles intact.
The last thing I want to do is give the Deaniac wing advice that they might actually take, but some things have to be said about the argument between men-of-principle and practical politicians: the only Democrats to win the White House in the last 50 years are people that count as moderates in today’s political calculus: JFK was a tax-cutter and vigorous warrior against totalitarianism; LBJ, Carter, and Clinton were moderate, pro-business, strong-national-defense Southerners who weren’t squeamish about committing America’s armed forces to democratic causes abroad (OK, Carter’s arguable, but he ran on such a platform the one time he was elected.)
True-blue liberal partisans may get the Democratic Party base all fired-up, but they don’t win elections. So here we have Jarvis advocating a course of action for Democrats that’s both morally sound and politically practical, and Mr. Willis viciously attacking him for it.
When I see this sort of thing I wonder if Wills’ employer David Brock really left the conservative fold, because it’s the best thing that could ever happen to the Tom DeLays of this world.
So I just shake my head and yearn for the productive dialectics of yesteryear.
UPDATE: Daily Kos doesn’t want to be left out of this scuffle, naturally.
In his short tenure as governor of California, Arnold Schwarzenegger has gleaned a powerful insight about transportation that somehow eluded his predecessor and Democratic legislators: Californians can’t get from place to place on little fairy wings. This is a car-centered state. And we need roads. Carpool lanes that obstruct the flow of traffic, light rail … Continue reading “Transportation insight”
In his short tenure as governor of California, Arnold Schwarzenegger has gleaned a powerful insight about transportation that somehow eluded his predecessor and Democratic legislators:
Californians can’t get from place to place on little fairy wings. This is a car-centered state. And we need roads.
Carpool lanes that obstruct the flow of traffic, light rail systems that carry no passengers, unbuilt bridges, bicycle lanes, and empty buses don’t move people, but freeways do. Right on.
Thank god this remark was made by one of the Bad People, because it makes my head hurt: In response to the public disgrace and ruin of New York Times editor Howell Raines, CBS anchor Dan Rather and CNN news director Eason Jordan, liberals are directing their fury at the blogs. Once derided as people … Continue reading “Terribly confusing”
Thank god this remark was made by one of the Bad People, because it makes my head hurt:
In response to the public disgrace and ruin of New York Times editor Howell Raines, CBS anchor Dan Rather and CNN news director Eason Jordan, liberals are directing their fury at the blogs. Once derided as people sitting around their living rooms in pajamas, now obscure writers for unknown Web sites are coming under more intensive background checks than CIA agents.
The heretofore-unknown Jeff Gannon of the heretofore-unknown “Talon News” service was caught red-handed asking friendly questions at a White House press briefing. Now the media is hot on the trail of a gay escort service that Gannon may have run some years ago. Are we supposed to like gay people now, or hate them? Is there a Web site where I can go to and find out how the Democrats want me to feel about gay people on a moment-to-moment basis?
Liberals keep rolling out a scrolling series of attacks on Gannon for their Two Minutes Hate, but all their other charges against him fall apart after three seconds of scrutiny. Gannon’s only offense is that he may be gay.
That Ann Coulter is such a panic.