Slouching Towards Oblivion

Monday, November 22, 2010

Voting Is Sexy

It would be exceedingly interesting to see this on American TV during the run-up to election day. Politics can certainly stir one's passion, but I think Spain's Green Coalition leader, Joan Hererra put it best, saying it would be "very difficult to reach orgasm voting for any of the candidates, myself included."

Sunday, November 21, 2010

Security Theater

Previously, I posted a thought that I might do a little passive resistance to TSA bullying by insisting on having a woman do my pat-down.

Here's another suggestion.  When the agent gets to this position - fart.

Friday, November 19, 2010

Security Theater

I really hope this continues to get even more interesting. I want very much for this to be "the tipping point", but I'm afraid we'll bitch about it (while it's hip and popular to bitch about it) for the standard four or five days, and then just learn to live with it. And it'll pass into being just one more thing the historians will include in the many reasons the USA finally broke down and took its place among all the other failed empires.

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Airport "Security"

Rightly rebranded "Security Theater".  I wonder how much Mike Chertoff is making from the contracts he's able to influence.  Now that he's done with the "public service" part of his career, he can safely get stinkin' rich by siphoning off a nice pile of taxpayer dollars - knowing that while there's still a real threat of terrorist attack, it's minuscule compared with the amount of money we're throwing at it.

Here's my suggestion:  You can opt out of the body scan, but by doing that, you automatically draw the pat down.  So my idea is that you could insist on a hetero-pat-down.  After all, how do I know the TSA guy isn't gay?  How do I know he isn't getting some kind of a cheap fantasy thrill from coppin' a feel off a stranger's junk?  If somebody has to rub up against my tender bits, I have to insist on having a woman do it.


Sunday, November 14, 2010

Close Encounters

...of the police state kind.

9/11 changed everything, because our reactions to the terror of that day have created the conditions necessary for the petty tyrants to be handed power.

Here's a blogger describing the events at an airport in San Diego.

I wonder how many of us have to be abused before we find the courage to insist that we be allowed to take the risks of living in freedom again.

Saturday, November 13, 2010

Verifiable Voting

Design And Engineering

Death Penalty

I don't really have a hard and fast position on the death penalty.  I think I have to lean more to the Anti side because we seem to have such a hard time getting it right; ie: there's a heavy probability that hundreds of not-really-guilty people have been killed by state governments over the last 20 or so years.

That said, I still think there're people in this world we can do without:  Charles Manson, Tim McVeigh, Celine Dion.  Anyway, I think what has to happen is that we need to raise the standard of proof a bit if we want the jury to convict for a capital offense.

We can argue about "cruel and unusual" or the over-representation of minorities on death row, or the silliness of continuing to apply 8000-year-old philosophies to modern age problems; but the main reason we need to change the way we approach capital punishment is that we have to keep assholes like GW Bush from killing innocent people in order to score  political points.

Read this. 

Friday, November 12, 2010

Push Back

It's at least doubtful that confrontation will change anybody's mind, but it's always a good thing to stand up to bullying.

One of the protesters makes mention of a newish slant on the anti-choice side of the debate - suicide risk among women who've had abortions. So of course I had to do a little research on that one, and guess what? They made it up. There is no credible clinical authority that recognizes any causal link between abortion and suicide. It's just another in a long line of bullshit arguments manufactured by smug self-righteous Right Radicals.

(tip o' the hat to Nick and friends for posting this on FB)

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Today's T-shirt

Projection

Hearing about Sarah Palin's little word spasm at a school in Pennsylvania allowed me to take a small step closer to what I think is a bigger truth.

Palin characterized attempts to teach kids and parents about healthy diets as some kind of dictate from big government.

I think this is revealing - I don't think it's a big stretch to say Palin thinks education is all about indoctrination.  And I think it illustrates the main difference between these Right Radicals and the so-called Lefties.

"Liberals" wanna teach kids how to think; "conservatives" wanna tell kids what to think.

Tuesday, November 09, 2010

The Next War Between The States

I re-watched Jon Stewart's interview with RIck Perry from last night a coupla times, and something popped into my brain.

1) the attack on Federal Power continues unabated - the approach being to starve the beast.  Extending the Bush tax cuts is being sold to us as "economic stimulus", but the point is to cut off the funding for all federal programs except Defense, Law Enforcement, and just enough social services to keep people from getting too riled up.
    
2) the attacks are aimed at having that power devolve to the states where the Repubs have majorities in 26 state legislatures, which gives them a big advantage because they get to redraw the voting districts, which gives them more power and control right down to the local jurisdictions.

3) the competition between states for companies and their jobs has kicked in to a higher gear.

We've entered an era of economic disruption that is manifesting itself in what looks like a race for the bottom.  Perry said over 100 businesses have left California and relocated to Texas because Texas has a more business-friendly environment (Regulation, Tax, Lawsuit, etc).  To me this means we can look forward to a rash of companies outsourcing jobs from a "labor-friendly" state to one that has stripped away requirements aimed at wages, safety net, work place standards, environment & consumer protection - you name it.  Other states will think they have little choice but to respond in kind because there's no shortage of phony populists who'll gladly lead that charge.

Can you say "Feedback Loop"?  It gets worse before it gets better - if it gets better.

The Genius Of Balloon Juice

The whole post and nuthin' but the post From DougJ:
There’s a new study on how high-profile academic financial economists are paid to do the bidding of our Galtian overlords:
In this study, we showed that the great majority of two groups of prominent academic financial economists did not disclose their private financial affiliation even when writing pieces on financial reform. This presents a potential conflict of interest. If this pattern prevailed among academic financial economists more broadly this, in our view, would represent an even greater social problem. Academic economists serve as experts in the media, molding public opinion. They are also important players in government policy. If those that are creating the culture around financial regulation as well as influencing policy at the government level for financial reform also have a significant, if hidden, conflict of interest, our public is not likely to be well-served.
Felix Salmon makes the obvious point...with a telling anecdote:
It seems obvious that when you’re regularly making significantly more than the median national annual personal income from giving a single speech, you’re prone to being captured by the people paying you all that money. And the secrecy makes things much worse. I once mentioned in passing on my blog a consultancy gig which I happened to know about and didn’t think was particularly secret. The consultant in question phoned me up extremely distraught, fearful that the employer, a hedge fund, would read my post and react to it with a whole parade of nasty possible actions. There’s no good reason for such secrecy on either the employer or the employee side — unless, of course, there’s something ethically suspect about the arrangement in the first place.
Maybe I’m wrong to fixate on this so much, but I see this kind of thing as the central problem facing contemporary democracies: it’s too easy for monied interests to control the flow of information. You want a very serious economist to endorse whatever scam you’re running? Give him a few hundred thousand for speaking fees, consulting fees, whatever the term is that they’re using these days. That’s chump change, but it’s a lot to him or her, and you can probably find a respectable person who’s enough of a whore to do it, if you look around.
There’s a crazy asymmetry at work when things that are worth a lot can be bought for so little, and this is just one example. People make a big deal out $4 billion spent on an election. That’s not a lot of money to buy off the people who run a $3 trillion budget. At least there used to be transparency about that particular form of bribery, but not anymore.