You don't REALLY have to read the whole article
Not unless you want to see the picture with the obligatory white guy. It's just a fluff piece.
By LINDA LEE
SAG HARBOR, N.Y.
YOU could say that Morris Reid didn't so much give a party for Tracey L. Brown last weekend as take one ? from a client, a liquor conglomerate, eager to back a series of get-togethers. Such is the nature of Hamptons entertaining that the purpose is not just a fun night out but sometimes to promote an agenda ? in this case, putting certain brands into the hands of the right crowd. And this was the right crowd. Ms. Brown, a lawyer and author, is the daughter of Ronald H. Brown, commerce secretary under Bill Clinton, who died in 1996 in a plane crash in Croatia.
The party was held in the five-bedroom waterfront house belonging to Alma Brown, Ms. Brown's mother. It was built in 1998 in a neighborhood that is a home to many prominent African-Americans, including the lawyer Johnny Cochran; the lifestyle guru B. Smith; Earl Graves Jr., the founder of Black Enterprise magazine; and Susan Taylor, the editor of Essence magazine.
"In the Hamptons, the whites have their place, and this is ours ? we're not all P. Diddy," said Lisa Bonner, an entertainment lawyer based in Los Angeles and once Ms. Brown's classmate at Boston College.
The easiest way to Leave No Child Behind
…is to stop everyone's forward progress.
By SAM DILLON
OKLAHOMA CITY, Aug. 30 ? Angela Houston, the principal of Eisenhower Elementary School, spent this week hunkered down in her office here phoning unemployed teachers, trying to rebuild her staff after a dozen instructors lost their jobs in a state budget crisis last spring.
But even if Ms. Houston can hire teachers for all her classrooms, she worries about her school's morale. "The layoffs brought a big letdown," she said.
Dozens of other Oklahoma City schools were also reeling from the financial turmoil that forced the closing of seven schools and the dismissal of 600 teachers at the end of the last school year.
As children return to classrooms, many of the nation's 90,000 public schools are, as in Oklahoma City, feeling battered and worn down. Most states have reacted to declining tax revenues by trimming education spending, setting the stage for one of the most austere school years in memory.
In Alabama, where a budget crisis has left 38 of the state's 129 school systems on the verge of bankruptcy, Birmingham closed nine schools before the fall term began this month. Boston closed five schools and eliminated 1,000 jobs, including 400 teaching positions. Teachers lost jobs in cities like Toledo, Ohio; Norwich, Conn.; and Vista, Calif. In New Port Richey, Fla., school officials closed a popular 29-year-old science field trip center.
"School finances across the country are teetering on horrendous," said Michael Griffith, an analyst for the Education Commission of the States, a research group in Denver.
Many schools are raising revenues in new ways, charging students to participate in sports, plays, band or other activities that were once free. The Los Alamitos District in Orange County, Calif., is urging parents to make a $40 donation for each day a student misses classes, to compensate for state aid forfeited through the absence, David Hatton, a spokesman, said.
If austerity is challenging parents and educators at schools across America, the new term also appears likely to pose a critical test for the education law, called No Child Left Behind, which President Bush has made a centerpiece of his domestic agenda. Mr. Bush developed its central concept ? using standardized tests to hold schools accountable for student achievement ? as governor of Texas in the 1990's, when the economy was booming. Flush with tax revenues, Texas sent squads of experts to schools labeled as failing to help them sort out their educational program.
But the education law, which seeks to replicate Mr. Bush's Texas experiment nationally, is taking force in an economic downturn, and a fierce debate is under way about whether the federal government will provide enough help to schools the law identifies as failing, or simply pass the costs of the law on to the states.
"We believe the law is amply funded," Dan Langan, a Department of Education spokesman, said. "There's more money than ever before to achieve the intent of the law."[p6: note the statement is "amply" not "fully"]
But legislators in several states have introduced proposals for those states to opt out of the federal law if its costs are not fully financed by the federal government. By doing so, however, they would also lose all federal aid to low-income schools.
Let's be clear: there should be no such thing as a "low-income school." This is, in fact, a euphamism for "schools servicing low-income people." Given that this administration has declared class war and been very obvious about which side it has chosen, Langan's statement strikes me as literally true…just as it was literally true to say "England says Iraq has sought to purchase large quantities of uranium from Africa."
Repercussions of rhetoric
This crisis is a direct result of the "Axis of Evil" riff. Both Iran and North Korea see the USofA's annexation of Iraq as a warning as significant as a quarrantine sign on your next-door neighbor's lawn.
Months ago, North Korea said they'd forgo this nuclear nonsense in exchange for a non-aggression pact between the USofA and themselves. Who could blame them?
By DAVID E. SANGER
…The most immediate challenge came on Thursday, when North Korea startled a six-nation conference in Beijing by openly threatening to make a formal declaration that it is now a nuclear-armed power, and to conduct a nuclear test that would put to rest any notions that it is bluffing. In public, the White House dismissed the statements as another unsubtle North Korean attempt at blackmail, with a spokesman noting the country's "long history of making inflammatory comments."
In private, Mr. Bush's national security aides were not so sanguine. While the North Koreans alternately blow hot and cold ? threatening to shoot off missiles and nukes one moment, then hinting at disarmament deals if the price is right ? they have backed up almost every public threat they have made in the past 12 months. They promised to throw international inspectors out of the country, then did it; they threatened to withdraw from the nuclear nonproliferation treaty and then withdrew; they said they would make bomb-grade plutonium, and American intelligence agencies now believe they are producing it, if slowly.
So despite the administration's public line that there is no crisis afoot, almost everyone in the administration, which is deeply divided on North Korea strategy, says this is a race against time. "If they blow off a nuke test, this whole process of negotiation is over," one senior national security aide said on Friday. American officials have also told their allies that if talks drag fruitlessly past October, they will be ended for fear that Kim Jong Il, the North Korean leader, is playing for time in which to reprocess plutonium.
The informal October deadline may offer a hint about what Mr. Bush means when he says he will not "tolerate" a North Korea gone nuclear. By then, the hawks in the Pentagon and Vice President Dick Cheney's office, who have never believed a negotiated solution is possible with the North, will be able to say that Mr. Bush tried diplomacy and that it failed. In fact, those arguing for a patient diplomatic approach appear to be losing ground: one of the State Department's more moderate North Korea hands, Charles Pritchard, resigned last week, after months of behind-the-scenes battling to get the administration to put serious incentives on the table for the North to think about.
Thank you, Dubya & Co.
By CHRISTOPHER MARQUIS
WASHINGTON ? Deputy Secretary of State Richard L. Armitage, a hard-liner who had pressed for five years to topple Saddam Hussein, admitted last week to mistakes in planning the war in Iraq. He said, for the first time, that the administration is considering placing American and British forces there under a United Nations flag, provided their leader is American.
Mr. Armitage declined to give details. "I don't think it helps to throw them out publicly right now," he said.
Too late. The deputy secretary's comments became part of a nascent chorus ? tentative but unmistakable ? of officials, lawmakers and others re-examining their preconceptions about Iraq and calling for a midcourse correction. Reality has poked ideology in the eye.
For conservatives, this has meant considering the idea that America can't go it alone and may have to appease allies who benefited from the war but failed to support it. It means acknowledging that Iraq is so badly broken it could well require a lengthy and extremely costly process of nation-building, a term that makes many on the right cringe.[p6: may? may??]
For liberals ? many of whom opposed the invasion ? it may mean admitting there can be no swift departure because the stakes have become too high. Leaving now would place Iraqis under violent usurpers, and set a precedent that could haunt Washington for years.[p6: may? may??]
Editorials
A French Roadblock to Free Trade
France is the leading supporter of the European Union's costly protectionist agricultural policy, and the major opponent of any serious change.
Tough Start to the School Year
Setting lofty education goals while failing to back them up with the needed cash is worse than doing nothing at all.
Policy Lobotomy Needed
By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN
I don't know what Mr. Bush has been doing on his vacation, but I know what the country has been doing: starting to worry
Unfree in America
IT IS EASY to see why the United States has the highest incarceration rate in the world when a convicted felon in California gets 50 years to life for shoplifting $153.54 in children's videotapes from Kmart. But a new report by the Justice Department on incarceration rates shows just how counterproductive get-tough state and federal sentencing laws have become. Reform is needed to prevent future generations from being rounded up and sent off to prison for nonviolent crimes that would be better addressed with restitution and other sanctions short of jail time.
Prop. 54 Could Undermine Racial Gains
By Gregory Rodriguez
It would seem a contradiction. Californians elect the first Mexican American governor in modern times and also approve an ostensibly conservative Proposition 54, which would prohibit the state from recognizing racial and ethnic categories. But the Mexicanization of California makes both political events possible.
Cartoons

Tom Toles on the really important discussion
David Horsey shows a reasonable reaction to the new school year
Joel Pett gives us "I Have A Dream Ver. 2.0"
Egad
Natasha at Pacific Views ran across an example of how desperate some job seekers have become:
She goes on to tell the DJ how much she needs this job, that it's such a good job, and that she's been unemployed for six months. She swears she's been clean. Then she starts begging him to change the results. She asks if he's married, and in the space of about a minute goes from offering lunch, to a night out for drinks, to saying she'll sleep with him.
Butting in
Arriving in the middle of an interblog discussion, I catch this gem from John Constantine at Hellblazer:
And the point of the TAP article is that RoveCo has taken extraordinary actions in regard to civil rights. Amazing, extra constitutional actions. Justified on a state of "war" with a noun. Get that? A noun.
This will not be easy
Hui Neng, the sixth Patriach of Zen, said there is no difference between the Buddha nature of an enlightened person and that of a person operating under delusion. This means intelligence only works one way; the difference is what we apply our intelligence to. If we cling to illusion, insist on something that is not true, our intelligence will create another untruth to compensate. You can tell if you are under delusion if you must continually explain to yourself why you were right to be wrong.
Because there is only one way intelligence works, I am convinced I can understand others if I listen, and they can understand me if I speak with my understanding of them in mind.
Therefore, I am adding every Black blogger I run across to my RSS feeds.
There are some that I just don't agree with, but we are trying to answer similar questions. I hope to be able to hold conversations with these folks just about everything because there are some things that I don't do and therefore that I don't understand.
George
I appreciate the link. You know I think highly of your article selection at Negrophile.
But "Go spur Earl Dunovant"?
Truthfully I was waiting for the holiday wekend to pass, both to give myself more time to try to integrate (heh) those disparate thoughts and so it wouldn't scroll off before folks got back to work. Besides, I don't really say or see anything that hasn't been seen or said before. I just have my particular way of saying it. Such as…
New data
Before I forget:
You may well have heard of the Minimum Wage series at NathanNewman.org. Hella job. Nathan joins the blogroll because of that and Racism and Liberals…I have no comment on the specifics of what kicked that one off, but declare the general case to be valid.
Baldilocks joins the Conservatives I Hate To Have To Respect because we're conversating and I've already come to the conclusion I'm not gonna have to scream on her.
To The Barracades! because Pessimist lays out the grief actual humans have come to this Labor Day oh, so well.
Now. I had this absurd idea about tackling Brad deLong's Problem Set #1 in the middle of all I have going on, which is going to require me to read the first chapter of his book, which is likely to force me to refresh myself on other stuff.
Now why would prosecutors resist a trend that identifies wrongly convicted prisoners, hmmm?
The Real Problem With DNA Tests
The American public has eaten up the stories of wrongly convicted people freed by DNA evidence — in print, on television and even in a recent, well-received play. What the public is less aware of is how hard the government often makes it for convicted people to get DNA testing. In a new twist, prosecutors are increasingly fighting to keep prisoners behind bars even when DNA testing points to innocence. This backlash should be resisted.
Happy Labor Day
By BOB HERBERT
There was an interesting lead paragraph in an article on the front page of The Wall Street Journal last Thursday:
"The blackout of 2003 offers a simple but powerful lesson: Markets are a great way to organize economic activity, but they need adult supervision."
Gee. They've finally figured that out. The nuns I had in grammar school were onto this adult supervision notion decades ago. It seems to be just dawning on the power brokers of the 21st century. Maybe soon the voters will catch on. You need adults in charge.
…Imagine if we had done some things differently. If, for example, instead of squandering such staggering amounts of federal money on tax cuts and an ill-advised war, we had invested wisely in some of the nation's pressing needs. What if we had begun to refurbish our antiquated electrical grid, or developed creative new ways to replenish the stock of affordable housing, or really tackled the job of rebuilding and rejuvenating the public schools?
What if we had called in the best minds from coast to coast to begin a crash program, in good faith and with solid federal backing, to substantially reduce our dependence on foreign oil by changing our laws and habits, and developing safer, cleaner, less-expensive alternatives? This is exactly the kind of effort that the United States, with its can-do spirit and vast commercial, technological and intellectual resources, would be great at.
Imagine if we had begun a program to rebuild our aging infrastructure — the highways, bridges, tunnels and dams, the water and sewage facilities, the airports and transit systems. Imagine on this Labor Day 2003 the number of good jobs that could be generated with that kind of long-term effort.
All of these issues, if approached properly, are job creators, including the effort to reduce our energy dependence. The big hangup in the economic recovery we are supposed to be experiencing now is the continued joblessness and underemployment.
A fellow I ran into recently in San Jose, Calif., Andy Fortuna, said: "I've got a college degree and I'm washing cars. I'm working, but I'd like a good job. If the idea is for business to employ as few people as possible and keep their pay as low as possible — well, how's that good for me? Who speaks for me?"
The job-loss recovery
FOR 9 MILLION Americans, today's Labor Day celebrations will be muted by the fact that they are unemployed. This amounts to 6.2 percent of the work force. The upturn that began almost two years ago is proving to be not just a jobless recovery but a job loss one: Nearly 1 million jobs have vanished since economists say the turnaround began in November 2001.
Strange as it seems, I can't stop dreamin' a dream
By Thomas A. Kochan, 9/1/2003
ON LABOR DAY, politicians usually applaud what workers do for the economy and society. This year speeches to this effect will ring hollow to the majority of American workers and their families. The reality is the American workforce resembles a pressure cooker about to blow.
Over the past decade workers and families have had to work longer hours only to be rewarded with stagnant or declining wages in the face of skyrocketing CEO pay, lost or dramatically diminished pensions, rising health insurance costs, and spreading job insecurity. Add to this the scandal induced breakdown in trust and confidence in corporations and their leaders, continued declines in union coverage and power, and a federal government busily reducing overtime coverage, quashing rules that would allow states to fund paid family leave, and unilaterally canceling thousands of federal workers' rights to join a union under the Orwellian guise that collective bargaining would be a threat to national security.
So maybe it is time for workers to say enough is enough. Instead of enduring more hollow rhetoric they might start demanding a new and better deal at work, one that gives them the tools to regain control of their economic destiny and restores trust and confidence in business and government.
Keeping it real
By J.P. Gownder
September 1, 2003
Colin Powell is not black. Nor is Halle Berry. Tiger Woods, with an Asian mother and mixed-race African American father, isn't black either.
At least, this is the reductionist assumption underlying Proposition 54, the so-called Racial Privacy Initiative, on the Oct. 7 ballot. The initiative would prohibit any government agency in California from collecting data on race, ethnicity, color or national origin.
Supporters argue that, among other things, there's no longer a rationale for collecting racial data because the number of mixed-race citizens is growing. They claim that "a remarkable blurring of racial lines" has rendered the concept of race meaningless. And they say that by asking Californians about their race, the government "sanctions racial classifications," forcing an increasingly multiracial populace into traditional categories of "hyphenated Americans." Yet neither race nor its effects will be dissipated by a ballot measure that seduces with a simple message of a "colorblind society."
Player Piano
Player Piano is Kurt Vonnegut's first novel. It's set in a world where everything is automated to the point that jobs are practically non-existant…the kind of world that is more and more possible every day.
What are the possible repercussions of this kind of transformation? Vonnegut was not sanguine about the possibilities. It was the ultimate welfare state, and Player Piano did not end happily.
The repercussions of full automation is something that needs consideration now because it truly looks like the direction we're headed in. I'll be dead before it's done but my daughter and potential grandchildren will not, so it's something I'd rather see done properly. Robotic Freedom is an entry point to the first detailed examination of the possibilities and possible alternatives I've seen.
Oh, why not
Goof-off entries must be made once in a while. I like my Giant Battle Monster ("CANNOT BE STOPPED"-nice power, though I can't figure out how a giant ant wields a samurai sword). And as a fan of Michael Moorcock's Eternal Champion series I like my battle cry too.
Enemy of the State
Check out your neighborhood from a thousand feet above using TerraFly
True, true

Your magical style is Magus.
What type of Magic do you work?.
Take the Magical Style Quiz by
Paradox
This is what happens when I'm up too late.
Fascinating
I just searched googled "java eclipse" using Mozilla 1.4. I then did the same query using the Google toolbar on IE6 and got a slightly different page… www.eclipse.org is the eigth listing on the IE page and the second on the Mozilla page.
I copied the URL from the Mozilla response page and pasted it into the address bar in IE6. Got back the same page as when I entered the query.
I wouldn't have thought Google would spin the results of a query based on the browser you submit it with, but for some subjects, like programming, it makes sense.
I hope the energy deregulation proponents I was talking to on Crooked Timber are paying attention
By PAUL KRUGMAN
When the E.P.A. makes our air dirtier, or the Interior Department opens a wilderness to mining companies, or the Labor Department strips workers of some more rights, the announcement always comes late on Friday ? when the news is most likely to be ignored on TV and nearly ignored by major newspapers.
Last Friday the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, known as FERC, announced settlements with energy companies accused of manipulating markets during the California energy crisis. Why on Friday? Because the settlements were a joke: the companies got away with only token payments. It was yet another demonstration of how electricity deregulation has gone wrong.
Most independent experts now believe that during 2000-2001, price manipulation by energy companies, mainly taking the form of "economic withholding" ? keeping capacity offline to drive up prices ? added billions of dollars to California's electricity bills. A March FERC report concluded that there had been extensive manipulation of prices in both the natural gas and electricity markets.
Using methods widely accepted among economists, the California Independent System Operator ? which operates the power grid ? estimated that withholding by electricity companies had cost the state $8.9 billion. This estimate doesn't include the continuing cost of long-term contracts the state signed, at inflated prices, to keep the lights on during the crisis.
Yet the charges energy companies agreed to added up to only a bit more than $1 million. That is, the average Californian was bilked of more than $250, but the state will receive compensation of about 3 cents.
…So what does this say about electricity deregulation?
There is a theoretical case for a deregulated electricity market. But making such a market work, it's now clear, requires at least three preconditions. First, it requires a robust transmission system, yet the recent blackout made it clear that we have now created a system in which nobody has clear responsibility for the transmission network. Second, it needs a watchdog agency with adequate powers to prevent and punish price manipulation; FERC doesn't have those powers. Third, that watchdog must not be an agent of the very companies it's supposed to be policing. Enough said.
I admire the virtues of free markets as much as anyone. But given what we've seen so far, any state government that lets the federal government prod it into deregulation is just plain crazy.
"Chinese" is not an ancient Teutonic word meaning "stupid"
The USofA wants China to "[allow] market forces to set the value of its currency."
Tell me, of what benefit would that be to China?
By JOSEPH KAHN
BEIJING, Sept. 1 — China is preparing to reduce incentives for exporters, increase purchases of Treasury bonds and loosen controls on foreign currency holdings to blunt mounting pressure from the United States, where its growing trade surplus has come under heavy political scrutiny, Chinese officials and analysts say.
The steps are expected to be among concessions Chinese leaders offer Treasury Secretary John W. Snow on his visit to Beijing this week, although they fall well short of meeting Mr. Snow's demand that China begin allowing market forces to set the value of its currency, the yuan.
With Democratic presidential candidates, influential American manufacturers and even Alan Greenspan, chairman of the Federal Reserve, pressing China to overhaul its currency system, officials here are eager to head off trade tensions. But they are also determined to maintain the current exchange rate, set at roughly 8.3 yuan to the dollar, for some time to come.
Ah, there's nothing like the smell of fresh Bushit in the mornin'
By DAVID E. SANGER
RICHFIELD, Ohio, Sept. 1 — Since the last time President Bush addressed a Labor Day picnic ? with carpenters in Pennsylvania ? the economy has lost 700,000 jobs, most of them in manufacturing.
…"Things are getting better," Mr. Bush told a subdued crowd here.
Orders for goods are coming back to the country's factories, the president said, and productivity is on the rise ? though he acknowledged that was one reason jobs were disappearing.
…Mr. Bush's only new announcement today, the traditional start of campaign season in election years, was the creation of an assistant secretary of commerce for manufacturing, a step clearly intended to reinforce his commitment to bringing back blue-collar jobs.
Yet the creation of the position is the kind of action that Republicans, when they were out of office, used to criticize.
…Mr. Bush said that in creating the post, he would address head-on the loss of what he said were "thousands of manufacturing jobs" in recent years.
In fact, around 3 million jobs have been lost since Mr. Bush took office, about 2.5 million of them in manufacturing.
Mr. Bush never explicitly mentioned China, but when he said much of the job loss was "because production moved overseas," he appeared to be referring to China and other low-cost countries.
China has emerged in this campaign in essentially the same role that Japan played when the first President Bush entered his ill-fated re-election campaign in 1992
…Mr. Bush did not say what the duties of the new assistant secretary would be other than to focus "on the needs of manufacturers," nor did he say when he intended to nominate one.
Loose talk caused the North Korean crisis
Check the last line, people.
By JOSEPH KAHN
BEIJING, Sept. 1 - The Chinese official who played host to six-party talks on North Korea's nuclear program said today that the United States was the "main problem" in reaching a diplomatic solution to the crisis, echoing the North's bitter assessment about why the talks had ended in acrimony.
Asked about the obstacles that had arisen during the talks in Beijing last week, Wang Yi, a vice foreign minister who was China's chief delegate at the negotiations, replied, "America's policy toward the D.P.R.K. - that is the main problem we are facing." North Korea's formal name is the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.
Mr. Wang made the comment to reporters during a conference he was attending in Manila, and it was not immediately clear if he spoke for China's Foreign Ministry, which has sought to maintain a neutral position while urging both parties to continue negotiating.
But the remark may reflect frustration that the United States offered no concessions to North Korea during the talks, which were organized after extensive diplomacy by Chinese officials.
The Bush administration has maintained that North Korea must dismantle its nuclear program before discussions can begin on any benefits it might receive for doing so. North Korea says it is willing to give up its nuclear program, but only if the United States offers a nonaggression treaty first.
Meanwhile, at the Boston Globe:
Policy shift seen as way to defuse nuclear issue
By Bryan Bender, Globe Correspondent, 9/1/2003
WASHINGTON -- After more than two years of trying to isolate reclusive North Korea, the Bush administration is preparing to offer Pyongyang diplomatic relations, security guarantees, and other concessions if it agrees to dismantle its nuclear weapons program, according to administration officials involved in internal deliberations.
The approach marks a major policy shift toward what President Bush has labeled a member of the "axis of evil." The Bush White House broke with the Clinton administration's carrot-and-stick approach, preferring to stand firm against North Korean leader Kim Jong Il, whom it accused of violating a 1994 agreement to freeze Pyongyang's weapons program.
The administration, however, has little to show for the confrontational approach. North Korea pulled out of a global treaty governing atomic weapons earlier this year and is now threatening to conduct a nuclear test.
Bolstered by new talks last week, a consensus has emerged in Washington that the most effective way to defuse one of its most challenging foreign policy crises is to reemphasize the Clinton approach of possible rewards in return for North Korean cooperation, the officials said.
"Now [the administration] has learned the hard way that the solution to this is going to be negotiation," said a State Department official who asked not to be named. "The approach until now has been terribly inefficient and wasteful. We could have been here two years ago."
So, nu?
Boston, other communities reflect impact of white flight
By Yvonne Abraham and Francie Latour, Globe Staff, 9/2/2003
Almost three decades after Boston's bruising school desegregation battles, nearly half of the white children in the city attend private schools and most minority children remain walled off from suburban school advantages, according to a report released yesterday.
The report, by the Lewis Mumford Center for Comparative Urban and Regional Research at the State University of New York at Albany, depicts a region with stark divisions between school districts. Students in Boston public schools are mostly black and Hispanic. Hispanic children are concentrated in schools in the blue-collar, satellite cities such as Lowell and Lawrence. And suburban schools are predominantly white.
"White children have almost entirely escaped the city of Boston, and those who remain in the city live in increasingly advantaged city neighborhoods; half of them attend private schools," it reads. "The vast majority of them live in the suburbs, and in the suburbs they grow up in neighborhoods and attend schools that are typically 90 percent white and remarkably affluent."
The report, sponsored by The Civil Rights Project at Harvard University, is part of a yearlong effort called the Metro Boston Equity Initiative, a study of segregation and inequality in the region. Researchers unveiled the findings as part of a weekend-long Harvard conference on race relations.
…According to the study, the white flight that followed busing in the 1970s continued through the 1990s. In 1990, 36.7 percent of Boston's children were white, but only 23.5 percent of the students enrolled in the public elementary schools were white. In 2000, 25.4 percent of the city's children were white, and they made up only 13.6 percent of Boston elementary school enrollments.
The white children who remain in Boston -- 30,000, or 3.2 percent of the entire region's population of white children -- live in neighborhoods where 85 percent of the children are white. Fully 44 percent of white children in Boston attend private schools.
By contrast, 46.8 percent of the region's black children live in Boston, and 22.5 percent of Hispanic children call the city home.
The picture in the suburbs is equally lopsided: 80 percent of the white under-18 population lives in the suburbs; only 21.4 percent of blacks in that age group and 24.1 percent of Hispanic youths and children live in the suburbs. Nationwide, by comparison, 40 percent of the black and Hispanic under-18 population lives in the suburbs, according to the report. The reasons for that are not just economic, said John R. Logan, an author of the study and director of the Mumford Center. Even when minority families become affluent, they tend to stay in neighborhoods with lower incomes and education levels, he said.
"Income is not the primary driver of the system here," he said. "There is very good evidence of discrimination in the housing market, and there is the historic legacy of a color line people hesitate to cross. It's asking a lot of a black family to be the only black family in a community."[p6: people who substitute EA (economic assistance) for Aa should take note]
But Mayor Thomas M. Menino took umbrage at the report: Seeing the Boston schools through a demographic lens does them an injustice, he said. The study says nothing about the quality of Boston's schools, which has improved enormously in recent years, he said.
"We can't continue to talk about black and white," he said. "Let's talk about achievement. The answer is to have quality schools, and when you have quality schools, there's no color. All parents want quality schools and that's what we have today in Boston."
Logan said it is not the racial disparities between school districts that allow for educational inequities but the economic differences that attend them.[p6: uh huh. and it is, of course, a coincidence that the economic differences attend the same groups that experience educational inequities]
Leave No Child Behind by stopping all forward motion
By Anand Vaishnav, Globe Staff, 9/2/2003
Padlocked libraries. No after-school drama club. Fewer intriguing electives such as desktop publishing or the culture of Greece and Rome.
It's back-to-school week in Massachusetts without the frills -- and, some fear, without the fun.
"You're going to have a bunch of shortchanged kids out there," said Paul Schlichtman, a member of the Arlington School Committee.
The gloomiest fiscal picture in two decades is clouding this week's stampede back to the classroom for dozens of school districts statewide, as budget cuts exacted on paper become a reality. While schools try to shield core classes, electives are taking a hit, and so are school clubs that made the school day not only passable but enjoyable. "That's my worry," said Kathleen Donovan, Arlington's superintendent of schools. "I think it's as important to provide for the student that's going on to college as I think it is to provide for the student that's going to be a chef and support himself."
Classes kick off in many districts today, tomorrow, and Thursday. School administrators promise their teachers will soldier on, but they have nagging questions about the long-term effects of slimmed-down schools on this generation of children. Nationally, the back-to-school outlook is grim: Legislatures in 11 states, including Massachusetts, cut funding for K-12 education this fiscal year, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.
I'm starting to hate the morning news
Resistance in Iraq Is Home Grown
Nationalists and Islamists are among diverse groups joining the attacks. Foreign fighters are present in moderate numbers.
By Tracy Wilkinson
Times Staff Writer
September 2, 2003
BAGHDAD - The men attempting to recruit a former soldier in the Fedayeen Saddam militia for today's war against the Americans took him to a bearded sheik seated in a pickup truck.
They appealed to the mortar expert's sense of nationalism and then to his religious conviction. The Americans have done nothing for Iraqis. They defile the homeland. Attacking the American occupiers is the only way to make them leave, the recruiters argued.
In their shadowy guerrilla war to drive American forces out of Iraq, hundreds of insurgents have organized into cells, especially in Al Anbar province west of Baghdad and Diyala province to the northeast, both strongholds for Saddam Hussein, the Sunni tribes that supported him and Wahhabi and other Islamic fundamentalists.
Despite the U.S. government's insistence that Iraq has become the new battlefield of global terrorism, most of the resistance is home grown. The guerrillas are militants from the deposed regime, but they are also ordinary Iraqis opposed to occupation. They are ex-intelligence officers and farmers, militiamen and merchants, bombers and fishermen, according to more than a dozen interviews with Americans and Iraqis.
Added to this mix of Iraqis are the Islamic fundamentalists, especially Sunnis who have stepped into the power vacuum created by the war and its aftermath to take leadership roles in the resistance. Foreign fighters from Syria, Yemen and Saudi Arabia have infiltrated in moderate numbers, working alongside some of the Iraqi groups. The first arrests in last week's bombing of the Imam Ali Mosque in the Shiite holy city of Najaf, for example, were said to be of two Saudi nationals allied with two Fedayeen militiamen.
Editorials
Ice Cream on the Brain
Throughout history, even in the caves of Neanderthals, legend says children have maintained they are so full it would be impossible to swallow one more bite of mastodon spleen or even a single Green Giant pea. Yet, miraculously, seconds later, the same youngsters can profess discovery in their stomachs of a little-known dessert compartment, which is, by good fortune, quite available for filling with cookies, cake or ice cream. Parents suspicious of such timely, documentation-free claims should note now that, in fact, such a compartment has been found by British researchers. It's just not in the stomach; it's in the brain.
Lawyers' New Ethical Duties
Lawyers don't take kindly to other people telling them how to do their jobs. But in the aftermath of Enron and WorldCom, corporate scandals in which attorneys coached companies on what they could get away with, change is in order. They should be required to report corporate wrongdoing that threatens to destroy shareholder wealth and strip employees of their hard-earned pensions.
The immersion challenge
WITH THE START of the school year, Massachusetts is embarking on an experiment in educating students whose first language is not English. Voters approved a ballot question last November that ended bilingual education for most of the 50,000 children in this category. Districts will be challenged to make the new practice -- English immersion -- work at the same time MCAS requires both math and verbal skills. Pessimists say many districts will simply revert to the immersion practices of 30 years ago, before bilingual education, when language-minority students often floundered and dropped out at rates much higher than other groups. As flawed as bilingual education was, often failing to educate students well in either their own language or English, it did curb dropout rates.
Cartoons
Don Wright
Gary Varvel
Rob Rogers
Jeff Danziger
So I'm slow, so what?
Though I attended to my own blog yesterday all manner of things kept me from checking out everything I could have on the BlogNet. So this morning I see all these references to Nathan Newman's post on why he's so supportive of unions. Gotta go see what I missed.
Well, the post itself is good, and the commenters trashing the troll was just as good.
But even better is that this is the first this week's themed posts: "Why Unions?" And unlike me, he seems to actually do a whole week of posts on a theme when he decided to. And they tend to be quite good.
So now we're all in at the beginning of the series. Just one day late, but that's less than terminal.
Damn! Finally!
Go check out Open Source Politics and see what's been distracting me all this time. The section of it I'm managing, Knowledge, focuses on education and Info Tech.
Yeah, that doesn't sound political, I know. We just like to be fully rounded.
Plus, I'll be writing a post per week for the LegalWrites section, and a monthly round up of the doings in Africa. I'll likely focus on the progress of the Pan-African movement…I actually still have time to work out the what and how of that.
TOPDOG04 is too busy for his own good
You know a brother's too deep in it when he becomes locally world-famous and damn near misses the whole thing.
Democratic Underground published my piece, "A Twelve Lane Freeway to Mediocrity?" in June and I didn't even know it until today. I expected an email informing me if they published it, so I did not keep checking the site every day to be sure. I feel pretty stupid now, but proud of the article at the same time.
I'm not going to cheat
Finally, I can start that macroeconomics textbook. I'm not going to look at the answers to Mr. deLong's Problem Set 1 until I finish that chapter. I'm not even going to link to the answers 'til then.
One lesson behind…just like back in the good old days. 
Psychohistory
I should finish Chapter 2 of Professor deLong's macroeconomics textbook tonight, so I'll be checking out the answers to Problem Set 1 tomorrow morning.
So far, it's clear, which means well-written, and I'm told I have the right reasons for being interested in economics; the three reasons given boil down to self-interest. Knowing something about this stuff lets you respond more intelligently to national events.
This is significant. And why "black" Muslims?
Why not just "Imam Warith Deen Mohammed, leader of the American Society of Muslims"?
RACHEL ZOLL, AP Religion Writer
Monday, September 1, 2003
©2003 Associated Press
Imam W. Deen Mohammed, the black Muslim spiritual leader who over three decades transformed how American blacks practice the religion, has resigned as head of the American Society of Muslims.
Mohammed said he will continue to represent and guide black Muslims and direct his ministry, The Mosque Cares, but would no longer lead the society, the main organization representing his movement.
"I'm getting ready ... to do more, to be more productive and to contribute to the good life of the believers," Mohammed said Sunday at the start of his keynote speech at the society's annual convention.
Mohammed, who will turn 70 in October, on Saturday privately informed his movement's imams, or prayer leaders, that he would step down
I don't have to say anything about MEChA, do I?
I do? Okay.
Stuart Butler, an economist with the Heritage Foundation, is a sadist
By LYNETTE CLEMETSON
WASHINGTON, Sept. 2 … The number of Americans living below the poverty line increased by more than 1.3 million last year, even though the economy technically edged out of recession during the same period, a Census Bureau report shows.
The spike in economic hardship hit individuals and families alike. The report indicated that the total percentage of people in poverty increased to 12.4 percent from 12.1 percent in 2001 and totaled 34.8 million. At the same time, the number of families living in poverty went up by more than 300,000 in 2002 to 7 million from 6.6 million in 2001.
The number of children in poverty rose by more than 600,000 during the same period to 12.2 million. The rate of increase in children under age 5 jumped a full percentage point to 19.8 percent living below the poverty line from 18.8 percent a year earlier.
"These numbers provide a moving picture of population changes," said Stephen Buckner, a spokesman for the Census Bureau. "It's more timely data that should allow decision makers to make more informed judgments."
The new data, some analysts say, may raise the level of scrutiny on a variety of federal programs like welfare reform and the recently enacted increases in child tax credits, which excluded about 6.5 million low-income working families with children.
Stuart Butler, an economist with the Heritage Foundation, a Washington policy institute, called the data "a fairly predictable product of the slowing economy."
"The issue is, what do you do to continue to strengthen the economy?" Mr. Butler said. "You take the necessary steps to encourage people to move back into the work force, plus making sure we don't do anything to weaken the welfare reforms put in place some years ago."
Robert Greenstein, executive director of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, said, "Some people had drawn a Pollyanna-ish conclusion that somehow changes in the welfare system would insulate children from increases in poverty during economic slumps."
"These new data show that that assumption is flatly incorrect." Mr. Greenstein said. "It also underscores the mistake in federal tax policies that exclude the very families who are hurting the most."
"[E]ncourage people to move back into the work force"? These people are newly poor. That means they used to not be poor. What, you think they woke up one day and said, "Ho hum, this is booooring. I think I want to be poor."
"[E]ncourage people to move back into the work force"? What makes this idiot think they left it voluntarily?
"[E]ncourage people to move back into the work force"? Hey, Butler…There's gotta be jobs for them to move into!
LATER: Butler's assoicate, Robert Rector, isn't a sadist. He's merely insensitive enough to declare these folks to be collateral damage:
"So now coming out of the recession, in terms of child poverty, it's a very optimistic picture," Rector said. "In terms of the population overall, it looks like an ordinary recession."
In other words, you have to admit you screwed the pooch
US shifts on role for UN in Iraq
(By Mike Allen and Vernon Loeb, Washington Post)
WASHINGTON -- In an effort to win broader international support for US policies in Iraq, President Bush decided yesterday to seek United Nations Security Council approval of a resolution granting the world body greater control over multinational peacekeeping forces and a role in forming a new Iraqi government, administration officials said.
A round of "I told you so"s seems proper
Bush's reelection liabilities mount
(By Robert Kuttner)
WITH LABOR DAY 2003, the race to November 2004 is on. Seemingly, President Bush will be seriously on the defensive on the issues, but with a big advantage on the politics. However, voters are likely to be energized in 2004 as they have rarely been in recent years. And voter mobilization will ultimately determine whether Bush gets a second term. First, the issues. Bush's foreign policy is a shambles. The architects of the Iraq war have been proven wrong on every contention they made -- the imminent weapons of mass destruction, the alleged Saddam-Al Qaeda connection, the supposed ease of occupation and reconstruction. Thumbing America's nose at "old Europe" proved a major blunder. Bush now needs the United Nations to clean up his mess, but he is insisting on US control. France and Germany, not to mention Russia and China, aren't exactly lining up to donate money and troops to bail Bush out. The administration line -- that the Iraq mess proves that the place is a magnet for terrorism -- just isn't selling. This is a hornets' nest that Bush's policy stirred up. GIs are still getting killed for a war that the American public is turning against.
"Leave no child behind" or "Children kiss my behind"?
It's sink or swim for school kids
By Derrick Z. Jackson, 9/3/2003
WE LOVE TO SAY kids are not stupid. This is a mediocre moment to find out if that is true. American families are in the process of throwing 48 million schoolchildren back into the public schools. That is a lot of fry floating in the pond. The good news is that their chances of growing to maturity are significantly better than those of the fish. For instance, female lobsters produce about 10,000 eggs, out of which less than 1 percent grow to adulthood. A much higher percent of children eventually will graduate from the nation's high schools.
That is small comfort for parents who send their children off to school under clearly decreasing odds of success and a clearly declining return on our investment. We love to say kids are our future. Based on what we are investing in them, we are not expecting much.
Not a day has gone by in the last two weeks without yet another story about school cutbacks and program elimination. In Massachusetts and the rest of the nation, schools in cities and suburbs are slashing funds for music, theater, foreign languages, school newspapers, and field trips. These are the kinds of things that day by day create cultured human beings, not just standardized-test automatons. Extracurricular activities that keep youth off the streets, even sports, have been decimated.
I may be traveling by bus in the near future
Muscling government out of air safety
By Thomas Oliphant, 9/3/2003
WASHINGTON
IN THE EXPANDING annals of President Bush's duplicitous misleadership, turning high school civics on its head in the service of corporate buddies is at least a new wrinkle. I seem to remember a distant summer school's worth of the civics stuff, along with a riveting course in driver's ed, in which I was taught that on Topic X, if the Senate passes A and the House passes B, they get together to resolve their differences in a conference committee, at which point the president decides to sign or veto the result.
Of course, my summer school long ago was in California, so maybe I got it wrong, but imagine my surprise to discover that late last month the Senate actually did pass A, the House actually did pass B, but they then got together to do the exact opposite of what each had already done, all under the veto-threatening gaze of President Bush. A final confrontation could come any time now that Congress is back.
The topic was an ideological favorite of Bush's -- turning governmental functions over to private, for-profit interests. In this case, it was a significant chunk of the country's air traffic control system. On one level, this is an interesting debate topic -- on which I happen to be a passionate believer in the odd notion that government should perform functions relating to public safety and health -- but what should fascinate everybody is how President Bush chooses to do his business.
He could not prevail if the privatization issue were put to a specific vote in Congress. In fact it was put to a vote in the Senate two months ago as part of the process of reauthorizing the functions of the aviation-supervising Federal Aviation Administration. With 11 Republicans joining in, the Senate in a 56-41 vote specifically forbade any privatization. In the House, a ban of only marginally less sweeping nature was made part of the legislation it approved.
But when representatives of the two bodies met to iron out differences, the White House went to work to undo what each had already done. Promising a veto for reauthorization legislation that restricted his agenda, Bush insisted that the final version allow for-profit air traffic control to proceed in stages. Rubber-stamp Republicans on the conference committee then folded like cheap suits and the result was legislation that permitted what each house had forbidden.
Meanwhile, let's not forget the issue of media convergence
NBC in Tentative Deal for Universal
Vivendi gives the GE unit a chance to become a media powerhouse with the sort of strategic advantages enjoyed by Viacom and Disney.
By Richard Verrier, Meg James and Sallie Hofmeister
Times Staff Writers
September 3, 2003
In a move that could further consolidate a media landscape already dominated by a handful of titans, Vivendi Universal and General Electric Co.'s NBC entered into negotiations Tuesday to create a multibillion-dollar entertainment powerhouse.
Vivendi's board of directors met in Paris on Tuesday and agreed to sign a nonbinding letter of intent to merge NBC's broadcast network and cable channels with Universal's venerable movie studio, theme parks and TV group. The new venture, tentatively dubbed NBC Universal, would overnight become the world's eighth-largest media company based on revenue and boast strategic advantages similar to those enjoyed by Viacom Inc. and Walt Disney Co. — the owners of CBS and ABC, respectively.
There's more than one reason we need more troops in Iraq
Battlefield casualties surging
With little notice, wounded soldiers spirited home
Vernon Loeb, Washington Post
Wednesday, September 3, 2003
Washington -- U.S. battlefield casualties in Iraq are increasing dramatically in the face of continued attacks by remnants of Saddam Hussein's military and other forces, with almost 10 American troops a day now being officially declared "wounded in action."
The number of those wounded in action, which totals 1,124 since the war began in March, has grown so large, and attacks have become so commonplace, that U.S. Central Command usually issues press releases listing injuries only when the attacks kill one or more troops. The result is that many injuries go unreported.
The rising number and quickening pace of injuries have been overshadowed by the number of troops killed since President Bush declared an end to major combat operations May 1. But alongside those Americans killed in action, an even greater toll of battlefield wounded continues unabated, with an increasing number being injured through small-arms fire, rocket-propelled grenades, remote-controlled mines and what the Pentagon refers to as "improvised explosive devices."
Indeed, the number of troops wounded in action in Iraq is now more than twice that of the Gulf War in 1991. The total increased more than 35 percent in August -- with an average of almost 10 troops a day injured last month.
O-kay
Seems we had widespread net problems, but we're back on the air.
Why I don't read Andrew Sullivan
Because he is a sad, confused man.
Professor deLong is the poor unfortunate that read this first.
I'm not even gonna quote it here
Since it's always best when white folks point out stuff like this, stop past MaxSpeak where Max quotes an article that documents Dubya's support of the neo-Confederate movement.
Comics
Go read Cobb's comics. Seriously, editorially funny.
Let the fear and loathing commence
I'm going to spend at least part of the day considering this. a number of folks have already expressed…I almost said concern, but it's actually been certainty that this is bad news.
By Mary Jo Foley, Microsoft Watch
RM client bits for a variety of Windows desktop releases are available for download.
Microsoft has made available for download the first of several components of its forthcoming stable of rights-management software.
The Redmond software maker posted to its download center on Tuesday its rights-management client. The client runs atop Windows and is designed to allow rights-management-aware applications—like Office 2003—to work with the forthcoming Windows Rights Management Services that will be layered on top of Windows Server 2003.
Microsoft unveiled its plans to build an end-to-end rights-management (RM) solution in February. Microsoft described its RM products as key to its security strategy. At that time, the company fielded a beta of its RM client.
The client software runs on top of Windows 98 Second Edition, Windows Millennium Edition, Windows 2000 Professional and Windows XP, and is designed to allow these desktop versions of Windows to access the forthcoming Rights Management Services server. The RM server component is the product code-named "Tungsten."
Microsoft has said it plans to require an RM client for each end user who will be creating or viewing rights-management-protected content.
Microsoft also is working on software called Rights Management Add-On for Internet Explorer that is designed to allow users to access RMS-protected documents without a full RM client present. That code went to beta in May.
Hey! They DIDN'T forget media consolidation!
By STEPHEN LABATON
WASHINGTON, Sept. 3 — A federal appeals court issued a surprise order today blocking the Federal Communications Commission from imposing new rules that would make it easier for the nation's largest media conglomerates to add new markets and areas of business.
The decision came a day before the new rules, considered among the most significant efforts at deregulation adopted during the Bush administration, were scheduled to take effect. It followed two hours of oral arguments at an emergency hearing this morning by a three-judge panel in Philadelphia and was a sharp setback for the largest media companies and for the commission's chairman, Michael K. Powell.
Mr. Powell, the architect of the new rules, has emphasized that the commission was compelled to rewrite the old regulations because of a string of federal court decisions in cases brought in Washington by the media companies. Those decisions ordered the agency to reconsider some of the rules.
But today the appeals court voted unamimously to prevent media companies from moving forward with plans to take advantage of the new rules. The court also raised tough questions for the commission and its industry supporters about their efforts to reshape the regulatory landscape. The new regulations are already facing a challenge in Congress, where legislators have taken steps to repeal some of them.
But it meets the needs of Big Pharma, so it's cool
Some Successful Models Ignored as Congress Works on Drug Bill
By ROBERT PEAR and WALT BOGDANICH
Congress has given birth to a prescription drug plan for Medicare that many experts say would fail to meet the needs of the elderly.

Okay, I could use some really foul language because of this
There is an old joke about a man who kills his parents and then begs the court for mercy because he is an orphan. For such chutzpah on a global scale, consider President Bush's overseas AIDS initiative. In his last State of the Union address, the president announced a new program to fight AIDS in Africa and pledged $15 billion over the next five years. But instead of using existing channels, Mr. Bush created a new bureaucracy. Now the White House and Congressional Republicans argue that since the bureaucracy is not ready, dying patients must wait.
The Senate is scheduled to vote soon on an appropriations bill that contains $2 billion for the AIDS initiative — only $500 million more than this year's spending. The House has approved even less. This is the White House's doing. It is twisting arms to get Congress to cut its own program. The House and Senate had authorized $3 billion for next year.
This undercutting of trumpeted compassion initiatives is a habit with the president because of his devotion to tax cuts for the wealthy. But officials are arguing that AIDS money cannot be spent wisely because the office of the AIDS coordinator — and Africa — is not ready.
Both assertions are nonsense. The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria is besieged with excellent vetted proposals from African nations desperate to fight AIDS. Multiple billions could be effectively spent on AIDS prevention and treatment and help for orphans. And countries that lack the ability to run good programs need money to build that capacity. But the Global Fund is too broke to help. If the administration cannot overcome its mysterious distaste for this organization, it could simply take some of the country proposals and finance them directly.
Senator Richard Durbin, an Illinois Democrat, is proposing to restore the full $3 billion. The Senate should adopt this amendment, then prevail upon the House. Several top Republicans, including President Bush and the Senate majority leader, Bill Frist, have recently been to Africa, where they hugged orphans and visited the dying. If they break America's promise on AIDS, they will be cynically using suffering Africans as nothing more than a photo opportunity.
Political Wisdom
By Joan Vennochi, 9/4/2003
LEFT, RIGHT. Left, right. Left, right. Straddle. Reach to the left on health care. Tilt with the polls to the right on issues like reducing welfare and the federal deficit. But above all, be all things to all people whenever possible.
That political calculation worked for Bill Clinton, most notably in 1992 against George Bush, the elder. It worked for Clinton a second time, in 1996, although it really didn't take much in the way of strategy to defeat Bob Dole. Standing next to the aging Republican was sufficient.
Following in Clinton's political footsteps is tempting for Democrats. But it is not the way to beat George W. Bush in 2004
…If Bush stood for something in 2000 -- compassionate conservatism? -- he stands for even more -- or is it less? -- at this point in his presidency. And that is his strength and weakness in 2004. On the weakness side, the people who voted for cardboard in 2000 rather than for Bush, are outraged by the absolute certainty of what Bush now represents. They seek a candidate who can put a face and voice to their outrage.
…The Bill Clinton era is over and someone should explain that to Terry McAuliffe, who heads the Democratic National Committee. No candidate is going to get elected president in 2004 talking about video chips. Three million jobs disappeared during the Bush administration. The United States waged war with Iraq but does not know how to wage peace in that country. Civil rights, affirmative action, and choice are under attack.
There is plenty to be angry about, but anger alone will not win the White House. For the Democrats, passion with purpose is necessary, in the primary season and beyond. Straddling is an exercise in political futility.
Link Pimping
If you haven't checked out Open Source Politics yet, you should. Lotsa well-written righteous indignation that most people with a job and EVERYONE without one will appreciate, including special props for teachers, who deserve it for hanging on through Dubya's "Child Kiss My Behind" program.
It's not all complaining, though. Have you ever been curious about how Microsoft finds all those clever programmers (and no matter what you think of the company, their programmers are good)? Well, a new book describes Microsoft's unique process for separating the wheat from the chaff, and said book is reviewed on OSP today.
And tomorrow…well, I'll tell you about that tomorrow.
Cartoons
Okay, so my schedule is shot to hell. I'll adjust. But today's editorial cartoons are so good it's a "better late than never" kind of thing.
I must apologize to Tom Toles, but this cartoon is so good, I can't chance you not clicking through:
And if you DO click though (and you should) you get yesterday's lesson in Democracy for Iraq.
And Ben Sargent shows what the EPA has been up to while Jeff Danziger is a fly on the wall in the Oval Office.
Looooooong day
Do you have any idea how much energy it takes to research and write a fairly significant post in an area you don't generally write for while participating in the launch of a 40+ blogger metablog/ezine/what the hell ever it is, when your father's in the hospital and you have a fairly major post for the topics you DO generally write about weighing on your mind? Huh? Do you?
This is important, and I'm tired
So I'm just stealing Nathan Newman's text:
Any day now the Senate will be voting on the Harkin Amendment to block Bush's plan to roll back overtime pay for millions of Americans.
ACT NOW. Go to www.saveovertimepay.org to sign a petition and here to send a personalized fax to your Senator.
And don't EVEN try to say I never mentioned it before.


]
. Y'all hear the ebonics, see the anger, check the hip-hop culture and come to the conclusion that you're looking at some kind of different sort of human. You're being fooled, sucked in, letting mere surface manifestations of variant cultural norms distract you from the fact that (if you'll pardon the expression) 