Osama Has Mask Ripped Off

Monday, October 31, 2005

Or at least we have less to fear from the contents of whatever he's carrying around today....

Just a quick one today unless the finishing touches on my presentation take a lot less time than they normally do....

According to the Wall Street Journal, there is no factual basis for fearing that Islamofascist terrorists will get their hands on the bomb any time soon.

Let's walk back the cat, as they say in intelligence circles. The foundation of all main nuclear suitcase stories is a string of interviews given by Gen. Lebed in 1997. Lebed told a visiting congressional delegation in June 1997 that the Kremlin was concerned that its arsenal of 100 suitcase-size nuclear bombs would find their way to Chechen rebels or other Islamic terrorists. He said that he had tried to account for all 100 but could find only 48. That meant 52 were missing. He said the bombs would fit "in a 60-by-40-by-20 centimeter case"--in inches, roughly 24-by-16-by-8--and would be "an ideal weapon for nuclear terror. The warhead is activated by one person and easy to transport." It would later emerge that none of these statements were true.
The article then goes about debunking the suitcase bomb myth and describing why it will be so hard for terrorists to get the bomb.
Fatwas are not enough. There are only three ways for al Qaeda to realize its atomic dreams: buy nuclear weapons, steal them or make them. Each approach is virtually impossible. Buying the bomb has not worked out well for al Qaeda. The terror organization has tried and, according to detainees, been scammed repeatedly. In Sudan's decrepit capital of Khartoum, an al Qaeda operative paid $1.5 million for a three-foot-long metal canister with South African markings. Allegedly it was uranium from South Africa's recently decommissioned nuclear program. According to Jamal al-Fadl, an al Qaeda leader later detained by U.S. forces, bin Laden ordered that it be tested in a safe house in Cyprus. It was indeed radioactive, but not of sufficient quality to be weapons-grade. One American intelligence analyst said that he believed the material was taken from the innards of an X-ray machine. It is not clear what it actually was, but the canister was ultimately discarded by al Qaeda.
This is a really good article, except for one point. Read it all.

The one deficiency? There is a fourth way for the terrorists to get a bomb: By obtaining it from Iran, North Korea, or some other state sponsor. Too bad we're still chatting with Iran and hoping that North Korea will deign to join us in six-party talks. At least on the publicly-visible side, we seem not to be taking either threat seriously enough.

We can heave a sigh or relief about the so-called suitcase nukes, but the cloud outlined in that bit of silver is that we'd better figure out a better way to monitor container shipping. Were I a terrorist with an Iranian nuke, this would seem the best way to get a nuke over here.

-- CAV

PS: The author of the article, Richard Miniter, is author of Disinformation: 22 Media Myths That Undermine the War on Terror. Looks interesting. perhaps I'll get a copy.


News and Notes: 10-30-05

Sunday, October 30, 2005

The Sweepers Wore Sox

I determined empirically that my guess last week that the World Series could easily go to seven games was off by only three games! At least all the games were close....

It was still fun seeing the 'stros in the World Series, and there was no shame in their losing to the White Sox.

Blogiversaries


This blog turned one on the 25th. I thank all the well-wishers who left comments here or on their own blogs to mark the occasion.

Fellow member of Ultraquiet No More, Alex Nunez, got into the blogging game a mere two days before I did. Be sure to stop by and wish him a happy first blogiversary if you haven't already done so.

Robert Spencer has been keeping tabs on terrorists for two years now over at Jihad Watch. We all owe him a great deal of gratitude for keeping an eye on developments pertaining to terrorism.

At Found on the Web

They liked the (anti) Che Guevara tee-shirt I pointed out the other day, but also noticed that the same company sells some Ann Coulter shirts I don't particularly care for, either.

Bloggers vs. Miers

I had heard about this list of bloggers who "went on the record" one way or the other about the Miers nomination, but never signed on. That didn't stop me from ending up on the list, though. In any case, I think this informal poll (about 70% against, 15% for, and 15% neutral) played a role (as a measure of public sentiment doubtless known to the administration) in stopping this mistake in its tracks, so I'm glad the 'bots found me/someone took the trouble to put me there. In the latter case, thanks, whoever you are!

Blogroll Additions

I've added Eternal Vigilance, the blog of Adam, who often comments here, to my blog roll. Judging by this post, he may find the previous item interesting. (Although I think he gives short shrift to cartoons.)

Also, I have added Dithyramb, the blog of fellow Ayn Rand fan and self-described "aspiring swashbuckling gentleman philosopher of sorts", Karl Mertens. Today, he reminds us of the upcoming 400th anniversary of the Gunpowder Plot.

New: Humor Section in Sidebar

Yesterday, I noted three favorite humor sites. Today, I'll recommend another that I am sure I will visit regularly: Save the Humans. I first found this site during lunch long ago on Martin Lindeskog's blog, but it is, oddly enough, blocked at work, so I forgot about it until today. Proprietor Jason Roth also posts the odd editorial now and then. I especially liked "Keep Your Values to Yourself".

I have added all four humor sites to the left sidebar for everyone's amusement.

Amit Ghate Columns

Just as I was wondering whether Amit Ghate would be posting again at Thrutch, I learned via the Charlotte Capitalist that he's been busy writing columns for Capitalist Magazine. Andy likes the one about the Greeks. I was partial to the one about Ward "Cherokee" Churchill. Good stuff!

Reading Recommendations

Andy Clarkson also has a list of book recommendations concerning the history of ideas.

Coming Soon: Polls and Crass Commercialism

(And, sooner or later, a favicon....)

A couple of readers have asked me whether I have a Yahoo! wish list or use Paypal. The answers are now: yes and yes. This weekend has been too busy to get them completely finished, though. I'll probably have everything ready and tested by next week. When I do, I'll mention where they are.

I blog for enjoyment and to practice writing and so have no plans to actively solicit donations. But I do appreciate being asked those questions and wouldn't want to get in the way of such gestures of appreciation in the future!

I'm contemplating several other changes for the blog and may use polling scripts to decide on whether to implement them, but I'll ask about one change in particular now: Does anyone who normally visits my site actually use the links on the left side of the page excluding the blogroll. I am thinking of moving these elsewhere and allocating that entire sidebar to blogs.

And, while I'm at it, I welcome suggestions for other improvements from the peanut gallery.

Comments or email are fine, though comments might allow others to see whether anyone else has already thought of a potential suggestion.

-- CAV


Another Good Humor Site

Saturday, October 29, 2005

I'm stuck getting a presentation ready this weekend, which means I'm sitting in front of the computer a lot. Lucky you!

If you like The Onion and McSweeney's, you'll love Landover Baptist!

At least this one is new to me, and most of my readers will probably also like it. I stumbled across a story (about -- how shall I put it -- "Jar Jar Binks doll" abuse) during an internet search. That was pretty funny, so I looked around the site a little bit.

Even better was this Q & A by Brother Harry Hardwick:

Q: If you could sell your soul to Satan, what would you want for it?

A: Dear Doomed, Inquisitive One,

I cannot agree with the others who have replied. With all due respect to *****, I think a doughnut is shooting a bit too low. In response to *****, I certainly wouldn't want to be Satan. I'm more of a winter person than a summer person. I have bad reactions to heat. And even though the climate in Hell is a dry heat (Humidity 0%), I would still find it unpleasant. Regarding *****'s answer, I certainly wouldn't want to be God. The sight of blood always makes me rather squeamish, and I find killing even bugs unpleasant. I cannot fathom slaughtering all the people God has over the years. I'm not criticizing Him, mind you -- to each His own, but striking down thousands upon thousands of people with plagues and pestilence just isn't my cup of tea.

The price tag for my soul would be "everything I would get from God as a saved Christian who followed all His commandments." That way, I could go to Heaven without having to sort through the myriad of seemingly unconscionable and inconsistent edicts to figure out what conduct is appropriate. I suppose if I'm in Heaven for eternity, my soul would be with me, but your question didn't say Satan has to take possession of my soul, just that he would buy it. So my request would essentially involve a deal whereby he would own it and I would lease it.

Praying all recognize that if the promise of eternal bliss were guaranteed without following the incomprehensible rules of the Good Book, religion as we know it would disappear,
And don't forget to take this quiz before you leave!

OK. Back to work.

-- CAV


On Supreme Court Quotas

Friday, October 28, 2005

Although I disagree with many of the points made by Rush Limbaugh in this column on the debate over the Harriet Miers nomination, I agree with his larger point: that most substantive policy debate in American politics today is occurring among those lumped together as "conservatives". For example, with so many Senate Democrats predictably voting against anyone Bush nominates for the profound reason that Bush nominated him, that party has sidelined itself from any serious discussion over who should replace Justice O'Connor. (Although some conservatives, like Hugh Hewitt, would have the entire Republican side of the Senate sideline itself. To him, "up-or-down" apparently means "rubber-stamp" and bare competence is less important than making sure that "Justice Sandra Day O'Connor will [not] cast one of her last votes on the most important abortion-rights case in a few years.")

Many blacks, who have historically voted monolithically for Democrats, have begun to feel that they have been "taken for granted" on the basis of their dependable voting. This is a species of the same problem now faced by their party at the national level: When one abandons principles and a thoughtful consideration of evidence to vote reflexively instead, one's power as a voter vanishes. Your supposed friends stop worrying about what you want and your enemies know never to start caring about what you want. And guess what you won't get?

I bring up Democrats and voting because major components of that coalition are women and minorities who reliably vote for Democrats, but are not seeing their interests furthered in the process. Assuming for the sake of argument that the Democratic agenda represents what is best for their most reliable voters, women are supporting a party that has very little power at the national level and this would go for blacks too, except that their reward for supporting the same party close to 90% of the time has already been described.

But what the Democrats say is good for women and blacks and what really is good for women and blacks are not necessarily the same thing anyway. (Fickle voting would have been a way to hold the party's feet to the fire, but it's too late for that now.) Case in point: The idea that only a member of a given demographic can represent other members of that demographic.

This idea gets taken apart today in, of all places, the Los Angeles Times, in a column against Supreme Court quotas for women and minorities.

Last summer, legal commentator Dahlia Lithwick provided a classic example of the "women think differently" argument in the New York Times. A female judge, she wrote, shows "empathy" to victims -- above all, to female victims. A properly sensitive female justice, confronting a constitutional challenge to, say, the 1994 Violence Against Women Act (which made "gender-motivated violence" a federal offense), would uphold the act because it sought to protect female victims of violence.

The fact that the law was patently unconstitutional -- exceeding as it did Congress' powers under the commerce clause -- would not stand in the way of the female justice's mission of helping the weak and oppressed. But empathy for victims, while a wonderful trait in ordinary human affairs, should not influence constitutional decision making. Judging requires the separation of emotions from logical thought.

A serious constitutional analyst does not ask: Is this a sympathetic victim? Rather, he (or she) asks: Is there a constitutional basis for this governmental assertion of power? One may have empathy for a plaintiff and still be compelled to rule against him. Any other approach contains disturbing implications. If female judges are really more likely than men to be influenced by their emotional sympathies, then the outcome of a case may hinge on whether a female or a male judge is hearing it -- an unacceptable proposition in a country that believes in the rule of law.

This reminds me of a discussion I was having with my wife before Bush ever nominated Miers, but when the smart money had him playing dumb at the quota table. My wife thought there was some merit to having a woman on the court. I countered with, "OK. Me or a 'pro-life' woman? It's the ideas a person holds that count."

Protection of individual rights. That's what our government should be doing. Bloc voting does not do this. Nor do quotas. Voter and officeholder alike must be committed not to a tribe, but to the idea that every individual has the same rights and that our government must protect them.

-- CAV

PS: Memo to Susan Estrich: This column may have been written by a woman, but I don't think that's why the Times used it.


Interesting "Anti-Anti" Column

Thursday, October 27, 2005

Dennis Prager takes a look at a rhetorical tactic used by the left in a column I encountered over at Jewish World Review today: the negative characterization of those who disagree with their views on any given issue. For example:

Anti-education: Those who object to the monopoly that teachers' unions have on public education and to their politicization of the school curricula are labeled "anti-education." Of course, the irony is that if you love education, you must oppose the teachers' unions.
(Interestingly, and this is more important than it might seem, Prager did not say, "Those who favor a wholly private educational sector.") This is something I noticed years ago and exploited rhetorically in a column, only to have it yanked out by a liberal editor....

Near the end of his essay, Prager correctly points out the fact that this tactic is a two-edged rhetorical sword:
The "anti" arguments are effective. Conservatives have to spend half their time explaining that they are not bad people before they can be heard. But the Left has paid a great price. Because they have come to rely so heavily on one-word dismissals of their opponents, they have few arguments.
I would agree with Prager that this tactic is no substitute for an argument, but would disagree with him that there are "few arguments" on what he calls "the left", mainly because his definition of "the left" is so much broader than it is for most commentators. In fact, by his lights, I might qualify as a "leftist"!
I have contrasted Judeo-Christian values only with leftist values: secularism, liberalism, socialism, humanism, environmentalism.
My regular readers know that from the above list, I advocate only secularism. In fact, I advocate the rise of a secular right in politics, so I am particularly wary of Prager's tendency to imply that secularism is, like socialism, a wholly discredited left-wing idea.

And interestingly, this leads me to note one variant of the "anti-" tactic that I have seen frequently used by the religious right. Those of us who do not believe in God are called atheists. That compound word arises from the Greek as follows: "from a- 'without' + theos 'a god'". I do not quarrel with the need for the term, but with the common practice among religionists like Prager to imply that atheists are "denying the existence of God". We, in fact, do no such thing. It is those who believe in God who are making an assertion and face the burden of proof. Using the term "atheist" in this way to essentially call someone like me an "anti-theist" is, as Dennis Prager might put it, a one-word dismissal, and not an argument.

In truth, there are "anti-" argument substitutes being used by some on both the left and the right. The lesson learned here is that the pot does not become any whiter by calling the kettle black. Given Prager's general intellectual "religious right vs. them" stand, this otherwise decent essay is seen, in that context, as yet another example of Prager pretending that there is no alternative to what he only half-correctly calls "Judaeo-Christian values".

But Prager's general point, that positive arguments are needed in the public debate is well-taken. A general theme in Ayn Rand's writing that too many miss is that she fought fiercely for her values. That many fail to see this fact is partly understandable: Ayn Rand was busily defending her values (e.g., capitalism) from those who would destroy them (e.g., the environmentalists). To many who encounter her, she seems at first merely to be "anti-communist" or "anti-theocracy", for example. But Ayn Rand herself often pointed out that it is not enough merely to oppose a dangerous intellectual trend: One must offer a positive alternative, and so she did.

The interesting question for Prager, then is the following: If he sees the need to make positive arguments for one's positions, why do so many of his columns focus on the intellectual vacuum of what he calls "the left" before offering -- with little or no supporting arguments-- his "Judaeo-Christian values" to fill that void?

-- CAV


Hurricane Fidel Still Lingers

Wow! This has been a tough hurricane season! It seems like ages ago that I reported speculation that Hurricane Dennis could cause political instability in Cuba....

In any case, Cuba has, after being ravaged by Wilma, accepted, for the first time ever, an offer by the U.S. for aid.

Washington has routinely offered humanitarian relief for hurricanes and other disasters in Cuba, and Cuban leader Fidel Castro himself has routinely turned the offers down. After Hurricane Dennis pummeled the island in July, Castro expressed gratitude for Washington's offer of $50,000 in aid but rejected it.
Given that some from the Babalu Blog expressed concern (excerpted here) after Dennis that Castro would merely confiscate relief supplies, I wonder whether this acceptance of aid will do the Cuban people any good.

What I said last time stands:
Hoping for Castro's downfall in this context is hardly minimizing the tragedy of the hurricane strike. The other day, I thought of the hurricane striking Cuba and realized that the damage would still not surpass what Fidel Castro has already done to that island and its people during decades of despotism. What's worse is that in addition -- and in the meantime -- Castro will act to compound the tragedy.
Too bad the real disaster is still pummeling Cuba.

-- CAV

PS: Val Prieto at Babalu Blog finds this change "a bit enigmatic". So do I. I wonder if Castro hopes to return the favor some time by foisting his army of poorly-trained doctors on us in return after some future disaster.


Get Up to Speed on Che

Wednesday, October 26, 2005

There's a rather lengthy article about Che Guevara you might want to read through over at Capitalism Magazine. A few brief excerpts should show you why I like it.

[This shirt can be purchased here.]

On the importance of the judiciary, Che intoned:
"To send men to the firing squad, judicial proof is unnecessary," [Lewis] Carroll would have heard from the chief executioner, named Ernesto "Che" Guevara. "These procedures are an archaic bourgeois detail. This is a revolution! And a revolutionary must become a cold killing machine motivated by pure hate. We must create the pedagogy of the paredon (The Wall)!"
"Pure hate", eh? Isn't there some stupid lefty bumper sticker that says, "Hatred is not a family value." Well, then, hippie, why is your daughter running around in a Che tee shirt?

Or watching The Motorcycle Diaries, which somehow failed to mention the following heart-warming passage:
Crazy with fury I will stain my rifle red while slaughtering any enemy that falls in my hands! My nostrils dilate while savoring the acrid odor of gunpowder and blood. With the deaths of my enemies I prepare my being for the sacred fight and join the triumphant proletariat with a bestial howl!
In addition to noting Che's bloodthirstiness, the article examines the following: the number of political executions he ordered or performed (which put Nazi Germany to shame), his torture methods (which a few people at Amnesty International could stand to familiarize themselves with) , his ineptitude in battle, and his writing style, whose description I liked:
As a professional duty I tortured myself with Che Guevara's writings. I finished glassy-eyed, dazed, almost catatonic. Nothing written by a first-year philosophy major (or a Total Quality Management guru) could be more banal, jargon-ridden, depressing or idiotic.
The author, Humberto Fontova, then provides three examples. He knows of which he speaks.

Some aspects of the writing style of this article, like several examples of dated slang, I found distracting, but it is overall an excellent and badly-needed debunking of someone whose pop culture status is possible only because pop culture is so thoroughly saturated with Marxism.

-- CAV


Ecoterrorists Shift Tactics

At RealClear Politics is an article that should be read in full. It describes a recent change in tactics on the part of animal "rights" activists. The new tactic? Terrorism aimed at businessmen who aid research involving animals.

Animal-rights fanatics have figured out that you beat medical research that uses animals not by going after the researchers, but by going after those who do business with the researchers. They cow Wall Street not by flying in to buildings, but by trashing members' clubs.
Here is a condensed list, from the article, of the terrorist attacks that leftist fanatics employed to keep Life Sciences Research, a company that tests drugs on animals, from being listed on the New York Stock Exchange.
(1) "Anonymous thugs vandalized [a company lawyer's] house, smashed his car's windshield and made nasty phone calls to his home in the middle of the night."

(2) Skip Boruchin, a trader who still does business with the firm has had his yard painted with epithets (e.g., "murderer") and has been libeled as a child pornographer online.

(3) "[A] website instructed people to send sex toys to [the same trader's] 90-something mother at an assisted-living home. Another website listed the names, phone numbers and Social Security numbers of 19 neighbors, and threatened to publicize information about their credit cards and medical history."
In addition to all that peace and love, here are acouple more interesting tidbits.
(1) Another company, Chiron, had its offices in California bombed in 2003, including a second blast intended to injure first-responders.

(2) In testimony before the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, Jerry Vlasak, spokesman for the North American Animal Liberation Press Office, dismissed the intimidation of Boruchin and others as "getting a little spray paint on the wall." Furthermore, he defended the notion of assassinating medical researchers: "[For] people who are hurting animals and who will not stop when told to stop, [murder would be a] morally justifiable solution."
Support for terrorism on the left goes beyond just celebrating our 2000th casualty in Iraq. In fact, some on the left are terrorists.

-- CAV


Gus Van Horn Turns One!

Tuesday, October 25, 2005

A year ago today, a scientist who was bored out of his mind during "dead time" in the lab officially gave himself a blog as a birthday gift -- late, of course -- when he wrote his first post ....

A few months ago, I figured I'd write a really long post for the occasion, but due to a strange combination of circumstances, I find myself both tired and not in much of a writing mood!

This still beats what was going through my mind last weekend, though. I'd somehow remembered the wrong date as my blogiversary and thought, as I was stuck in New Orleans without internet access or time to post, that I would fail to mark the occasion at all on the day. At least I didn't miss my own party!

I had also imagined I'd make graphs of such things as readership numbers, links to my blog, and other such milestones, but I have been a bit lax about keeping track of such things for awhile. That is probably a milestone in and of itself as well. I have statistics in a file and might pull them out for some kind of report at some point, but the logical time to do this would be around Christmas anyway.

Today, I will simply celebrate my blog's first birthday by thanking all the wonderful people I have met in the process of maintaining my own web log and following those of my fellow bloggers. Although I enjoy writing in and of itself, the friendships I have made along the way have made this pastime all the more enjoyable!

-- CAV


Is Texas set to ban marriage?

First, there was the collision of laws that made it possible to bring capital murder charges against some physicians who perform abortions in Texas.

Now, with an anti-gay marriage amendment on the ballot, some are warning that certain judges might "interpret" the wording of the proposed amendment to mean that the state cannot recognize any marriage!

Proposition 2 on the Nov. 8 ballot states that marriage exists only as a union of one man and one woman.

It then adds that the state or political subdivision of the state "may not create or recognize any legal status identical or similar to marriage ." [bold added]

"That in the hands of an activist judge could lead to the ruin of my marriage and every other marriage in this state because the status that is most identical to marriage is obviously marriage itself," said Trampes Crow, a graduate student at the University of Texas and a former army captain who served in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Rep. Warren Chisum, R-Pampa, who authored the amendment, called the group's assertion "ludicrous" and said no legal scholar could possibly agree that Proposition 2 could negate traditional marriages.

"It's just crazy," said Chisum, who has long championed measures to block same-sex marriage in Texas. "This is politics at its lowest level here. They're just trying to scare people."

Well, Mr. Chisum, the wording actually sounds pretty unambiguous to me! In fact, with a literal reading of the law you wrote, one could go a step further and say that your new law would (1) make it impossible for heterosexual couples to marry at all in Texas, (2) cause Texas to not recognize marriages performed in other states (causing the law, I think, to run afoul of the 14th amendment), and (3) cause only homosexual unions -- which are eliminated from the newly-outlawed institution of marriage by the same law -- to have legal status in Texas! The last consequence is conditional upon someone finding, of course, that a homosexual union is not "similar to" marriage. Good work, Warren!

I couldn't find out for certain whether Chisum is a fundamentalist, but if so, his angry quote in the last paragraph above would be particularly ironic. In any case, it's amusing to see someone hoist himself with his own petard.

I was already planning to vote against this amendment by November 8, and that was before I learned of this little problem!

On a more serious note, I know that the above interpretations will almost certainly never happen, but this begs the further question: Is it not alarming that we live under such poorly-worded laws?

-- CAV


Keeping One's Head out of the Clouds

Monday, October 24, 2005

The following is a preliminary draft of a column I have written on Katrina and the war. Constructive criticism is welcome and appreciated.

***

It was already balmy that morning as I surveyed the damaged houses that stretched endlessly around me in every direction. "What are these people going to do?" I thought. Everything was coated with a tan dust, making it seem like I was surveying the destruction through some kind of gauze. Not long ago, this had been pretty nice place to live.

The vignette above is not a wartime description from the ground in Baghdad, but of an area not far from where my wife grew up in New Orleans, as observed six weeks after Katrina struck.

This Houstonian with strong ties to New Orleans is quite storm weary. We took in two family friends before Katrina hit New Orleans, only to see them head north to be with family after it became apparent they'd lose everything and be unable to return for weeks. While waiting for officials to declare New Orleans safe, we fled from Rita. All told, hurricanes have accounted for two weeks of our time this summer, and we haven't even been struck!

We just recently went to the site of America's worst natural disaster to help my wife's parents ready for sale the home they had lived in for nearly two decades and had planned to use in retirement. My wife grew up there and, like her family, had come to love the Big Easy. But for all practical purposes, New Orleans was no more for our friends, our family, and countless others after that terrible storm.

One of America's most legendary places is on life support and may never fully recover. The city where I proposed to my wife and where we got married is a scene of overwhelming devastation.

I risk gilding the lily with this personal account. After all, with the nonstop cable news coverage of hurricanes this summer, one would hardly know we were a nation at war. Indeed, one estimate of the cost of recovering from this storm, $200 billion, is about twice what we have spent fighting the war in Iraq!

And while we lost a few airplanes and buildings on September 11, 2001, Katrina, praised by a government official in Kuwait as a great terrorist, nearly succeeded in wiping a major American city off the map. Aside from that, Jesse Jackson and other civil rights activists have mourned the loss of the home to over a hundred thousand poor New Orleanians who will now have to "acculturate" to strange surroundings.

Surely, if Katrina relegated Iraq and Cindy Sheehan to the teletype at the bottom of the cable news screen, if she made al Qaeda sympathizers proud, and if she upset Jesse Jackson, the storm was a greater tragedy than 9/11.

If you agreed with that last sentence, you would be sorely mistaken.

First of all, the damage resulting from Hurricane Katrina, a natural event beyond man's control, is the only event of the two that can properly be called a "tragedy". The terrorist attacks in Pennsylvania, Virginia, and New York were deliberate acts by evil men. They were not tragedies. They were atrocities.

In fact, although I do not know anyone personally who died on September 11, 2001, I cannot bring myself to call it "9/11". The short term has such an Orwellian ability to cause us to forget what happened that day that even Michael Moore had to lengthen the title of his famous movie so its audience could form the mental associations he wanted. I almost never call the mass murders that took place on September 11, 2001 "9/11" and I absolutely never refer to them as a "tragedy".

But back to Michael Moore for a moment. What was the thrust of his movie? That George Bush invaded a peaceful country for the sake of oil, causing untold human suffering.

And speaking of George Bush, it is noteworthy that in certain leftist quarters, the severe devastation visited upon the poor and heavily black ninth ward in New Orleans was blamed on his negligence in reinforcing the levees in that area. In fact, some on the far left even claimed that the levee breaks were deliberately caused by the Bush administration. Bush was being blamed for mass murder after Katrina!

By this point, one wonders why a deliberate mass murder is merely called a "tragedy", a movie is made depicting kids flying kites in a nation that gassed its own citizens, and the President of the United States is being accused in every respect but the term being used, of genocide.

Why are we being urged to think of a terrorist attack as if it is on a par with a natural disaster and ignore the crimes of a dictator, while at the same time we are to blame the President for the deaths that occurred in a hurricane?

It is because the purpose of our government is to protect the individual rights of its citizens from being violated by enemies, foreign and domestic. Our government exists because human beings have free will, and can sometimes choose to violate our rights, including the right to our own lives.

Because the power of our government is rooted in the people, it is the people who must make the moral evaluation of a person, a group, or a nation as a threat to our lives before the government will act.

This is why those who oppose Bush are attempting to lay the blame for Katrina on him. They see Bush as opposed to the welfare state they clearly hope to expand in the wake of Katrina. While ousting Bush might seem their goal, having Bush in office and trying to hold onto power while appeasing liberal constituencies with "reparations" for his "racism" would do nicely for them.

And this is also why the atrocities of September 11, 2001, although distant in time and hazily recalled by many, are far more important than the storm that has pushed them out of the limelight. Here, we know that our lives are being threatened by foreign enemies and that our government is acting properly to protect them.

For all the hot air being blown around about hurricanes this year, and for all the upsetting images of suffering on our own soil, don't let the press sell you a bill of goods. While our nation must recover from a hurricane, we are still at war. We may or may not suffer a similar storm in the future, but evil men who want us dead are still out there looking for ways to kill us.

Your sensory overload, your mistaken priorities, and (some hope) your gullibility will only make it easier for the terrorists. No matter what, wartime is not the time to lose focus.

-- CAV


Pssst! Tell them it's too late!

Sunday, October 23, 2005

A recent proposal to use treated wastewater in the production of artificial snow for a ski resort has some Indian tribes upset.

In the view of American Indians here, the spirits that inhabit the San Francisco Peaks, towering 12,000-foot-plus mountains rising from the desert here, certainly did not appreciate it when a ski run was built a quarter of a century ago on one slope.

So, imagine, tribal leaders say, what the spirits will think -- or worse, do -- when treated wastewater is piped up from Flagstaff and sprayed on the mountain so the resort, the Arizona Snowbowl, can make more snow to ski on. A lawyer for one of the tribes likened it to "pouring dirty water on the Vatican"
Have these guys ever heard of the water cycle? "The water in the apple you ate yesterday may have fallen as rain half-way around the world last year or could have been used 100 million years ago by Mama Dinosaur to give her baby a bath." Or worse.

Interestingly, something that happens in nature already (i.e., the separation of water molecules from waste) is being damned when man does it himself -- or it surely would be if these kibbitzers actually knew something about the forces of nature they hold in such high esteem.

-- CAV


News and Notes: 10-23-05

I'm still getting back up to speed after my recent trip to New Orleans. Here's a look at what I've seen so far....

World Series Teams, Cities Mirror Images

Over at This Blog is Full of Crap, fellow Houstonian Laurence Simon has an ongoing list of who's rooting for whom. As I write this, Chicago leads the series after winning last night's game 5-3. I saw the action up until the score was 4-3. The series looks to be evenly-matched and the teams are indeed the mirror images of each other the sportswriters said they'd be. The series could well go on for all seven games.

And speaking of mirror images, awhile back, I wrote of a visit to Chicago to see my in-laws, who'd recently relocated there from New Orleans:

The wife and I had a great time visiting her folks in Chicago, where they recently relocated. We'd been there once before, too, and it's the only northern city we could see ourselves living in for any length of time. I think the in-laws are especially enjoying the embarrassment of cultural riches possessed by the Hog Butcher for the World.
Note the following: (1) the ability of this Southerner to imagine living in Chicago, (2) Chicago's cultural riches, and (3) Chicago's economic might. Now compare this to today's Rick Casey column in the Houston Chronicle.
Chicago fans may not be aware of it, but when they come to Houston this week they will be visiting their younger brother.

Houston is, in so many ways, a strapping adolescent version of Chicago.

...

Houston lagged in development for fairly obvious reasons. With the Great Lakes and railroads, Chicago had earlier and stronger links to the population centers of the East Coast, boosting its economy.

Houston wouldn't become an industrial giant until the creation of the Ship Channel and the advent of air conditioning.

Chicago and the North had the technology to tame the brutal winters, but Houston and the South couldn't truly thrive until we had a means to conquer the beastly summers.

Now that we have, Houston is following in the footsteps of its bigger brother.

Casey goes on to point out the numerous similarities between the two cities. I'm not normally a big Casey fan, but for the most part, he nails it today. No wonder I liked Chicago so much when I visited!

Congratulations ...

... go to the General, whose Benjo Blog recently saw its 10,000th visitor.

Posts on Blogging

I haven't posted much on the medium of blogging lately, but others I read regularly have.

The Gaijin Biker at Riding Sun comments on a recent top ten list of blogging mistakes he came across. Here's the list, but be sure to stop by and see what the Gaijin Biker had to say. I agree with most of it. My own additional comments follow in brackets.
1 No Author Biographies [See also #9.]

2 No Author Photo [See also #9.]

3 Nondescript Posting Titles

4 Links Don't Say Where They Go

5 Classic Hits are Buried [I call having a list of favorite posts "link insurance". Quite a long time ago, I made a really stupid mistake while composing a post that a couple of commenters roasted me for overnight. At the time, I had no list of favorite posts. My readership dropped by about a third and took quite a while to recover. I had been thinking about adding a list of favorite posts already, and after that, wondered whether such a list might have given new readers a chance to see that I wasn't the complete idiot I felt like after making that mistake.

This can do more than possibly save you from being misrepresented by a bad post. It can also give a passer-by incentive to explore a bit and then return. This is especially good to have around in the event you get noticed by a high-traffic blogger.]

6 The Calendar is the Only Navigation

7 Irregular Publishing Frequency

8 Mixing Topics [I do not regard this as a mistake. I elaborate on this further here.]

9 Forgetting That You Write for Your Future Boss [For academics, this could be your biggest nightmare -- except for the fact that this problem might solve itself (not necessarily a good thing). For those who, like myself, blog anonymously, #1 and #2 above are hardly mistakes, but you probably want to avoid making this particular mistake anyway.]

10 Having a Domain Name Owned by a Weblog Service
To the list, I would add a few of things that have hampered my enjoyment of other's blogs.
Not making it obvious where permanent links to individual posts are

Using scripts that cause the page to load too slowly

Making it impossible for readers to post comments unless registered with the site
On the last, I note that Riding Sun has a way to register, and yet I can still post comments there as a "guest".

Shifting gears, both Martin Lindeskog and the General mentioned some tools that look interesting to me. Lindeskog points to an interesting search engine whose name I really like: Inquisitor. Some results pop up even as you type! Note that Inquistor is in beta.

The General mentions Flock, a Mozilla-based browser that includes a blogging window. I might give this one a spin once Time-Warner gets my cable fixed so I'm back up to speed at home with Roadrunner.

Curtis Weeks, an avid template tweaker, wants reader input on the general design of his site. I think he's contemplating "changing interior frames from lavender to butter" (or was that "cobalt instead of lavender") and needs a little bit of encouragement before he takes the plunge.

No! Just kidding! Read what he says first!

And finally, Martin Lindeskog points to an ambitious project at Politburo Diktat to make a family tree of the blogosphere. As for me, I ain't got no blog-daddy and, as far as I can tell, no "blog children", either.

If I've got any young 'uns I don't know about running around, let me know.

News on Objectivism

The Undercurrent is hosting its fourth blogger contest.

The Fountainhead has recently been published in Chinese.

Zach Oakes is in the process of reactivating the PSU Objectivist Club. No word yet on whether Joe Pa has signed on as faculty sponsor. Best of luck, Oakes!

The General, busy with law school, is not the only one with a loaded hopper. Sarah Beth is immersed in business courses and OAC work besides.

Over at the Charlotte Capitalist, Andy Clarkson mentions that Prodos recently interviewed Allen Gotthelf about his book On Ayn Rand, and lists the topics.

From the Mail Bag

After a recent post in which I expressed my dislike of certain aspects of pop culture, a reader emailed me the following under the subject line, "Oy!": "They say that in popular culture, there is no bottom. But there is."

Appropriately, the news comes from Down Under.

Amazingly, I have heard of this bizarre practice! My wife saw something about it on television the other day and thought I'd get a laugh out of it, and so she told me.

Without further ado, I will quote (chortle), without comment (snort), from the article (guffaw).

"The good news on sphincter bleaching is that it's safer than anything involving general anaesthetics or fat-vacuuming gizmos."

Yes. Sphincter bleaching. And no, we're not talking about Scott Peterson's blond hair.

With "technological advances" like these, who needs Beavis and Butthead? Perhaps we should revisit that discussion about Leonard Peikoff and the Greeks....

Interesting Books

Reader Adrian Hester, who recalled my high praise of Bernard Lewis's
What Went Wrong?: The Clash Between Islam and Modernity in the Middle East, has informed me that Lewis has penned another interesting book.
I got a copy of Bernard Lewis's From Babel to Dragomans [link added]. It's a collection of entertaining essays about Middle Eastern history and about history as a field.

Many of the essays are a result of his "closing his files"--over several decades he would put interesting little facts in his files, and now that he's pretty much retired he's getting rid of the files in the best way, by writing them up as short, interesting essays. For instance, there's an entertaining 10-page essay, "Middle Eastern Feasts," on the history of food, drink, and cutlery in Middle Eastern society. Other essays are very large-scale interpretive essays, such as a very fine one on the history of the Islamic financial and taxation systems up to the rise of what is misleadingly called "feudalism" around 1000 AD; it's a clear, excellent 7 pages. Oddly enough, it was published in 2004 and yet seems already to have been remaindered, so there should be cheap sale copies at Border's or whatnot, so keep your eyes open for it.
I think I will.

Microsoft Palladium Redux

The Resident Egoist points out an alarming possibility about that laser printer you just purchased. Here, he quotes the Electronic Frontier Foundation.
A research team led by the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) recently broke the code behind tiny tracking dots that some color laser printers secretly hide in every document.

The U.S. Secret Service admitted that the tracking information is part of a deal struck with selected color laser printer manufacturers, ostensibly to identify counterfeiters. However, the nature of the private information encoded in each document was not previously known.

"We've found that the dots from at least one line of printers encode the date and time your document was printed, as well as the serial number of the printer," said EFF Staff Technologist Seth David Schoen.
He then adds:
It is also important to know that this information may not be available only the U.S Secret Service, but possibly to every government on Earth. Hell, if companies such as Microsoft, Yahoo, Google and Cisco -- among others -- have not refrained from making explicit deals with dictatorial government such as China to block the use of such words as "democracy", "liberty", "freedom", and "human rights", what is there really to prevent others from making similar deals as the present one between the U.S government and the printing industry? Not to forget, of course, that nearly everything we consume is "Made In China".
Read the whole thing.

The Good Book Just Got Better

Philip B. Pape found a web resource that many Objectivists will find useful: The Skeptic's Annotated Bible.

Chickens Come Home to Roost

The wife and I finally saw Serenity yesterday! I give it a solid A and strongly recommend it.

This story, of chickens coming home to roost, reminds me, in different ways, of two elements of the story, one at the beginning, and the other at the end.
Head of the Qalqilya teachers' union, Naim Al Ashqar told PNN that the union is working to set up a group meeting that includes official and popular institutions to look into the necessary steps in light of the recent attack on a teacher. Apparently, the 10th grader struck the teacher on the back of his head with a sharp object, seriously wounding him.


The Qalqilya teachers' union issued a statement condemning such attacks on teachers by students, calling these students, "immoral" and accusing them of undermining the entire educational process. In its statement, the union said the lack of involvement from student's parents and school rules that limit the teacher's disciplinary powers are two major reasons for the spread of this phenomenon.

I'll be cryptic and leave it to the reader to figure out what I'm talking about.

That's all, folks!

-- CAV


Principal Stands up to Indulgent Parents

Friday, October 21, 2005

I first heard about this whilst driving the moving truck to (or from, I don't remember which) New Orleans a few days ago.

My new hero is the principal who canceled his school's senior prom, not just to prevent underage drinking and sex at post-event parties, but to make the kids and parents consider how they spend their money.

It is the best recent example of an authority figure standing up to both the culture of conspicuous consumption and of rights without responsibilities.
As usual with moral stands in this day and age, the message is mixed. Also, as usual in our culture, it is the religious right that is happy about this news. After all, the hallmark of our age is that so many are aware of the need for morality while at the same time, (1) most secularists pretend that man does not need morality while (2) religionists pretend that only blind faith can form the basis of morality. Both "sides" in this debate pretend that reason cannot determine what is right for man. As a result, both sides do everyone a disservice by failing to demonstrate that everyone needs a coherent moral code to live his life on this earth.

Although his views seem mostly good, the columnist, Peter A. Brown of the Orlando Sentinel, clearly sides with the religionists on this one. As with many sympathetic to the religious right, Brown is clearly not a medieval mystic who would have us all wearing hair shirts, flagellating ourselves, and drinking pus. He implicitly accepts aspects of the American Dream -- of a good life on Earth -- as good, while he explicitly accepts elements of Christian morality. As a result, his analysis has some good and bad aspects.

The principle flaw in Brown's analysis is evident when he says, "Hoagland rightly thought that there is something innately wrong with students spending $1,000 or more on their prom...." Brown is a moral intrinsicist. Spending "too much" money on one's kids is "innately" bad (meaning that he ultimately would have no objective standard for deciding how much is too much). Kids having access to drugs, alcohol, and sex is bad. But why? Brown gives the religion of the principal credit here, which stems from his intrinsicism and has the further effect of promoting the view that only religion is the answer to licentiousness. In truth, the answer to licentiousness is for more people to learn that morality has a rational basis and a practical application to one's life.

To get one thing out of the way. Yes. Of course -- so long as no one's rights are violated -- a parent has the right to spoil his kids rotten. Freedom includes the right to act foolishly. The question here is this: Is it right for a parent to overindulge a child? Should he help his child experience an orgy? The answer is no, but requires some consideration for the requirements of man's life. I am not going to make a complete argument here, but will hint at one.

The initial couple of paragraphs are mostly fine. The principal in question runs a parochial school, meaning a private school. Let's set aside the question of whether he overstepped his authority in canceling this event. In fact, let's assume for the sake of argument that this authority is part of his job description. As an advocate of a completely privatized educational system, I certainly find it conceivable that many schools would grant their principals such latitude, for one thing. The principal certainly acted on the premise that what he did was for the benefit of his charges and this is presumably what one would hire a principal to do.

So the principal, concerned that his school's prom is training his students to be irresponsible spendthrifts, cancels it. This sounds good in isolation, but we must do as Brown ought to have done and examine this in more detail. Let's consider just one set of examples.
When teenagers, or for that matter adults, think it is the norm to spend $200 on tennis shoes, $250 on blue jeans and $5 on a cup of coffee, it's no wonder our society has lost its sense of perspective.
To the coffee first. Regularly spending five bucks on a cup of coffee is so potentially ruinous to one's personal finances that there is now a popular phrase that captures the wastefulness of the practice: the latte factor. (The example at the link argues that one could cut out a daily latte of half this amount and save 630 smackers per year.) $5.00 coffee, to date myself, was unheard of when I was growing up, and credit cards for college students were rare. Now, both are common, and I can't help but wonder whether we are raising a generation of kids who are, for one thing, totally clueless about the value of money and undisciplined about spending it. But wait. There's much more.

Ditto for the fad clothing. Yes. When I was a kid, you could get tennis shoes for less than a couple hundred dollars. You can now, too. The fashion fads of my day were expensive, but were nowhere near this ridiculous. I may part ways with Smith here, as he seems principally against the materialism implicit in the large amounts of money involved. I see two dangers to children here. Aside from the missed opportunity to inculcate financial sense, being overindulgent in the realm of fashion constitutes a missed opportunity by a parent to teach a child to be independent of the crowd. But wait. There's more.

Yes. There is a fine line here. Spend too little money on your kids' clothes and they might experience ridicule to the point that mere social acceptance becomes a major goal, but to bend completely every time the winds of fashion change not only makes you, as a parent, look like a patsy, it teaches a child that conformity is very important. Extravagances like this should be paid for at least in part by the kids themselves. I wonder how many kids would be running around in 200 dollar shoes if it meant that they couldn't have something else.

As for materialism.... Things can't make you happy. This is not because some religious text says that they obstruct passage to the Pearly Gates, but because how one lives one's life -- one's moral character and pursuit of values -- ultimately determines whether one is happy. Will a kid who has been handed everything he wants all his life really appreciate any of it? Will he appreciate the relationship between a value and the action required to obtain the value? Will he be able to pursue goals rationally as an adult? Can he even have goals without the experience of deciding between things that make competing demands of him?

Note that -- although I personally find the idea of spending 200 dollars for a pair of sneakers patently ridiculous -- I am not railing about tennis shoes. In fact, I will use them as an example. Yes, Mr. Brown. We can have a culture where $200.00 shoes and opportunities to build character both abound.

Forget adulthood for a moment and let's look at just those bloody shoes. Consider three kids. One is simply given $200.00 shoes. Two others are told they have to earn $100 towards the shoes because their parents have budgeted $100.00 for footwear that school year. Both of these kids earn $100.00, but only one ends up with the shoes. The other one discovered model railroading while saving up and used the money for it instead, because he liked his hobby more than the shoes. What the other kids think of his shoes is put into its proper -- and very low -- place by the competing consideration of how much this kid enjoys building model railroads.

The first kid maybe doesn't even really care about the shoes, but simply wants to avoid standing out in the crowd. How has he been helped by his parents? He knows less about earning and saving money than the other two, and has probably been shielded from the need to stand up to his peers -- even for something so silly as what kind of shoes to wear! His parents have thus, in this child's mind, severed a value (the shoes) from the need to act to gain it. In doing so, his parents have retarded his development as an independent adult.

The other two kids learned: working to pay for what you want, saving money, making choices based on limited time/resources, and making choices based on what they want as opposed to what others think they should have. These lessons are all part of a greater whole, part of which will be experienced on an emotional level by the two kids who worked for what they wanted: These two kids will feel a sense of accomplishment impossible for the other one. Two pairs of shoes, but only one kid with a sense of pride about them and with the confidence developed from successfully pursuing a goal. It was the kid who paid for the shoes, not the one who got them for free, who made out like a bandit here.

It is this dissociation between value and action -- and not the availability of expensive merchandise per se -- that is so bad about our fad-driven, ostentatious culture. Surrendering to this culture on the part of a parent is to abdicate the most sacred obligation of parenthood: helping one's child become an independent adult. But to advocate an intrinsicist morality in reaction to such a culture is not the answer, for there is no relationship between a simple list of commands and how one lives one's life.

Consider a fourth kid. He wants the $200.00 shoes. His parents simply brand the shoes as "sinful" and make him wear something else. Has he been presented with the opportunity to see for himself how important the shoes really are to him? No. Suppose further that the kid is enterprising and saves up the money to buy the shoes himself. His parents make him return the shoes for the same reason they wouldn't buy them in the first place. This kid has just been taught that morality keeps him from having what he wants, even if he has earned it. If he learns this lesson consistently, he will be faced with this choice as an independent adult: scrap morality as an impediment to his happiness or scrap his happiness as an impediment to living morally. Morality has been set against practicality and the requirements for this boy's life.

Both the kid who has been simply handed the shoes and the kid who has been simply denied them have been denied the opportunity to learn the relevance of rational thought, making choices, and acting to obtain values to their daily lives. Your guess is as good as mine as to which has been psychologically crippled more. And both kids are, respectively, examples of being raised in an atmosphere of licentiousness and one of moral intrinsicism. Neither alternative is conducive to living a good life.

It is interesting that this article focuses mainly on the decision by a high school principal to ban an orgy-like prom. Within the context of that man's imperfect understanding of morality, I salute him for attempting to do the right thing. But I fear that, in addition to not having quite the right answer, he is too late anyway. The very morality he upholds -- intrinsicism -- is what has (directly or indirectly) made these kids want an orgy in the first place.

Kids raised too permissively (by adults who decided raising kids by this morality was too cruel or by adults who simply are not moral themselves) will go along with whatever the dominant culture says -- which is to have the orgy. They are not in the habit of thinking about anything important and will do what they feel like doing. The other kids, having a conflict between being "moral" and enjoying their lives will be faced with the same choice I described above, only the orgy will fall in the "happiness" column. As will booze and drugs. On what rational basis will they be able to decide not to have the orgy? None. There is no answer to them to the question of "Why not?" that makes a lick of practical difference in their lives.

Why not get drunk along with a bunch of other inexperienced drinkers? Why not have sex while in such a state? These are the kinds of questions that would, I am afraid, elicit gales of laughter from most of these kids and many adults besides. That's too bad for them. It would take a long time to argue against these things, and so I won't. I will have to offer my own experience as a counterexample of how of the middle two kids might have reacted to the prospect of attending an orgy.

I was not really any of the kids in this story. I was a fifth kid: I was the poor one who threw a paper route for spending money. I attended parochial schools with more affluent kids who were as extravagant as the day permitted. I was very repressed in those days, having had Catholic morality drummed into me pretty well despite my doubts about religion. But I also had a healthy respect for reason that happened alongside the happy circumstance of a lack of affluence. My parents could not afford the kind of clothes most of my classmates wore. I took much less flack for that than I feared and quickly learned that fashion wasn't really such a big deal. And by the time I was earning my own money, I was buying model railroad stuff rather than clothes. I would have laughed at the idea of sinking even 50 bucks into a pair of tennis shoes.

I was a teetotaler, but not because I regarded drinking as sinful. I simply didn't like the lousy beer. And even after I learned about mixed drinks, the thought of getting plastered had no appeal to me. I thought drunks were idiots and had no desire to join them. And why end up puking later on? And the really loud music I heard at the few parties I did attend took most of the fun out of them: I couldn't talk to anyone. Promiscuity turned me off, too. I remember thinking, of a girl I knew around that time who was reputedly such a complete floozy that the "conquest" would have been, emotionally, about like being licked by a dog. Laugh all you want, but I wanted more than that.

I was not exactly a budding John Galt, but the good fortune of being slightly poor and having parents who taught me early on to think about the consequences of my actions went a long way in saving me from the poverty-stricken and soul-withering culture of empty material excess we live in today -- and from making the mistake of "rebelling" against it merely by taking orders.

The principal was trying to do the right thing, but when most kids already want to attend an orgy, the cause is all but lost.

-- CAV


Around the Web on 10-20-05

Thursday, October 20, 2005

In the process of catching up on the news after my recent media blackout in New Orleans, I encountered the following....

Houston, We Have a Pennant!


If that wasn't the headline I saw on the Houston Chronicles being sold in street medians today, it should've been. I am not much of a baseball fan, but I do tune in when things get really interesting, like when the local Rice Owls made it to, and eventually won, the College World Series in 2003. And so I've been following the Houston Astros of late, and I am thrilled to see that they finally made it to the World Series after a 5-1 win over St. Louis last night!

The Astros, who were 15-30 on May 24, are the first team since the 1914 Boston Braves to go from 15 games under .500 to the World Series.

By winning the best-of-seven series 4-2, the Astros have earned the right to face the American League champion Chicago White Sox in the World Series, which starts Saturday night at U.S. Cellular Field.
I was also very impressed with the Cardinals' fans.
A classy, red-clad, sellout crowd of 52,438 even gave the Astros an ovation while watching them party in the last game at Busch Stadium, which will be replaced by a modern stadium next door.
Good sportsmanship is a sign or respect and a recognition of excellence that transcends which side in a game one hoped would win. As such, their good sportsmanship is a sign that the fans in St. Louis have a real love for the game. Win or lose, I hope Houston's fans live up to the standard set at Busch stadium.

Coming Soon...

... to better stationery stores near you: The Bashar Assad pencil eraser.

From Picking Cotton to Picking Democrats

Awhile back, when I learned about Jesse Jackson's unhappiness with black New Orleanians being perhaps permanently unavailable to vote in New Orleans, I wrote:
[Jackson] fears two things: (1) a dilution of black voting strength in New Orleans resulting from countless decisions to remain elsewhere, and (2) a demonstrative education on good government for the black voters who do return.
It looks like I was right on the money.
The Rev. Jesse Jackson and New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin are up in arms because what has historically been a mostly black city may be on its way to becoming a largely brown city. Latino immigrants are coming to New Orleans from as far away as California to repair homes, clear debris, rebuild roads and do other jobs. According to a story in the Los Angeles Times, they're making about $15 per hour, and they've been so warmly received by contractors that many of them say they plan to stay, save money, buy homes, and put down roots in the Big Easy.

Before Katrina, New Orleans was only about 3 percent Latino. Now, demographers say the city's Latino population could swell to four or five times that amount.
The author of this piece reports that Jackson has proposed busing New Orleans's able-bodied, but aimlessly-wandering refugees back to the Big Easy to participate in the reconstruction work, something I noticed awhile back, and he makes the following excellent point:
City officials say that one thing that keeps former residents from wanting to give New Orleans another chance is the lack of subsidized housing.

Guess what? Latino immigrants have to contend with the same shortage. The difference is that the immigrants are not sitting around and waiting for government to come to the rescue. They're probably living two or three families to a house, and saving money to buy a home of their own.

That's how it used to be in this country before the advent of the welfare state. And, if the immigrant values win out in this struggle over those of the New Orleans officials it could be that way again.

Let's understand the stakes. This is a struggle between those who want to be seen as delivering salvation and those who believe that everyone is responsible for saving themselves. Funny. Given the government's slow response to Katrina, I thought that argument was settled.
If Katrina has exposed the consequences of the welfare state, perhaps the rebuilding of New Orleans will expose the benefits of doing away with it altogether. Not only have many government regulations already been shelved to expedite the effort, but now we also see that many from outside the "social safety net" are about to come to the rescue -- something the Jesse Jacksons of the world can only pretend to do.

Add "Incompetent" to the List


I have already stated why I oppose the Miers nomination on political grounds. I have also indirectly expressed my gut feeling that she is a lightweight. Now, apparently, that gut feeling has been confirmed, something I hope Harriet Miers never is! From Patterico's quotation of the Washington Post:
[S]everal constitutional law scholars said they were surprised and puzzled by Miers's response to the committee's request for information on cases she has handled dealing with constitutional issues. In describing one matter on the Dallas City Council, Miers referred to the proportional representation requirement of the Equal Protection Clause as it relates to the Voting Rights Act.

There is no proportional representation requirement in the Equal Protection Clause, said Cass R. Sunstein, a constitutional law professor at the University of Chicago. He and several other scholars said it appeared that Miers was confusing proportional representation which typically deals with ethnic groups having members on elected bodies with the one-man, one-vote Supreme Court ruling that requires, for example, legislative districts to have equal populations.
Wow! One of Patterico's commenters adds, "[A]ny Senator who would vote in confirmation of Miers, Republican or Democrat, should have all support withdraw from them in their next election campaign. Voting for this disaster of a nominee would be a clear sign of utter incompetence and frank disrespect for the US Constitution." Hmmm. And what of nominating her in the first place? I am not sure whether to be more afraid that Bush made this nomination for tactical reasons (e.g., as a foil for the next nominee) or that Bush really wants her confirmed!

This is interesting. Many religious conservatives -- like this commenter -- oppose Miers. Many do so because they want an ironclad assurance that the Roe vs. Wade decision would be overturned if the opportunity presents itself, but many, including Ann Coulter, do so on the grounds that Miers is less than qualified as a constitutional scholar.

I think that a woman has the right to abort an early term fetus, but can see why some might object to the constitutional basis of the Roe vs. Wade decision. However, other goals of the religious right, notably those, like school prayer (or even the banning of abortion), where states' rights is to be used as a pretext for a piecemeal government establishment of religion on the state level, will require that a Justice deliberately evade the meaning of the Establishment Clause! To require that a solid constitutional scholar be willing to do this is to ask for a contradiction.

The Miers nomination, after this news, looks more likely to fail or even be withdrawn than it ever did. One wonders, though. If Miers were more adamantly "pro-life", would so many on the religious right still oppose her? Would the desire to ban abortion trump the desire for competence in the field of constitutional scholarship?

Is the desire for "competence" the same kind of window dressing that Intelligent Design is for Creationism?

American Cultural Imperialism

James Lileks writes a funny column on how American culture is invading nations around the world. My favorite line:
Drop a VCR and a TV in a remote Amazonian village, return a year later, and what do you find? Nothing, because you forgot to supply the generator. But leave one of those, and within six months the kids will be running around saying "No Luke I am your father" and making whoom-whoom lightsaber sounds. This fact gladdens the hearts of some, since it shows that American values freedom, justice, explosions are universal.
It's a lighthearted look at the fundamental contradiction of multiculturalism.

-- CAV

Updates

Today: Added link to Lileks column (HT: Jennifer Snow).


Mysticism at the SfN

Wednesday, October 19, 2005

In the New York Times today, I read a story about a controversy brewing among neuroscientists concerning someone who has been invited to speak at the 35th Annual Meeting of the Society for Neuroscience (SfN) to be held next month in Washington, DC.

[The Dalai Lama] has been an enthusiastic collaborator in research on whether the intense meditation practiced by Buddhist monks can train the brain to generate compassion and positive thoughts. Next month in Washington, the Dalai Lama is scheduled to speak about the research at the annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience.

But 544 brain researchers have signed a petition urging the society to cancel the lecture, because, according to the petition, "it will highlight a subject with largely unsubstantiated claims and compromised scientific rigor and objectivity."

Defenders of the Dalai Lama's appearance say that the motivation of many protesters is political, because many are Chinese or of Chinese descent. The Dalai Lama fled Tibet in 1959 after the Chinese crushed a Tibetan bid for independence.

But many scientists who signed the petition say they did so because they believe that the field of neuroscience risks losing credibility if it ventures too recklessly into spiritual matters.

On that last sentence: How 'bout this: Science will lose all credibility if it ventures into mysticism at all.

This is not to say that research into what is going on in the brain during meditation is totally unwarranted. At least from the news article, it appears that this is plausibly what the Dalai Lama has helped some scientists do.

In one widely reported 2003 study, Dr. Richard Davidson of the University of Wisconsin-Madison led a team of researchers that found that 25 employees of a biotechnology company showed increased levels of neural activity in the left anterior temporal region of their brains after taking a course in meditation. The region is active during sensations of happiness and positive emotion, the researchers reported.


This area of research is completely unfamiliar to me, so will leave aside the question of how well this study was conducted and how well its conclusions are supported by other work. However, I see no substantive difference in testing brain activity while someone is meditating as opposed to while they are performing other mental tasks. This sort of work is done all the time. (What would be wrong would be to use the fact that meditation was studied rigorously to imply that unrelated claims about what meditation can accomplish are somehow validated.) In this respect, I have no problem with researchers studying willing participants, including the Dalai Lama.

What I do wonder about is this: What makes the Dalai Lama a scientific collaborator? His cooperation might be crucial to the work in question, but suppose I wanted to study brain differences between, say, professional basketball players and the general population. I might enlist the aid of the NBA or a few team owners in the quest for study participants. The study wouldn't happen without their help, but that would not make the owners collaborators. They are not scientists. The players themselves provide data, but they are also not collaborators in the scientific sense. While the owners and players would be thanked in any resulting publication of the work, they would not be listed as authors and would not be qualified to speak about the science at all.

And you would not see someone like Mark Cuban or Shaquille O'Neal speaking at a scientific conference.

Granted, one might attribute to journalistic sloppiness the use of the term "collaborator" in this story to describe the Dalai Lama's role in ongoing research on meditation, but that still begs the question of why he was invited to speak at a scientific conference. Even if the research on meditation is rock solid (a contention that some scientists clearly do not agree with), this invitation can be easily manipulated to give his religion a veneer of credibility that only science can give it.

Indeed, from a description of the talk that appears at the conference web site (No permalink: Citation is "Dalai Lama. THE NEUROSCIENCE OF MEDITATION Program No. 8. 2005 Abstract Viewer/Itinerary Planner. Washington, DC: Society for Neuroscience, 2005. Online."), that seems indeed to be what is going on. The talk is to be the first in a lecture series called "Dialogues between Neuroscience and Society", which will feature insights from leading figures in "fields at the boundaries of neuroscience". While this is certainly legitimate at the meeting of the SfN, and one could argue that the Dalai Lama, after 15 years of working with neuroscientists might have some interesting things to say, the last sentence in the description sounds like he will be using the lecture as an opportunity to promote his religious views at a scientific conference, something that is exactly what should not be going on. To paraphrase: The Dalai Lama will discuss the implications of this research in promoting "compassionate behavior in all human beings."

In fact, the scientist who invited the Dalai Lama to speak at the conference seems to share in this agenda.

"The practice of meditation is a human behavior, and the Dalai Lama is extraordinarily skilled at it and at promoting qualities of peace and compassion that I thought could bring us together," said Dr. Barnes, a professor of psychology and neurology at the University of Arizona who invited the Dalai Lama to speak last February.

The place to promote Buddhism as the path to peace is anywhere but at a scientific conference.

-- CAV


Back from the Big Moldy

Tuesday, October 18, 2005

My wife's family was recently allowed back into their old neighborhood in New Orleans after Katrina hit, and I left Friday to help them clear out their house for repair and sale. Even though I took off Monday "just in case", the whole affair stretched into this morning.

I have three quick comments after the trip.

(1) Pictures and television do not do the devastation justice. And what I saw was hardly the worst.

(2) My in-laws, who own a house there got off easy. And what does that mean? A month and a half later, the house lacks power and, although water has been restored, it is not safe to drink. Part of the roof was stripped clean of shingles by winds, allowing about a quarter of the house to suffer rain damage. Since flooding in surrounding areas had cut off all access to their neighborhood, the wet areas of the un-air-conditioned house remained wet for weeks and so became overgrown with mold. A significant amount of furniture and other dry goods had to be thrown out. Probably a third of the drywall in the house, which did not flood, has to be replaced. The house should be habitable in only a month, quite fast by New Orleans standards.

But this is nothing. About three quarters of the houses I saw suffered at least a foot of indoor water -- if you can call what flooded New Orleans "water". About half had wind damage. My wife saw a few of the hardest-hit areas. There was basically nothing left in those neighborhoods.

And one more thing about the flooding: Aside from  the damage caused by this liquid and mold, did I mention that everything touched by the flooding is now coated with putrid, tan dust?

Huge swaths of this city are simply devastated. Preservationists have made noise about saving the "vernacular architecture" (e.g., shotgun houses) of New Orleans, but it is sheer fantasy to maintain that this can be done economically. Leveling and rebuilding from the ground up would be far cheaper.

(3) Will New Orleans rebound? I doubt it will become much more than a big tourist trap after this. Lots of people already plan to stay away, lots of people think (in my opinion anyway) that they want to return but perhaps haven't fully realized what rebuilding is going to take, and some I know who are already there are playing a "wait and see" game until the strength of the recovery becomes easier to judge. Whatever happens, it's going to be a long, extremely difficult process at best.

-- CAV

PS: I've a full plate at work and some annoying problems with internet connectivity at home, so odds are that blogging will continue to be on the irregular side this week.


An Inland Pirates' Cove

Thursday, October 13, 2005

A couple of disturbing stories came to me from quarters I don't visit regularly enough. Oddly, they both involve medieval barbarians and satellite technology.

Via Belmont Club comes this rather disturbing account by a blogger who decided to investigate an outpost (Jamaat) -- in rural Virginia -- of an Islamofascist organization called Jamaat ul-Fuqra, which the Beltway Sniper joined after he decided the Nation of Islam was not quite militant enough. The account is long, but well worth it.

Shirley said that there are other Jamaat locations besides the compound. One of her hobbies is historical research, and recently she was tracking down old homesteads in the wilds of Charlotte County. Her maps led her down a back-country lane, a non-state route through the wilderness that required a four-wheel drive to negotiate. When she neared the old homesteads she was looking for, she was surprised to find an establishment with a sign that identified it as a "Training Camp for Young Muslim-American Men."
There were a lot of men there, and some boys, and they came up to us to ask us what we were doing. I was a little bit scared, you know, asking their permission to go back and look at the ruins of the house. They weren't real helpful, just pointed us in the general direction. We never did find the place.
This "training camp" was across Route 615 and a couple of miles from the main compound on Rolling Hill Road.

According to Shirley, Jamaat ul-Fuqra operated some kind of jewelry-and-essential-oils business at a kiosk at a Lynchburg Mall. A friend of hers who worked at UPS reported that the men running the kiosk would come in to collect C.O.D. packages from New York, and pay for them with large amounts of cash. Her friend didn't understand how they could acquire such quantities of money from the kind of business they ran at the Mall.

I floated the idea that it might be a money-laundering operation. Perhaps they brought in drugs from their Central Asian contacts, and then laundered the money to buy their firearms and run their camps. Pure speculation on my part, but …

What we do know is that an organization with a history of violence had set up shop locally, refused to let its girl children go to school, and had top members arrested and convicted by the FBI for firearms violations. In addition they have set up a remote and isolated "Training Camp for Young Muslim-American Men" [bold added] -- to train young men for what? Auto repair? The food service industry? I have my doubts.
Fantastic! We have terrorists biding their time in training camps in the backwoods! Aspects of this account remind me of places I saw signs for in Florida and Oklahoma years ago.

At the same time, via MEMRI, it seems that these peaceful Moslems will not lack for satellite viewing options when they get tired of trying to assemble nuclear weapons "in their kitchens", as that old Islamic canard goes.
On October 10, the Iranian Student News Agency, ISNA, reported that Iran 's Hizbullah is planning to operate a new satellite TV channel, named Kheibar.

...

It should be noted that Kheibar was a rich and fertile oasis north of Al-Madina, inhabited by Jews, and destroyed by Prophet Mohammad in 628. The fate of the Kheibar Jews today is used by Hamas as a symbol to the fight against the Jews and Israel.a
I saw this story first and wondered whether their use of satellites might make it easy to figure out from whence they broadcast. This would be valuable information, to say the least.

What to do about the infiltration of the West by Moslem fanatics? I'm no legal scholar and I have some reservations about this approach, but an article about a similar war, the one against maritime pirates, comes to mind.
Coming up with such a [legal] framework would perhaps seem impossible, except that one already exists. Dusty and anachronistic, perhaps, but viable all the same. More than 2,000 years ago, Marcus Tullius Cicero defined pirates in Roman law as hostis humani generis, "enemies of the human race." From that day until now, pirates have held a unique status in the law as international criminals subject to universal jurisdiction -- meaning that they may be captured wherever they are found, by any person who finds them. The ongoing war against pirates is the only known example of state vs. nonstate conflict until the advent of the war on terror, and its history is long and notable. More important, there are enormous potential benefits of applying this legal definition to contemporary terrorism.
Unless I am mistaken, the chief difficulty lies in the fact that American citizens are among the numbers of these pirates. But then citizens belong to such organizations as the Ku Klux Klan and the Mafia, too, and our legal system seems to be able to cope with them. If we need to expand the scope of say, racketeering laws, to include criminal activity that aids a terrorist organization, we ought to.

In any event, if Islamists can use satellites to transmit propaganda over the airwaves, we can use satellite imagery to find them. In the meantime, our enemy, despite the wide availability of bomb-making recipes and the aid of hundreds of organizations, has yet to produce a single nuclear bomb.

It is not the means we lack to win this war. It is only the will.

-- CAV

PS: A reader emailed me with this interesting tidbit:
Via Michelle Malkin comes this:
A man who fatally shot himself in his University City condominium during a standoff with San Diego police was identified Saturday as a 29-year-old student.

An autopsy is scheduled tomorrow on the body of Khaled Yasufi, medical examiner Investigator Sal Rodriguez said.
Let' see ... 8700 Costa Verde is here. [Near this intersection was an apartment] where the Paleswinean flag was hanging from a balcony [for months after] the Arafish died.... And I got a look at this crowd. Right out of (pre-911) Central Casting.

Oh, and what is conveniently located nearby?
Updates

Today: Added PS.