Wednesday, June 15, 2005

MSN'S "WITHOUT THE COMMUNIST PARTY THERE WOULD BE NO NEW CHINA" 2.0 [Warren Bell]
Can Derb sing this?
Microsoft Corp.'s new MSN China Internet venture is censoring words such as "freedom," "democracy" and "human rights" on its free online journals, Microsoft said on Tuesday, putting itself in the middle of a major Web controversy.

Posted at 08:46 AM

THE TERRIBLE WHITE FLASH [John Derbyshire]
"William Perry made a speech in which he admitted he was more fearful of the nuclear threat than ever before, and estimated that the chance of a nuclear detonation on US soil over the next decade was as high as 50%."

I hesitate to recommend to a conservative readership remarks by William Perry (Clinton's SecDef) and Robert McNamara (father of the Edsel). They have a point, though. It's a great thing for the USA to have lots of nukes; but too many other people have/are getting them, controls are way below Cold War standards, and nobody thinks about these things much.

Posted at 08:41 AM

GITMO SOLUTION [Jonah Goldberg]

From a reader:

Simple solution...Make it known that all Gitmo detainees will be housed in minimum security facilities in the home state of any Senator or Representative that calls for its closure....

Posted at 08:33 AM

WSJ & MJ [Jonah Goldberg]
When The Wall Street Journal runs those pictures (line drawing versions of photos) of people, their longtime policy has been to make the subject look about fifteen or twenty years younger. Don't you think it'd be awesome if they did that with Michael Jackson, showing him as a black guy?

Posted at 08:21 AM

"THREATENS TEEN HEALTH" [K. J. Lopez]
Planned Parenthood is on the attack in California, against the parental-notification initiative on the upcoming November special-election ballot. PP says: "Parents rightly want to be involved in their teenagers' lives, but should their daughters be unable to talk to them, for whatever reason, most parents want their teens to be safe. That's much more important to caring parents than the government forcing their teens to inform parents of problems when they feel they can't." It is good that 14-year-olds always know what is best for them and can always gauge their parents' reaction. I'm not going to pretend all parents act ideally in such situations, but we are talking about children--two of them, as it happens. Parents have the right to know and sometimes (shockingly) the pregnant teen will even be much better off because they had to tell. (I ranted more about parental-notification here.)

Posted at 08:14 AM

SPEAKING OF FILIBUSTERS [Tim Graham]
John Rosenberg has some fun with how the New York Times editorial page keeps changing its mind about the utility of the filibuster. It seems so necessary now, even if it was a demonic obstruction in the Clinton era.

Posted at 07:50 AM

CONSERVATISM STANDS ATHWART HISTORY [K. J. Lopez]
yelling stop--and puts you on another road, sometimes a u-turn, sometimes just a different road. But you get somewhere. The Dems would just have you sit and stare at their Bill Pryor/etc. talking points.

Posted at 07:47 AM

STOP! [John J. Miller]
Bush's speech last night was okay -- K Lo excerpts it below -- but one line condemning Democratic obstructionism really grated: "It is the philosophy of the stop sign, the agenda of the roadblock, and our country and our children deserve better." Umm, "the philosophy of the stop sign" sounds like a pretty good definition of conservatism, whose adherents are supposed to stand athwart history and all that.

Posted at 07:38 AM

"WHO'LL APOLOGIZE FOR THE FILIBUSTER?" [K. J. Lopez]
In the LATimes today:
Who knew the Senate was so cheeky? On Monday, a mere three weeks after the centrist, bipartisan Gang of 14 agreed, ever so proudly, to save the institution's fabled filibuster, senators passed a resolution apologizing for the chamber's failure to enact anti-lynching legislation.

Astonishingly, Senate Resolution 39 makes no mention of the f-word, which denotes the mechanism that allows a minority of legislators to block votes. The resolution duly notes that at least 4,742 people, mostly African Americans, were lynched in the U.S. between 1882 and 1968; that nearly 200 anti-lynching bills, backed by seven presidents, were introduced in Congress during the first half of the 20th century; that the House of Representatives did pass three strong anti-lynching measures, but that the Senate never did, thus failing its "minimum and most basic of federal responsibilities" to those who were "deprived of life, human dignity, and the constitutional protections accorded all citizens of the United States." As Mary Landrieu, the Louisiana Democrat who sponsored the resolution, said, the Senate was "uniquely culpable" for Washington's failure to protect U.S. citizens from a type of domestic terrorism often orchestrated by local authorities.

What wasn't said is that the Senate was "uniquely culpable" because it cherished the filibuster — a procedural rule that enhances each member's individual power — over the Constitution. The Senate's failure to acknowledge the cause of its homicidal negligence robs its apology of much meaning or sincerity.

Those unfamiliar with history today, or generations from now, might blame the American people for sending senators to Washington who were evil or out of touch. But there were 70 senators willing to sponsor anti-lynching legislation as far back as 1938, and lives could have been saved if the federal government had taken action then.

Posted at 07:27 AM

GET TO WORK [K. J. Lopez]
The president offers Democrats some advice:
Members of the other party have worked with us to achieve important reforms on some issues. Yet, too often, their leadership prefers to block the ideas of others. We hear 'no' to making tax relief permanent. We hear "no" to Social Security reform. We hear 'no' to confirming federal judges. We hear "no" to a highly qualified U.N. ambassador. We hear "no" to medical liability reform. On issue after issue, they stand for nothing except obstruction, and this is not leadership. It is the philosophy of the stop sign, the agenda of the roadblock, and our country and our children deserve better.

Political parties that choose the path of obstruction will not gain the trust of the American people. If leaders of the other party have innovative ideas, let's hear them. But if they have no ideas or policies except obstruction, they should step aside and let others lead.

Posted at 06:58 AM

NOT YET AT REST [K. J. Lopez]
For better or for worse, the Terri Schiavo autopsy results are being released today.

One blogger who was a firm supporter of Terri's right to live thinks Michael Schiavo will be quite satisfied with the results.

Posted at 06:45 AM

IT IS SO [K. J. Lopez]
too early in the morning to be thinking about Levitra.

Posted at 06:32 AM

YES... YES... YES! [John Derbyshire]
I've grumbled before about those Levitra ads you get on prime-time TV -- the ones where the botoxed brunette is squirming and moaning into the camera. Well, apparently the ads had performance problems. The NY Post reports that GlaxoSmithKline/Schering-Plough, the, ah, firm that markets Levitra in the U.S., are changing their advertising yet again. Drooping sales, I guess.

Posted at 06:31 AM

OHIO POLITICS [K. J. Lopez]
A DeWine loses

Posted at 05:38 AM

"THEY BALANCED ANOTHER BUDGET" [K. J. Lopez]
That's AOL's the-Clintons-paid-off-their-Whitewater-bills headline.

Posted at 05:33 AM

Tuesday, June 14, 2005

VIRGINIA POLITICS [K. J. Lopez]
Jerry Kilgore has won the Republican nomination for governor.

Posted at 09:08 PM

BLEG: BRITISH/EUROPEAN RENTAL CARS [John Derbyshire]
Here's a bleg I'm hoping someone knows about.

The Derbs are going to England in August. We want to take a side trip to France to (a) see Paris, and (b) visit friends in Normandy.

Plan A was to hire a car from London & take it over on a ferry (or thru the Chunnel). However, Budget rent-a-car, my usual firm, say they won't let us take a rental car out of England for insurance reasons.

Yet my English relatives tell me they often drive over to France, and their insurance companies don't mind (though you apparently have to tell them you're doing it, the first time at least).

It seems to follow that there ought to be some car-rental company that doesn't mind, either. Plainly Budget is not that company. What I have to do now is call every car rental desk at Heathrow airport to see if I can find one that doesn't mind us taking a car to France.

That's where I'm looking to have some knowledgable reader save me the trouble. Anyone got info on this?

Posted at 09:01 PM

TODAY IN HISTORY AND ANYTHING BUT HISTORY [K. J. Lopez]
Indepundit:
LEST WE FORGET, today is also the 20th anniversary of the hijacking of TWA Flight 847 by terrorists affiliated with Hezbollah, aka "the Party of God." The flight from Athens to Rome was diverted to Beirut, on to Algiers, and eventually back to Beirut. There, the hijackers demanded the release of 435 Lebanese and Palestinian prisoners held by Israel...
(Keep reading.)

Posted at 08:59 PM

ISTANBUL [Rick Brookhiser]
I claim to have sung "Istanbul" more than anyone else in the Corner, because when I was in college (Yale, '77), I belonged to the Duke's Men, an all-male singing group whose signature piece "Istanbul" was.

Even old New York
Was once New Amsterdam.
Why they changed it, I can't say.
People just liked it better that way.

Posted at 08:49 PM

NEW YORK POLITICS [Ramesh Ponnuru]
Noah Millman explains why he's for Bloomberg and against Pataki.

Posted at 07:36 PM

DANGEROUS DARWIN? [Jonah Goldberg]
From a reader:
Fine, books can be very dangerous. I agree. Please defend the inclusion of Origin of Species on such a list - even in the "Others Receiving Votes" category. I don't mean to direct this to you, since you didn't put the list together and haven't defended it substantively. But in my mind including a book which created a new branch of science and which has been proven in most important ways to be absolutely correct about the nature of our origins renders the entire list useless and, in fact, dangerous. I say dangerous because it adds legitimacy to current movements in this country that seek to undermine science (e.g., the intelligent design movement). (I suspect we might both agree that the intelligent design movement is dangerous - I personally would include the current administration's environmental policies as a similarly dangerous movement, but on that I suspect our opinions differ.) I might go so far as to consider this one of the 10 most harmful Top 10 lists of the past century.
Me: No, I wouldn't have put the Origin of Species on the list. I disagree with those who would lump Darwin with Freud and Marx. But I don't think one can glibly say that just because the book was scientifically correct (speaking broadly, we've discovered lots of new things since then) and pioneering, doesn't mean it can't also be harmful. Darwinism certainly led to many horrors and abuses across the ideological spectrum, often through misapplication (more on that when I finish my book). But so have many scientific discoveries. Science, much like books, isn't by definition morally good or bad. It's what you do with it. As for Intelligent Design, that's been covered enough around here, I think.

Posted at 06:05 PM

A THREAT TO DEMOCRACY? [Jonah Goldberg]

A reader writes:

Jonah, Are you defending the list and ideas put forth by Human Events? Chait's getting all huffy over something silly I think. But you don't mention whether or not you agree w/ Human Events. Chait attacks Human Events ideas. You are criticizing Chait, does that mean you support Human Events? Where do you stand? Is Darwin a danger to society? Should the Theory of Evolution be minimized in public education? The Corner did this w/ Deep Throat too. Fine Mark Felt might have been a disloyal pr*ck and Woodward is a boorish whore, but that doesn't excuse Liddy, Colson, Nixon etc. Fine Chait cannot write or argue well, but where do you stand? Those who put that list together are a danger to reason and democracy, the only time a book is harmful is when it is thrown at someone's head. All ideas must be heard (not necessarily paid attention to but heard).

Me: This strikes me as hyperventillated nonsense. Some very quick thoughts in response.

I didn't say Chait can't write or argue well. If that were true, I wouldn't bother criticizing him. He can do both quite well which is why his piece vexed me so.

Second, I said I thought the list was to a significant extent stupid. But not because of the content or the authors, but because it's a list. I once had a book contract to rank in order the 100 most influential conservatives from antiquity to the present day. I know how dumb lists can be. I might quibble with the entries or the ordering or the criteria, but in general I don't have the objection to the Human Events list this reader wants me to have.

This reader wants me to buy into the notion that books -- i.e. ideas -- can never be dangerous. Alas, I think that's bunk. Of course books can be dangerous. Everything important, everything with the power to change mens' minds can be dangerous. How you can believe a book -- or a movie or a play -- can make the world a better place but that it can never make the world a worse place is beyond me. Any medium which can uplift can confuse. Does the reader really think the Protocols of the Elders of Zion is only dangerous when thrown?

The notion that "art" can only be enlightening is a carbunkle of a cliché. The relevant question is, Therefore what? Since most people think censorship is the greatest evil known to man (a belief I've disputed many, many times), I certainly think criticizing ideas is not only fine, but sometimes necessary. Pragmatically, I admit this can backfire (calling a book "dangerous" increases its appeal). But I don't see why, as a matter of principle, we can't say some books made this world better and some books made this world worse.


Posted at 05:23 PM

VIACOM [K. J. Lopez]
, cbs's parent company, is splitting in half

Posted at 04:53 PM

T-T-TALKIN' 'BOUT MY G-GENERATION [John Derbyshire]
...singing "Istanbul"

Posted at 04:51 PM

WON'T YOU PLEASE COME TO CHICAGO? [K. J. Lopez]
Need I say more?

Posted at 04:49 PM

A NEW JERSEY COURT [K. J. Lopez]
upholds the state's marriage law.

Posted at 04:42 PM

NOVEL IDEA! [K. J. Lopez]
BBC:
Michael Jackson's lawyer said the singer will no longer share his bed with young boys, after the star was cleared of 10 child abuse charges.

Posted at 04:40 PM

AP [K. J. Lopez]
writes Bill Owens off.

Posted at 04:33 PM

CONSTANTINOPLE [John Derbyshire]
Tim: Well, that's what I said. In my childhood, i.e. round about 1990.

I must say, "Constantinople" is a chore to type out. No wonder they changed it. When will someone do the same for Cincinnati?

Posted at 04:21 PM

RUPERT SAVES [K. J. Lopez]
europe?

Posted at 04:15 PM

CATCHING UP [Jonah Goldberg ]

I saw this column by Jonathan Chait when it came out, but I never got around to commenting on it. Along with some others who commented on it earlier, I think this may be the shabbiest piece I've ever seen Chait write.

He tackles a list of the 10 most harmful books of the last two centuries, published by Human Events. He scores some easy points, with a lot of name-calling thrown in (for exaomple, conservatives are "a gaggle of thick-skulled fanatics"). And I think he's right that The Protocols of the Elders of Zion should have made the list -- though I can see how the contributors overlooked it, since it's more a propaganda tract. But, whatever.

What bothers me about Chait's attack on the list is the seeming disingenousness of it. First of all, he surely must know that lists -- especially those compiled by committees -- are always stupid in one respect or another. It's a journalistic conceit that knows no party affiliation.

Second, he asserts -- simply for the sake of offering insults -- that the contributors in particular and conservatives in general cannot "distinguish between seminal works of social science and totalitarian manifestos" simply because both sorts of books show up on the same list. But he must know that, say, Robert George knows the difference between The Communist Manifesto and John Dewey's Democracy and Education. But conceding this in good faith would detract from the entire point of the column.

Or take his riff on the entry on Betty Friedan's The Feminine Mystique:

The squib on "The Feminine Mystique" begins with a fairly anodyne summary of Betty Freidan's pioneering feminist tract. Rather than explain what's so dangerous about allowing women the choice of having a career, though, Human Events proceeds to quote a review that "Friedan was from her college days, and until her mid-30s, a Stalinist Marxist." Not just a Stalinist, but a Marxist to boot!

Personally, I fail to see how Friedan's communist past — she was 42 when she published "The Feminine Mystique" — would discredit her insights about the repressive nature of a world in which women were discriminated against or barred outright from most professions and much of public life. Especially because the conservative movement was itself heavily salted with ex-communists. But then, my mind has already been poisoned by Dewey, Mill and other liberal relativists.

This is thick with bad faith. He creates a strawman by saying that what really offends conservatives is the idea that women have the choice of working (when was the last time you heard a conservative make the argument that women shouldn't have that choice?). He scores a quick hypocrisy charge by mentioning that many conservatives were ex-Communists. He suggests that there's no merit to the idea that Dewey's influence on education has been negative even though this is hardly a crackpot or new argument, even among liberals. And, worst of all, he pretends that he doesn't know the real substance of the complaints against Friedan. The issue isn't merely that she was an "ex"-Communist. The critique offered by David Horowitz, and mentioned in the Human Events piece, was that Friedan was a collosal liar. She pretended to be a middle class housewife when she was really a pro-Stalin activist. Chait willfully ignores this in order to deliver a cheap shot. Call me crazy, but if a conservative were guilty of such propagandistic misrepresentation, I sincerely doubt Chait would write how he failed to see how a famous conservative's pro-Hitler past was entirely irrelevant to his insights.


Posted at 04:14 PM

RE: CONSTANTINOPLE [Tim Graham]
Say, Derb, you don't have to scratch your head and swell your synapses. "Istanbul, Not Constantinople" is covered quite ably by the goofy, geeky band They Might Be Giants.

Posted at 04:11 PM

THE THINGS WE LEARN... [John Derbyshire]
…via our kids. Danny, just home from school, wanted to know how long Byzantium had been around before Constantine I came along and made it the capital in AD 330. I hadn’t a clue, so we looked it up. Answer: 667 BC! The city is almost as old as Rome. I never knew that.

Dimly remembered song from my childhood:

“Take me back to Constantinople.
No, you can’t go back to Constantinople,
‘Cause if you’ve a date in Constantinople
She’ll be waiting in Istanbul.”

You used to be able to learn geography from pop songs – imagine!

Posted at 03:51 PM

EX-ADMIN. 9/11 CONSPIRACY FLIRTER [K. J. Lopez]
Morgan Reynolds--he's been a 9/11 "skeptic" on LewRockwell.

Posted at 03:01 PM

THOUGHT FOR THE DAY [John Derbyshire]
“In politics, being ridiculous is more damaging than being extreme.”

Roy Hattersley (former deputy leader of the British Labour Party)

Posted at 02:59 PM

RIPLEY'S [K. J. Lopez]
timewaster

Posted at 02:58 PM

PIT BULLS [Jonah Goldberg]
This will annoy some folks but, for the record, I am basically anti-pit bull and I generally don't think their transgressions should count against dogs any more than lynx or cougars should count against cats. I know this doesn't hold up under the strictest scrutiny on several fronts, but while I think most breeds of dogs have to be "taught" to be bad, I think the reverse is largely true for pit bulls. They can be sweet, but it takes a lot of work to make and keep them that way.

Posted at 02:56 PM

COLLECTED SPEECHES OF JOE BIDEN [John Derbyshire]
Boy, our readers have long memories: "Derb---Depending on who he had plagiarized, this might not be bad reading."

Posted at 02:33 PM

HOW [K. J. Lopez]
awful

Posted at 02:32 PM

FUNDRAISING SUGGESTION [John Derbyshire]
(from a reader):
"Without the Communist Party There Would Be No New China"

Have you put this on the web as an MP3? You could charge people to download it.

Or how about a form of blackmail--NRO readers download it, then collect from the neighbors in return for not playing it.

This implies no reflection on your singing, of course: they must simply explain to the (presumably lefty) neighbors that it's a writer at a Conservative publication doing the singing, crank it up, and wait for results. Then send all proceeds to a special fund set aside for that purpose.

Just a thought.

Posted at 02:29 PM

POOR COSMO [Jonah Goldberg]
These have been trying times for the Wonderdog. I've been gone a lot. We moved back into our house about two weeks ago after living elsewhere for nearly a year. Cosmo doesn't like change. There are still workmen all over the house, which also upsets him greatly, for he doesn't appreciate intruders in the perimeter and other such security breaches. My daughter is now old enough to chase him, which is a big hassle too. When my wife, the Fair Jessica, came up to New York for all the stuff about pops, Cosmo stayed behind at my sister-in-law's house, which is only a couple blocks away. His best dog-friend, Buckley, lives there.

Anyway, he came back home today. He clearly missed us. He resumed his normal Overlord spot on our porch and tolerated the workmen who still come in and out of the house. Cosmo has been an outstanding porch dog ever since we moved here. While he might run down to the lawn to yell at the mailman or UPS guy, or to inform neighborhood dogs not to leave their calling-cards on our lawn, he's never left our property and only very rarely leaves his post.

Except today. Without us knowing it, he snuck-off to my sister-in-law's. We don't know what this means as it is so unprecedented, particularly given the brutal heat (Cosmo's a very hard worker, but he likes his shade as much as the next dog). We just don't know what to make of it.

Posted at 02:16 PM

PORK FROM ORK [K. J. Lopez]
NASA has an "artist in residence." I kid you not. She gets a $20,000 stipend. I'm told that Rep. Chris Chocola (R., Ind.) is going to offer an amendment today in the House of Representatives prohibiting NASA from hiring more performance artists.

Posted at 02:12 PM

THEY CAN'T TAKE THE HEAT [K. J. Lopez]
D.C. schools closed early today

Posted at 02:01 PM

MARINE DESPERATION [K. J. Lopez]
Spruiell also takes a look at a much-cited column about Seattle recruiters that turns out to have been something other than fair.

Posted at 01:59 PM

DEADLY PARENTING 101 [K. J. Lopez]
SAN FRANCISCO, California (AP) -- The mother of a 12-year-old boy killed in his own home by one of the family's two pit bulls says she had been so concerned about one of the dogs that she shut her son in the basement to protect him.

Maureen Faibish said she ordered Nicholas to stay in the basement while she did errands on June 3, the day he was attacked by one or both of the dogs.

She said she was worried about the male dog, Rex, who was acting possessive because the female, Ella, was in heat.

"I put him down there, with a shovel on the door," Faibish said in an interview with the San Francisco Chronicle. "And I told him: 'Stay down there until I come back.' Typical Nicky, he wouldn't listen to me."... [KJL: He's a child. They do that.]

Faibish found her son's body in a bedroom. He was covered in blood from several wounds, including a major head injury.

..."It's Nicky's time to go," she said in the interview. "When you're born you're destined to go and this was his time."

Posted at 01:56 PM

SENDING A MESSAGE [Michael Ledeen]
For those who continue to think that American support is unwelcome to Iranian democracy forces, take a look at these pictures, and look at the signs (from the women's protest over the weekend). They are mostly in English. That's for us, not for our dear friends in Germany and France...














Posted at 01:44 PM

HILARIOUS [Rich Lowry ]
You have to check out the surveillance pictures Spruiell has posted of a New York Times editorial writer hanging outside a chemical plant that the Times went on to describe as dangerously insecure (read his posts too)...

Posted at 01:35 PM

WHAT ANNAN KNEW AND WHEN HE KNEW IT [K. J. Lopez]
AP:
UNITED NATIONS - Investigators of the U.N. oil-for-food program said Tuesday they are "urgently reviewing" new information that suggests U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan may have known more than he revealed about a contract that was awarded to the company that employed his son.

The December 1998 memo from Michael Wilson, then a vice president of Cotecna Inspections S.A., mentions brief discussions with Annan "and his entourage" at a summit in Paris in 1998 about Cotecna's bid for a $10 million-a-year contract under oil-for-food.

If accurate, the memo could contradict a major finding of the Independent Inquiry Committee — that there wasn't enough evidence to show that Annan knew about efforts by Cotecna, which employed his son, Kojo, to win the contract. Cotecna learned it won the contract on Dec. 11, 1998, days after the meeting....

Posted at 01:34 PM

LENIN [Rick Brookhiser]
Bertrand Russell: "When I met Lenin [in 1920] I had much less impression of a great man than I had expected; my most vivid impressions were of bigotry and Monoglian cruelty. When I put a question to him about socialism in agriculture, he explained with glee how he had incited the poorer peasants against the richer ones, 'and they soon hanged them from the nearest ree--ha! ha! ha!' His guffaw at the thought of those massacred made my blood run cold."

Posted at 01:28 PM

WE SPEND MORE ON FOOD PER PERSON IN GITMO [K. J. Lopez]
than we do for rations for our troops overseas, Don Rumsfeld just said at a press conference. (I have on in the background here--on CNN.)

Posted at 01:23 PM

THAT NICK CANNON VIDEO [K. J. Lopez]
(see here) is getting some reaction.

Posted at 01:15 PM

HE KNOWS OF WHAT HE SPEAKS [K. J. Lopez]
Paul Hanning of Virginia e-mails: "Following the Derb's epic performance, he retired to the buffet to refuel. What a night! Everyone should drop what they're doing and flock to Chicago. I personally guarantee an unforgettable evening."

Posted at 01:03 PM

MUSICAL MURDER [John Derbyshire]
Jay Nordlinger is one of the most acute and sensitive music critics in the business. For him to have to listen to me singing is like an A-1 gourmand being forced to eat a carton of Twinkies, or like WFB being shut up in a jail cell with nothing to read but the collected speeches of Joe Biden. The fact that Jay stayed conscious through myfortissimo rendition of "Without the Communist Party There Would Be No New China," and refrained from leaping over and throttling me, testifies to his strength of character, and to the pain he is willing to endure on behalf of the magazine we all love.

Posted at 12:55 PM

CAFTA, [K. J. Lopez]
NR encourages the Senate.

Posted at 12:52 PM

CORNER V. GDP [Jonah Goldberg]

From a reader:

Mr. Goldberg,

First, let me state that I think the existence of The Corner reduces our real GDP figures somewhat. Here's a short, oversimplified explanation:

Assuming the following:

- 10,000 people monitor The Corner regularly at work.
- "Monitoring regularly" means hitting the refresh button every 15 minutes.
- Stopping work to refresh the page and glance at new posts takes 1 minute.
- Starting back into the project you were working on takes 1 minute.
- Average productivity $ value per minute of the 10,000 viewers = $5.
(Yes, I pulled that out of thin air, but you can do that in economics.)

That would figure out to be 8 minutes per person of lost productivity every hour, or $400,000 of lost productivity each hour. Assuming a 40-hour work week, that's $1,600,000 lost per week, or $83,200,000 per year. That brings our GDP figure down just a bit.

Now whether comparing GDP figures between China and the US is good or bad, I'd say it's probably more irrelevant. The West has turned into one big shopping mall, and sees everything through economic glasses. China and our other enemies do not. They have not forgotten that it is power, and power alone, that rules history. We believe that our economy is what gives us power. That is a pretty fragile belief, don't you think?

Anyway, I don't care what my nieces and nephews say....math is fun!


Posted at 12:50 PM

FRIST ON BOLTON [Rich Lowry ]
From his opening statement at press conference today (note, according to this transcript, the wierd Bob Dole-esque reference to himself as “Bill Frist”--he's getting a bad case of majority leader disease):

We are here to urge our colleagues to allow the Bolton nomination to come back to the floor for an up-or-down vote. That's the purpose of John McCain and Bill Frist today spending a few minutes with you. And I believe we can accomplish that. There's a lot going on in terms of negotiations and letters and talking.

But now we're at a point where the filibuster against Bolton -- and, yes, I'll call it a filibuster, because that's where we are until we get it to an up-or-down vote on the floor of the United States Senate -- is continuing.

Just looking back at the data and the statistics, it was over 200 days ago that the position of the U.N. ambassador came open with the resignation of our former colleague, Jack Danforth, who was then ambassador at the United Nations.

On March 7th, the nomination was announced. On March 17th, the nomination was sent to this body, the United States Senate. On April 11th, the Foreign Relations Committee held its hearing. On May 12th, sent to the floor, to our executive calendar. But on May 26th, through a cloture vote, this filibuster was begun.

At the same time, we have seen a whole sequence of events over the last 200 days. We've seen the Orange Revolution in Ukraine, the Cedar Revolution in Lebanon, the vote in Iraq, the vote in Palestine, the hope of opening the presidential elections in Egypt.

It's been 200 days that this vacancy sign above our U.N. ambassador's door in New York has been blinking. It is now a time to end that.

In addition, we're seeing reports come out almost daily calling out for reform in the United Nations. We see the oil-for-food program. We've seen the problem with refugees. We've seen the human rights questionable commission there in terms of participation.

It is time to reform the U.N. It is time to bring Bolton to the floor for an up-or-down vote. We're confident that he will be confirmed if we're allowed to do so.

Posted at 12:45 PM

SO MUCH FOR THAT [K. J. Lopez]
Racer Danica Patrick doesn't know who Gloria Steinem is. That inevitable Lifetime special about how she was inspired by Ms. Magazine and the fight for sports quotas in schools might be a challenge to pull off.

Posted at 12:40 PM

WE'RE A MIX--AND WE'LL BE THERE [K. J. Lopez]
A reader about those fundraiser pictures: "the best part is Mr. Nordlinger (I think that's him) standing to Derb's right with an expression like he's seeing the very concept of music itself being murdered before his very eyes..." Will you join us in Chicago?

Posted at 12:36 PM

RED V RED WHITE AND BLUE [Jonah Goldberg]

From a few readers:

On China and the US and growth:

1. The calculation that you are doing is total GDP; when US and Chinese
total GDPs are even there will be around 250 million Americans earning,
say, $50,000/head and 1.25 billion Chinese earning $10,000 each. So you
may want to think about per capita GDP as well. The smaller, richer US
population will be able to afford things that the more numerous, poorer
Chinese will not.

2. Chinese growth statistics are at best back of the envelope
estimates. There is a staff of something like 15 people calculating
Chinese GDP, and a large fraction of the country is not well measured.

3. Most of Chinese growth involves getting people out of peasant villages
(where they practice more or less subsistence agriculture) and into factory
jobs. It is unclear how long this will last (it is possible that to move
another 100 million into factories will require building more factories
than are needed to build all the stuff needed by the world's
consumers). There is a lot of pressure in the US and Europe to reduce
purchases (or maybe the growth in purchases) of Chinese goods, which will
limit future Chinese growth.

4. India is fast creeping up on China. They speak English and outnumber
the Chinese.

And...

If you are speaking of the date at which you expect per-capita income in China will surpass that in the US, then the following is something to remember. There is something called the “Convergence Hypothesis” which states that under certain conditions, economies that are similar except for their initial level of income, will have their incomes converge over time. The corollary to this result is that economies that are initially poor will gradually approach the level of income of the initially rich, they will never pass them. Another way to say this is that it will take an infinite amount of time for China to pass the US. This is because the growth rate of the poorer economies (e.g. China) gradually slows down and prevents it from passing the richer economies (e.g US).

Of course if the “certain conditions” assumption is not satisfied, then there are other things that could happen in principle. For example, it could then ultimately be that China could surpass the US in per-capita GDP at some future date. On the other hand, the opposite could happen: The differences could stay large forever.

The “Convergence Hypothesis” is something widely studied. People like Robert Barro have made a career out of it. It seems to hold up pretty well in the data, but there are always exceptions. For example, once you include the continent of Africa in your data set, everything gets screwed up since this is a pool of countries that are poor and don’t seem to show any sign of catching up to any developed countries.


And...

Jonah:

While it may be interesting to think about when China might pass us as the largest economy, it is certainly not the whole story. If, in 2056, China has an economy roughtly our size, then it would have roughly one-fourth of the per-capita income, since their population is four times as large. So, even after fifty years of outsized growth, we would still be, on average, four times as wealthy as the Chinese. Now that is interesting.


Posted at 12:20 PM

WHAT THE COOL KIDS DO OVER SUMMER VACATION [K. J. Lopez]
An e-mail re early-morning Corner talk:
Hi Kathryn,

I too really enjoyed reading the article in today's NYT on the current crop of Heritage interns. I'm still in close touch with many of my former Heritage intern alums (summer class of 2002) and we're quite jealous that we missed out on living in those luxurious dorms! (although my stipend did allow me to survive living in a basement apartment in a less-than-glamorous section of N.E. Washington).

Although we did predictably break down along libertarian-traditionalist lines, some fissures produced more numerous discussions than others. For instance, we were relatively united on U.S. foreign policy issues, but the question of same-sex marriage and the future possibility (at that time) of a Constitutional amendment, was probably the most popularly debated issue of the summer (especially for those over 21 during the post-softball game victory celebrations). During my time at Heritage we also had an early-morning American political theory reading group that was graciously led by Matthew Spalding. A few of the hardcore libertarians were quite unflattering toward Abraham Lincoln, blaming the origins of "big government" on his administration. Those fans of Strauss and of the American founding period looked more toward the Progressive era for the intellectual origins of the federal government's expansion and for many of the ideas-now-taken-as-axioms by today's Left (which I look forward to reading more about in Jonah's pending book).

We also had many related discussions on whether/ how the state should either exist to promote freedom, virtue, or both. I noticed that those of us from northeastern or secular schools such as Amherst (me), Harvard and Chicago often learned a lot from our peers at Catholic U., Notre Dame, and other similar institutions during these discussions. Political dorks we were, but outside of those discussions great continuing friendships were fostered that still continue.

Throughout my internship, we were able to learn directly from Lee Edwards and former AG Meese as well as hear from some terrific speakers (Dinesh D'Souza included). Overall, my summer at Heritage was a fantastically engaging intellectual and personal experience that my fellow alums still reminisce about when we get together in Washington. I also found that when it came time to seek a post-college job in Washington, the Heritage name was very helpful. Thanks for the link and keep up the good work!

P.S. Before I came to Heritage and with the exception of some wonderful people at Amherst, (Hadley Arkes especially) NR and NRO were pretty much my only links to people who shared my beliefs. Many other interns at Heritage shared my perspective and so it was even more terrific to debate the latest NR article or position stated from up above by the editors.

Posted at 12:13 PM

MORE AWAKENING DRAGON [John Derbyshire]
A
AvuTA=
In-reply-to:

Er, sorry, got the 8 and 9 switched round in that last post.

No scary math here, it's just compound interest, & the numbers are all on the Web.

The assumption of linearity is, of course, absurd; but Jonah already said that. Even just leaving aside considerations of political upset, resource crunch, etc., as China becomes a mature economy her growth rates will presumably fall to what mature economies manage -- 3 or 4 percent in normal times.

Posted at 11:56 AM

RE: AWAKENING DRAGON [John Derbyshire]
Oh, you wanted per capita GDP dates, too. Making some rough assumptions (e.g. both populations continue to grow at same rate -- around 0.7% per annum -- across the period), I get dates of 2062 and 2078 for 8 and 9 percent respectively for per capita GDP equalization. Of course, if China's population growth rate slows, as demographers expect, while the USA's doesn't, or slows less, then the dates will be earlier, though only by 5 yrs or so.

Posted at 11:55 AM

KATHRYN STARTED IT! [Mark Krikorian]
A reader informs me of a 1989 song by the German group Plan B entitled “Beam Me Up, Scotty.” I couldn’t find the lyrics.

Posted at 11:54 AM

CHINA V US [Jonah Goldberg]
Several readers have let me know that if present trends held constant (and everybody agrees it would be foolish to believe they would), China would pass us around 2056.

Posted at 11:52 AM

STRAINING AT A GNAT [Mark Krikorian]
Illegal-alien amnesty supporter Jim Kolbe, congressman from Arizona, tells the Washington Times today that Mexican lawmakers admitted to him that their country hasn’t done enough to stop non-Mexican illegal aliens sneaking into the U.S. That’s nice, except for two things: first, the Mexicans aren’t willing to say it in public, assuming they said it at all; a spokesman for Mexico’s ambassador to Washington, who attended the meeting Kolbe was referring to, “had no comment on the matter.” And second, the problem of Central Americans, Brazilians, and others making their way through Mexico is important, and has gotten a lot of press lately, but the fact remains that most of the people jumping the border (and living and working illegally in the country) are Mexicans, and keeping them out (or getting them to leave) is the main problem.

Posted at 11:52 AM

80S MUSIC & TREK [Jonah Goldberg ]
Did anyone mention Star Trekkin'?

Posted at 11:51 AM

SHE STILL WAVES [Mark Krikorian ]
Many readers inform me that the flag still waves on the masthead of the Chicago Tribune. Also, the indomitable Johnny Hart has a Flag Day theme in his B.C. comic today. Maybe we’re not as doomed, doomed as I thought.

Posted at 11:45 AM

THE SONG [K. J. Lopez]
it was Chinese Communist propaganda Derb was singing, as I recall.

Posted at 11:44 AM

NAME THAT TUNE [K. J. Lopez]
From a reader who was at our D.C. fundraiser in September:
I don't recall the song Derb was singing in those pics, but looking at them, it seems that it might be "Mr. Roboto."

(top to bottom)

Pic 1 - "You're wondering who I am -- machine or mannequin (manny-can)"

Pic 2 - "With parts made in Japan..."

Pic 3 - "I am the modern man!"

Pic 4 - "Domo arigato Mr. Roboto, domo...domo"

Pic 5 - "The time has come at last, to throw away this mask, so everyone can see, my true identity..."

Pic 6 - "I'm Kilroy! Kilroy. Kilroy. Kilroy."

Posted at 11:44 AM

RE: AWAKENING DRAGON [K. J. Lopez]
I hope that cleared it up for Jonah, certainly did for me.

Posted at 11:42 AM

AWAKENING DRAGON [John Derbyshire]
Just running this query

Do[Print[2004 + n,

" ", 1.59*(1.08)^n, " ", 1.59*(1.09)^n,

" ", 11.74*(1.03)^n], {n, 0, 100}]

on my trusty Mathematica, I get dates of 2040 at 9 percent, 2047 at 8 percent.

(GDP figures for 2004 are: China 1.59 trillion US$, U.S.A. 11.74, from here)

Posted at 11:42 AM

RE: HOME [K. J. Lopez]
I wouldn't even know where to begin. A lot of stuff I best not relive--it might encourage more of it. I quoted from The Simpsons (and linked to news of the movie to come) and broke the Star Trek ban--even did timewasters. And a lot more, some of which, again, we best not get into. Suffice it to say, you were missed. (And don't bring up Katie Holmes or her man or Brad Pitts' hair color. We've been there, done that. And WHATEVER you do--don't bring up Ground Zero and Mike Bloomberg in JPod or Stuttaford's presence. Don't. Just--stop--don't think about it. No.)

Posted at 11:11 AM

CHINA VERSUS THE U.S. BLEG [Jonah Goldberg]
This has been bugging me for a long time. But as I have been busy and I am math and economics impaired, I thought I should just throw this out as a bleg, since economists always disagree with each other.

How long would it take, assuming current trends hold as they are, for China to pass America economically? We're growing at about 3% annually while China's growing at something like 8-9% annually. I would guess our rate is more sustainable. But let's assume everything holds constant. When would China have a higher GDP and/or per capita GDP? Why is this a good/bad way to look at the issue? Etc.

Posted at 11:11 AM

HOME [Jonah Goldberg]
Ahhh. Okay so who's going to post a single paragraph on what I missed in the Corner since I've been gone?

Posted at 10:55 AM

NEW BOOK ON MAO [John Derbyshire]
Several people have asked me whether I shall be reviewing this new book on Mao Tse-tung by Wild Swans author Jung Chang. Well, nobody's asked me to; and as everyone knows, I am much too self-effacing to put myself forward in such a matter...

Apparently Ms. Chang is very, very hard on Mao, whom she draws as a monster. Well, he was a monster. The only really interesting question about his monstrousness is where it ranks in the 20th-century scale, among Hitler, Stalin, and the rest.

Personally I'd rank him rather low. China being such a populous nation, he had a lot more material to work with than most dictators. Macias Nguema of Equatorial Guinea murdered around a quarter of his country's population (and likely ate several of them); but it didn't notice, since that's a small country. Similarly with Pol Pot. Mao was trying out crackpot social experiments on 800 million people, so when the eggs turned into a mess instead of an omelet, the mess was tremendous. Just the famines following the Great Leap Forward of the 1950s saw off 25-30 million souls... but that was only around 3 percent of China's population. You need to decide on some scaling considerations when making these comparisons.

That aside, I have never though Mao was as malicious as, say, Stalin. I am sure he didn't care about the people his policies killed; but I doubt he took actual pleasure in reflecting on their deaths, as I feel sure Stalin did, and probably Hitler, too. Mao's inward reflection on the famine mega-deaths was probably something like: "Darn it, the cadres didn't carry out my instructions properly!" I doubt there was much of an element of: "Well, those people who died were only useless mouths, anyway," which, with Stalin, I feel sure there was. Stalin really seemed to hate peasants. Mao's affection for them was abstract and cold, but I don't think he hated them.

Similarly with colleagues. Mao was easier on his colleagues than Stalin or Hitler -- he killed very few of them: Gao Gang, Peng De-huai, Liu Shao-qi, and a handful of others. And again, he doesn't seem to have relished doing so, as Stalin obviously did with Kamenev, Zinoviev, etc.

In any case, the great villain of the age that has gone by was surely Lenin. Perfectly cold-blooded, urging the use of terror as a peacetime political instrument, gleefully contemplating the suffering of "class enemies," teaching Hitler and Mao all their techniques. The whole thing comes back to Lenin. Leszek Kolakowski, in _Main Currents of Marxism_, scoffs at Mao's intellectual attainments as (I am working from memory) "a few regurgitated Leninist cliches."

Ed Capano of National Review tells the story of a visit to Moscow with some of the previous generation of NR editors. He went with Keith Mano down into the pit where Lenin's embalmed corpse was on display. Coming out, Mano was dead white and shaking. Ed asked him what was wrong. Keith: "I have seen the face of the antichrist!"

He wasn't far wrong.

Posted at 10:53 AM

RE: THE MADRASSA “MYTH”? [Andy McCarthy]
That is a very strange article Peter Bergen and Swati Pandi have in the NYTimes today. It argues that the notion that young Muslims are being radicalized by what they learn in Islamic schools (madrassas) is just as fictional as the oft-debunked contention that poverty drives people to terrorism.

Bergen and Pandi conveniently avoid confronting what is actually taught in the madrassas – many of which are financed by hundreds of millions of dollars the source of whose stream throughout the world, for years, has been Saudi Wahhabists committed to proselytizing the most extreme form of militant Islam. They also steer clear of the fact that some terrorist organizations, such as Hamas, make a point of operating Madrassas that inculcate in the young that their hateful world view. Instead, the authors offer a coincidence-does-not-mean-causation theory that goes like this: while some terrorists have attended madrassas, many terrorists have also attended regular universities (in the U.S. and elsewhere); ergo, it is no more appropriate to claim madrassas lead to terrorism than to say the average college education does.

The “myth” here is the authors’ false premise. No one is claiming that the nuts and bolts of how-to terrorism is the main problem with the madrassas (although there is surely some of that). The main problem is that the radical madrassas drive into children, at a very young and impressionable age, the attitudes that will inevitably inspire some percentage of them into active terrorism – and even if that percentage is small, that is still a very large potential pool of terrorists. The authors unwittingly concede this when they write:
While madrassas may breed fundamentalists who have learned to recite the Koran in Arabic by rote, such schools do not teach the technical or linguistic skills necessary to be an effective terrorist. Indeed, there is little or no evidence that madrassas produce terrorists capable of attacking the West.
The principal point of the radical madrassas is not to teach technical or linguistic terrorist skills. Terror organizations have other forums (like training camps) to handle that. The point is precisely to breed a mode of thinking that is hospitable to crossing the line from sympathizing with radical points of view to active participation in terrorism.

The authors also ignore another inescapable reality. To succeed, terrorism requires not only operatives who are willing to do the dirty work but support networks that are essential to facilitating, concealing and protecting those operatives. The madrassas unquestionably contribute to a culture that fosters such support networks.

Posted at 10:37 AM

OWENS VS. PAWLENTY! [K. J. Lopez]
A quarter war breaks out. Could it be just a preview of the 2008 primary season?

Posted at 10:35 AM

NOT TO GO HERE AGAIN, BUT [K. J. Lopez]
No one mentioned the B-52s in the Star-Trek-80s melting-pot thread yesterday:
Wanna be the captain of the Enterprise

Wanna be the king of the Zulus

Posted at 10:31 AM

MOT JUSTE [John Derbyshire]
The Drudge cover on the Michael Jackson verdict shows some German-language tabloid named Kleine Zeitung ("little newspaper") with the headline FREISPRUCH (acquital).

So I guess the prosecution case was well and truly verpfuscht.

Posted at 10:15 AM

LONG MAY SHE WAVE [Mark Krikorian ]
I’m glad someone remembered that it’s Flag Day, though you wouldn’t know it from the MSM. I didn’t find any reference to it in the Washington Post or the NY Times (no surprise there), the Christian Science Monitor had an article in the kids’ section, and USA Today had a sports section story. A Nexis search finds only 42 hits for today, most in papers out in the real world, like the Lexington, Ky., Herald-Leader or the Aberdeen, S.D., American News. When I lived in Chicago 30-plus years ago, I remember the Tribune still had a flag on its masthead – I assume that’s gone, presumably because displaying the flag would inaccurately suggest that journalists were Americans rather than outside observers. Post-Americanism proceeds apace.

Posted at 10:09 AM

PLUS, HE’S A RACE TRAITOR [Roger Clegg]
The AP story on yesterday’s Supreme Court opinion regarding race and jury selection discusses Justice Souter’s majority opinion (finding that prosecutors had illegally discriminated), and then makes this point in its discussion of Justice Thomas’s dissent: “Thomas, one of the most conservative members of the court, has opposed black defendants in the past and has voted against affirmative action.” Now, each point in that sentence is certainly true—Thomas is conservative, has joined opinions that were unfavorable to defendants who happened to be black, and has voted against affirmation action—but there’s still something offensive about that sentence, isn’t there? Imagine if the story had said: “Souter, one of the most liberal members of the court, has voted in favor of other black defendants, and he supports affirmative action.” Well, of course, it’s unimaginable.

Posted at 10:01 AM

THERE'S NOTHING WE WON'T TRY [K. J. Lopez]
That, Derb, will be provided, aplenty in Chicago.

Posted at 09:58 AM

IN VINO VERITAS [John Derbyshire]
What Derb actually needs in order for those effects to be generated is a few jars of what made Milwaukee famous.

Posted at 09:55 AM

FLAG DAY [John Derbyshire]
Happy Flag Day to all my fellow citizens

Posted at 09:46 AM

ALL DERB NEEDS IS A LITTLE NUDGE [K. J. Lopez]
and Chicago will turn into this:











(photos from d.c. fundraiser last fall)

Posted at 09:44 AM

LITERARY REVIEW [John Derbyshire]
A reader chides me for my frequent references to the excellent London monthly magazine Literary Review, without offering any way to get in touch with them or inspect their wares. (LR is so conservative, they don't have a website. The magazine was founded by the late Auberon Waugh, son of Evelyn.)

Well, I have scanned the contents pages of the June issue into my website, and here they are: verso and recto. If you want to subscribe -- and you really should -- the information is there.

Posted at 09:39 AM

HAPPY BIRTHDAY [K. J. Lopez]
to the U.S. Army--230 today.

Posted at 09:35 AM

BLIND GENERATION LEADING BLIND GENERATION [K. J. Lopez]
An interview with Gloria Steinem from that new teen feminist rag (bolding mine):
Melody: I keep on reading about how you believe in the inherent goodness of humanity, and I was just wondering how someone like Bush fits into that world view... if he does, at all.

Gloria: Well, yeah. He wasn't born that way. As a baby, he probably had a whole person inside him! But that family is enough to turn anybody into a raving power maniac, and they certainly did it with him.

Melody: When I saw the picture, the famous picture of him, with a bunch of other white guys, gleefully signing away our rights as women... all I could think was, "ok, how is that not just pure evil?" [KJL: She's talking about the signing of the partial-birth abortion ban.]

Gloria: Well, you know, there is certainly evil effect. There are certainly going to be millions of women and a lot of men who simply are not alive because he's in the White House. There are going to be whole species of animals, and living things, and plants that are not alive anymore, and will never come back, because: he killed them. So, that's an evil impact. I don't think it's inevitable. He wasn't born that way.

Posted at 09:33 AM

"THE F-WORD" [K. J. Lopez]
Just the magazine you've been looking to give your teen daughter.

Posted at 09:29 AM

A CASE FOR SUSAN ESTRICH [K. J. Lopez]
President Bush doesn't work with female-quota rules at press conferences.

Posted at 09:23 AM

WE HAVE AN IMPORTANT MESSAGE [K. J. Lopez]
from John Derbyshire this morning

Posted at 09:21 AM

HARVARD, [K. J. Lopez]
after Summers diversity concessions:
SEXUAL predator women teachers are chasing male colleagues away from the profession, says an official report.
(It's from the Sunday Mail).

Posted at 08:38 AM

WHY NR? [Jack Fowler]
The following (from “The Week” section in the June 20, 2005 edition of America’s premier conservative journal) is yet another example of why NR is so very good.
Metaphors are tricky things, dangerous in the wrong hands. Which leads us to Indra Nooyi, president and CFO of PepsiCo. In an address to the graduating class of Columbia Business School, Ms. Nooyi spun out an elaborate metaphor contending that the nations of the world resemble the fingers of a hand, with the U.S. being — can you guess? — the middle finger. Explained the lady: “This is how the rest of the world looks at the U.S. right now. Not as part of the hand . . . but instead scratching our nose and sending a far different signal.” Ah, the Ugly American! Blundering and insulting, the loose cannon among nations, stirring up strife and discord! We must be gentler, more sensitive — then they won’t hate us so much! But who, actually, hates us? Not, presumably, the untold millions who watch our movies and buy our soft drinks. Foreigners could, if they wished, stop watching and stop buying. A lot of European and Third World intellectuals hate us, we know, because their brains are so addled with crackpot ideologies as to make them useless for employment in modern commerce. Who else hates us? Just a few guilt-crazed wealthy elites like . . . well, like the president and CFO of PepsiCo.
Every issue of NR is crammed with this sort of superior commentary and analysis of the American scene, cultural and political (plus essays, articles, reviews, and much more). How can you get by without a fortnightly dose of NR is beyond me, which is why we’ve created National Review Digital – it’s only $21.95, and you get it the day after the paper version is off the presses (but just beginning to make its way through the US Postal labyrinth). Convenient, super affordable, super brilliant – the time has come for you to subscribe to National Review, which you can do safely and securely here.

Posted at 08:12 AM

TWO TRILLION WAYS [K. J. Lopez]
to tie a shoe lace

Posted at 07:52 AM

TEHRAN'S NEW AIRPORT, [K. J. Lopez]
despite worries, is "Zionist-free."

Posted at 07:31 AM

JUDGMENT FOR FREE [Jonathan H. Adler]
The effort by liberal activist groups to shut down privately funded educational seminars for federal judges suffered a major setback when a federal judge dismissed an ethics complaint filed by Community Rights Counsel against the Honorable Danny Boggs, Chief Judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. In rejecting the complaint, Judge James Loken wrote, "it is the complainant who is undermining public confidence in the integrity and impartiality of the judiciary, not the judges complained of." For more, see here and here.

Posted at 07:28 AM

MICHAEL JACKSON [K. J. Lopez]
Andrew Sullivan:
Some may find it hard to feel pity for someone as wealthy as Jackson, but if you view wealth, as I do, as a potential prison of pitiless isolation, then the damage to the man's psyche and soul must have been and still is immeasurable. And damaged people damage others - even in the pathetic, sick way in which Jackson obviously wounded some of the children who foolishly came into his care. The parents of these boys should have known better, but they too were mesmerized by the fantasy of eternal wealth and youth. What you see in this case, then, is the cold, heartless core of American celebrity: a Faustian trade-off between instant, fathomless attention and the maintenance of any sort of psychological or spiritual perspective.

Meanwhile, fame moves on. No one cares much about Jackson's music any more. No one cares about his soul or those of his alleged victims. What the culture of celebrity builds it also destroys - casually. In this case, the wreckage is a husk of a human, the detritus of a culture that feeds on exposure and then, bored, moves on to the next victim. It is because we do not want to look at this too long that we finally look away. The world that created Michael Jackson is also the world that will happily forget him.

Posted at 07:28 AM

THIS IS HOT [K. J. Lopez]
Enough whinging from northeasterners. It's 46 degrees Celcius in India (that's really hot if you do American temperatures).

Posted at 07:19 AM

THE DANGER OF THE VERDICT [Warren Bell]
This continues the acceleration of a very dangerous game in the entertainment industry called "What Am I Famous Enough to Get Away With?' There's shoplifting, hit and run, throwing phones... And it just got a little worse.

Posted at 07:08 AM

LEST WE FORGET -- OOPS, ALREADY DID [Tim Graham]
It truly is sad that not yet four years after September 11, the "20th hijacker" is bathed in sympathy in Time magazine for being subjected to "invasion of his personal space" by a woman during interrogation. Our media no longer has any idea what torture is or what oppression is. Jokes aside, anyone who would list playing Christina Aguilera music as a form of torture has given up any seriousness as a journalist or political analyst. Yesterday on NPR, Time magazine writer Adam Zagorin even noticed that the aspiring American-killer was -- horrors -- shown pictures of 9/11 and forced to listen to widow interviews. But the only outrage our media has is for our leaders.

PS: Henry Payne jokes about how today's media would have spun World War:

Posted at 07:07 AM

RATHER DUMB [K. J. Lopez]
CBS News is honored by the Radio-Television News Directors Association for "overall excellence."

Posted at 07:01 AM

JOHN EDWARDS '08 [K. J. Lopez]
Two Americas are back

Posted at 06:36 AM

SEE BROWNBACK RUN [K. J. Lopez]
George Will has a write-up on the Kanasas Republican's '08 plans in this week's Newsweek (destiny--"Also Ran"?). Also: Brownback says Santorum won't run. I think that's true--he has enough to worry about trying to win reelection right now.

Posted at 06:34 AM

H-E-L-P [K. J. Lopez]
For a split second, what the Paris Air Show is didn't register. I thought it had to do with Paris Hilton. Doesn't everything?

Posted at 06:14 AM

TO THE TOP [K. J. Lopez]
Two Iranian women climbed MT. Everest, the first Muslim women ever to.

Posted at 06:11 AM

IT'S JUST HATE, DON'T WORRY [K. J. Lopez]
I'm sure lessons in glad anti-American fundamentalist hate would never sow the seeds for terrorism; "The Madrassa Myth" in the NYTimes:
While madrassas may breed fundamentalists who have learned to recite the Koran in Arabic by rote, such schools do not teach the technical or linguistic skills necessary to be an effective terrorist. Indeed, there is little or no evidence that madrassas produce terrorists capable of attacking the West. And as a matter of national security, the United States doesn't need to worry about Muslim fundamentalists with whom we may disagree, but about terrorists who want to attack us.

Posted at 06:06 AM

RE: KIDS TODAY [K. J. Lopez]
when I was an intern at Heritage, those splits were always clear (interns at Heritage always beeing the coolest kids in school--heh). Among the coolest of the cool, I remember Strauss drawing some dividing lines (the cult of vs. Leo, oh I loved him in Titanic--I kid, Titanic came after later, don't worry).

Posted at 06:02 AM

CALIFORNIA VOTING [K. J. Lopez]
When Californians vote in a special electionon November 8, parental notification for minors' abortion will be on the ballot.

Posted at 05:55 AM

NOT SO HOT [John J. Miller]
Speaking of Coldplay -- I bought the new album over the weekend and have listened to it once. One-word review: Underwhelming. Maybe it will grow on me, but first impressions leave me stranded in dullsville. I felt much better when Liz Fisher, the resident hipster at NR's DC office, said she shared my opinion. I'm not an old fogey yet.

Posted at 05:52 AM

KIDS TODAY [John J. Miller]
There's a good article in the NYT today on the 64 paid interns who are working at the Heritage Foundation this summer. They even have a dorm complex for these kids. I wonder if they've split into conservative and libertarian factions yet. That's what always happened when I was in college -- the Burke and Kirk club vs. the von Mises and Hayek types. Likely late-night conversation topic: Is President Bush a traitor to conservatism? Playing in the background: the new Coldplay album.

Posted at 05:49 AM

YOU KNOW THE GUY'S OFF WHEN [K. J. Lopez]
This can be said of him (Roy Moore):
At a recent conference of conservatives in Washington, Moore decried [Bill] Pryor as one of the judges ''who say you cannot acknowledge God."

Posted at 05:48 AM

NRO CONTRIBUTOR ANDREW C. MCCARTHY WILL BE A GUEST... [NRO Staff]
...on Bill Bennett's nationally syndicated radio show, "Morning In America" this morning at 7:30 a.m. (Eastern)

Posted at 05:39 AM

FPOD [Jonah Goldberg]
Heh. Getting on the road.

Posted at 04:39 AM

Monday, June 13, 2005

...YOU MUST ACQUIT [John Podhoretz]
An e-mailer offers: "Now Michael can go out and find the real molester."

Posted at 07:54 PM

THE VERDICT [John Podhoretz]
My wife put it this way: "Now that he's been acquitted, he'll have time to seek treatment to cure his pedophilia."

Posted at 07:21 PM

OUR MEDIA BLOG [K. J. Lopez]
has some interesting information on a recent NYTimes editorial.

Posted at 07:00 PM

"PREWAR BRITISH MEMO SAYS WAR DECISION WASN'T MADE" [K. J. Lopez]
This had to hurt the NYTimes to report.

Posted at 06:29 PM

FOX [K. J. Lopez]
did just interrupt Hume's show, though, with a Shep break-in on a jurors news conference.

Posted at 06:18 PM

MATH STUFF [K. J. Lopez]
Winnie from The Wonder Years is Derb's kinda gal--she has spoken at Rutgers University's biannual Statistical Mechanics conference and wrote something about some ferromagnetic Ashkin–Teller models on Z2.

Posted at 06:17 PM

I AM BEGINNING TO FIT IN [Warren Bell]
After my post this morning about the 9/11 widow who spent almost all of her multimillion government issued victim's compensation, I began an email argument with an exceptionally annoying lawyer whose last name just so happens to be the same word as an exceptionally annoying common household insect.

I reprint his original response here:
Why is $5mm absurd as compensation for a lost life and in exchange for giving up the right not to sue the airlines and others for their negligence—particularly with respect to security? That's a very typical amount for a lost life. If you look at the amounts of compensation people accept for risk, it's on par with what people take (statistically) for a 1% increase in mortality for instance. So it just seems like a lot to you, but you have no real basis for saying so. Indeed, for a bond trader, the lost income alone is likely in the millions.
I wrote back:
Seems like a lot of money to give in one check. Social security pays out over years -- why not pay this out over time also? And the guy was making low six figures when he died -- I don't mean to be disrespectful to him, but he was a long way away from 5 mil. As for it being a payoff for giving up the right to sue -- that's different, and I didn't know that.

But the real problem is that a woman who has lost her husband has had her life thrown into complete disarray. The big government/liberal approach is to throw a big check at her. Clearly, money wasn't the answer.
One of his 10 responses said I was "typical of the knee-jerk regime that has prevailed at NR for the last 5-7 years or so." So that's good, right?

Posted at 06:08 PM

BRIT HUME CONFIRMS [K. J. Lopez]
Cheney is on at 9. Opposite a Jackofest on Larry King. Seems brave (such the wrong word), ratings-wise.

Posted at 06:07 PM

THERE'S HOPE FOR CHENEY YET [K. J. Lopez]
I turned on Brit Hume's show at 6:01 and they were on Gitmo, not Jackson.

Posted at 06:06 PM

WHAT HAPPENS TO THE VEEP? [K. J. Lopez]
A friend notes that Fox has been promoting all day that Sean Hannity has an interview w/ the Veep at 9pm. So, does Cheney get dumped for Jacko? He e-mailed it as his "'where is civilization at?' inquiry for the day."

Posted at 05:59 PM

"DON'T GO THROUGH WITH THE KNIFE DECISION" [K. J. Lopez]
Nick Cannon rocks with a stirring story in "Can I Live?" (you can listen and watch it on his website). It's his story--of his mother who almost aborted him. He sings, in part: "that's a life inside you, look at your tummy/what is becoming Ma, I am Oprah bound/ you can tell he's a star from the Ultrasound."

Posted at 05:49 PM

MICHAEL JACKSON: HE BEAT IT [K. J. Lopez]
Not guilty...not guilty...not guilty (many more of those)...not guilty on all ten counts.

Posted at 05:18 PM

RE: RE: KATIE HOLMES NEEDS HELP [K. J. Lopez]
There's a website dedicated to the cause--http://www.freekatie.net/

Posted at 05:12 PM

RE: MICHAEL JACKSON [K. J. Lopez]
He sang "Steppin' Out," right?

Posted at 05:11 PM

MOVE OVER, [K. J. Lopez]
St. Jerome. There's some serious competition.

Posted at 05:10 PM

MICHAEL JACKSON [Rick Brookhiser]
Michael Jackson got big after I stopped listening seriously to rock n roll, i.e. after 1965. But he was huge. In all Kathryn's paeans to dismal 80s hymnody, how has she missed him? There is a reason he owns the Beatles catalogue, or half of it, or whatever: he sold more records than they did. He was about one hundred times more talented than Madonna. Our fascination with him is how such a lively figure became such a moral and physical gargoyle.

Posted at 05:07 PM

THE WONDER YEARS GETS RACY [K. J. Lopez]
Winnie grows up to Stuff.

Posted at 05:02 PM

DAVID FRUM IS LOOKING TOWARD [K. J. Lopez]
saving South Africa.

Posted at 04:25 PM

AND YES [K. J. Lopez]
You have come to NRO's The Corner and been redirected to People. NRO will be back again tomorrow.

Posted at 04:15 PM

RE: NEEDS HELP [K. J. Lopez]
The age gap isn't what's creepy. The poster thing is:
The former Catholic and star of television's "Dawson's Creek" grew up with a poster of Cruise on her bedroom wall and has said she grew up wanting to marry him.

"We all keep dreaming, and luckily, dreams come true," Holmes said.
Think of the Jake Ryan groupie who have a renewed hope.

Posted at 04:14 PM

"ONE OF THE TOP DOZEN MOST FAMOUS PEOPLE IN THE WORLD" [K. J. Lopez]
Jeffrey Toobin just said that of Michael Jackson, on CNN. I guess that could be true (think of who might be most recognizable throughout the world--try getting to 12 without him). Like it or not, the list probably includes Jackson, Madonna, David Haselhoff (ok, maybe only in German for the latter). At least he doesn't qualify as a greatest American hero type. Oh wait. Believe or not, he sorta does, in a Matt Lauer reality (you can drop the "hero" but that doesn't make it that much better).

Posted at 04:07 PM

KATIE HOLMES NEEDS HELP [Warren Bell]
And I guess she's going to get it from Scientology.

You read it here first: a Cruise-Holmes engagement will be announced within 3 months.

Posted at 04:02 PM

TOM LEHRER SINGS MATH [John Derbyshire]
A reader has alerted me to this site, with a several-minite downloadable video clip of Tom Lehrer singing math songs. The last one is the best.

Posted at 04:00 PM

CALLING JENNIFER GRAHAM [K. J. Lopez]
D.C.-area schools are shutting down because it's too hot? You'll recall it was too cold this winter and she was none too happy.

Posted at 03:49 PM

99 80S POSTS [K. J. Lopez]
You've seen this happen before, on other topics. You post one thing, the emails rush in on the same subject, broadly. If it's a particularly nutty day, there's no hope for anything else in The Corner, and if everyone isn't around...it's like a slightly more entertaining Time-Life 80s collection infomercial, but without Nina Blackwood.

Will do better.

Posted at 03:44 PM

RE: EYE IN THE SKY [John Derbyshire]
Mark: To the intense disappointment of all chez Derb, the satellite picture of this street does not show our tree house.

Posted at 03:41 PM

YOU ARE MY OBSESSION [K. J. Lopez]
Something new this way may come from Animotion.

Posted at 03:40 PM

MICHAEL JACKSON [K. J. Lopez]
verdict is in...(which may mean cable news may someday go without Michael Jackson coverage).

Posted at 03:39 PM

"DEAD BABOONS" [K. J. Lopez]
An alternative (I didn't say a good one) to Left-wing lyrics. I bet Nena could slip in the new words and no one would know the difference.

Posted at 03:35 PM

HASSELHOFF DISSED [Andrew Stuttaford]
Kathryn, how you could you forget such classics from the Hasselh'oeuvre as Night Rocker, Lovin' Feelings and Looking for Freedom - all from the 80s, I might add.

Posted at 03:31 PM

MESSED UP [K. J. Lopez]
John Kerry has sent out one of his mass e-mails. When I saw the subject line I thought he was self-flaggelatingly apologizing for his presidential campaign. It begins:
The Bush White House and the Republican Congress are living in their own world. But, they're messing up ours.

The Washington Republicans ignore facts, push aside America's real problems, promote partisan sniping and division, and flat out refuse to turn their attention to finding ways we can work together to make America stronger.

We may not be able to change their minds -- or their hearts. But, we have to change their behavior.

It's time to demand action -- time to embarrass Washington Republicans out of their partisan frenzy and into acting on the problems America's families need solved.

That's just what's happening today as, with help from the johnkerry.com community, Keeping America's Promise's powerful new Kids First ad hits the airwaves...

Posted at 03:29 PM

"USVP CHENEY SAYS TORTURE FACILITY WILL STAY OPEN " [K. J. Lopez]
Headline chasing

Posted at 03:00 PM

.MIL [K. J. Lopez]
gets blog rules.

Posted at 02:55 PM

"ITS LIKE WHOA" [K. J. Lopez]
W and Blair IMing.

Posted at 02:53 PM

80S MUSIC AND TV [K. J. Lopez]
I think David Haselhoff's first album came out in 98. This, is, of course, only mentioned for the purpose of linking to the most-disturbing "Hooked on a Feeling" video again.

Posted at 02:27 PM

99 LEFTBALLOONS [Tim Graham]
Warren, someone must remind the youngsters that Nena's song was musicially catchy, but politically dopey, with a scenario that red balloons in the summer sky would cause a rush to nuclear holocaust.
99 Decision Street, 99 ministers meet
To worry, worry, super-scurry
Call the troops out in a hurry
This is what we've waited for
This is it boys, this is war
The president is on the line
As 99 red balloons go by.

Posted at 02:25 PM

HEY EVERYONE [Jonah Goldberg]
Thanks for the kind words, notes, prayers, thoughts, jokes, guidance etc. I apologize if I haven't responded to every email. These have been some long days and I read most of them when I wasn't up to it. But I'm heading home tomorrow and I hope to be hanging around here again then.

Posted at 02:19 PM

TREK/80'S MUSIC [Andrew Stuttaford]
Ok, so it's actually from 1979, but there's really only one contender: "Where's Captain Kirk" by Spizz Energi.

Posted at 02:17 PM

"MONSTER 80S" [K. J. Lopez]
Warren, looks like you just bought my itunes list based on a scan of Vol 1 and 2 (though "Miss Me Blind" is missing from my list, for which I am ashamed; I must make a note to purchase).

Posted at 01:36 PM

WOMEN AND "TOLERANCE" [Ramesh Ponnuru]
That was an interesting post by Garance Franke-Ruta you linked to earlier, Kathryn. She writes that women are more "behaviorally conservative" than men on sex, drugs, and crime--which is sort of interesting terminology for her to use: are criminals "liberal" with regard to crime?--but are more tolerant of others. I'd be interested in seeing the underlying data (which she says will be coming out soon). I wouldn't be surprised if women turned out to be more supportive of same-sex marriage than men. But I've never seen large gender-based differences in surveys of public opinion on abortion; I wouldn't be surprised if women were more supportive of restrictions on pornography than men; and even some of the findings that Franke-Ruta cites undercut her conclusion about tolerance. (E.g., women are "less likely than men to condone sex before marriage" and think there's too much sex on tv--these aren't just findings about the respondents' own behavior.)

Posted at 01:23 PM

RE: CONFLUENCE [Mark Krikorian ]
OK, I’ll bite. Another ‘80s song with a Star Trek reference: Mojo Nixon’s 1987 song “Elvis Is Everywhere”:
Yeah man, you know people from outer space,
people from outer space they come up to me.
They don't look like Doctor Spock.
They don't look like Klingons,
all that Star Trek jive.


They look like Elvis.

ELVIS!

Everybody in outer space looks like Elvis.
Cause Elvis is a perfect being.
We are all moving in perfect peace and harmony towards Elvisness

Posted at 01:23 PM

MEDICAL HOPE IN NON-EMBRYONIC-STEM-CELL PLACES [K. J. Lopez]
Working on diabetes:
The first successful transplant of insulin-producing cells from a live donor — a mother to her daughter — is being reported today by Japanese scientists, raising hopes for a cure for severe diabetes.

Diabetes experts caution that the procedure has been performed only once and in a patient whose diabetes was not typical. But the accomplishment is "dramatic," says Robert Goldstein, chief scientific officer of the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation.

Both the patient, a 27-year-old woman, and her mother, 56, are healthy and have normal blood sugar levels, lead author Shinichi Matsumoto and colleagues say. Their article was posted online Monday ahead of publication in the British medical journal The Lancet. The patient is considered cured for now, but whether the disease will return is uncertain.

Posted at 01:13 PM

THE CONFLUENCE OF PASSIONS [Warren Bell]
Wouldn't the best way to combine "Star Trek" and 80s music be with the fabulous "99 Luftballoons" as performed by that kittenish German pop diva, Nena? I seem to remember there being a lyric about Captain Kirk.

Okay, that's a lie. I don't seem to remember it--I heard it yesterday. Well, I played it yesterday in my car, on a CD that I bought with real money. One of two CDs I bought--"Monster 80s" and "Monster 80s Volume 2." I wanted some simple pop songs to play for my sons in the car because they are showing an interest in the drums, and I thought some of these songs from a simpler time would have simpler rhythmic--- OKAY, OKAY, I JUST LOVE IT, OKAY?!

I have previously mentioned my love of Dexy's Midnight Runners, whose "Come On Eileen" is of course found on "Monster 80s." But lest anyone think me a musical silly-pants, you should also be aware that I had nearly equal affection for Adam and the Ants. And demonstrating that I was right then as now, "Goody Two Shoes" is to be found on both "Monster 80s" and "Monster 80s Volume 2." It's that good.

Posted at 12:54 PM

OH BABA DON'T YOU WANT TO GO [K. J. Lopez]
It's a Chicago fundraiser plug again.

Posted at 12:24 PM

GARANCE FRANKE-RUTA TAKES THE LARRY SUMMERS POSITION [K. J. Lopez]
Okay, not really. But on The American Prospect's blog, she says something you don't often hear on the Left: that women are naturally more conservative than not.

Posted at 12:21 PM

THE MANCHESTER UNION LEADER [K. J. Lopez]
has a new blog feature

Posted at 12:20 PM

A B16 WIN [K. J. Lopez]
in Italy

Posted at 12:06 PM

AN NRO KIND OF STARBUCKS [K. J. Lopez]
An e-mailer:
I lived in Raleigh until recently in John Edwards' neighborhood, so I'm assuming the emailer got the cup at the Starbucks on Lassiter Mill Road.

Jonah's cups actually fit right in there. The Starbucks is a few blocks up the street from the elementary school that is also the neighborhood polling place -- where Senator Edwards' neighbors voted by a 70-30 margin for Bush-Cheney. (Scroll to the last item, entitled "Sorry, neighbor")

Posted at 12:05 PM

RE: LEHRER [Mark Krikorian]
I don’t dispute Tim’s basic point about liberal bias at PBS, but the NewsHour hasn’t been entirely “deaf, dumb, and blind about conservative media criticism,” since they have had Bob Lichter of the Center for Media & Public Affairs on the show a number of times. Lichter’s appearances (and mine) underline my sense that PBS and NPR are open (to a degree) to conservative voices, so long as those voices appear consistent with the media outlets’ view of themselves as serving an elite constituency. And, despite the many strengths and contributions of David Horowitz and the late Reed Irvine, they don’t fit the NPR/PBS mold – this doesn’t make Lichter better than Horowitz, just that they serve different markets. Of course, conservatives labor under a double standard at PBS, as in many other institutions of our society (for instance, my opponent on a couple of NewsHour appearances was the former director of a Trotskyite anti-Israel group linked to the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine -- and people call me extreme!). But we can get heard on these outlets with the right product.

Posted at 11:48 AM

GIVE A LITTLE BIT [K. J. Lopez]
A reader points out:
I’m curious about something – Jonah’s into Trek posts; you’re into 80’s songs.

Do both of you get rights to talk about T’Pau? You could, and so could he (though his reference predates yours).

Posted at 11:48 AM

"MITT ROMNEY IS JAKE RYAN" [K. J. Lopez]
[WHO IS Jake Ryan?] I don't see a Romney campaign embracingthis as an official strategy, he has at least one NRO reader smitten:
I'm serious. LOOK at him.

1. He's handsome.

2. He's rich. I'll bet he drove a nice car in high school.

3. He's nice. Really nice.

4. He married his high school girl friend who...wait for it...would have been about the age of a sophomore when he was a senior.

5. He comes to our rescue. We needed the SL Olympics to be clean, to be safe, to help to heal us after September 11th, and it did. (Based on what we're hearing about the Twin Towers "memorial," the Olympics seem to have gone farther than that will.) 6. He's popular. He was elected as a Republican and a Mormon in Massachusetts. (Which is not as shocking as a Republican and a Mormon being elected in New York City, but it's still very unusual.)

7. We like him. We really do.

8. Okay, so I don't know about the cake and the dining room table, but I'll bet he is a good husband and father. I'll bet he's changed diapers and worn spit up.

Just be sure not to confuse him with Jack Ryan. I am not insinuating that he is a spymaster with a fear of flying, a bad back, shadowy field agents in the background and terrorists coming after him.
And if you're wondering why I just posted that...because I am behind on work and it was there in my inbox, crying out to be posted. (Consider it all an application for one of VH-1's silly commentary shows.)

Posted at 11:44 AM

RE: POD ON TOM CRUISE [K. J. Lopez]
What does that say about the prospects for War of the Worlds?

Posted at 11:41 AM

I'M A LOSER [Andy McCarthy]
Many readers are responding with this, so let's correct the record. As one puts it: "The 2003 Tigers were 43-119, while the 1962 Mets were 40-120. Prior to the modern era, the 1899 Cleveland Spiders finished the season 20-134." (K-Lo, do I get any points for conforming to the new directive about pop song titles at the start of Corner posts?)

Posted at 11:39 AM

A LIFE GREATLY LIVED [K. J. Lopez]
If you measure a man by his children, yesterday's memorial for Sid Goldberg was quite the award ceremony. The love those two have for him is the most fitting tribute, and was at his memorial, as JPod relays.

NRO readers all know him as Poppa G (no relation to Kenny), but Sid Goldberg, besides being beloved family man (which, as his sons made clear yesterday, was his heart's devotion), was a successful newspaper man. He was the long-time head of United Media's newspaper syndicate, which, as it happens, is where I'm syndicated now. I mention this because in recent months I've been struck by how much the folks over there love him—when at their offices a month or so ago, folks were asking about him, and his young successor relayed a recent jovial phone conversation she had with him. Many of his former colleagues were there yesterday, devastated that they wouldn't have Sid's humor and wisdom to call upon anymore. If you knew nothing about Sidney Goldberg and just encountered the United Media affection for him, you'd have enough to see clearly this was a man who had a vocation, not a job. And he was a giving man—not one who walked out on retirement day even, but who would always be a part of the enterprise he had devoted so much time to.

Beloved by family, by friends, by colleagues, dearly missed by all of the above.

As a mere sidebar to JPod's post: Sid wrote a number of pieces for Tech Central Station in his retirement years. Here's a sampling: On communist symps

On Christo’s gates

On Dan Rather

On Gibson’s Passion

On the death penalty

On the Jews and the ME

On the collapse of the media

On the constraints of ‘sovereignty’ in foriegn policy

On Time mag

On the market for news

On the benefits of downsizing

On NYC art

I know so many readers have the Goldbergs in their thoughts and prayers. And I know they're grateful for that.

Posted at 11:26 AM

A SAD, MOVING, HILARIOUS, TRAGIC, GLORIOUS OCCASION [John Podhoretz]
Some of us spent yesterday morning saying goodbye to Sidney Goldberg at a funeral marked by two of the most beautiful, heartfelt and laugh-out-loud funny eulogies I've ever heard -- one by our own Jonah and the other by Jonah's brother Josh. Both Goldberg men paid tribute to a father whose life was spent engaged in ideas and enfolded in family. Sidney was a dispenser of wisdom -- the best kind of wisdom dispenser, in fact, because the wisdom he dispensed was not of the Polonius, "to thine own self be true" kind. Josh talked about riding around New York with his dad on aimless bus and subway rides that helped instruct his sons in the glories of the city. And Jonah spoke of the time when he was around 8 years old, walking up Broadway with his dad, when Sidney offered him the most important advice any boy has ever received. "If you are in a South American country and you're stopped by a policeman," Poppa Goldberg told young Jonah, "say, 'I'm sorry, Officer. I must have made a mistake. Is there any way I can pay the fine right here on the spot?'"

An American original.

Posted at 11:01 AM

DIGGING A DEEPER HOLE [Andrew Stuttaford]
Kathryn, Judging by that quote, Bill Schulz still doesn't get it about the Gulag. Here's what he says:

"...Amnesty International understands the difference in magnitude between forcing millions into labor camps where tens of thousands starved, and illegally imprisoning and sometimes abusing prisoners in US detention..."

The Gulag was rather more than a place where "tens of thousands starved." Even if one takes (1) the narrowest possible definition of the term Gulag (restricting it to the work camps of the Soviet corrective labour system) and (2) the most conservative calculations of the death toll within that system, the Gulag claimed at least a million lives in the twenty years up to Stalin's death.

That's one million dead who Schulz continues to insult.


Posted at 10:57 AM

TOM CRUISE... [John Podhoretz]
...overacts being himself.

Posted at 10:37 AM

RE: RE: THE SHAMANIC WAY OF THE BEE [K. J. Lopez]
Just for the record: I was kidding about Tom Cruise. Sadly, he's not come to NR World Headquarters and jumped on our reception-room couch (or piles of books in my office) to protest Stuttaford's piece. I have, however, received a friendly lunch invitation from Scientology NY headquarters in recent months (I am reminded to return that phone call) in part thanks to Andrew Breitbart.

Posted at 10:08 AM

"GRIEVING 9/11 WIDOW SPENDS ALMOST $5 MILLION" [Warren Bell]
Good Morning America presents this cautionary tale of Kathy Trant, who received 4.2 million dollars from the Federal Victim Compensation Fund, and then due to depression, survivor's guilt, and compulsive shopping, turned it into, among other things, "a $500,000 shoe collection, gowns by Versace and Capelli that go for $5,000 each and Fendi and Judith Leiber handbags, also $5,000 per bag."

Poor thing is down to her last $500,000. Hopefully the Federal Victim Compensation Fund will realize she is once again a victim, this time of a nutty government program that stuffs an absurd amount of money into grieving widows' pockets when the real help they need can't be measured in dollars. So that's got to be worth another $1.2 to $1.5 mill.

Hat tip to e-mailer Kevin Orlin Johnson, Ph.D. (Hey, that's how he signs it.)

Posted at 10:00 AM

FAKE BUT ACCURATE [K. J. Lopez]
The USA head of Amnesty International defends "gulag" on the H-Bomb.

Posted at 09:53 AM

BAD NEWS [K. J. Lopez]
Brett Kavanaugh may be held, Ed Whelan reports over in Bench Memos.

Posted at 09:52 AM

LEHRER'S LAME MEDIA UNIT [Tim Graham]
Anyone who wonders about the charge of liberal bias freezing out conservative viewpoints on PBS should look at the Lehrer NewsHour's Media Unit. Once again, in a segment featuring departing New York Times ombudsman Daniel Okrent and Washington Post ombudsman Michael Getler, the topic quickly goes from the usual self-protective media blather about an "animus" against journalists (as opposed to the "animus" OF journalists) to how all the media's failings are about being too soft on George W. Bush. Smith didn't ask about conservative complaints against the Post or the Times. Typical. Conservative media criticism isn't allowed, but criticizing the liberal media from the left is acceptable (a panel including Michael Massing can be found just by clicking the links on the Okrent-Getler transcript.)

How many times has Lehrer's Media Unit allowed another point of view, that a liberal-dominated media is biased against President Bush and other conservatives? Since they began in 1998, a little research shows two mentions of the term "liberal bias" -- a 2002 debate between Bernard Goldberg and Marvin Kalb (both former colleagues of Terence Smith at CBS) and a question to an all-liberal panel just after the vote in 2000: Marvin Kalb, Bill Powers, and Tom Rosenstiel. Has the Media Research Center ever been featured, interviewed, even mentioned? No. Accuracy in Media? No. The Media Institute? No. David Horowitz's Center for the Study of Popular Culture? No. They are deaf, dumb, and blind about conservative media criticism.

Ken Tomlinson is wrong to highlight the Lehrer show as the role model of fairness on PBS: until it allows someone to speak out about liberal media bias, they're just another liberal media program comfortably talking amongst themselves in an insular bubble.

Posted at 09:36 AM

EYE IN THE SKY [Mark Krikorian ]
A donor of mine (hi, Jim!) alerted me to Google's new map function. It's not that different from Mapquest, except that you can also get satellite pictures (in color!) of anywhere in North America or the UK, and pretty detailed ones, at that. The picture of my little cul-de-sac in Northern Virginia isn't so detailed that I can read license plates, but I can clearly see my neighbors car. I also checked the pictures of Cuba, but didn't find any missiles.

Posted at 09:35 AM

AL CAPONE, CALL YOUR OFFICE [Mark Krikorian]
The Post today explores how immigration violations are being used as an anti-terrorism tool. Obviously, the usual suspects hate the idea, but for investigators it's a no-brainer -- proving that you moved money for Osama can be hard, but proving that you held a job in violation of your student visa, or that you lied about being a U.S. citizen, or some other immigration-related infraction, is a lot easier.

The big difference between this immigration tactic and its precursor of going after Al Capone for not paying his taxes is that, parallel to the investigators going after gangsters, there was always an agency whose main goal was tax enforcement -- whereas there is no longer an agency whose raison d'etre is immigration enforcement. The old INS was broken up and combined with the Customs Service to make up two bureaus in the new Department of Homeland Security, one for border matters and one for interior enforcement. The result has been that the corporate culture of Customs has come to dominate both bureaus, with immigration law virtually ignored except when it can be an anti-terrorism tool.

Posted at 09:30 AM

RE: YANKEES [Andy McCarthy]
Grrrrrrrrrrrowl. Have they really won 26 championships? I never hear any Yankee fan mention that! I would point out to you that the Mets have ... uh ... well, they've ... no not quite -- Well, they once lost 120 games in a single season. No one's come close to that. So there!

Posted at 09:23 AM

RE: THE SHAMANIC WAY OF THE BEE [K. J. Lopez]
Andrew, Tom Cruise still won't leave me alone since you had your way with Scientology. We're not messing with bees.

Posted at 09:23 AM

ONE TOWN THAT WON'T LET YOU DOWN [K. J. Lopez]
Our June 23rd fundraiser is inching closer. And it won't let you down. The event, as you might have heard, is a fun afternoon/evening with panel discussion, Q&A, drinks, dinner and more. Meet NR regulars and some terrific readers. Why not make one of those readers there you? Check out the particulars here. I'm looking forward to seeing you. Thanks!

Posted at 09:15 AM

YANKEES [K. J. Lopez]
Andy, I'm just not talking about them this season. Talking dirt about the Waxed BoSox (see Queer Eye) and the occasional pot-shot at your team. It's a coping mechanism.

And even a bad season can't take away 26 championship wins.

Posted at 09:04 AM

THE WORST PART [Andy McCarthy]
K-Lo, no self-respecting Mets fan (and no, that's not an oxymoron) wants a baseball stadium in Manhattan. The idea is for a new stadium in Queens to replace Shea, which is an aging eyesore. The Mets do need a new stadium, but we definitely do not need the Olympics, so I'd prefer to keep trudging out to Shea for now.

BTW, how are those Bronx Bombers doing these days? They must be ahead by 10 or 15 games by now, no?

Posted at 09:04 AM

ANY NRO READERS WORK AT STARBUCKS? HOW ABOUT STRATEGIC COFFEE CUP DISTRIBUTION? [K. J. Lopez]
An e-mailer:
I got a "Jonah Goldberg The Way I See It" cup this morning in Raleigh, NC--AT JOHN EDWARD's "HOME" STARBUCKS!!!

Posted at 09:03 AM

POP CULTURE [K. J. Lopez]
is torture.

Posted at 08:50 AM

THE WORST PART [K. J. Lopez]
of a Manhattan baseball stadium, of course, would be Mets fans getting in the way.

Posted at 08:49 AM

RE: TEN COMMANDENTS DECISION [Andy McCarthy]
Having now mastered the Supremes' crystal clear jurisprudence in this area, I disagree with Mark, slightly. I believe the Court will permit four of the Commandments to be displayed: No killing, no stealing, no bearing false witness, and, while that "honor thy father and thy mother" thing is a bit on the quaint side, they'll let it stand for nostaligia's sake. But this stuff about "God," the sabbath, and graven images? That very personal prying about adultery, and especially that sexist, judgmental business about who's coveting whose wife? All that must be stricken. After all, as Justices O'Connor, Kennedy and Souter reminded us in Casey (1992), “At the heart of liberty is the right to define one’s own concept of existence, of meaning, of the universe, and of the mystery of human life.” So here's to The Four Commandments! And by the way, do we really need to call them "Commandments"? How 'bout, like, "The Four Strong Suggestions"?

Posted at 08:49 AM

"WE ARE WOMEN, WE ARE THE CHILDREN OF THIS LAND, BUT WE HAVE NO RIGHTS" [K. J. Lopez]
Iranian women protest. (More.)

Posted at 08:42 AM

BAD KARMA, CHAMELEON [K. J. Lopez]
The world's oldest 15-year-old.

Posted at 08:40 AM

" WOW, THE FORTUNE COOKIES HERE REALLY ARE MORE ACCURATE." [K. J. Lopez]
Continuing the fortune cookie thread: Last night Fox repeated the Selma-adopts-a-baby episode of The Simpsons, where Homer concludes China is the land of real fortunes.

Posted at 08:35 AM

JPOD WILL BE DELIGHTED I REMINDED PEOPLE OF THE SUBJECT [K. J. Lopez]
I just noticed that Mort Kondrake didn't like Star Wars.

Posted at 08:33 AM

AMERICA, THE LAND OF OPPORTUNITY [K. J. Lopez]
Buy a home, no one will ask if you're legal!

Posted at 08:22 AM

OUR NEW MEDIA BLOG [K. J. Lopez]
Journalism professor Jay Rosen welcomes NRO's Stephen Spruiell into the blogosphere.

Posted at 08:20 AM

TEN COMMANDENTS DECISION [Mark R. Levin]
Of course, I could be wrong (it happens) but I believe the Supreme Court will split the baby (or shall I say tablets) and rule that the 10 Commandments can be displayed in public places, such as courthouses, as long as they are part of a secular display and the primary purpose is not religious.  Otherwise, it's difficult to imagine how they can justify the display of the Commandments engraved in their own courtroom.

Posted at 07:55 AM

"GOOD NEWS FROM IRAQ" [K. J. Lopez]
Arthur Chrenkoff's latest installment

Posted at 07:38 AM

WE'LL SEE [K. J. Lopez]
From the Washington Post this weekend (Milbank/ Babington), recapping the Romney NR-cover story fireworks:
The Boston Globe ran a front-page headline saying "Adviser Says Governor Faked Stance on Abortion." With a political nor'easter in Massachusetts, Murphy backpedaled, saying he "was discussing a characterization the governor's critics use." Romney told reporters: "While I've said time and again that I oppose abortion, I've also indicated that I would not change in any way the abortion laws of Massachusetts, and I've honored my promises."

That may be a tough line to maintain in a GOP primary, even for a double-cover boy.
Dana Milbank getting a little snippy with him already makes me all the more interested in "double-cover boy."

Posted at 07:10 AM

SEAN PENN'S CAMERA SEIZED IN IRAN [K. J. Lopez]
Couldn't have happened to a better guy.

Posted at 05:41 AM

NO "GROW BY" DATE [John J. Miller]
A 2,000-year-old seed, unearthed by archaeologists at Masada, grows in Jerusalem. If it lives for 30 years, it will be a mature date palm. Scientists are calling it "Methuselah."

Posted at 05:25 AM

Sunday, June 12, 2005

QUICK MOVIE REVIEW [Warren Bell]
Didn't get to "Mrs. Smith and That Guy", didn't get to "Cinderella Man." Did get to "Madagascar" with the little one. It's now official: computer-generated 3D animation is no longer your guarantee of a creative film. Madagascrap.

Posted at 11:17 PM

WEARING OUT THE GROOVES ON OUR TIVO [Warren Bell]
The new sensation in the Bell household is the show Mythbusters on the Discovery channel.

Basically, two movie industry special effects guys, Jamie and Adam, try to prove or disprove urban legends, myths, and popular misconceptions. It's good, reasonably family friendly fare. (There is the occasional bleeped expletive.) Many tests involve guns and explosions, so the Bells (young and old) are held in thrall. But there is also a fair amount of legitimate science in every test, and what's really cool is watching the guys actually build their experiments from scratch in their shop. My guys are inspired to start mythbusting themselves, and I think that is pretty high praise for the educational value of any show.

Posted at 11:17 PM

ME, ME, ME [Warren Bell]
Okay, I am calling a moratorium on the 3x name repetition as a title for a post, like this one.

It's not the fussy, schoolmaster tone I object to. (Long ironic pause.) But I have had three of these thrown my way by different people in the last month here, and I just think I have filled my quota.

Posted at 11:16 PM

REALLY TRULY NO LONGER FUNNY [Warren Bell]
Some might say my Rise of the Avian Menace posts were never funny, but in my opinion this is actually getting a little worrisome. Check these reports of bird attacks in the U.S. and Scotland (here and here.)

(Thanks for watching the skies, e-mailer Sean.)

Also, I came in literally during the last 10 seconds of ABC's Sunday "World News Tonight" or whatever they call it. And it appeared they were doing a story about predatory birds, but I couldn't quite tell. If anyone saw it or has a link, I think we need to know.

My current plan: find actor George Kennedy and stick with him. He always seems to survive these things.

Posted at 11:14 PM

UNSCRAMBLING EGGS [Andrew Stuttaford]

An Italian minister discusses abandoning the euro here.

Over at the London Times meanwhile, Anatole Kaletsky gives some useful background as to what is going wrong for the european single currency. Here’s the nub:

“The euro is the essential cause of Europe’s “democratic deficit” because it prevents different countries adopting the variety of social and business models that voters demand. A currency is to national economic management what a border is to political sovereignty: with floating currencies each country can choose its own style of economic and social organisation; with fixed currencies they can’t. If France or Italy wants a generous social safety net, it can keep its business costs down by devaluing its currency. Of course, devaluation may lower living standards for consumers, but if people want to pay this price to preserve their social traditions, that is what democracy is for. It is only when a country with high social costs loses control of its currency that the burden becomes intolerable, destroying jobs and decimating investment.

“This is exactly what has happened in the eurozone since 2001. After 9/11 and the Iraq war the euro began to rise for essentially non-economic reasons. Unable to control this currency upsurge, national politicians had only two other options: either to dismantle their costly social provision (a concept which French voters have clearly rejected) or to cut hourly wages (a policy which Germany has attempted, with beneficial results for profits but disastrous effects on consumer confidence and the Government’s popularity).

“If the euro did not exist, European politicians would not be driven to such desperate, even suicidal, measures. Each country could make its decisions about the balance between social protection, wages and currency strength. Since European voters are unwilling to accept wage cuts or abandon their social model, the rational choice is for the eurozone as a whole to adopt the policies that worked so successfully for Britain (and to a lesser extent in Italy) after White Wednesday [the day that the UK was forced out of the European exchange rate system that predated the euro]: to devalue the euro and stimulate growth by slashing interest rates to 1 per cent or less. “

This is a topic that needs to be discussed at far greater length but for what it’s worth, I’d be very skeptical as to whether Italy could – or would – abandon the Euro (unscrambling eggs really is pretty difficult) at least at this stage, but I wouldn’t be at all surprised if the EU’s funny money (which has already weakened quite noticeably since the French and Dutch referendums) soon came under some very prolonged – and severe – pressure


Posted at 08:03 PM

WARREN, WARREN, WARREN [Andrew Stuttaford]
So Planet of the Apes is ‘good-bad’ eh? Go carefully, Mr. Bell, very carefully.

Posted at 08:02 PM

VOX POP [Ramesh Ponnuru]

Jeffrey Rosen argues in the New York Times Magazine that the Supreme Court, for good or ill, reflects public opinion better than elected officials do. I've been hearing this claim since high school. In the last several years, I've read it often in Rosen's work. As smart as he is, his claim is not getting more persuasive with repetition.

Rosen notes that the public has higher esteem for the Court than for congressmen--which is a very different, and only indirectly related, claim. He asserts that the Court's decisions on affirmative action, abortion, and gay rights reflect public opinion. But that claim gets what plausibility it has from Rosen's tendentious description of the Court's abortion decisions. Did the Court reflect public opinion when it struck down laws against partial-birth abortion? Rosen cites polls that support his thesis. But there are many polls that show majority disapproval of racial quotas in university admissions. As for gay rights: It may be that the national public believes that state governments should allow localities to protect gays from private-sector discrimination and that homosexual sexual conduct should be legal (even if the publics of Colorado and Texas, respectively, did not take those views). On the question of whether the Court ought to impose a national policy on these matters, I doubt there is a meaningful public opinion.

Rosen also benefits from misleading comparisons. Justice O'Connor is compared to the polarized congressional leadership of Harry Reid and Bill Frist. But wouldn't the relevant comparison be between the Supreme Court's swing justice and the Congress's swing legislators? (Or between Reid and Frist on the one hand, and Scalia and Ginsburg on the other.) Finally, this business about congressional polarization, which Rosen all but calls the Court to do something about: Rosen passes over in silence the much-discussed possibility that the Court has had something to do with creating the problem in the first place.


Posted at 07:30 PM

PC PC [Andrew Stuttaford]

From the Sunday Telegraph:

“Police officers who arrested a student for calling a police horse "gay" have been accused of "absurd heavy-handedness and over-reaction" by a leading campaigner for homosexual rights.”

I have no comment on this – none at all – other than to say that Mr. Ed is never around when he is needed.


Posted at 03:37 PM

KNOW-NOTHINGS [Andrew Stuttaford]

One of the arguments put about in Brussels for ignoring the results of the French and Dutch referenda is that the people – the ignorant swine – were too ill-informed to come to a reasonable decision on that document (no matter that this constitution was originally supposed to bring Brussels closer to the people).

In Sweden, politicians arguing against allowing Swedish voters to decide on the constitution for themselves have used essentially the same argument (even if they are more diplomatic about it).

Then a Swedish TV journalist had a rather good idea.

The Viking Eurosceptic blog takes up the story:

”… Swedish television aired a programme in which leading journalist Janne Josefsson went into the Riksdag and asked various MPs three quite simple questions about the Constitution. (1) How do you reach qualified majority according to the Constitution? (2) What is exclusive competence? (3) What is a citizens initiative? “It was easy to get the MPs to argue against a referendum, and some MPs even claimed to be well-informed about the constitution, but unfortunately they had serious difficulties in answering the questions. One liberal MP became very irritated and demanded that he'd only be asked questions about views - not about facts! He also wanted to be told which page in the constitution the questions came from, so that he could look it up before answering...

”That was before lunch.Strangely however, after lunch almost every MP knew the answers! Research revealed that the parties had sent out warnings on the parliamentary e-mail that Josefsson was in the building, and they had given them the correct answers.”

Ha ha ha


Posted at 03:26 PM

HOW COULD WE HAVE MISSED IT? [Warren Bell]
I was thinking about the Bird Wars this morning (because I, unlike some, care about freedom) and I realized that if I were to write a movie about the Rise of the Avian Menace, it would start exactly like the events that are unfolding now. First one seemingly super-intelligent talking bird, then another, then isolated incidents of bird attacks on people. Then I started thinking that I should write this movie, that it would be great, better than The Birds, which is fun but has no greater underlying theme other than suspense.

No, the movie that I would hope to live up to is Planet of the Apes, and then it hit me -- when we were discussing good-bad movies, how did we miss the granddaddy of them all?

Posted at 03:19 PM

SCHOOL CHOICE [John J. Miller]
The Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel runs an extensive series of articles on school choice, beginning today. Milwaukee is of course Ground Zero in the nation's school-choice battle--the home to its first and most vigorous program. How it fares there, as well as how it's perceived, is critically important to the future of this reform.

I would like to have seen some conclusions on academic performance, but on the whole the major points in today's article seem fair and balanced:

• The voucher schools feel, and look, surprisingly like schools in the Milwaukee Public Schools district. Both MPS and the voucher schools are struggling in the same battle to educate low-income, minority students.

• About 10% of the choice schools demonstrate alarming deficiencies. The collapse of four schools and the state's limited ability to take action against others have led to some agreement on the need for increased oversight to help shut down bad schools.

• The voucher program has brought some fresh energy to the mission of educating low-income youth in the city by fostering and financially supporting several very strong schools that might not exist otherwise. There are at least as many excellent schools as alarming ones.

• The amount of taxpayer money going to pay for religious education in Milwaukee has no parallel in the last century of American life. About 70% of the students in the program attend religious schools. Religion guides the choices that parents make, and the curriculum that a majority of schools choose, and has led to a network of dozens of independent church schools led by African-American ministers throughout the city.

• The choice program regenerated parochial schools in the city, including dozens of Catholic and Lutheran schools, which were experiencing declining enrollment. Overall, it has preserved the status quo in terms of schooling options in the city more than it has offered a range of new, innovative or distinctive schools.

• Parental choice by itself does not assure quality. Some parents pick bad schools - and keep their children in them long after it is clear the schools are failing. This has allowed some of the weakest schools in the program to remain in business.

• There is no evidence that voucher schools have "creamed" the best students from Milwaukee Public Schools, an early concern expressed by some critics. Except for the fact that the public schools are obligated to serve all special education students, the kids in the voucher program appear have the same backgrounds - and bring the same problems - as those in the public schools.

• Creating a new school through the choice program is easier than most people expected. Creating a good new school is harder than most thought it would be.

Posted at 09:55 AM