Archive for 2010

MARK STEYN: “Having stood by watching as a mob trashed downtown businesses (and their own cruisers), the peculiarly insecure dweebs of the Toronto police are now threatening law-abiding passers-by (that would be Cop#3478) and beating up Guardian reporters.”

After acting cowardly around those who might hit back, they have to reestablish their dominance somehow.

Related: Why do we have police forces? “I’ve spent very little time in Toronto over the years. Last time I was there, it reminded me of an American city of the 1970s–dirty, with a menacing street population and a whiff of violence in the air. That was only an impression, but it may be that inept police work didn’t start with the G-20.”

COMMENT OF THE DAY:

A reason for the “wealth or income gap”: Smart people keep on doing things that are smart and make them money while stupid people keep on doing things that are stupid and keep them from achieving.

People who get an education, stay off of drugs, apply themselves, and save and wisely invest their earnings do a lot better than people who drop out of school, become substance abusers, and buy fancy cars and houses that they can’t afford, only to lose them.

We don’t have an income gap. We have a stupid gap.

Ouch.

APPLIANCEBLOGGING: So the latest Consumer Reports likes the Cuisinart coffeemaker best. As the owner of one, that makes me feel slightly smug. As I’ve mentioned before, I like my All-Clad slow-cooker a lot, but it’s kind of pricey; I got it as a gift, but probably wouldn’t spend that much myself. Luckily, Consumer Reports likes this much much cheaper Hamilton Beach.

UPDATE: Reader Dan O’Brien writes: “My old style slow cooker died and I bought the Hamilton Beach you cited. I like it a lot. Time, manual, or temp sensing. Plus the top buckles down for transport without spilling anything. Nice unit.”

ANN ALTHOUSE: “Remember the liberal meme that George Bush was ‘incurious’? But aren’t these liberal journalists incurious? They had this email list that was designed — apparently — to figure out how to structure the various news stories to serve the interests of their party. The Journolist was a self-herding device. They wanted to be good cogs in a machine that would generate power for the Democratic Party, didn’t they? For career and social rewards? That’s my hypothesis. As an intellectual, I would like to study how that worked. I’ll write a book about it if someone will send me the raw material I need — the complete archive of the Journolist. I need a Deep Throat.” I’ve got your man right here.

UPDATE: A journalist reader emails:

That Ann Althouse post you quoted is more right than she knows. A friend who was on the List and works at a major newspaper told me recently, and I quote verbatim: “Journolist was basically a jobs program for liberals in DC.” This person said that it was used to link up the older, more established set with the younger up-and-comers, all to better staff newspapers, magazines, and institutions with liberals. And it is worth adding that this was said by a very liberal person who was not speaking the least bit apologetically.

Seems like it might violate some institutions’ affirmative action policies, then. . . .

ANOTHER UPDATE: Oh, here’s a blog post on the employment-discrimination angle. If they’re colluding to make their product uniform, is it an antitrust violation, too?

MORE: Ted Frank isn’t convinced on the antidiscrimination argument. I’m not sure about the legality here — though I think Ted’s thinking like a defense lawyer, not a plaintiff’s lawyer — but I was referencing internal HR policies. My institution, for example, makes us log all hiring-related email contacts.

QUAGMIRE!

Well, I dunno. The real quagmire seems to be in the Gulf of Mexico. There’s no Petraeus to bring in there. . . .

WALTER SHAPIRO ON THE DEATH OF PRIVACY. Well, this is a product of journalism. It probably started when Earl Butz lost his job. In The Appearance of Impropriety, Peter Morgan and I noted that sociologists like Erving Goffman think that every functioning society needs a “backstage” where people can let their hair down and speak without observing social proprieties. But journalists have been destroying that backstage for decades, reporting casual remarks, emails, and betrayed confidences whenever it would advance their careers, or their agendas. Why should they be permitted to keep one, when no one else is?

And if these had been emails among conservative pundits and reporters (er, if you could find 400 of those), the leaker would be treated as a hero, not a person “whose motivations were mysterious and whose lack of integrity was obvious.”

FASTER, PLEASE: Genetically-Engineered Salmon Get Closer To The Table. “Normally, salmon do not make growth hormone in cold weather. But the pout’s on-switch keeps production of the hormone going year round. The result is salmon that can grow to market size in 16 to 18 months instead of three years, though the company says the modified salmon will not end up any bigger than a conventional fish.”

UPDATE: Despite what the expert said, the package sent to Calzada wasn’t a bomb.

THE INSTA-WIFE IS ON WNOX talking about men and marriage. Listen live here. Call-in info here.

HORSE HAVEN OF TENNESSEE has a blog!

TAKING THE TEA PARTIES SERIOUSLY. Oh, good grief. Check out the photo if you want to see the face of modern journalism. In your nightmares . . . .