True as regards a significant fraction of the population
Nice Try, Reverend, But We're Past That Brand of Politics
By Jonetta Rose Barras
Sunday, February 22, 2004; Page B01
When the Rev. Al Sharpton launched his campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination last year, no one thought he could actually win. But there were those who expected him to reconstitute the posse the Rev. Jesse Jackson left behind after his 1988 bid for the nomination, and use it to gain influence in the party.
In '88, Jackson turned in a spectacular performance, winning nearly 7 million votes and 30 percent of the delegates to the Democratic Party's convention. With stats like those, he was able to leverage himself into a position of power within the party and give African Americans an unprecedented voice in the organization, setting the stage for black voters' role as the kingfish of Bill Clinton's 1992 presidential campaign.
Sharpton may well have thought he could replicate those results to become the new leader of black America. After all, he reigns over a nonprofit organization -- the National Action Network -- with 22 chapters across the country that could serve as bases for organizing. He has a record as a formidable strategist from his work in New York politics, and he made substantive inroads into the Hispanic community when he involved himself in the fight against the U.S. Navy's practice bombing on the Puerto Rican island of Vieques.
But a Jacksonesque showing has eluded Sharpton. When he arrives at the Democratic National Convention this summer, it is not likely to be as any newly crowned prince of blackness, but merely as a highly entertaining pol who barely made it to the finish line. What's more, his campaign may become the definitive historical marker for the end of "black politics."
Sharpton's poor showing reflects the evolution of a new kind of black electorate. This is a constituency that no longer views itself as separate from the broader political dynamics of the country, constantly needing to play the victim in order to gain entrance. These new, savvy voters are more discerning of candidates, and they are more deliberately assessing the role they can and should play in the democratic drama. In the Democratic Party, they see themselves as principal players, crucial to any candidate's victory.
Taken to its logical extreme
Outspoken, Outgunned, Outsourced
By Norman Ornstein
Sunday, February 22, 2004; Page B03
President Bush's top economist said yesterday that the outsourcing of U.S. service jobs to workers overseas is good for the nation's economy. N. Gregory Mankiw, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, said in releasing the annual Economic Report of the President that the "offshoring" of service jobs is only "the latest manifestation of the gains from trade that economists have talked about" for centuries. "Outsourcing is just a new way of doing international trade," Mankiw said. "More things are tradable than were tradable in the past and that's a good thing."
-- news reports, Feb. 11, 2004
WASHINGTON, Feb. 30 -- The White House announced today that it is outsourcing the work of the president's Council of Economic Advisers to India. Ramindar Prabhakesh, an economist who teaches Introductory Economics and Macroeconomics at Bangalore University, will take over as chairman. He will earn one-sixth the salary of his outsourced predecessor, N. Gregory Mankiw.
"This is all part of our new way of handling government business," said presidential spokeswoman Mairéad O'Connor during her daily briefing via teleconference from Dublin. "These are the kinds of gains that economists like Greg have been touting for years."
Moving the council to India will save more than $30 million, O'Connor said, while demonstrating the administration's commitment to reducing the deficit and holding down spending. "Outsourcing Mankiw's job alone will save nearly $200,000 in salary, benefits and what economists call 'fixed costs,' " she said. "For Prabhakesh, this is a net gain -- and we don't have to offer him health insurance. He's also more than willing to work out of his university office. It's a win-win."
Why Bush will lose California
I mean, besides the fact that it's, like, California.
Rifts Show at State GOP Event
Anger over illegal immigration and high spending shakes up the convention. Bush and Schwarzenegger are heavily criticized.
By Michael Finnegan
Times Staff Writer
February 22, 2004
BURLINGAME, Calif. — An uproar over illegal immigration roiled the state Republican convention on Saturday as party leaders struggled to keep the rank and file united behind Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and President Bush.
Hundreds of GOP loyalists booed the president at a rally where U.S. Senate hopeful Howard Kaloogian and his allies denounced Bush's plan to give temporary legal status to undocumented workers.
"Enough is enough!" the crowd shouted. "Enough is enough!"
A Kaloogian supporter, Republican Rep. Tom Tancredo of Colorado, told the crowd he knew a gynecologist who surveyed patients about the plan and found it rated "right below genital herpes."
Schwarzenegger fared no better than Bush. Even staunch allies of the governor distanced themselves from his effort to strike a deal with Democrats on a bill to give driver's licenses to illegal immigrants. U.S. Rep. Darrell Issa of Vista warned that the move would "empower criminal aliens."
"If we find an illegal, we have an obligation to deport them; it's that simple," said the San Diego County car-alarm tycoon, who bankrolled the recall petition effort that led to Schwarzenegger's victory. "As long as people are here illegally, to give them the ability to further cover their status is to empower Al Qaeda."
And Mike Spence, leader of one of the party's biggest conservative activist groups, the California Republican Assembly, shouted, "Resist the compromise, and let your legislators and the governor know they'll end up with Gray Davis: Out of work and starring on sitcoms," alluding to the ousted governor's cameo next week on the CBS show "Yes, Dear."
Also sparking dissent at the state GOP convention here beside San Francisco Bay was Schwarzenegger's plan to borrow $15 billion to balance the state budget, a measure that appears on the March 2 ballot as Proposition 57.
If you pretend the Bushistas care about children, this is a good article
Don't Mess With Head Start's Success
The program isn't broken, so Republicans shouldn't "fix" it with misguided changes.
By Kay Mills
Kay Mills is the author of "Something Better for My Children: The History and People of Head Start."
February 22, 2004
Head Start works. A government study in 2001 showed that the federal preschool program for children from low-income families improved participants' vocabulary and writing skills and narrowed the gap between them and more affluent youngsters. Last year, a San Bernardino County study found that kindergarten students who had gone through Head Start scored 9% better in literacy than students from similar backgrounds who had not participated in the program. They were also 9.6% better in language skills and 7.3% better in math skills. And they were absent from school 4.5 fewer days than their peers who hadn't gone through the program. Other research has shown that Head Start children are less likely to need special education services, less likely to repeat grades and more likely to graduate from high school.
Most experts agree that Head Start, which this year served 905,000 children, 104,000 of them in California, prepares needy kids for school. So why do some House Republicans and the Bush administration want to start experimenting with the program?
What exported jobs look like when they are reimported
Rise of the Off-the-Books Workforce
Native-born workers are being displaced by new immigrants.
By Andrew M. Sum and Paul E. Harrington
Andrew M. Sum is director and Paul E. Harrington is associate director of the Center for Labor Market Studies at Northeastern University in Boston.
February 22, 2004
BOSTON — If you scrutinize the U.S. labor market numbers from the last two years of economic recovery, you're left with what seems to be a paradox. Since the recession's low point, in November 2001, the number of employed people 16 and older has risen, but the number of jobs on the formal payrolls of employers remains below recessionary levels.
The different numbers have conveniently provided politicians with a choice, depending on which points they wanted to make, but they've perplexed economists.
Some analysts have concluded that this gap must represent the different ways in which statistics are kept by the two main sources of national data on employment developments.
But here's a more likely explanation. The number of people on formal payrolls remains low because new jobs tend to be ones that don't show up on payrolls. Employment gains are among the self-employed and contract workers, or in the informal "gray" and "black" labor markets. People are doing temporary day work or contracting that's kept off the books. These don't tend to be highly paid jobs or jobs with benefits like health insurance, and they are often performed by immigrants, especially undocumented immigrants.
Late Edition
1:15 - Gov. Mike Huckabee (R) is stupid. he just said on Late Edition "Jobs are important but leadership is more important," and "This president has kept his word," and other lies.
1:30 - Huckabee just blamed American consumers for outsourcing.
1:34 - Gov. Bill Owen (R) says tax cuts on corporations is the way to make US corporations competitive.
The last word on opportunity costs
As regards drug development or anything else.
"The money was NOT spent all on day the drug was approved"
"And that you have overestimated the costs is obvious from simple inspection, even assuming opportunity costs to be an actual expense rather than a potential bookeeping entry."
"Do you really think you would have doubled your money…if you had the money up front…had you made some investment other than the development of a new drug?"
It isn't something that costs you money. It is a way of talking about who chooses to invest in what. If I invest in something I know is going to lose money, I am an idiot unless I'm running some sort of tax scheme. If I invest in something that will definitely make 3% a year (a CD perhaps) I'm much smarter. If I invest in something that will have an imprecise percentage chance of making money and an imprecise percentage chance of losing money it is a wise decision based on how much money I can make compared with what the chances are that I will make or lose money. If, on average, the best this imprecise investment will make is less than 3%, I'm still an idiot for investing in it because I had a safe 3% available to me with the CD. The gap between the average return of the safe investment and the risky investment is called the opportunity cost. If the risky generally underperforms the safe, no one would invest in the risky. In fact if the risky cannot dramatically outperform the safe (when the risky doesn't go bankrupt) very few people would invest in the risky.
Pharamaceutical research is risky.
"The money was NOT spent all on day the drug was approved"
You are right. The fact that it is spent BEFORE the approval is what makes sunk costs amenable to an opportunity cost analysis. In fact that is a pre-condition to talking about opportunity costs.
Your whole bank analysis is completely nonsensical once you realize that opportunity cost analysis is how one chooses between investments. It isn't expensable, but if the pharma profits drop anywhere near the safe investment level, everyone will pull out of pharma research because such research has a high chance of giving you NOTHING. If your return is 4% when positive with a 75% chance of getting nothing, you would be a fool to invest in such a thing when you could get 3% in a CD and the only risk you would take is the vanishingly small chance that the entire world economy implodes. Opportunity analysis is a selection mechanism.
- Sebastian Holsclaw
Note: "It isn't something that costs you money. It is a way of talking about who chooses to invest in what."
Since it isn't something that costs you money, including it in one's costs is…inaccurate.
I don't know Jim Capozzola
I don't even read The Rittenhouse Review very often. I have minimal social skills and frankly minimal desire to expand those skills. I was invited to Orkut, joined, and now I don't know what the hell to do with it.
This is all to let you know this is an unusual case.
I'm doing okay now but last year I wasn't. So when a respected associate posted this and suggested it would be a good thing to pass along, I reviewed my personal grief from illness and such. I'm passing this along for much the same reason Kevin wrote it.
I'm an anti-social Deaniac, in that I was never particularly engaged in the social atmosphere of its main blog or the hundreds of spawning Howardlings that occurred after his heroic swim upriver.
However, I have experienced the social life that comes from the experience of being homeless. That's a vulnerable feeling and moreso, a very, very lonely feeling. Unlike some homeless, I did have family I could cross the country to or occasionally beg from, and friends, as well. But there is a very real sense of 'not wanting to be a burden' that compels most people not to go there unless they're too sick to otherwise survive.
For some time, I've observed a few fellow bloggers struggling through the throes of unemployment. Some have teetered close to that edge with readers coming to their aid. Now, one of the best writers and progressive activists appears to be poised on that edge. He's been so active in the Dem party that he was even considering a Senate run against the extremist conservative Rick Santorum a few months back.
I hope every reader today can find $5-$20 to send his way. And if you are a Deaniac in the most social sense, would you please get the word out to the bigger Dean blogs and see if we can keep Jim Capozzola of The Rittenhouse Review afloat for a few months, to spare him that fate?
It is not just in politicians that we define our world, but in our investment to our own hearts. Please contribute, and pass on the word to others.
Posted by Kevin Hayden at February 22, 2004 02:34 PM
Bythe way
Remember Daniel Davies' request for documentation of the vast number of Iraqis whose murders Saddam Hussein is personally responsible for?
Fugeddaboudit. Folks started talking about how you have to add in the deaths from the first Iraq war, how you have to count everyone who ever, and the discussion just ceased to be about the atrocities that are the justification now that the first two or three sets of justifications turned up hollow.
That's just those European weenies, though
Job cuts 'harm those left behind'
Axing staff can worsen the health of fellow employees left behind, researchers have warned.
A Finnish study of local government personnel found those whose departments suffered major cuts doubled their risk of dying from cardiovascular disease.
Major downsizing - cutting more than 18% of staff - was also linked to an increase in workers taking sick leave.
The study in the British Medical Journal said employers and occupational health staff should recognise the risk.
Then make them stop doing it!
Bush Campaign Denies Kerry Accusation
2 hours, 44 minutes ago
By NEDRA PICKLER, Associated Press Writer
George W. Bush's presidential campaign told John Kerry (news - web sites) it "does not condone" any effort to impugn his patriotism but asserted that senator's voting record on national security and defense issues is a valid target of political scrutiny.
Now that Sex in the City is over
Can we admit that Sarah Jessica Parker

…ain't all that?
Matching funds would take money away from him
Sharpton Debts Top $485,000, FEC Says
Monday, February 23, 2004; Page A07
Democratic presidential candidate Al Sharpton, who has billed his campaign for hotel stays of more than $1,000 a night, has campaign debts totaling $485,696, including unpaid staff salaries dating to last May, finance reports show.
As of Jan. 31, Sharpton's campaign had just $1,039 in the bank, according to Federal Election Commission reports.
Among those to whom he owes money is Frank Watkins, his former campaign manager. The report said Watkins had not been paid salary and expenses from last May to September, for a total of $55,000.
In addition, Sharpton owes $38,000 to Kevin Gray, who ran his South Carolina campaign
"There was no focus and discipline as it relates to raising money, and that's not the way you run a campaign," Gray told the Associated Press.
Sharpton's current manager, Charles Halloran, said, "I have no current plans to pay Kevin Gray. . . . I can't see any value for what he was allegedly doing over there in South Carolina."
The Sharpton campaign is carrying a $150,000 loan owed to the Amalgamated Bank in New York.
Sharpton himself is on the list of those waiting to get paid. The report lists $81,780 owed Sharpton for "Reimbursement Services Rendered," "AMEX Reimbursement" and "Reimbursement Expense." Sharpton also loaned his campaign $20,000.
Halloran, who is owed $52,500 by the campaign, said Sharpton's bid for the Democratic nomination will continue "as long as Reverend Sharpton is standing and speaking." Despite running in the red, Halloran said, "it's a campaign built on faith and trust and commitment."
Halloran defended the use of "nice hotels," saying that they were important for holding fundraising events and for security reasons. In the future, he said, Sharpton will be reimbursed $200 a night for hotel stays and will loan the campaign the rest. Sharpton will not be paid back until all other bills are paid, Halloran said.
Another cause could be Republican extremists
A Paradox of Progress: Stepped-Up Stress
Even as the modern world has dramatically improved our material lives, many of us are feeling increasingly worse.
By Gregg Easterbrook
Gregg Easterbrook's new book is "The Progress Paradox: How Life Gets Better While People Feel Worse" (Random House).
February 23, 2004
By practically every objective measure, American life has been getting better for decades.
Standards of living keep rising, with the typical house now more than twice as large as a generation ago; middle-class income keeps rising, though more slowly than income at the very top; more Americans graduate from college every year; longevity keeps rising; almost all forms of disease, including most cancers, are in decline; crime has dropped spectacularly; pollution, except for greenhouse gases, are in long-term decline; discrimination is down substantially. Yet despite all these positive indicators, the percentage of Americans who describe themselves as "happy" has not increased since the early 1950s, while incidence of depression keeps rising — and was doing so long before the morning of Sept. 11.
This is the progress paradox: Life gets better while people feel worse. Many explanations suggest themselves. One is the depressing effect of excess materialism, which I call "the revenge of the credit card." Another is fear that Western society will break down, which might be called "collapse anxiety." A third is the uneasy feeling that accompanies actually getting what you dreamed of. Today, tens of millions of Americans have things their parents or grandparents could only dream of — nice houses, college educations. Though that is obviously good, Americans are finding that merely possessing the good life does not ensure happiness. This may tell us there is a "revolution of satisfied expectations" — that general prosperity brings with it an empty feeling.
Neener-neener, I can't hear you
Palestinians Open Case Against Barrier
By JOSEF FEDERMAN
Associated Press Writer
5:34 AM PST, February 23, 2004
THE HAGUE, Netherlands — The Palestinians opened their case against Israel's West Bank barrier in the world court on Monday, a landmark hearing that brings Israel's policies before an international tribunal for the first time.
Nasser Al-Kidwa, chief of the Palestinian delegation, the first to address the tribunal, argued against the barrier and in favor of the court's authority to render an opinion on its legality.
"This wall is not about security. It is about entrenching the occupation and the de facto annexation of large areas of the Palestinian land," Al-Kidwa told the tribunal.
The 15-judge International Court of Justice planned three days of hearings into the barrier starting Monday, with all of the participants expected to harshly criticize the fence. Israel, the United States and the European countries that oppose the court's intervention, refused to attend.
Ever notice that "Drudge" rhymes with "sludge"?
Kerry rumor shows how scandal travels in the media
By Mark Jurkowitz, Globe Staff, 2/23/2004
Like a steaming geyser bubbling up from the netherworld, rumors of infidelity involving Democratic presidential front-runner John Kerry forced their way through the journalism hierarchy. While much of the media exercised well-founded caution in handling the story earlier this month, the episode became the latest example of a pattern in which scandal and rumor travel through a fragmented media universe, starting with the bottom feeders and often ending up on the pages of major newspapers and on the lips of network anchors.
The speculation originated in a Feb. 12 report by online gossipmonger Matt Drudge, best known for "breaking" the Bill Clinton/Monica Lewinsky affair six years ago by reporting on Newsweek's investigation into their relationship. From there, it leapt to the talk radio microphones of Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity. On Feb. 13, Kerry chatted with talk show host Don Imus to say "there's nothing to talk about." But the rumor also surfaced in the British press and generated mentions in political tipsheets such as The Hotline and ABC's "The Note." By Feb. 14, the New York Post was trumpeting the tale on Page 1, while publications such as The New York Times and The Boston Globe were noting Kerry's denials inside broader stories on the campaign. On Feb. 16, when the woman allegedly involved issued a firm denial, the story subsided, at least for now.
Are all wars holy wars nowadays?
Up to 192 killed in Uganda as rebels torch civilian camp
By John Donnelly, Globe Staff, 2/23/2004
KAMPALA, Uganda -- A rebel attack on a camp of displaced people in northern Uganda killed as many as 192 civilians over the weekend, according to witnesses, in a dramatic escalation of the 18-year civil war here.
Monica De Castellarnau, country director for Medecins Sans Frontieres, said she talked with someone at the scene at the Barlonya camp yesterday who counted 192 bodies. A hospital in Lira, about 16 miles to the south, had admitted 51 injured people from the camp, most with severe burns, by midday yesterday, she said.
A Roman Catholic priest, Sebhat Ayele, told reporters that he visited the burned-down camp of grass huts yesterday. He said he counted 121 bodies and was told that 51 others had been buried.
The rebel group that carried out the attack, the Lord's Resistance Army, has been battling the government of Uganda for 18 years, mostly in guerrilla-type attacks.
Its leader, Joseph Kony, has built a militia of about 12,000 fighters; an estimated 80 percent are children whom his troops abducted from villages in the north. Often, according to fighters who have escaped from the LRA, he has forced the children to kill their parents or relatives so that their family will not want them back. Kony, who has said he has spiritual powers, aims to overthrow President Yoweri Museni and run Uganda according to his own interpretation of the Ten Commandments.
File under "Duh!"
Rumsfeld warns of disruption in US plans
Iraqi insurgents pose potential threat, he says
By Sewell Chan, Washington Post, 2/23/2004
KUWAIT -- Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld cautioned yesterday that plans to shift the US military presence in Iraqi cities to outlying areas could be disrupted by the continuing insurgency, which he attributed to "terrorist networks" and Al Qaeda guerrillas that he said were trying to fracture Iraqi society.
Typical sneaky stuff
U.S. Pressing for High-Tech Spy Tools
Sun Feb 22, 2:27 PM ET
By MICHAEL J. SNIFFEN, Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Despite an outcry over privacy implications, the government is pressing ahead with research to create powerful tools to mine millions of public and private records for information about terrorists.
Congress eliminated a Pentagon (news - web sites) office that had been developing this terrorist-tracking technology because of fears it might ensnare innocent Americans.
Still, some projects from retired Adm. John Poindexter's Total Information Awareness effort were transferred to U.S. intelligence offices, congressional, federal and research officials told The Associated Press.
In addition, Congress left undisturbed a separate but similar $64 million research program run by a little-known office called the Advanced Research and Development Activity, or ARDA, that has used some of the same researchers as Poindexter's program.
"The whole congressional action looks like a shell game," said Steve Aftergood of the Federation of American Scientists, which tracks work by U.S. intelligence agencies. "There may be enough of a difference for them to claim TIA was terminated while for all practical purposes the identical work is continuing."
Reducing unemployment by attrition
Bush to Revisit Changes in Medicaid Rules
By ROBERT PEAR
WASHINGTON, Feb. 22 — After strenuous protests from governors of both parties, the Bush administration said Sunday that it would reconsider tough new rules on the financing of Medicaid that could limit the states' ability to provide health care for millions of poor people.
Tommy G. Thompson, the secretary of health and human services, conveyed the administration's decision to governors here for the winter meeting of the National Governors Association.
Though formal sessions of the association focused on issues that cut across party lines, like Medicaid, education and highway construction, presidential politics dominated many conversations among governors.
Democratic governors expressed alarm at the loss of jobs, especially those in manufacturing, and the growth of the federal budget deficit in the past three years, while Republicans insisted that the economy was bouncing back.
"President Bush does not appear to have an understanding of the pain caused by unemployment," said Gov. Tom Vilsack of Iowa, chairman of the Democratic Governors Association. Gov. Jennifer M. Granholm of Michigan, a Democrat, said Mr. Bush's tax cuts were not producing new jobs in her state.
Gov. Bob Taft of Ohio, chairman of the Republican Governors Association, said: "Consumer confidence is up. The stock market is up. All economic indicators are moving in the right direction." Another Republican, Gov. Mitt Romney of Massachusetts, tried to dispel the perception that his party saw the shift of service jobs from the United States to other countries as part of some global economic strategy. "We are concerned any time any job leaves our shores and goes somewhere else," Mr. Romney said.
State officials say soaring Medicaid costs have put them in a fiscal vise, as revenue collections have been stagnant in recent years.
Federal officials did not withdraw the proposed Medicaid rules but promised to consult governors and to solicit public comment for 60 days before enacting the restrictions.
The restrictions would give federal officials sweeping new power to review state decisions on Medicaid spending and the sources of revenue used by states to pay their share of Medicaid costs.
Medicaid provides health benefits to 50 million people a year and is financed jointly by the federal government and the states. But federal officials say states have used creative bookkeeping and other ploys to obtain large amounts of federal Medicaid money without paying their share.
The proposed changes have touched off an uproar among state officials. Gov. Dirk Kempthorne of Idaho, a Republican who is chairman of the National Governors Association, said the federal government was imposing "new administrative requirements and new costs on the states."
My economics teachers will be mad at me for agreeing with Schumer
Even though they don't know they're my teachers.
Theory vs. Reality
By BOB HERBERT
Welcome to the 21st century. The landscape has changed. We're in a new hypercompetitive worldwide economy, driven by breathtaking advances in technology. Men and women are being added to the global work force by the hundreds of millions.
In this dynamic, potentially very treacherous labor market, few people are looking out for the interests of the American worker. The very concept of the traditional high-paid American job, with its generous health and pension benefits and paid vacations, is at risk.
Senator Charles Schumer of New York sees the economic changes as a paradigm shift. In an era of high-bandwith communications and the free flow of capital, most goods and services can be produced or performed anywhere in the world. And with highly educated workers in countries like China and India ready and able to perform sophisticated tasks at a fraction of the pay earned by Americans, there are fewer and fewer reasons for those American jobs not to take flight.
In light of these changes, said Senator Schumer, we should at least be asking some tough questions about the real-world effects of free trade as we've known it.
Judge Roy Moore for President
Strikes me like Judge Roy Bean for President, but…
Forget Nader. Draft Moore.
How Democrats can win back the White House.
By Timothy Noah
Posted Sunday, Feb. 22, 2004, at 11:01 PM PT
Ralph Nader is running for president again. The media blitz is underway. So is the backlash. Many news outlets have been quoting a Jan. 29 editorial in The Nation urging Nader not to run. Chatterbox's own view is that if Nader wants to run, that's Nader's business; and if a teeny-tiny number of potential Kerry or Edwards voters pull the lever for Nader, that's their business. It's a free country.
The more urgent question Democrats need to ask is whether former Alabama Chief Justice Roy Moore will run for president. In a column posted Feb. 22 on The Nation's Web site, John Nichols points out that Nader isn't the potential third-party contender to watch in 2004:
Roy Moore, the Alabama jurist whose fight to display the Ten Commandments on state property drew national attention last year, is being courted by the right-wing Constitution Party as a potential presidential candidate. (The Constitution Party was on the ballot in 41 states in 2000, and retains a solid network of activist supporters nationwide.)
This is, of course, the very scenario Chatterbox fantasized about in his Jan. 19 column, "A Republican Nader?" The fundamentalist whom Chatterbox envisioned running for president (and stealing votes from Bush) was James Dobson, chairman of Focus on the Family. But Moore would be an even better rabble-rouser. Apparently his possible third-party candidacy is no mere fantasy on the left; at the very worst, it's a fantasy on the left and the right. John Fund wrote about it Feb. 2 in his online column for the Wall Street Journal editorial page:
Last Saturday, Mr. Moore was a featured speaker at the Christian Coalition's "Family and Freedom" rally in Atlanta. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported he was "treated like a rock star, signing autographs and getting thunderous standing ovations." The week before that, Mr. Moore was the speaker at a dinner in Lancaster, Pa., sponsored by the Constitution Party, which has the third-largest number of registered voters in the U.S. ...
During a question-and-answer period, Mr. Moore was asked if he would run for president. "Not right now," he said, noting he is still appealing his dismissal from office for violating a federal court's order to remove the monument from the Alabama Supreme Court building. "I have to wait till all these things are done to decide my future." His friends say he is undecided about whether to run for president or to wait two years and seek Alabama's governorship.
Bush's recess appointment of William H. Pryor to the 11th Circuit, though generally a disaster for liberals, is a great boon in one largely overlooked respect. It has very likely enraged Roy Moore. It was Pryor who, as Alabama's attorney general, helped give Moore the boot when Moore refused to remove his famous monument to the Ten Commandments from his courtroom. (Pryor's conservative detractors say Pryor did it to shore up support for his judgeship in the Senate.)
You can't make this stuff up
Surf at random sometimes. It's amazing what you find.
This is Matthew Richardson, a 23 year old engineering student at Oxford.

This is Professor Matthew Richardson of NYU, a leading authority on international trade.
Guess which one was to be invited to do a presentation in China?
Guess which one got the invitation and bluffed his way through with a first year textbook?
It pains me to do this
I'm linking to an article on BlackAmericaWeb on the possible need for "New Black Leadership" by Armstrong Williams. I'm entering it now:
Is it Time for New Black Leadership? A View from the Right
Date: Monday, February 23, 2004
Author: Armstrong WilliamsIs it time for new black leadership? Well, let's look at what we've got.
This election season has seen two black Americans toss their hats in the ring: Rev. Al Sharpton and former Senator Carole Mosley Braun.
Sharpton is an insular, Northeastern, New York-style politician with a controversial history and a track record of voting Republican (He's endorsed Republicans for most of his career).
Braun offers the historical legacy of having become the first black female U.S. Senator. That alone is quite a feat. Just one thing: In her six years in the senate, Braun essentially failed to produce any worthwhile legislation, and lost her last election bid after allegations surfaced that she misappropriated campaign donations and took an ill-advised personal trip to Nigeria. Prior to dropping out of the race, Braun 's only significant policy announcement was a call for universal healthcare.
Together, these racial prophets, these torch lights in the darkness, managed to raise little money and produced no coherent plan to help the American people.
When young children see Sharpton on television and ask their parents how they can be a part of the campaign, they find out quickly that there is no mechanism for them to help, because there is no real campaign. The election bid is a farce. It's not about making America better (where's the plan to do that?), it's about self-aggrandizement.
Which leads to the inevitable question: is this the best the blacks in the Democratic Party have to offer? If so, then plainly new blood is needed, as evidenced not only by the poor quality of our current leadership, but by generational shifts in black public opinion.
…because the View From The Left counterpoint is by Ray Winbush, and I wanted you to see that first.
Jegnas
Is It Time for New Black Leadership? A View from the Left
Date: Monday, February 23, 2004
Author: Raymond Winbush
We need more Jegnas.
I first heard the term a couple of years ago from Marimba Ani, the author of “Yurugu” and “Let the Circle Be Unbroken.”
Jegna is an Ethiopian (Amharic) word that means "a very brave person who is a protector of a culture, the rights of his or her people and their land."
A Jegna is more than a "leader." She or he is someone who is not afraid to speak truth to power, is uncompromised, full of integrity and at the very core of his or her being sees the welfare and protection of their people as paramount. They are literally prepared to die for the community they represent.
Denmark Vesey was a Jegna. So was Harriet Tubman. Yaa Asantewa. Malcolm X and Martin Luther King.
Where are today’s black Jegnas? They are few and far between.
In a recent article in the Village Voice, columnist Thulani Davis writes, "The problem of black leadership is not [Al] Sharpton, but a lack of other voices outside of the presidential contests who could exert enough influence on the Democratic Party to stem the rightward drift that has sacrificed our interests. It's time to throw out some of these cult-of-celebrity tactics and go back to organizing around the real needs in our communities."
She’s right. I have always been suspicious since the death of Martin Luther King about "national black leaders" who appear on the scene and never saw a camera they didn’t like. Many of them invoke the name of King but neglect King’s least written about but most important talent -- organizing at the local level for social change.
I once attended an event where Jesse Jackson said that there are "tree shakers and jelly makers" and then proudly described himself as the former.
The idea of "jelly maker," I suppose, is a long-term commitment to a cause that sees tangible results -- a Jegna if you please. That's opposed to a person who moves swiftly from one issue to the next (tree shaker), draws media attention in large part to him or herself then moves on to the next "cause."
Though the audience around me loudly applauded Jackson’s self-description, I winced at it, and thought that drive-by organizing should never replace long-term community involvement.
On the Progress Paradox
Little did I suspect when I linked to Greg Easterbrook's op-ed in the LA Times this morning that a bunch of other folks would be talking it up as well. Kevin Drum essentially says, "Duh. Ya think?" And I found Matt Yglesias' question is cogent, especially in combination with Kieran Healy's observation:
Meanwhile — sorry, I’m not even going to pretend to link these comments — Matt Yglesias makes the following observation about Greg Easterbrook’s The Progress Paradox:
The real progress paradox isn’t “why doesn’t all our stuff make us happy” but rather, given that all our stuff pretty clearly doesn’t make us happy, how do we come to have all this stuff.Which seems about right. An unwillingness to distinguish these two questions — or rather, the decision, for technical purposes, to treat them as if they were the same question — is a hallmark of modern economics. Robert E. Lane has a book that argues this point. Bruno Frey and Alois Stutzer have a solid rejoinder from the economist’s point of view, arguing that money can indeed go a long way towards making you happy — but not as far, surprisingly, as democratic institutions and local political autonomy can.
LATER: Oops. Just noticed Kerim at Keywords has another view:
I would like to argue that this is not such a confusing stance for an American to take, as I discussed before, when Thomas Jefferson demanded the freedom to pursue "happiness" he was really arguing for the freedom to own private property. No, what really bothers me about Easterbrook's Op-Ed isn't his definition of happiness, but his definition of progress. What arguments about "material progress" inevitably overlook a very important issue: inequality.
Over the same period that Easterbrook discusses, inequality has been increasing, and social mobility has been decreasing. As Nobel Prize winning economist and philosopher Amartya Sen argues, it doesn't matter if the total bundle of goods received by the poorest is getting larger if, at the same time, social inequality is increasing. That is to say, it is harder to function as a poor person in a rich society than a poor one, even if you have more material possessions. An argument borne out by the fact of lower life expectancies amongst poor and minority populations in industrialized nations when compared with materially poorer populations in developing nations.
This is deep.
Read the whole thing.
Are you as weary of gutter politics as we are here at the Town Hall? Then whatever you do, don't click here. Instead, help us flush out an authoritative witness to President Bush's tour of duty defending the skies over Alabama -- and put this tired, recycled AWOL story to rest once and for all.
For the past twelve years, George W. Bush has had to endure charges that he didn't take the final two years of his Guard service as seriously as duty required. (For updated timeline, click here.) And the two witnesses who have come forward in support so far haven't exactly cleared things up. We at the Town Hall believe that with everything he has on his plate, Mr. Bush shouldn't have to contend with attacks on the National Guard, which is serving so bravely in Iraq. And we're willing to back up our support with cold, hard cash.
Granted, this has been tried before. In 2000, concerned veterans in both Texas and Alabama offered cash rewards to lure former guardmates of Mr. Bush into stepping forward, to no avail. The problem, in our view, was that these enticements weren't serious enough, that the sums offered were insulting. In contrast, we at the DTH&WP respect how inconvenient it can be to subject yourself to worldwide media scrutiny in general, and Fox News in particular, and are thus prepared to sweeten previous offers by a factor of five. That's right, we're offering $10,000 cash! Yours to either spend or invest in job creation. All you have to do is definitively prove that George W. Bush fulfilled his duty to country.
So don't let the smear artists define the president. If you personally witnessed George W. Bush reporting for drills at Dannelly Air National Guard Base between the months of May and November of 1972 we want to hear about it. Help Mr. Bush put this partisan assault on his character behind him, so he can focus on more serious issues like jobs, the deficit and the coming civil war in Iraq. Just contact us below with the salient details. If we think you're a possible winner, we'll get back to you pronto. Good luck to all contestants!
Q: Isn't this just a publicity stunt?
A: If by a publicity stunt, you mean an attempt to draw attention to the problem of gutter politics, trolling-for-trash, and cheap smear tactics, then sure, guilty as charged.
Q: What if I saw Bush, but I can't prove it? Can I get some of the money?
A: No, but if your story's entertaining enough, you may qualify for our consolation prize, an original Doonesbury strip personally signed by a top studio intern.
Q: The DTH&WP is a media content web site, which means you're broke. Who's paying the reward?
A: The reward is being generously underwritten by Doonesbury creator G. B. Trudeau. The money has been put in escrow and is being administered by Universal Press Syndicate.
Q: It's really in escrow?
A: No, but we're good for it. Thanks to Bush's massive tax cuts for people who don't need them, GBT is flush.
Q: Are employees of Universal Press Syndicate, Slate or Microsoft eligible for the contest?
A: Only if no one else comes forward.
Q: Is there some sort of hitch?
A: Well, yes, but it's a hitch for a good cause. The winner won't actually receive the reward for himself; instead we'll be donating $10,000 in his name to the USO. That way everyone's a winner, including GBT's tax accountant.
No comment for fear of being struck by lightning
Vatican Report Calls U.S. Abuse Policy Too Strict
By FRANK BRUNI
VATICAN CITY, Feb. 23 — A report on child sexual abuse that the Vatican released today found fault with and challenged American bishops' zero tolerance policy of seeking to remove from ministry any Roman Catholic priest who has abused a child.
The 219-page report, titled "Sexual Abuse in the Catholic Church: Scientific and Legal Perspectives," cast that policy as an overreaction by Catholic leaders in the United States to a public outcry and as a potentially counterproductive way to keep children safe from sexual abuse.
The report included expressions of concern that sexually abusive priests who are cast out of ministry and pushed away from the Roman Catholic Church might be more likely to abuse again, due to their isolation and a lack of monitoring of their behavior.
"Although until now the phenomenon of abuse was not always taken seriously enough, at present there is a tendency to overreact and rob accused priests of even legitimate support," wrote one of the editors of the report, Dr. Manfred Lütz, in its conclusion. Dr. Lütz, a German psychiatrist, is a member of the Pontifical Council for the Laity here.
The other two editors are not connected to the Vatican, and the report mainly presents the perspectives of those two scientists and six others. None of the eight scientists are Catholic; all are experts in the study or treatment of sexual abuse.
I'm sure this will go over well
No Iraq Election Until End of 2004 at Earliest, Annan Says
By WARREN HOGE
Published: February 23, 2004
UNITED NATIONS, Feb. 23 — Secretary General Kofi Annan said today that credible elections could not be held in Iraq before the end of this year or the early part of 2005, and then only if planning a framework for them began immediately.
In a report to the Security Council, Mr. Annan said that his special envoy, Lakhdar Brahimi, and a team of United Nations elections experts had determined during an emergency one-week trip to Iraq that it would take until May to set up that framework and then eight months from that point to hold elections.
His report said that the first task was establishing an independent election commission to come up with the technical and legal rules and structure for a national vote. The current American plan had envisioned full elections by the end of 2005.
"If the work was started immediately and the required political consensus was reached fairly rapidly, it would be possible to hold elections by the end of 2004," Mr. Annan said. "At least eight months are required to prepare a credible election in Iraq, once the legal framework is agreed upon."
Suppose everyone in the Middle East had to abide by the same rules
The major difference between building this particular fence this particular way and Saddam Hussein draining that swamp the Marsh Arabs lived in is you got one guy you can blame for the swamp.
And don't give me any moral equivalence crap. Neither side has had a leader that actually wanted peace in a long, long time.
In Hague, Israeli Barrier Proves Divisive Issue
By GREGORY CROUCH
THE HAGUE, Feb. 23 — The Israelis sent grieving parents and the singed shell of a bombed bus. The Palestinians sent farmers cut off from their land.
They have come for an International Court of Justice hearing that started today on a planned 450-mile barrier of ditches, watch posts and concrete walls that Israel is erecting in and around the West Bank. The hearing, expected to last three days, was requested by the United Nations General Assembly, which sought an advisory opinion on the legal consequences of the barrier.
The Israeli government calls the barrier a defense against suicide bombers, an argument it repeated on Sunday when a Palestinian suicide bomber attacked a bus in Jerusalem, killing at least eight other passengers. The Palestinian Authority calls it a deceptive land grab, a violation of international law and a new form of apartheid that further oppresses Palestinians on the West Bank.
"This wall, if completed, will leave the Palestinian people with only half of the West Bank within isolated, non-contiguous, walled enclaves," Nasser al-Kidwa, the Palestinians' permanent observer to the United Nations, told the 15-judge panel today, according to Reuters.
Officially, Israel contends that the court has no jurisdiction. But symbolically, the hearing has become an important variable that could complicate the stalled Middle East peace talks. A ruling that the barrier is illegal, while nonbinding, could be a public relations disaster for Israel.
Bush finally speaks the unvarnished truth
He did say it would be the year of sharp elbows and quick tomgues, after all.
Education Secretary Calls Teachers Union a 'Terrorist Organization'
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: February 23, 2004
Filed at 3:15 p.m. ET
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Education Secretary Rod Paige called the nation's largest teachers union a "terrorist organization'' during a private White House meeting with governors on Monday.
Democratic and Republican governors confirmed Paige's remarks about the National Education Association.
"These were the words, 'The NEA is a terrorist organization,''' said Democratic Gov. Jim Doyle of Wisconsin.
"He was making a joke, probably not a very good one,'' said Democratic Gov. Ed Rendell of Pennsylvania. ``Of course he immediately divorced the NEA from ordinary teachers, who he said he supports.''
"I don't think the NEA is a terrorist organization,'' said Rendell, who has butted heads with the group as well. "They're not a terrorist organization any more than the National Business Organization is a terrorist organization.
Neither the Education Department nor NEA had an immediate comment on Paige's comments. Both indicated that statements were forthcoming.
Education has been a top issue for governors, who have sought more flexibility from the administration on President Bush's "No Child Left Behind'' law, which seeks to improve school performance in part by allowing parents to move their children from poorly performing schools.
Democrats have said Bush has failed to fully fund the law, giving the states greater burdens but not the resources to handle them.
Missouri Gov. Bob Holden, a Democrat, said Paige's remarks startled the governors, who met for nearly two hours with Bush and several Cabinet officials.
"He is, I guess, very concerned about anybody that questions what the president is doing,'' Holden said. [P6: I guess he's gunning for Powell's spot.]
"He was implying that the NEA has not been one of the organizations that has been working with the administration to try to solve 'No Child Left Behind,''' he said.
Vermont Gov. Jim Douglas, a Republican, said of Paige's comments: "Somebody asked him about the NEA's role and he offered his perspective on it.''
Nice quote!
Ampersand at Alas, A Blog posted this.
Here's what King said interviewed in Playboy (January 1965):
Question: Do you feel it's fair to request a multi-billion-dollar program of preferential treatment for the Negro, or for any other minority group?
King: I do indeed. Within common law, we have ample precedents for special compensatory programs, which are regarded as settlements. American Indians are still being paid for land in a settlement manner. Is not two centuries of labor, which helped to build this country, a real commodity?
I knew Dr. King's position but never saw that particular quote (I was only seven years old. It was another year or two before I got my first Playboy.) Keep it on file to hurl forcefully at anyone who claims Dr. King would be against affirmative action programs.
...
Some time this week, Wednesday I think, I'll get my 10,000th visitor of the month. That includes about 1,500 extra folks the day after the Super Bowl. I may actually see 10,000 legitimate visitors by the 29th.
That's pretty wild.
Attention Blogger folks
You know you can host Atom feeds on your site, right? Terry?
Just like the RDF/RSS stuff MT, pMachine, Wordpress etc. have, just a different format. In fact, I added my first Atom feed to Feed Demon today, a Typepad blog, and you know what? If I didn't know, I'd have never known, you know?
Anyway, if you're on Blogger and my blog roll, would you consider enabling your Atom feed and dropping me a line?
Hello, folks from Corante's "In The Pipeline"
I got no idea whether or not you'll see this. Side effect of using individual archives as my primary archive type.
Derek, I do not believe academic labs produce drugs. But if a commercial entity did the work an academic lab did, they'd apply for a patent and get it. Take a look at how intellectual property works in any other field. People get patents for well defined but unimplemented ideas regularly And if you later independently define and implement that idea, well too bad you still owe royalties. I suspect government funding of the research is the reason more of these compounds aren't patented by academic labs in the first place.
Look at Coca-Cola and Amazon.com and you'll see the law covering trade secrets and process patents gives as much protection and they currently have…the makers of Prilosec might argue Coca-Cola's protection is stronger. A competitor would have to develop an in dependant process to produce any drug under consideration and so no one gets a free ride. The drug being in the public domain would be a spur to innovation and competition, though (what's sauce for the schools is sauce for the pharma). If the results of any such research went into the public domain, I actually see no loss to big Pharma.
And as for whether or not One Of Us Is Hallucinating all can say is, dude—YOU'RE the one that works with drugs. 
It's not that you in the pharmaceutical industry have let perception get out of hand. It's that I have different issues than "big Pharma." Also I consider the world to be like a ball of yarn…lift a thread and the whole ball comes with it.
Also, I don't think you have to worry much about the virulence of my opinion being wide spread. Frankly, if health care costs were such they didn't scare the bejeezus out of your average person I wouldn't much care who owned what.
GOP Hypocrasy watch
…The governor has taken to calling himself the "collectinator,'' a well-connected GOP officeholder who he says will help California out of its deep budget hole by bringing home more federal dollars.
So perhaps the most important visit of his trip to Washington came Monday afternoon in the Capitol, where he met with Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, chairman of the powerful Senate Appropriations Committee, which parcels out federal money.
Schwarzenegger said he particularly appealed to Stevens for more money to help the state pay for the upkeep of illegal immigrants imprisoned in the state. This issue has been a thorny one for California and other border states for years, and Bush has proposed eliminating the federal government's share of hundreds of millions of dollars a year.
"I expect to get a lot'' of the money that California is due for the immigrant jail costs, homeland security and other programs, Schwarzenegger said. Of course, every other governor in town is making similar appeals, and with the federal budget deficit ballooning and Bush calling for restraint in spending, it's unclear how much money California can get.
Schwarzenegger vowed to be relentless.
"I'm like a tick that holds on,'' he said. "I will come back to Washington as many times as possible.''
Schwarzenegger said he felt optimistic in his meeting with Stevens.
"I judged Sen. Stevens' facial expressions,'' he said. "It indicated to me, 'You should get the money.' ''
Another fiscal body blow for California
Court Deals Blow on Budget
The state could sink $650 million more into the hole after a decision on corporate taxes.
By Marc Lifsher and Evan Halper
Times Staff Writers
February 24, 2004
SACRAMENTO — California's budget deficit appeared to grow by about $650 million Monday, after the U.S. Supreme Court refused to review a ruling that state corporate tax laws impede interstate commerce.
The move was more bad budget news for Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and state lawmakers, coming less than a week after nonpartisan Legislative Analyst Elizabeth G. Hill warned that the state's economy is improving more slowly than expected, causing revenue projections to drop by more than $1 billion.
"Not the way you want to start your workweek," said state Department of Finance spokesman H.D. Palmer. "There is no question this is a substantial hit."
The latest setback is the result of a state law that allowed corporations to deduct from their taxes dividends received from other corporations, as long as those dividends were paid from corporate income that was taxed by California.
The deduction originally was created to provide an incentive for California firms to invest in other companies in the state without being penalized with double taxation.
State courts ruled that the provision violated federal laws regulating interstate commerce. The ruling will force California to provide refunds and interest to affected corporations.
According to the Franchise Tax Board, the state will have to pay $800 million in refunds to between 1,000 and 2,000 corporate taxpayers with dividend income from out of state. [P6:
]
That would include some of the largest corporations doing business in California, such as Microsoft Corp. and Hewlett-Packard Co.
But because the board is considering jettisoning the dividend tax break, the revenue loss could be offset by $150 million in new taxes the state could collect from companies that had been receiving the break since 2000, said board spokeswoman Denise Azimi. Those same companies could in the future face a new, ongoing obligation of about $35 million a year, she added.
The new ongoing obligation of $35 million would take 18 or so years to fill the hole that's just been dug.
LA Times on "The Passion"
I think the reviews are all I'll ever know about this flick.
Quote of note:
…it shouldn't be surprising that what's immediately most evident about "The Passion" is its complete sincerity. This is Gibson's personal vision of the greatest story ever told, a look inside his heart and soul. Gibson even personally provided, according to composer John Debney, the despairing wail that accompanies Judas' suicide. When the director writes in the introduction to the film's coffee-table book that he wanted his work "to be a testament to the infinite love of Jesus the Christ," there is no reason to doubt him. Which makes it even sadder that "The Passion of the Christ" does not play that way.
A narrow vision and staggering violence
By Kenneth Turan
Times Staff Writer
February 24 2004
Combining the built-in audience of the Bible, the incendiary potential of "The Birth of a Nation" and the marketing genius of "The Blair Witch Project," the arrival of Mel Gibson's "The Passion of the Christ" feels like a milestone in modern culture. It's a nexus of religion, celebrity, cinema and mass communication that tells us more about the way our world works than we may want to know.
The film left me in the grip of a profound despair, and not for reasons I would have thought. It wasn't simply because of "The Passion's" overwhelming level of on-screen violence, a litany of tortures ending in a beyond-graphic crucifixion.
And it wasn't because of the treatment of the high priest Caiphas and the Hebrew power elite of Jesus' time — a disturbing portrait likely to give, I feel sure unintentionally, comfort to anti-Semites.
Instead, what is profoundly disheartening is that people of goodwill will see this film in completely different ways. Where I see almost sadistic violence, they will see transcendence; where I see blame, they will see truth.
In effect, aspects of Gibson's creative makeup — his career-long interest in martyrdom and the yearning for dramatic conflict that make him an excellent actor, coupled with his belief in the Gospels' literal truth — have sideswiped this film. What is left is a film so narrowly focused as to be inaccessible for all but the devout.
Those factors have made "The Passion" a film that will separate people rather than bring them together. Normally these kinds of disagreements don't matter, but with a film like this, "You just don't get it" confrontations have sad echoes of savage conflicts that have lasted for centuries. It has the potential to foster divisiveness because of the way it exposes and accentuates the fissures in belief that otherwise might go unnoticed. We all know where the road paved with good intentions leads, and it is not to the gates of heaven.
Here's a theme that worked "I'm a unite, not a divider"
Bush Replays Themes That Worked in 2000 Election
By Ronald Brownstein
Times Staff Writer
February 24, 2004
WASHINGTON — President Bush, in sharpening on Monday his case for reelection, signaled his determination to return to arguments that worked against Al Gore in 2000.
At the heart of Bush's speech at a Republican fundraiser was a determined effort to frame the 2004 election as a stark choice between more government and more individual freedom — the same contrast he used with success against Gore in the final two months of their razor-tight race.
"The American people will decide between two visions of government: a government that encourages ownership and opportunity and responsibility, or a government that takes your money and makes your choices," Bush said.
That formulation echoed Bush's insistence in 2000 that he wanted "to empower the American people" while Gore wanted "to empower the federal government."
Many Democrats agree that assertion hurt Gore in the closing weeks of the campaign. Bush's return to the argument suggests that a key question in this year's campaign could be whether Americans are more worried about big government or the powerful corporate interests that Sens. John F. Kerry of Massachusetts and John Edwards of North Carolina — the two remaining major Democratic presidential candidates — promise to confront.
The choice between big government and small government "obviously worked to a large extent for Bush in 2000, and could well do that again in 2004," said Democratic pollster Geoff Garin. "But I think we are in a very different context in 2004, where the public is much more attuned to the need for government to play an active role in policing excessive corporate power."
Why Bush will lose in November III
Because he's let too many things of too great importance to people go by the wayside.
AP Poll: Drugs Costly for U.S. Families
By WILL LESTER
Associated Press Writer
2:27 AM PST, February 24, 2004
WASHINGTON — Almost a third of Americans say paying for prescription drugs is a problem in their families, and many are cutting dosages to deal with the crunch, according to a poll by The Associated Press.
Nearly two-thirds of those surveyed said the government should make it easier to buy cheaper drugs from Canada or other countries.
The poll conducted for the AP by Ipsos-Public Affairs found most Americans either take prescription drugs or someone in their family does. Of those, 33 percent said their families have trouble paying at times. For people having trouble paying their medicine bills, three-fourths say the solution often is to cut back on the dosage.
The high cost of prescription drugs will be an important issue in the presidential campaign, said eight in 10 in the poll. Almost half said it will be "very important."
At last
US launches anti-Aids programme
The United States has officially launched its emergency anti-AIDS programme with the release of its first funds.
The $15bn programme targets countries in Africa and the Caribbean.
It is hoped the money will help speed up prevention, treatment and care services in some of the world's most badly affected countries.
The five year plan was announced by President Bush during his 2003 State of the Union address.
Where the money goes
Under the programme, $9bn is to go to 14 most affected countries in Africa and the Caribbean, representing about 50% of HIV infections worldwide.
The US anti-Aids /HIV coordinator Randall Tobias, said "the money will go to programmes that are providing anti-retroviral treatment, preventions programmes including those targeted to youth and safe medical practices programmes."
He said also included are, "programmes to provide care for orphans and vulnerable children".
Another $5bn will be devoted to ongoing bilateral projects in more than 100 countries while $1bn has been set aside for
United Nations anti-Aids campaigns.
But critics have attacked what they say have been continuous delays to the funding process.
The Aids Health Care Foundation, the largest US-based organisation with clinics in the US, Africa and Central America, said it was disappointed with the announcement.
The head of the foundation, Michael Weinstein, said, "in a funding process marked by continuous delays, today's results are leaving many experts in the field of Aids treatment how decisions are made."
It is estimated that 40m people worldwide are infected with Aids/HIV and that each day 14,000 are added to that number.
They can hear his knees knocking all the way in Europe
Bush goes on anti-Democrat attack
President Bush has warned Americans against handing over power to the Democrats in November's election.
In a speech to Republican governors, he said his rivals would leave the US "uncertain in the face of danger".
Voters will decide "between two visions of government - one that encourages enterprise and one that raises taxes".
Mr Bush's approval rating has slumped in recent weeks amid fierce attacks from Democratic contenders over the war in Iraq and the economy.
The Democrats have not yet chosen their presidential candidate - but front-runner John Kerry has capitalised on strong anti-Bush feelings among party voters.
The BBC's Katty Kay in Washington says the president would not be lashing out at potential rivals this long before the election if the White House was not worried.
Q&A: What is the West Bank barrier?
The West Bank barrier has been highly controversial ever since the Israeli government decided to build it in 2002.
Now it is being challenged in court, both in Israel and at the International Court of Justice in The Hague.
BBC News Online answers questions about the plan.
Wall? Fence? What exactly is this structure?
"The Thing", as one commentator has drolly called it, is in fact part-wall, part-fence. Most of its 700-kilometre (440-mile) length is made up of a concrete base with a five-metre-high wire-and-mesh superstructure. Rolls of razor wire and a four-metre-deep ditch are placed on one side. In addition, the structure is fitted with electronic sensors and has an earth-covered "trace road" beside it where footprints of anyone crossing can be seen.
Parts of the structure consist of an eight-metre-high solid concrete wall, complete with massive watchtowers. The solid section around the Palestinian town of Qalqilya is conceived as a "sniper wall" to prevent gun attacks against Israeli motorists on the nearby Trans-Israel Highway.
Work started in June 2002 and contractors have now completed about a quarter of the planned barrier: a long segment on the north-west edge of the West Bank; two sections either side of Jerusalem; and a section in the Jordan Valley.
But construction has been slowed with the Israelis announcing some changes to the route - for instance around the town of Baka al-Sharqiya, where eight km (5-mile) of fence is to be removed.
The West Bank Thing
REALLY INTERESTING Quote of note:
The British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw made a parliamentary statement about the position.
"Despite our view on the illegalities of the fence, we argued against this question being referred to the International Court of Justice.
Israel's barrier and the world court
By Paul Reynolds
BBC News Online world affairs correspondent
The case at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) over the barrier Israel is constructing in the West Bank opened with mutual accusations between Israelis and Palestinians and a sense among many countries linked to the peace process that a ruling from the court would not help their task.
It is shaping up to be every bit as contentious as the General Assembly resolution of 1975, which declared Zionism a form of racism. That resolution was revoked in 1991 for the opening of peace talks in Madrid.
Public hearings opened on 23 February. Forty-four governments sent in written opinions, along with the UN itself, the Arab League and the Organisation of the Islamic Conference.
Israel has also sent a submission but it is boycotting the oral sessions on the grounds that it is all a propaganda exercise. Palestine, with observer status at the UN, sent a written argument and opened the oral hearings.
Broadly, western countries opposed a role for the ICJ while and Muslim states argued for it.
Jobs Expected to Continue to Lag Economy
Jobs Expected to Continue to Lag Economy
By EDUARDO PORTER
Job growth is likely to remain tepid even as the economy moves ahead, according to a survey of professional forecasters by the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia. Indeed, the bank said yesterday, the economists' outlook for employment has grown gloomier even as their predictions of economic expansion are becoming more robust.
The 32 economists polled by the Philadelphia Fed, drawn from private business and academia, increased their forecast for economic growth this year to 4.6 percent, on average, from a previous projection of 4.3 percent. Yet at the same time, they trimmed their 2004 forecast of job creation to 1.1 million jobs, from 1.25 million.
Economists have been puzzled for months by the sluggishness of the employment market. The new forecast suggests that they have come to terms with the pattern established in this recovery: fast economic growth being driven by even faster expansion in productivity, with businesses meeting demand by squeezing more output from their current employees instead of hiring more workers.
"The economy has a greater capacity to grow because of stronger productivity growth," said James Glassman, an economist at J. P. Morgan Chase, who participated in the survey. "So we need stronger growth to get everybody employed."
Mr. Glassman estimated that the nation's output needs to grow some 5 percent a year for several years if the economy is to create jobs for the 2.5 million people who have lost employment since the start of 2001 as well as absorb new workers coming into the job market.
The forecast is at odds with an estimate this month by the White House Council of Economic Advisers, which said that the economy would generate more than 2.5 million jobs this year. The forecast, ridiculed by Democrats as being out of touch with the real world, was swiftly disowned by some administration officials, including Treasury Secretary John W. Snow.
Bush Assertion "at odds" with documented fact. Again.
Bush Assertion on Tax Cuts Is at Odds With IRS Data
By Jonathan Weisman
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, February 24, 2004; Page A04
President Bush defended his tax cuts yesterday as economic fuel for the small-business sector in response to mounting criticism from Democratic presidential candidates that the cuts chiefly benefited the wealthiest Americans.
But the president's contention that upper-income tax cuts primarily benefit entrepreneurs conflicts with some of the government's own data.
I guess that's one way to put it
White House Forecasts Often Miss The Mark
By Dana Milbank
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, February 24, 2004; Page A01
President Bush last week caused a stir when he declined to endorse a projection, made by his own Council of Economic Advisers, that the economy would add 2.6 million jobs this year. But that forecast, derided as wildly optimistic, was one of the more modest predictions the administration has made about the economy over the past three years.
Two years ago, the administration forecast that there would be 3.4 million more jobs in 2003 than there were in 2000. And it predicted a budget deficit for fiscal 2004 of $14 billion. The economy ended up losing 1.7 million jobs over that period, and the budget deficit for this year is on course to be $521 billion.
These are not isolated cases. Over three years, the administration has repeatedly and significantly overstated the government's fiscal health and the number of jobs the economy would create, but economists and politicians disagree about why.
Cobb hits it out of the park
That Paul Robeson is being honored with a stamp in the current era of repression and political paranoia is the height of historical irony. The catalogue of Robeson's achievements is incredible, but his demise, amid allegations of being a communist in the 1950s, is almost a metaphor for the experience of black heroes who have been enstamped by the US Postal Service. Robeson was born in 1898 to parents who were both former slaves. His mother died in a fire when he was six years old. His father served as minister at a number of churches in New Jersey (being pushed out of at least one post due to racial factors) and settled in as the pastor of St. Luke A.M.E.-Zion church in Westfield. Paul Robeson entered Rutgers College in 1915 as only the third black student to be accepted by the school. He went on to earn 15 letters in sports during his time there, joined in the debate team and graduated as valedictorian of the class of 1919. He went on to Columbia University Law School, graduated in 1922 and practiced law briefly before becoming disillusioned with the racism practiced by New York law firms. He decided to embark upon a career as an actor and vocalist.
After landing theatrical roles in Shuffle Along, Black Boy and The Emperor Jones, he appeared in a 1930 production of Shakespeare's Othello, eventually being recognized as the definitive enactor of the tragic Moor. Robeson had graduated to film in 1924 and starred in Oscar Micheaux's Body and Soul, but abandoned the genre because of the limited roles available to black actors. He traveled extensively, visiting Africa in the 1930s and becoming friends with a number of African students, including the Kenyan Jomo Kenyatta, who were actively fighting against European colonialism. He would eventually learn to speak over a half-dozen languages. Radicalized by his exposure to African struggles, Robeson began to articulate an increasingly critical perspective about racism and American politics. By the beginning of World War II, he was widely acclaimed as a vocalist, actor, athlete and intellectual. Paul Robeson was possibly the best known American artist in the world.
By 1949, however, the Cold War had begun to heat up and the lines between dissent and treason were deliberately blurred. Robeson's comments at a 1949 peace conference were deliberately misinterpreted to say that African Americans would never fight in a war against the Soviet Union. The denunciations came with fury and swiftness: Walter White, Jackie Robinson and Mary McLeod Bethune lined up to distance themselves from him. He was called before the House Un-American Activities Committee in 1950, where he refused to state whether or not he was a member of the Communist Party. Robeson, though he had a number of friends who were Communists and had himself visited the Soviet Union more than once, had never been a member of the Communist Party. His issue with the McCarthy inquisition was a moral one: he objected to any form of political expression being criminalized and saw McCarthy as a greater threat to the Constitution than Communism was. Asked by a committee member why he didn't simply move permanently to the Soviet Union, Robeson famously replied: "Because my father was a slave and my people died to build this country and no fascist-minded people will drive me from it. Is that clear?"
There would be consequences for this kind of democratic audacity. Robeson was refused permission to perform in venues across the country and his passport was revoked, making it impossible for him to tour abroad. His alma mater, Rutgers University, omitted his name from its list of football greats and all but dismissed his significance as an alumnus of the institution. A planned concert in Peekskill, New York, devolved into a riot when local residents began throwing bricks through the car windows of Robeson's entourage. Within a decade, the most famous black person in the world had quite simply disappeared.
Robeson could have ended his internal exile by simply stating that he was not a Communist, but to do so ran counter to his deep belief in intellectual freedom. He fell into financial ruin. The accumulated strains — along with his discovery of the horrors of Stalin's tyranny in the USSR — took their toll; he suffered a series of nervous breakdowns. The Supreme Court ruled in 1958 that it was illegal to deny a passport to a citizen on the basis of political beliefs and Robeson was allowed to travel abroad later that year. He performed internationally, but never came close to his former prominence. He died in 1976, a legend who had been quietly forgotten.
With a sitting President who tells the world, "you are either with us or against us," endorses secret military tribunals, and condones eavesdropping on confidential discussions between a person and his or her attorney, it's almost impossible to ask whether the Robeson stamp is tribute or hypocrisy. These days, presidents visit Martin Luther King's tomb — before appointing former segregationists to the federal bench. And a defamed icon is given accolades a half-century after his life was ruined by an overzealous government that had declared Communism its primary threat and told him that he was either with us or against us. With history as an alibi, you can't expect anyone to plead guilty.
I know this one ought to tweak a few noses
Reparations proponents take note. That much of the Black community has no housing value to mitigate their debt with is directly traceable to local, state and federal government policies.
Greenspan Says Personal Debt Is Mitigated by Housing Value
The Associated Press
The finances of American households are in generally good shape even though consumers have increased their debt and bankruptcy filings have surged, the Federal Reserve chairman, Alan Greenspan, said yesterday.
In a speech to the Credit Union National Association in Washington, Mr. Greenspan said that an extended period of low interest rates and extra cash from mortgage refinancing had given borrowers flexibility to better manage their debts.
Consumer spending accounts for roughly two-thirds of economic activity in the United States, and a widespread deterioration in households' balance sheets could significantly cut spending. Consumer debt reached a record $2 trillion in December, according to the most recent figures from the Federal Reserve. That includes credit cards and car loans, but not mortgages.
More than 1.6 million people filed for bankruptcy protection in the 2003 fiscal year, ended Sept. 30. Continuing the record-setting pace of recent years, personal bankruptcies rose 7.8 percent, according to the Administrative Office of the United States Courts.
Mr. Greenspan said that while elevated bankruptcy filing rates in the last few years were troubling because they underlined the difficulties that some households experience during economic slowdowns, "bankruptcy rates are not a reliable measure of the overall health of the household sector because they do not tend to forecast general economic conditions and they can be significantly influenced over time by changes in laws and lender practices."
He said that American households own more than $14 trillion in real estate assets and that mortgage refinancing and the rise in home values have helped to bolster consumer spending in economic hard times as well as better periods.
"Over the past two years, " he said, "significant increases in the value of real estate assets have, for some households, mitigated stock market losses and supported consumption."
Busted (meaning broken)
I need a new keyboard and printer. My keyboard is wireless (Logitech). So is my networking (Netgear). They don't always get along. And my printer just died.
So I don't look stupid
Online economics glossaries:
Microeconomics: Dr. T.'s Econolinks Glossary
Macroeconomics: John B. Taylor's Macroeconomics Glossary
(And for when I grow up: Peter B. Meyer's Online Glossary of Research Economics)
The Onion
Bush To Cut Deficit From Federal Budget
WASHINGTON, DC—President Bush proposed a $2.4 trillion election-year budget Monday that would boost defense spending, redistribute funds among government programs, and cross out the $477 billion deficit entirely.
"Nobody likes making cuts, but the nation's current rate of spending and the decreased tax revenues we've seen since implementing my tax cuts have created a deficit that we can't afford to carry," Bush said in a nationally televised address. "Someone had to have the vision, leadership, and courage to go in and erase that line altogether, no matter how unpopular and impossible that may be."
According to the Congressional Budget Office, the $477 billion deficit is the country's largest ever, easily topping the previous record of $290 billion in 1992. If the budget is approved, however, the deficit will roll down to $0.0 billion.
In the past, critics have accused the Bush Administration of responding to a mounting deficit and the ongoing recession with unsound fiscal policies like cutting taxes for the wealthy. Bush supporters say the deficit cut proves the wisdom of the president's economic plan.
"Bush has taken a brave step, one that was long overdue," Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-TN) said. "He has taken charge of the budget problem once and for all, simply by saying 'The deficit stops here.'"
There's always hope
Andrew Sullivan is taking stuff personally. As well he should.
I hope that doesn't mean I have to read him now.
A brief diversion
I'm going to actually start studying PHP today. The initial program I want to write will be something of a blogroll manager because I want to do a couple of specific things specific ways. Okay, I want to assign each site a category and generate include files for each one that I can use as a blogroll. The files will be unordered lists of hyperlinks so the appropriate CSS will turn it into amount any kind of menu or rollover you'd like. And I want to be able to rate each one, pluses for great articles, minuses for sucky statements, because I want to sort on their aggregate score as well.
When I get this done, I'm sure you'll see John Cole's Balloon-Juice up near the top of the Righties on a fairly consistent basis. Sebastian linked to this post, an eloquent visual response to Rod Paige's incredibly stupid "teachers are terrorists" comment. But then I found this post and this one and I'm pretty much convinced I need to keep him in site with the rest of the guys in the Conservatives box. I need all them as constant reminders that one can be Conservative, intelligent and sane at the same time. Wrong, too. 
Until I get my little program done I'll just stick the link in the appropriate template module.
He's prominenet in the shadow government too
By Robert Kuttner, 2/25/2004
DICK CHENEY is the most powerful vice president in US history. Indeed, there is a fair amount of circumstantial evidence that Cheney, not Bush, is the real power at the White House and Bush the figurehead.
The true role of the shadowy Cheney is finally becoming an issue in the election, and it deserves to be. A recent piece in The New Yorker by Jane Mayer lays out in devastating detail how Cheney, while CEO of Halliburton, created the blueprint for shifting much of the military's support role from the armed services to private contractors. The leading contractor, of course, is Halliburton. When Cheney became vice president, Halliburton was perfectly positioned to make out like a bandit.
Cheney, whose prior career was in politics, became a very rich man as Halliburton's chief executive, earning $45 million in just five years, with $18 million still available in stock options. Cheney also went to extraordinary lengths to keep secret the meetings of the Bush energy task force, which included primarily private companies positioned to profit from public decisions. The press treated all this as newsworthy for a time but then backed off.
What is significant about Mayer's New Yorker piece is that it was pieced together mainly from the public record. Cheney's unprecedented role and dubious history are mostly hidden in plain view, just like Bush's. The press needs only to decide that it's a story.
Self inflicted wounds
Stores Facing Hard Sell to Refill Aisles
By James F. Peltz
Times Staff Writer
February 25, 2004
When the supermarket strike ends, another headache will begin for the major grocery chains in Central and Southern California. They'll have to deal with the likes of Ronnie Bertrand.
The 69-year-old Bakersfield resident, a self-described "person who doesn't like change," was a longtime Vons patron until picket lines sent her to check out alternative aisles. At some point after the strike began 4½ months ago, Vons lost her to a Foods Co. store in her neighborhood.
"As time went on, I found I was spending less money," Bertrand said. Once the pickets are gone, she might visit Vons to buy fresh vegetables, she added, but "I really think I'm going to continue shopping at Foods Co."
Luring back once-loyal customers will be a major task for Vons, Pavilions, Ralphs and Albertsons. A new Los Angeles Times poll indicates they have their work cut out: Among people who shopped at the three chains before the labor dispute, 59% said they had stopped shopping there during the picketing. And 14% of the chains' total pre-strike customers said they would continue to shop elsewhere after a settlement.
In the competitive supermarket business, that is a big percentage. As negotiations with the United Food and Commercial Workers union wrapped up their 14th straight day Tuesday, fueling hope in some quarters that the labor dispute may soon end, the markets were already plotting to regain the allegiance of customers they've lost.
Voodoo, American style
Cursed Ball About to Get Whacked
Cub fans hope a 58-year jinx can be lifted by sacrificing a most-foul baseball.
By P.J. Huffstutter
Times Staff Writer
February 25, 2004
CHICAGO — At Harry Caray's sports bar, surrounded by mementos of baseball legends, The Ball sits safely inside a display case — watched over by 13 surveillance cameras, two anti-theft alarms and 24-hour security guards.
All this to protect, at least until Thursday night, what superstitious Cub fans see as the ultimate symbol of bad luck. For this is the baseball that Steve Bartman, the hapless yet loyal Cub fan, inadvertently knocked away from outfielder Moises Alou in last year's National League championship series.
Alou didn't catch the foul ball, this ball, and the Florida Marlins rallied to win the game. The Cubs then lost the next game, as well as their chance to get to the World Series, where they haven't been since 1945.
"If we destroy that ball, it'll finally be all right," said Jeremy Dougherty, 38, a construction worker who dropped by the downtown bar and restaurant for a last peek before the ball is obliterated. "The curse on the Cubs will be lifted."
Dougherty is among the nearly 30,000 Cubs fans who have sent eager e-mails, made pleading phone calls and scrawled desperate notes on the bar's cocktail napkins to Grant DePorter.
Managing partner of the Harry Caray's Restaurant Group, which was founded by and named after the beloved longtime announcer for the Cubs, DePorter bought the ball in December for $113,824.16.
The Cubbies' faithful all want one thing: to destroy The Ball.
They have suggested DePorter roast it, incinerate it, crush it, drown it, drop it into a bucket of acid, split it into two with an ax, put it in front of a firing squad, launch it into outer space, shove it into a shredder, scatter its remains at sea, even freeze it in liquid nitrogen and shatter it into a million pieces.
Some way, any way, get rid of it.
On Thursday night, their pleas will be heeded. Only the method remains a mystery.
"This ball is baseball's anti-trophy," DePorter said. "I had a pit in my stomach, for sure, because it was so expensive. But what would happen if we didn't destroy it and some Marlins fan got ahold of it? What if someone used it to psych out the Cubs next year? No, it's got to go."
Reparations proponents should note the logic of his decision
Justices Find No Age Bias in Benefits Case
Court says firms can't be sued if they adopt plans that favor older workers over younger ones.
By David G. Savage
Times Staff Writer
February 25, 2004
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Tuesday rejected claims of reverse bias in the area of age discrimination, ruling that employers could not be sued for adopting benefit plans that favored older workers over younger ones.
Age "means 'old age' when teamed with 'discrimination' " in the employment laws, the high court said in a 6-3 decision. It threw out a lawsuit brought by workers in their 40s who sued after a division of General Dynamics Corp. decided that only employees who were then over age 50 would be promised health benefits in their retirement.
Tuesday's ruling, which maintains widespread employment practices, was seen as an important victory for corporate America. Employers feared the prospect of being sued by middle-aged workers if they offered buyouts or other retirement incentives to older workers, an increasingly common occurrence.
The Age Discrimination in Employment Act makes it illegal for an employer to discriminate against an employee "because of an individual's age." Congress said it was intended to protect older workers from being pushed aside or denied opportunities because of their age.
But the wording of the law applied to all employees over age 40, and it could be read to forbid discrimination against middle-aged workers as well as their elders. Two years ago, a federal appeals court in Ohio set off alarms among corporate lawyers when it ruled in this case that the law prohibited all age discrimination among employees, even when younger workers were complaining about preferences for their older colleagues.
Employment law experts said this was the first successful "reverse discrimination" claim in the area of age bias.
But it did not stand for long. The Supreme Court took up the employer's appeal and ruled that the law was indeed intended to protect older workers, and not the younger ones who complained about advantages given to their elders. The law "does not mean to stop an employer from favoring an older employee over a young one," said Justice David H. Souter in General Dynamics Land Systems Inc. vs. Cline.
Obviously, drilling for oil in Alaska holds some symbolic significance to Bush
February 25, 2004
If at first you don't succeed in despoiling an environmental treasure, try, try again. That's apparently the White House motto for drilling in Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. The Senate should stop President Bush again, as it has for two years now.
The Bush administration has been no friend to the Alaskan environment in recent months. In December, the Forest Service announced it would strip protections from the Tongass National Forest, allowing loggers to build roads to choice stands of old-growth trees. In January, the president's budget brought back his twice-defeated proposal to sell oil leases in the wildlife refuge, and Interior Secretary Gale Norton approved a plan to open millions of acres of the North Slope to drilling and loosen requirements for environmental safeguards.
Of these, the annual presidential assault on the 19-million-acre wildlife refuge is hardest to fathom. It would take eight to 10 years to get at the oil, which, according to the U.S. Geological Survey, would meet the nation's energy needs for only six months. A very modest increase in the fuel efficiency of the nation's cars would save more oil than that.
Risk analysis
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-hammit25feb25,1,641848.story?coll=la-news-comment-opinions
COMMENTARY
Balancing Lives Against Lucre
Risk analysis is no soulless monster of science. It's a valuable way to make choices that help the most people at the least cost.
By James K. Hammitt and Milton C. Weinstein
James K. Hammitt is the director of the Harvard Center for Risk Analysis. Milton C. Weinstein is the director of the Harvard Program on Economic Evaluation of Medical Technology.
February 25, 2004
A risk that kills thousands of Americans every year surely seems like something the government should regulate. But what if that risk also comes with a benefit, providing people with a service that improves their lives?
Take the case of cellphones and driving. Drivers using cellphones cause 2,600 deaths and 330,000 injuries in the United States a year, according to our estimates. But Americans are deeply attached to their cellphones and are willing to spend billions of dollars for the convenience and business and social contact that cellphones provide when they are driving. A ban would save lives but deprive people of a benefit they badly want.
The decision is not as obvious as it seems. If you were in charge, what would you do?
…money and time are limited, even when it comes to saving lives. And a million dollars spent protecting against one risk might save more lives if spent protecting against another.
Here's a simple example of how risk analysis can work. Some women who get Pap smears are told that their results are uncertain and that they should get follow-up tests every year. Totaled across all the women tested, annual follow-ups cost about $800,000 per year of life saved, according to our analysis. On the other hand, if those women got follow-up tests every two years, the reduction in cervical cancer rates would be almost the same — while the cost per year of life saved would decline to about $200,000. That means that the healthcare system would save tens of millions of dollars per year that could be used to screen more women or to provide other health benefits.
Its creation was inevitable
Its utility is undeniable. But it's a very sharp blade with a very small handle. Our concern needs to be about who uses it and how.
Anti-Terrorism Network Launched
System Allows Agencies Across Country to Share Data Instantaneously
By Spencer S. Hsu
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, February 25, 2004; Page B01
Hundreds of federal, state and local intelligence and law enforcement agencies will be able to share threat reports, investigative leads and potential evidence instantaneously under a new counter-terrorism computer system announced yesterday by Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge.
Developed since the September 2001 terrorist attacks, the Homeland Security Information Network is part of a sweeping data-sharing policy adapted by federal authorities. The network, created in response to presidential priorities, is designed to prevent acts of terror and to give local police chiefs, mayors and governors greater access to federal intelligence.
Ridge announced the launch of the system in the Joint Operations Command Center at Washington's police headquarters, where he was joined by Mayor Anthony A. Williams (D) and officials from New York City and California, who developed the system with the Defense Intelligence Agency.
"In this new post-9/11 era, a new philosophy is required -- a philosophy of shared responsibility, shared leadership and shared accountability," Ridge said. "The federal government cannot micromanage the protection of America."
The Internet-based secure network marks a dramatic expansion of U.S. law enforcement agencies' ability to simultaneously share time-sensitive information. The development has been eagerly anticipated by thousands of users and closely monitored by civil liberties groups that track the impact of technology on personal privacy.
My opinion of John McCain improves incrementally
Not that I ever thought badly of him.
Senators Threaten to Stall Nomination
McCain and Dorgan Seek Explanation of McClellan's Drug Importation Stand
By Ceci Connolly
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, February 25, 2004; Page A23
Sens. John McCain (R-Ariz.) and Byron L. Dorgan (D-N.D.) threatened yesterday to hold up the nomination of Mark McClellan to run the federal Medicare program because they are frustrated by his refusal as commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration to permit importation of lower-cost medicines from Canada.
Speaking to governors at a meeting on Capitol Hill, McCain said the pair will stall McClellan's nomination to be administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services "until there's a full and complete explanation of why he will not make prescription drugs from Canada available to Americans." He and congressional allies also intend to use parliamentary maneuvers to force votes in the Senate on the volatile issue, he said.
Also yesterday, Wisconsin Gov. Jim Doyle (D) announced that his state -- in defiance of the FDA -- will launch an Internet site this week to steer residents to a limited number of Canadian mail-order pharmacies that Wisconsin officials deem safe and reliable.
At a separate meeting, FDA Associate Commissioner Peter Pitts said the agency has no intention of backing off its aggressive pursuit of cities and states that promote illegal drug importation. "We're not going to go away," he said.
More headline issues
Quote of note:
Today, the Senate plans to take up a House-passed bill to protect gun manufacturers and dealers from lawsuits brought by victims of gun violence. A proposal to curb class-action lawsuits is also pending for Senate action soon.
Gun-control advocates plan to use the firearms liability measure, which is backed by the National Rifle Association, as a vehicle for votes on two of their top priorities: reauthorization of the 1994 ban on assault weapons, which expires later this year, and legislation to require unlicensed dealers to conduct speedy background checks at gun shows.
Sen. John W. Warner (R-Va.), who voted against the assault weapons ban 10 years ago, is among three Republicans co-sponsoring the bill with Democrats this year. Warner said he believes the law has helped reduce crime while protecting gun owners more than he anticipated in 1994.
The outcome of the struggle over guns is unclear, according to senators on both sides of the issue.
Why should it be noted? Because it's buried in the middle of an article about a medical liability bill.
Medical Liability Curbs Blocked
Senate GOP's Bill Targeted OB-GYNs
By Helen Dewar
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, February 25, 2004; Page A04
Senate Republicans failed again yesterday to win approval for legislation limiting damages in medical malpractice lawsuits, even after adopting an approach that targeted only litigation involving obstetricians and gynecologists.
The largely party-line vote was 48 to 45 in favor of considering the legislation, 12 short of the 60 votes needed to cut off a Democratic-led filibuster against the measure. A broader measure that would have limited damages in all medical malpractice cases fell 11 votes short in July.
The bill is part of a broader drive by President Bush and other Republicans to overhaul the civil liability system, limiting the damage awards that trial lawyers can win against businesses. Today, the Senate plans to take up a House-passed bill to protect gun manufacturers and dealers from lawsuits brought by victims of gun violence. A proposal to curb class-action lawsuits is also pending for Senate action soon.
A reality check worthy of the Stanley Cup finals
I feel the need to post the last few paragraphs first so no one misinterprets my intent and forces me to rip 'em a new on.
Fortunately, we have too the African Americans with their feet firmly on the ground. Their engagement with Africa dates back to the American civil rights and African liberation movements. They remain true to the values that inspired those movements but know that we are now in a different place. They pick their battles carefully, trying to add value to the work done by African governments and civil society organisations.
Take, for example, actor Danny Glover, who was in town this past week. In his capacity as Goodwill Ambassador with the United Nations Development Programme, he adds his voice to the range of issues relating to fair trade, such as commodity pricing. He was here for a coffee conference, but made time to meet with Kenyan artists and civil society organisations. In that meeting, he talked of his plans to develop a filmmakers" fund to support African productions. As chair of Transafrica Forum, a Washington-based advocacy organisation, he listened carefully to concerns about the US elections and America's hosting of this year's Group of Eight summit.
Maybe there is some hope for the relationship after all.
Now the whole article.
Help, Here Comes the Back-to-Africa Crowd
The East African (Nairobi)
COLUMN
February 23, 2004
Posted to the web February 25, 2004
By L. Muthoni Wanyeki
Nairobi
L. Muthoni Wanyeki is executive director of the African Women's Development and Communication Network
African peer review
Quote of note:
In addition to a code of standards, benchmarks and institutions endorsed in March last year as a roadmap to the review process, the Kigali Summit agreed on the meaning of "good governance" in the African context, which is in itself a critical step.
Despotic Leaders Beware, Peer Review is Here
The East African (Nairobi)
COLUMN
February 23, 2004
Posted to the web February 25, 2004
By Peter Mwangi Kagwanja
Nairobi
The recent African leaders' summit in Rwanda finally adopted a unique peer-review system that has the potential of irreversibly changing the face of governance in Africa.
The African Peer Review Mechanism (APRM) sanctioned by nine heads of state and several ministerial delegations meeting in Kigali from February 13-14, will serve as the linchpin of the New Partnership for Africa's Development (Nepad), itself a grand recovery project launched by African leaders in 2001.
Seems I'm back on The Education Trust's list
As I mentioned before, The Education Trust is a pretty fair-minded pro NCLB organization. I follow them because even though I believe NCLB as implemented is bad, I also believe the ideas that sold the legislation are pretty close to the guides we need to improve the public school systems.
I got a press release from them today responding to a report released today by The Civil Right Project at Harvard University that is apparently very critical of NCLB. The report focuses on a "Graduation Rate Crisis" among Black, Hispanic/Latino and Native American people that it says provisions of NCLB obscures.
Now, I haven't read the report nor the response yet, but both organizations get some respect in my view. So. I'm finally going to go get my damn printer and keyboard. When I get back I'll read both and post the press releases and links to reports…I think I'll save my opinion for my first OSP post of the year. And both organizations get added to the Reality Checks link box.
The Education Trust response
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
February 25, 2004
Contact: Jeanne Brennan, 202-293-1217 ext 328, Kimberly Holmes ext 292, or Nicolle Grayson, ext 351
Statement of Kati Haycock, Director of the Education Trust, on the Harvard Civil Rights Project and Urban Institute Report on High School Graduation Rates and NCLB
(Washington, DC) -- There’s no question that high school graduation rates across the country are abysmal, and that the shocking racial disparities in graduation rates are unconscionable. That's why the Education Trust released last December a report documenting the fact that many states shamelessly inflate their high school graduation rates and minimize their graduation gaps. And why, at that time, we called on the U.S. Department of Education to take a much stronger role in the implementation of the high school graduation rate accountability provisions in No Child Left Behind.
“Last year, the Department sent clear signals that graduation data was not an issue about which it cared -- including sending out data-reporting directions that were at odds with the law and the Department's own regulations -- and states cynically took advantage of the Department's inattention by publishing data that obfuscates and obscures the problem rather than addresses it. The Department has belatedly appointed an advisory commission to look at the issue, and we are hopeful that more accurate data will be reported in the future. Meaningful accountability in public education has to measure both student learning and whether students are still in school to learn.
“But any suggestion that high school dropouts are somehow caused by accountability is absolutely incorrect. Indeed, to suggest that accountability forces educators to harm children actually rewards irresponsibility and bad behavior. Worse still, it lets educators and the education system off the hook.
“Make no mistake, this is about adult choices -- professional and ethical choices. When professionals in other fields act in bad faith, no one calls for less accountability. In fact, they often call for more.
“Would anyone claim that corporate scandals are the result of too much accountability? Would anyone -- other than perhaps his defense attorneys – claim that former Enron chief Jeffrey Skilling was forced into cheating and that the SEC is at fault for requiring the disclosure of information and enforcing securities laws? Would anyone claim that the proper response to such unethical and unprofessional behavior would be to stop holding corporations accountable?
“Absolutely not.
“Choosing to break the rules and take actions that harm children is just that: a choice. When we explain away such choices with euphemisms like “forced” or “unintended consequence,” we excuse educators from their professional and ethical obligations. We send a message to our Nation's young people that irresponsibility will be met with impunity. That is simply unacceptable.”
The Civil Rights Project's press release
It's long. Real long.
Press Release
For Immediate Release
The Civil Rights Project, The Urban Institute, Advocates for Children of New York and Results for America
STUDY: ONLY "50-50" CHANCE OF HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATION FOR U.S. MINORITY STUDENTS, WEAK ACCOUNTABILITY RULES FOUND
Washington, DC--February 25, 2004-- Half or more of Black, Hispanic and Native American youth in the United States are getting left behind before high school graduation in a "hidden crisis" that is obscured by U.S. Department of Education regulations issued under the "No Child Left Behind" (NCLB) Act that "allow schools, districts, and states to all but eliminate graduation rate accountability for minority subgroups," according to a new report from two nonpartisan groups, The Civil Rights Project at Harvard and The Urban Institute.
The new report, also issued by the Civil Society Institute's Results for America (RFA) project and Advocates for Children of New York, notes that the minority high school graduation rate crisis is masked by the widespread circulation of "misleading and inaccurate reporting of dropout and graduation rates." According to the report, while 75 percent of white students graduated from high school in 2001, only 50 percent of all Black students, 51 percent of Native American students, and 53 percent of all Hispanic students got a high school diploma in the same year. The study found that the problem was even worse for Black, Native American, and Hispanic young men at 43 percent, 47 percent, and 48 percent, respectively. [P6: emphasis added]
The Civil Rights Project at Harvard/Urban Institute report finds: "The national (graduation rate) gap for Blacks is 25 percent; for Hispanics 22 percent; for Native Americans 24 percent. Despite wide ranges within some states, nearly every state shows a large and negative gap between Whites and at least one minority group." According to the data, the 10 worst states overall for Black and Hispanic minority graduation rates are: New York; Wisconsin; Pennsylvania; Michigan; Iowa; Massachusetts; Nebraska; Ohio; Illinois; and Connecticut. The report defines the "graduation rate gap" as the difference between its calculations for graduation rates of Whites and minorities.
Dueling press releases
If you were interested you've probably already gone to The Civil Rights Project at Harvard to check out their report on what they're calling a Graduation Rate crisis, and The Education Trust's response to it. But I promised links and press releases and I am, if nothing else, a man of my word (anyone who say which word gets their mouth washed out with soap).
I slipped the links to their respective press releases in up there already. The press releases follow (and wouldn't it be nice if everyone who just published a press release without analysis would tell you so?).
The Harvard report is issued jointly by Harvard, Civil Society Institute’s Results for America (RFA) project and Advocates for Children of New York. The report is a 98 page pdf, so I'll be writing an opinion of the abstract to submit to OSP.
The Education trust has their own, eight page, pdf on this issue. If you read it, you'll see why I think highly of an organization that supports a policy I oppose…because they seem to be holding the feds accountable for the promises they made.
Taking a break
I'm pretty much standing down today. No biggie, no drama, and I'll still be looking at comments.
By the way, I'm thinking in terms of a community site in addition to P6 (which I've grown rather fond of as it is). That won't be mentioned directly again for a while, but that's why I've been testing portals, discussion board and blog software.
When asked why all the foreigners want to come to the USofA...
Decline Seen in Science Applications From Overseas
By DIANA JEAN SCHEMO
Published: February 26, 2004
WASHINGTON, Feb. 25 — Bucking a trend that dates to the end of World War II, the number of foreign students applying to graduate and doctoral programs in science at American universities is declining broadly, according to a survey of 130 such programs released here today.
The findings came as the General Accounting Office, the investigative arm of Congress, reported that foreign students and scholars hoping to study science or certain technologies at universities in the United States must wait an average of 67 days to receive a visa. For some of them, the delays extend up to a year, the report said.
"It's really what we've been fearing all along," said Vic Johnson, associate director for public policy at the Association of International Educators. "It's the accumulation of a lot of things that is just causing a change in the attractiveness of the United States as a destination for students and scholars."
If we kill ourselves, replacements are available
Cell Protein Gives Monkeys Innate Immunity to H.I.V., Researchers Discover
By GINA KOLATA
Published: February 26, 2004
Scientists have discovered that monkey cells have innate protection against infection with the human AIDS virus, a clue that may help explain why some people are susceptible to certain viral infections while others are not.
The finding, reported in today's issue of the journal Nature, offers one of the first concrete examples of what researchers call an intracellular system of innate immunity and may open the door to the development of new antiviral therapies, the scientists said.
The monkeys were protected from the virus by a mechanism that resides within cells and that is independent of the antibodies and white blood cells of the immune system. The mechanism appears to have evolved to protect animals from specific viruses.
In the case of AIDS, the researchers found, the monkeys blocked the human immunodeficiency virus, or H.I.V., as soon as it slipped into cells, using a protein that prevented the virus from shedding the hard casing around its genes. The protein, called TRIM5-alpha, apparently floats inside the monkey cells, looking for H.I.V.
"This is really telling us about a system of natural immunity to viruses," said Dr. Joseph Sodroski, a professor of pathology at Harvard's Dana-Farber Cancer Institute who was the lead author of the study. He described the protective mechanism used by the cells as "very specific, very potent and very targeted to particular viruses."
Dr. Nathaniel R. Landau, an AIDS researcher at the Salk Institute in San Diego, called the study "excellent," and predicted, "I think it's going to open up a new avenue of research."
There are but so many lies you're allowed to tell
Senate Panel Presses Bush on War's Plan
By DOUGLAS JEHL
WASHINGTON, Feb. 26 — Faced with a refusal by the Bush administration to provide certain documents related to prewar intelligence on Iraq, the Senate intelligence committee voted in a closed session on Thursday to move toward a possible subpoena, according to senior Congressional officials.
The bipartisan vote on the Republican-led panel sets a three-week deadline for a voluntary handover by the administration, after which the committee would employ unspecified "further action," which could only mean a subpoena, the officials said.
In a brief telephone interview, the top Democrat on the panel said that "there's no other interpretation" of the committee's action if the White House fails to turn over the documents by late March.
"We need these things, we want them, and if we don't get them, we will resort to other means," said the Democrat, Senator John D. Rockefeller IV of West Virginia, who declined to discuss the committee's deliberations in detail.
The plan approved by the panel calls for Senator Rockefeller and Senator Pat Roberts of Kansas, the top Republican, to issue an explicit warning in a letter to President Bush if the documents are not received, Congressional officials said.
But we proved in Iraq that sanctions don't work
European Union to Impose Trade Sanctions on U.S.
By REUTERS
Filed at 2:14 p.m. ET
by Doug Palmer
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - European Union Trade Commissioner Pascal Lamy said on Thursday the EU would impose $200 million in economic sanctions on the United States beginning on Monday because of Congress' failure to repeal tax breaks declared illegal by the World Trade Organization.
``The picture is now quite clear. Countermeasures will go into effect by next Monday,'' Lamy told the European American Business Council after meeting with the chairman of the House of Representatives Ways and Means Committee.
The retaliation will hit a wide array of agricultural and manufactured goods ranging from buckwheat to nuclear reactor parts. Lamy said the sanctions would remain in effect until Congress passes legislation to repeal the tax breaks.
Lamy said it remained unclear how long it would take Congress to do that but he said ``the sooner, the better'' for U.S.-EU business relations.
The sanctions begin with a 5 percent duty on more than $4 billion worth of U.S. exports to Europe. That duty will increase by 1 percentage point each month up to a cap of 17 percent. However, Lamy said the sanctions will be dropped ``the day Congress passes the new legislation'' to repeal the tax breaks.
It does not look good for Aristede
Rebels Preparing to Attack Haiti Capital
Rebels Say They Are Preparing to Attack Port-Au-Prince As Foreigners and Haitians Flee
The Associated Press
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti Feb. 26 — Haiti's rebel leader said his fighters were advancing on the capital Thursday, awaiting an order to attack unless President Jean-Bertrand Aristide resigns. The United States questioned whether Aristide could "effectively continue" in office.
With Haiti's ill-equipped police force not expected to put up much resistance against a rebel assault, government loyalists began building defenses in front of the National Palace in Port-au-Prince.
At a U.N. Security Council meeting on Haiti, Caribbean nations called for a multinational force to end the violence. But the United States and France said they want a political settlement first.
In Washington, Secretary of State Colin Powell openly questioned whether Aristide can continue to serve effectively as Haiti's leader the closest Powell has come to suggesting that Aristide bow out as president before his elected term ends in February 2006.
"Whether or not he is able to effectively continue as president is something he will have to examine carefully in the interests of the Haitian people," Powell told reporters.
Powell's comments came a day after French Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin called on Aristide to resign.
It is vital that we get this education thing in order
Reverse brain drain threatens U.S. economy
Tue Feb 24, 6:40 AM ET
By Alan M. Webber
Until recently, if Americans heard the words "brain drain," they knew clearly what that meant: Bright, talented scientists, engineers and other techies from all over the world were migrating to the United States. They were drawn here by the world's best universities, the most dynamic companies, the freest economic and social environment and the highest standard of living.
Today, while many of these conditions still apply, Americans are starting to hear a new term: "reverse brain drain." What it suggests is the United States is pursuing government and private-sector policies that, over the long run, could lead to a significant shift in the world's balance of brainpower.
Recently, President Bush's chief economic adviser, Gregory Mankiw, touted the advantages for U.S. firms of outsourcing jobs overseas. But that trend, if left unattended, could have serious implications for this country's economic competitiveness.
For its part, the federal government seems intent on letting "controversial" scientists - for example, those dealing with research that touches on the issue of abortion - go to other countries and keeping foreign talent out. U.S. companies are happy to outsource knowledge work while, at the same time, buying out the contracts of their most experienced workers - all in the name of reducing costs. And the one sure way to grow new brains - a high-quality educational system - has failed to produce enough homegrown talent.
As the economy globalizes, and as first-class creative minds go abroad, stay abroad or are produced abroad, other nations may challenge the United States' role as the leader in innovation and creativity. The prospect of that challenge tomorrow - more than the loss of jobs today - is what the debate over America's economic future ought to be about.
Problems of uninsured directly affect all Americans
There is no better title.
Problems of uninsured directly affect all Americans
Tue Feb 24, 6:40 AM ET
By Mary Sue Coleman
…If you have a good health insurance plan, you may think the problems of the uninsured do not affect you directly. Think again. One of the most insidious effects of the large uninsured population in our nation is that it wears down the medical system's ability to provide health care services to all Americans, even those with insurance.
More people, less access
Cities with large populations of uninsured residents, such as Atlanta and Detroit, risk losing doctors, on-call coverage by specialists and health facilities and hospitals because of the uncompensated costs of caring for the uninsured. Big urban areas are especially at risk: A quarter of Los Angeles' 10 million people are uninsured. As a result, one of six public hospitals has shut its doors, as have 11 of 18 public health clinics. [P6: emphasis added]
Our committee devoted three years to preparing its study of the full costs and consequences of the uninsured. We based our findings and recommendations on the best research available.
About 43 million Americans, the vast majority of whom are working, go without health insurance for at least an entire year. This number has continued to increase during the past 25 years. In addition, more and more employers are limiting their offerings of coverage or shifting premium increases to their employees.
Poor health's high costs
The story of the family dealing with a son's motorcycle accident illustrates that, as a society, we have not accounted for the substantial costs of failing to provide health insurance for all Americans. If the uninsured had the same health care as their insured fellow citizens, the nation's total health bill of nearly $1.2 trillion likely would increase only 3%-6%, or approximately $34 billion to $69 billion annually. But without some form of universal health coverage, the nation's economic losses due to poorer health, impaired child development, earlier deaths, lost job productivity and financial stress on families ranges from $65 billion to $130 billion annually, our committee estimates. [P6: emphasis added]
This stupid plan again
Private accounts alone can't bail out Social Security
Tue Feb 24, 6:40 AM ET
After putting Social Security (news - web sites) reform on the back burner for several years, President Bush (news - web sites) is making a new push for a plan that would let workers divert part of their payroll taxes into personal savings accounts. Bush touted the proposal in his State of the Union address and again in his economic report to Congress this month.
From the way supporters describe it, the concept is simple and appealing. Workers would invest a portion of their Social Security taxes into stocks and bonds that typically yield higher returns than the current government-managed system. What's more, they say, the step is crucial in saving Social Security from insolvency as 75 million baby boomers retire during the coming years.
But much like a miracle weight-loss plan that promises stunning results without diet or exercise, the proposals to create private accounts avoid the difficult reforms required to ensure Social Security's long-term financial health: reduced benefits, higher taxes or a combination of the two.
Certainly, personal savings accounts can be part of a broader debate on reforming the national retirement system, particularly if young workers are willing to give up some traditional Social Security benefits in exchange for the opportunity to save on their own. Pretending, however, that the mere introduction of personal savings accounts will solve Social Security's problems is not only dishonest, it also misleads the public about the hard choices that will be required to put the nation's retirement program on sound financial footing.
Among the problems personal accounts don't address:
•Demographics. Social Security faces a financial crisis because the number of retirees collecting benefits in 20 years is expected to increase 60%, while the number of workers paying taxes to support those benefits is projected to increase a mere 14%. In addition, those retirees are likely to live and collect benefits longer than previous generations of retirees. Bush's own commission on Social Security reform concluded in 2001 that private accounts would not close the projected gap between taxes coming in and benefits going out.
•Costs. In the short term, personal accounts would worsen Social Security's financial condition. The reason: Some of the taxes now needed to guarantee traditional benefits to current retirees would be tapped to set up the accounts.
The Social Security Administration estimates that, depending on how the new accounts are structured, the government could have to borrow roughly $1.5 trillion during the next decade to cover the loss of taxes diverted into private accounts. That would be the equivalent of charging $8,800 to every worker's credit card.
As recently as 2001, Congress and the administration promised to reserve the government's annual budget surpluses to repair Social Security or finance the transition costs of moving to a system of personal savings accounts. Since then, they have broken their pledge by going on a spending and tax-cutting spree that has squandered $475 billion in Social Security surpluses on other purposes and has put the nation $1.1 trillion deeper into debt.
If Cleopatra looks like Elizabeth Taylor, I'll never go back
From the Sphinx to King Tut, a Feast for Budding Egyptologists
By CHRIS LARSON
Seven millenniums of Egyptian culture and history are now available in a most modern way: through a new Web site called Eternal Egypt. A result of three years of cooperation between I.B.M. and Egypt's government and major museums, Eternal Egypt is intended to encourage preservation while providing an immense amount of data that could formerly be absorbed only by visiting Egypt. And of course, the Egyptian government hopes that some of the virtual tourists will be persuaded to make the actual trip.
With 3-D scanners and other hardware donated by I.B.M., the country's considerable museum collections were digitized and loaded onto www.eternalegypt.org.
The site offers high-resolution 360-degree views of artifacts, with written and oral explanations in English, French and Arabic. Also available are interactive maps and timelines; views from live Webcams in Egypt; virtual reconstructions of the Sphinx as it looked 2,000 years ago; and, as shown above, the treasure-filled tomb of King Tutankhamen as it looked when it was discovered in 1922.
The material at the Web site is also available on hand-held guides that visitors can use at Egypt's museums, and through text and picture displays that can be received by cellphone at the museums and historic sites.
Eternal Egypt went live on Tuesday. Thousands more artifacts are to be added over time, and Egypt hopes the site will eventually include items that are no longer in Egypt, like the Rosetta stone. I.B.M. expects the concept and the scanning and database technologies developed for the project to be applied at other museums and cultural collections worldwide. Chris Larson
As long as they really work that way
I can't say I actively approve of any weapon that removes the mano-a-mano aspect of combat. That said, timed self-deactivation is a huge improvement on old land mines and a reasonable compromise.
Bush Shifts U.S. Stance On Use of Land Mines
Policy Slated for 2010 Won't Ban All Devices Designed to Kill Troops
By Bradley Graham
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, February 27, 2004; Page A01
President Bush will bar the U.S. military from using certain types of land mines after 2010 but will allow forces to continue to employ more sophisticated mines that the administration argues pose little threat to civilians, officials said yesterday.
The new policy, due to be announced today, represents a departure from the previous U.S. goal of banning all land mines designed to kill troops. That plan, established by President Bill Clinton, set a target of 2006 for giving up antipersonnel mines, depending on the success of Pentagon efforts to develop alternatives.
Bush, however, has decided to impose no limits on the use of "smart" land mines, which have timing devices to automatically defuse the explosives within hours or days, officials said.
His ban will apply only to "dumb" mines -- those without self-destruct features. But it will cover devices not only aimed at people but also meant to destroy vehicles. In that way, Bush's policy will extend to a category of mines not included in Clinton's plan, which was limited to antipersonnel devices.
Bush will also propose a 50 percent jump in spending, up to $70 million in fiscal 2005, for a State Department program that provides mine-removal assistance in more than 40 countries, officials said. The program also funds mine-awareness programs abroad and offers some aid to survivors of mine explosions.
A senior State Department official, who disclosed Bush's decision on the condition that he not be named, said the new policy aims at striking a balance between the Pentagon's desire to retain effective weapons and humanitarian concerns about civilian casualties caused by unexploded bombs, which can remain hidden long after combat ends and battlefields return to peaceful use.
The safety problem stems from dumb bombs, which kill as many as 10,000 civilians a year, the official said. Smart bombs, he added, "are not contributors to this humanitarian crisis."
Winamp 5
Though I keep it on the low, I'm a digital music freak. I've been using Winamp 2.something for it's Shoutcast list, which let me look up Shoutcast stations by genre. I found some really good stations, tried (and enjoyed) new genres I'd have never tried if I had to pay for stuff I never heard before…life was good until the Shoutcast list stopped working.
Last time that happened, it was to support the current 2.something version of Winamp. The function originally belonged to version 3, which sucked pretty bad. So I head over to www.winamp.com and find they've skipped version 4 altogether and released version 5.
Well, it's cuter, sounds the same and gives you the option of NOT polluting your desktop with AOL install icons, but the damn Shoutcast list still isn't working. If it's not working by Sunday night I may uninstall it put version 2.something back.
I wonder how our congressmen would have liked these programs around when they were growing up
Friday, February 27, 2004
©2004 San Francisco Chronicle
WHEN RETIRED Adm. John Poindexter left government service last year, it was widely believed that his misguided scheme to collect private data on U. S. citizens was gone for good, too.
It was a bad assumption. The Poindexter-inspired drive to electronically surveil and compile dossiers on millions of Americans is apparently still in gear.
It turns out that the federal government, this time with congressional sanction, has been pressing ahead with plans to create the machinery to mine millions of public and private records, ostensively for information about foreign terrorists.
This unsettling revelation comes months after Congress' much publicized elimination of the Pentagon office that was creating the same technology that, aside from pursuing terrorists, could invade personal privacy and cause irreparable harm to the civil liberties of law-abiding Americans.
Known as Total Information Awareness, the Pentagon project was engineered by Poindexter, President Reagan's national security adviser, who was convicted of conspiracy, lying to Congress and more in the Iran-Contra scandal. Poindexter resurfaced in the Bush White House, but was dismissed again in August after public outrage over his terrorist futures marketing idea.
Total Information Awareness endeavored to screen out terrorist acts by cataloging individuals' traits: securing their travel plans, arrest records, passport applications, work permits, driver's licenses, credit-card purchases, choice of books, medical records or anything else.
The implications of the government compiling such vast dossiers on Americans -- with great potential for abuse -- were harrowing. So, again spurred by public uproar, Congress shut it down -- or so we thought.
It was an illusion. The work persists, only now Congress farms it out to various government agencies.
It's time for further congressional action to shut down this data-mining idea once and for all.
I did notice a bit of a disrespectful attitude
Top query to also-rans: Why?
Sharpton, Kucinich defend campaigns
By Kirsten Scharnberg
Tribune national correspondent
February 27, 2004
LOS ANGELES -- In the opening minutes of Thursday night's debate, Larry King zoned in on the two candidates sitting at the far end of the table and asked them each a pointed question.
"Rev. Sharpton," he said, "why are you in this race?"
"Congressman Kucinich," the CNN host asked a few moments later, "why are you here?"
The two long-shot Democratic presidential candidates had ready answers: That they each added alternative voices to the public debate, that they represented constituencies not traditionally represented, that both hailed from outside the political establishment. Dennis Kucinich, ever the optimist, went so far as to answer, "I'm here to be the next president of the United States."
Still can't go to Cuba
US lifts Libya travel ban, encourages deeper ties
By Terence Hunt, Associated Press, 2/27/2004
WASHINGTON -- The United States lifted a longstanding ban on travel to Libya yesterday and invited American companies to begin planning their return, after Moammar Khadafy's government affirmed that it was responsible for the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 in 1988.
The administration also encouraged Libya to establish an official presence in Washington by opening an "interests section," a diplomatic office a classification beneath an embassy. And Washington will expand its diplomatic presence in Tripoli.
The White House announcement rescinded travel restrictions that have been in place for 23 years against Libya, which the United States had long branded a sponsor of state terrorism.
Allowing US travel to Libya would give American companies an opportunity to do lucrative business legally in Libya's rich oil fields. It also would help Khadafy emerge from semi-isolation.
US firms that had holdings in Libya before sanctions were imposed were authorized to negotiate the terms of renewing their operations, the White House said. But the companies will be required to obtain US approval of any agreement, if economic sanctions remain.
The Treasury Department said the prohibition on flights to Libya by US carriers remained for now, even though the travel ban was lifted.
The United States has been moving toward improved relations with Tripoli since Khadafy renounced the development of weapons of mass destruction and allowed weapons inspectors to verify that his country was abandoning nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons programs. "While more remains to be done, Libya's actions have been serious, credible, and consistent with Colonel Khadafy's public declaration that Libya seeks to play a role in `building a new world free from [weapons of mass destruction] and from all forms of terrorism,' " a White House statement said.
The easing of restrictions was cheered in Tripoli.
"The Americans are welcome here anytime," said Abdul Tahar, a student selling carpets and prayer rugs in Tripoli in the old Medina district. "American tourists and American dollars. Anything that will improve the situation here is welcome."
I think I see a pattern
Scalia Took Trip Set Up by Lawyer in Two Cases
Kansas visit in 2001 came within weeks of the Supreme Court hearing arguments.
By Richard A. Serrano and David G. Savage
Times Staff Writers
February 27, 2004
WASHINGTON — Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia was the guest of a Kansas law school two years ago and went pheasant hunting on a trip arranged by the school's dean, all within weeks of hearing two cases in which the dean was a lead attorney.
The cases involved issues of public policy important to Kansas officials. Accompanying Scalia on the November 2001 hunting trip were the Kansas governor and the recently retired state Senate president, who flew with Scalia to the hunting camp aboard a state plane.
Two weeks before the trip, University of Kansas School of Law Dean Stephen R. McAllister, along with the state's attorney general, had appeared before the Supreme Court to defend a Kansas law to confine sex offenders after they complete their prison terms.
Two weeks after the trip, the dean was before the high court to lead the state's defense of a Kansas prison program for treating sex criminals.
Scalia was hosted by McAllister, who also served as Kansas state solicitor, when he visited the law school to speak to students. At Scalia's request, McAllister arranged for the justice to go pheasant hunting after the law school event. And the dean enlisted then-Gov. Bill Graves and former state Senate President Dick Bond, both Republicans, to go as well.
During the weekend of hunting in north-central Kansas, Graves and Bond said in separate interviews recently, they did not talk about the cases with Scalia, nor did they view the trip as a way to win his favor.
Scalia later sided with Kansas in both cases.
In a written statement, Scalia said: "I do not think that spending time at a law school in which the counsel in pending cases was the dean could reasonably cause my impartiality to be questioned. Nor could spending time with the governor of a state that had matters before the court."
Earlier this year, the Los Angeles Times reported that Scalia had been a guest of Vice President Dick Cheney on Air Force Two when they went duck hunting in southern Louisiana. That trip came shortly after the high court had agreed to hear Cheney's appeal seeking to keep secret his national energy policy task force.
The details of the Louisiana hunting trip, coupled with the visit to Kansas, provide a rare look at a Supreme Court justice who has socialized with government officials at times when legal matters important to them were before the high court.
Federal law says that "any justice or judge shall disqualify himself in any proceeding in which his impartiality might be questioned." By tradition and court policy, justices are free to determine for themselves what constitutes a conflict.
Another inaccurate headline
A direct vote by year-end is NOT part of the U.S. transition plan.
Shiite Leader Reluctantly Backs U.S. Transition Plan
The cleric, who helped derail two proposals, wants U.N. guarantee of a direct vote by year-end.
By Patrick J. McDonnell
Times Staff Writer
February 27, 2004
BAGHDAD — In a boost for the Bush administration, Iraq's leading Shiite Muslim cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani, signaled his reluctant support Thursday for a U.S.-backed blueprint to create an Iraqi caretaker government until direct elections can be held.
But the man considered to be one of the most influential in Iraq also called for a United Nations guarantee of elections by the end of the year and appeared to warn that he would not tolerate further delays. Shiites are the largest group in the country, accounting for more than 60% of the population.
The pointed declaration from a powerful leader who has twice helped scuttle plans for the transfer of power in Iraq helps open the way for Washington to end its official occupation by June 30.
Plans call for political power to be turned over on that date to a still-undetermined body of Iraqis who would govern until direct elections are held. However, U.S. troops are expected to remain in the country for at least another year under terms of an agreement to be negotiated with a new Iraqi administration.
From his base in the holy city of Najaf, the reclusive Sistani has pushed for direct elections, which presumably would lead to a government dominated by Iraq's long-repressed Shiite majority. Shiite protesters routinely hoist his image aloft in marches to demand such balloting.
"It is vital to understand that this [provisional] government is going to be valid for a short period of time and that it should be replaced as soon as possible by a democratically elected and fully recognized" body, said a statement issued by Sistani's office in Najaf, south of Baghdad
Glad they're back at work
No further comment until the details of the agreement are released.
Union, Stores Reach a Deal to End Strike
The rank and file, out since October, will vote this weekend. A two-tier system for wages and health benefits appears to be central to the contract.
By James F. Peltz, Melinda Fulmer and Ronald D. White
Times Staff Writers
February 27, 2004
Negotiators reached a deal Thursday night that could end the California supermarket strike and lockout, a bitter fight that highlighted the national debate over how much companies should pay for workers' healthcare coverage.
After 16 straight days of bargaining, the deal was struck in a conference room at a hotel in Orange County. Neither side would provide details.
People close to the talks said the supermarkets scored victories in their bid to cut labor costs and curtail spending on health benefits — in large part through a two-tier system under which new hires would earn less per hour and receive skimpier health benefits than veterans — but the United Food and Commercial Workers Union said the proposed contract "preserves affordable healthcare" and job security for its members.
Pickets won't immediately drop their signs and return to their old jobs. The pact must be ratified by the tens of thousands of UFCW members who until last October had worked at 852 Vons, Pavilions, Ralphs and Albertsons stores in Central and Southern California.
The voting is scheduled for Saturday and Sunday, and the results probably will be tallied by Sunday night, according to the joint statement by the seven UFCW locals in the dispute.
UFCW leaders have agreed to recommend that the contract be ratified, and approval is expected, the supermarkets said in a joint statement. As the word swiftly spread on picket lines, members, living on strike pay for nearly five months, indicated they were ready to do just that.
I wish I didn't understand their surprise
Quote of note:
As recently as the 1960s, a prominent black physician bought a home in the Peyton Forest area and white homeowners were so inflamed that Atlanta Mayor Ivan Allen agreed to erect a permanent wooden barrier around the neighborhood, said Andy Ambrose, deputy director of the Atlanta History Center. The Peyton Forest Wall, as it was called, stood about 4 feet tall. It was designed to prevent the entrance of moving vans.
When he takes newcomers to look at houses in southern DeKalb County, real estate attorney Robert Burroughs offers them a powerful counter-narrative.
Usually, he drives them to Hunt Valley Estates in Lithonia, where mansions priced at $500,000 and more sit among tall pines, with iron gates and topiary hedges reminiscent of English manors.
He points out his own home. And then he waits for it to sink in.
"They say, 'This is a community of all black folks?' It's inconceivable to them," Burroughs said. "They want to pack up and come here, job or no job."
Atlanta Suburbs Bloom for Blacks
Affluent new arrivals are finding the good life -- and issues that whites in similar communities have to confront, such as weak public schools.
By Ellen Barry
Times Staff Writer
February 27, 2004
LITHONIA, Ga. — When she first turned down the road into Sandstone Estates, with its velour-soft swells of lawn, Italianate fountains and circular driveways, Diana Clarkson asked the question that newcomers always ask: Are these really all owned by black people?
Clarkson, 41, had lived in suburbs most of her life. One thing all those communities had in common — other than good public schools and high-end grocery stores — was that very few black families lived there. Clarkson's last home was in Westchester County, N.Y., where the IBM executive with a six-figure salary was frequently mistaken for a nanny.
Here, suddenly, was a land populated almost entirely by people like herself: African American judges, doctors and college professors. It was a place, the first Clarkson had seen, where her son could grow up middle-class without being reminded that he is an outsider.
She was moved. The subdivision of Lionshead, where she bought land, had no history — much of it was still open red clay — but she could close her eyes and envision the brick homes and backyard barbecues, and a vibrant network of neighbors who had chosen each other.
Clarkson had enrolled in a kind of social experiment — one that, 5 1/2 years later, has had mixed results for her.
Over the last decade, affluent, professional African Americans have poured into the Atlanta metropolitan area faster than any other region in the country, and many are settling in predominantly black suburbs, such as Lithonia, in southern DeKalb County.
As they grow, Atlanta's black suburbs have begun to accumulate both social cachet and political power. Populating freshly built neighborhoods, middle-class blacks can recognize "something really new, really different is going on here," said Roderick Harrison, a demographer.
"The entire black suburban experience in the north has involved urban pioneers integrating white neighborhoods," said Harrison, of the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies in Washington. "Here, you're moving into territory that's essentially virgin. You're there, you come in, you enjoy your new status. This is real arrival. This is living large."
It will be brought up the next time she runs for as much as dogcatcher so I'm not going to ask her to mean it
Calpundit thinks she should apologize and mean it. Since I can't remember the last sincere public apology I heard, I think that's an unfair double standard.
Brown rips into Bush administration official
KEN THOMAS
Associated Press
MIAMI - U.S. Rep. Corrine Brown verbally attacked a top Bush administration official during a briefing on the Haiti crisis Wednesday, calling the President's policy on the beleaguered nation "racist" and his representatives "a bunch of white men."
Her outburst was directed at Assistant Secretary of State Roger Noriega during a closed-door meeting on Capitol Hill. Noriega, a Mexican-American, is the State Department's top official for Latin America.
"I think it was an emotional response of her frustration with the administration," said David Simon, a spokesman for the Jacksonville Democrat. He noted that Brown, who is black, is "very passionate about Haiti."
Brown sat directly across the table from Noriega and yelled into a microphone. Her comments sent a hush over the hourlong meeting, which was attended by about 30 people, including several members of Congress and Bush administration officials.
Noriega later told Brown: "As a Mexican-American, I deeply resent being called a racist and branded a white man," according to three participants.
Brown then told him "you all look alike to me," the participants said.
During the meeting, Brown criticized the administration's response to the escalating violence in Haiti, where rebels opposing President Jean-Bertrand Aristide's government have seized control of large parts of the country.
After her comments about white men, Noriega said he would "relay that to (Secretary of State) Colin Powell and (national security adviser) Condoleezza Rice the next time I run into them," participants said. Powell and Rice are black.
A State department spokesman did not return a phone message.
U.S. Rep. Mark Foley, R-West Palm Beach, who organized the meeting, called the comments "disappointing."
"To sit there and browbeat this man who is a Mexican-American and call him names, it was inappropriate," Foley said.
Brown has criticized the detention of Haitian migrants fleeing their country and the freezing of millions of dollars in aid over flawed 2000 legislative elections in the impoverished Caribbean nation. In a statement Wednesday, she made parallels to the disputed 2000 election in Florida.
"It simply mystifies me how President Bush, a president who was selected by the Supreme Court under more than questionable circumstances (in my district alone 27,000 votes were thrown out), is telling another country that their elections were not fair and that they are therefore undeserving of aid or international recognition," Brown said.
Participants at the meeting included eight members of Florida's congressional delegation, U.S. Reps. Christopher Cox, R-Calif., and Maxine Waters, D-Calif.; John Maisto, U.S. Ambassador to the Organization of American States, and Adolfo Franco, an assistant administrator with the U.S. Agency for International Development.
Fair enough
via BlackGayBlogger

You're A People's History of the United States!
by Howard Zinn
After years of listening to other peoples' lies, you decided you've
had enough. Now you're out to tell it like it is, with all the gory details and nothing
left out. Instead of respecting leaders, you want to know what the common people have to
offer. But this revolution still has a long way to go, and you're not against making a
little profit while you wait. Honesty is your best policy.
Take the Book Quiz
at the Blue Pyramid.
Baby Bush and his Alliterative Associates
Boy.
First teachers are terrorists.
Florida politicians debated how the Haitian refugees should be treated. Gov. Jeb Bush called one boatload "hijackers" and said the United States must be careful not to signal desperate Haitians that they should take to "rickety boats or to hijack commercial vessels."
Indecent exposure
Please check out this Mark Fiore animation. I don't want to be laughing alone because people think you're crazy.
"All peoples by their nature reject whoever tries to impose ideas on them."
U.S. Plan for Mideast Reform Draws Ire of Arab Leaders
By STEVEN R. WEISMAN and NEIL MacFARQUHAR
WASHINGTON, Feb. 26 — An American proposal for the world's wealthiest nations to press for economic, political and cultural changes in the Middle East has drawn harsh criticism from Arab leaders and European officials, who say the Bush administration did not consult the countries it seeks to transform.
In addition, a Bush administration official said Thursday that some European officials had suggested they might block the initiative if there was no progress toward peace between Israel and the Palestinians.
The administration, seeking to overcome anti-Western and anti-American sentiments in the Arab world, is circulating a draft of what it calls a "Greater Middle East initiative." It hopes the idea will be adopted at the summit meeting of the eight leading industrial nations in June.
The draft has not been officially released, but after a copy was published earlier this month in Al Hayat, a London-based Arabic newspaper, and an English-language version was posted on its Web site, President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt and Crown Prince Abdullah of Saudi Arabia criticized it as an attempt to dictate change.
"Whoever imagines that it is possible to impose solutions or reform from abroad on any society or region is delusional," Mr. Mubarak said on Wednesday. "All peoples by their nature reject whoever tries to impose ideas on them."
Egypt's three semiofficial dailies — Al Ahram, Al Akhbar and Al Gumhuriya — all reported Mr. Mubarak's remarks, including another pointed statement that the Bush administration was behaving "as if the region and its states do not exist, as if they have no people or societies, as if they have no sovereignty over their land, no ownership."
But that would be too simple and too much like being correct
One Producer of U.S. Beef Wants to Test All Its Cattle
By SANDRA BLAKESLEE
A beef producer in Kansas has proposed testing all its cattle for mad cow disease so it can resume exports to Japan, but it is encountering resistance from the Agriculture Department and other beef producers.
American beef exports have plummeted since Dec. 23 when a cow in Washington State was diagnosed with bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or B.S.E., a fatal disease that can be passed to humans who eat infected cattle tissue.
To assure the safety of its meat, the company, Creekstone Farms of Arkansas City, Kan., a subsidiary of the Enterprise Management Group, wants to use rapid diagnostic tests that are routinely used in Japan and many European nations.
But no rapid tests have been approved by the United States Department of Agriculture, and department officials pointed out yesterday that it was against the law for any company to sell or market any unapproved diagnostic test. They said they would not respond to Creekstone's request until they evaluated the legal, regulatory and trade implications raised.
Other meat producers are upset by the company's request, saying it has broken ranks in an industry besieged by bad news. Dan Murphy, vice president for public affairs at the American Meat Industry, said American beef was so safe that widescale testing was unnecessary.
"Everybody is hurting from the export ban," Mr. Murphy said, "but their solution is not the right one."
Dr. Dean continues to serve the party
Dean Urges Supporters Not to Leave the Party
By ROBERT F. WORTH
NEW HAVEN, Feb. 26 — In his first public appearance since dropping out of the presidential race last week, Howard Dean thanked his supporters here on Thursday night and urged them to stay with the Democratic Party and "not to be tempted by independent or third-party candidates."
Dr. Dean spoke in a packed hotel ballroom to an audience of whooping, clapping supporters who often acted as though their candidate were still in the race.
He did not mention Ralph Nader, who entered the presidential race a few days ago, but a number of those in the audience said they considered his remark about third-party candidates to be a clear reference to Mr. Nader.
Dr. Dean also did not say anything about endorsing another Democrat for president, but he did say, in a characteristic aside, "My staff is absolutely terrified about what I might announce tonight."
Instead, he urged his supporters to back the eventual Democratic nominee, and described his plans to continue influencing the race from the outside.
"Those of you who wish to support another candidate, I encourage that," he said, adding that he would also be happy to have his supporters vote for him in the Connecticut primary on Tuesday. "But remember," he added, "we must all stand together in the end."
There is a very interesting interview on the other side of the link
hat tip to Mr. Willis
Soldier for the Truth - Exposing Bush's talking-points war
Fri Feb 20, 6:27 PM ET
By Marc Cooper LA Weekly Writer
After two decades in the U.S. Air Force, Lieutenant Colonel Karen Kwiatkowski, now 43, knew her career as a regional analyst was coming to an end when in the months leading up to the war in Iraq she felt she was being propagandized by her own bosses.
With masters degrees from Harvard in government and zoology and two books on Saharan Africa to her credit, she found herself transferred in the spring of 2002 to a post as a political/military desk officer at the Defense Departments office for Near East South Asia (NESA), a policy arm of the Pentagon.
Kwiatkowski got there just as war fever was spreading, or being spread as she would later argue, through the halls of Washington. Indeed, shortly after her arrival, a piece of NESA was broken off, expanded and re-dubbed with the Orwellian name of the Office of Special Plans. The OSPs task was, ostensibly, to help the Pentagon develop policy around the Iraq crisis.
She would soon conclude that the OSP a pet project of Vice President Dick Cheney and Defense Secretary Don Rumsfeld was more akin to a nerve center for what she now calls a neoconservative coup, a hijacking of the Pentagon.
Though a lifelong conservative, Kwiatkowski found herself appalled as the radical wing of the Bush administration, including her superiors in the Pentagon planning department, bulldozed internal dissent, overlooked its own intelligence and relentlessly pushed for confrontation with Iraq.
The Post Modern Negro
I'd been planning to discuss The End of Blackness by Debra
Dickerson and thought the end of Black History Month an appropriate time to do
it. But by the time I set out to write I realized whatever I write will only
start out as a discussion of the book. I look at books like this on three
levels: what is the point the author is trying to make, how well the author
support the point, and is this point the one that should be made.
The Point
Viewing Dickerson's book through the lens of
href="http://www.debradickerson.com/next_book.html">the "trailer" posted on her
web site makes you come away with a different view than you do if your only
forewarning of her intent is knowledge of her previous book. Here's a longish
excerpt from her site, the parts that made in interested in the book emphasized:
Now that blacks are
free from whites (i.e. the societal understanding of them as the caste which
can be oppressed and exploited at will), The End of Blackness will argue that
its time for black people to free each other. Blacks can not effectuate
their collective will, unmediated by outsiders or insiders beholden to
outsiders, until they trust themselves and each other to effectuate their
individual wills.
Blacks must locate and embrace the selves they've not known since 1619. Only by
daring to live as autonomous individuals with voluntary group loyalty, only by
being brave enough to chart a course unconcerned with the existence of white
people, only by taking complete responsibility for their comportment and
decisions--only then will blacks be able to achieve collective goals, assess
collective penalties, award collective benefits, and jockey for socio-political
position like fully entitled citizens.
Til now, blacks have been social weaklings buffeted about and passively
informed of their reality (e.g. you may live here but not there, you may sit
there but not here on a city bus, you may protest in this way but not that way)
by the first class citizens, both their protectors and their enemies. It's time
for blacks to engender passivity in others, to inform outsiders of who blacks
are and what will and won't happen in black communities. Blacks must now
stop screaming at the top of their lungs and start speaking with quiet
authority; the authority of the fully entitled, the authority of the calmly
confident, the authority of the self-legitimized citizen who has no intention
of being silenced or marginalized ever again, but who, most importantly, does
not expect to be.
The first step in freeing each other is for black people, collectively, to
surrender, to consciously give up on achieving racial justice. Certainly, they
must renounce any notion of justice meant to even the historical score or to
bring about actual racial integration. The Civil War did not end with Lee's
surrender at Appomattox. Nor did it end with the passage of the 1964 Civil
Rights Act one hundred years later. It continues to this day. But that War over
the social and political position of black people must end and that end can
only come in the form of black surrender. What blacks must surrender is
the notion that they can be made whole for the centuries of loss and
degradation, that whites can be made to suffer guilt and shame equal to the
portion they dealt blacks, that America will ever see itself the way that its
blacks citizens do. America will never feel blacks' ambivalence for the
Founding Fathers, it will never waver from nostalgia for that much vaunted 'Age
of Innocence' that the black experience proves never existed. It can't. If it
did, it would have to come up with another, less glorious definition of itself
because that 'innocence' is that of the criminal whose victim lies mute, buried
in an unmarked grave and lost to history. Whites will never cringe with the shame
blacks feel appropriate; they will never welcome blacks freely into their
neighborhoods and schools. They must abandon the quest for whites'
respect, settling instead for their acceptance, however grudging, of the fact
that interference will be summarily dealt with (and not via bullhorn). Blacks
must cease clutching the unlocked fetters of humiliation and voluntary
outsiderness that hobble them to a view of the present shrink-wrapped to the
circumscribed past. Alas, they don't even have their faces pressed up against
the plate glass window of the future. They should be working towards a day when
segregation is turned on its head, when whites sue blacks for admittance to
black schools, black medical staffs, black businesses. Until then, blacks
will remain the annoying kid brother Mom forces you to tolerate.
This surrender must also acknowledge that blacks are Americans living in
a Euro centric culture, but one which could not have been built without them.
They should feel free to adopt Western culture, reject it, or meld it with some
desired level of Afro- (or other) centrism. But they should make that choice
aware of its consequences (and, of course, free of coercion from
goaltending Blacks and their apologists). In a recent book called a Hope in the
Unseen, a striving black youngster from the ghetto claws his way to Brown
University only to find that the Afrocentrism of his neighborhood education
left him knowing all the words to Lift Every Voice and Sing but clueless as to
who Churchill and Freud were. He was also sorely lacking in the academic
basics. That youngster had mainstream aspirations but was impeded by his
well-meaning black teachers in availing himself of that to which his
citizenship entitled him and for which he had worked so hard.
Blacks must accept that they are a numerical and political minority and must
master the dominant bodies of knowledge even as they fight for the inclusion of
worthy multicultural knowledge. As rational adults, they should concede
that, forced to choose, it should be Churchill over Patrice Lumumba, the Inchon
Landing over the Zulus' David vs Goliath victory over the British. Of course,
they shouldn't have to choose; the goal should be to expand the base of
cultural literacy, one sinew of a strong nation, not play a zero sum game in
which one nugget of western civilization must be jettisoned for every
multicultural nugget included. For the same reason that all schoolchildren need
to master algebra whether they think they'll ever use it or not, blacks must
master the Master's world. They needn't embrace it or even believe it; they
must simply render unto Caesar the things, which are Caesar's. And then subvert
it from within.
This black surrender
is not defeat. It is not an admission that either the racists or the political
conservatives were right all along. It is the mature acknowledgement that,
right or wrong, the past is as rectified as its ever going to be, the future
theirs to claim. Black surrender is both honorable and justified because it is
offered as a response to whites' surrender of the right to exploit and oppress
them or to appease those who do. In short, they've surrendered their right to a
whiteness defined as control over non-whites, as a preordained spot at the top
of every pile, from character, to intellect, to beauty, to talent.
In order to make
future progress possible, blacks have to give up on the past. Tomorrow is their
only option.
This is pretty strong stuff, and for the most part I approve.
I immediately take exception to the chosen language in places…"surrender" is not
an acceptable metaphor when a great number of the people such a statement needs
to reach conceives of themselves as being at war…but overall I was inclined
toward giving her book the benefit of the doubt.
Others, apparently, were not.
href="http://www.villagevoice.com/issues/0408/davis.php">Thulani Davis' review
at the Village Voice gathers the opinion of several reviewers as well as parts
of a telephone interview with Ms. Dickerson. I know this because I tracked down
a fair number of reviews. I assigned races to each of the reviewers and damned
if Ms. Davis' article didn't confirm my breakdown.
The Argument
The title of the book itself starts the discussion. It was
as popular among Black folks as this, from Race
Traitor, proved to be among white folks:
The key to solving the social problems of our age is to
abolish the white race
…which is to say it fell on its face.
The opening section, I believe, is intended to say, "Okay, I
acknowledge all the racism stuff," in the hope that it will get Black folks to
read the prescriptive part. What has happened instead is white folks said, "I
don't have to sit here and be insulted," while Black folks said, "You know all
that and still…" The divide between Black and white opinions on this
book is as stark as that on any other issue. For instance,
href="http://www.motherjones.com/arts/books/2004/01/12_100.html">Michael W.
Robbins at Mother Jones says:
The End of Blackness is a solidly researched account of the
evolution of black identity in America (her "prologue" is about as
concise and direct an account of slavery and its long-standing effects as you
are likely to find).
…while
href="http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9402EFDF1338F93AA15752C0A9629C8B63">Gerald
Early at the New York Times says:
The problem is that the author does not know enough, has
not researched enough, to write an incisive book on African-American life or
American racism. If one listens to a lot of black talk radio or has some bull
sessions with other blacks, nearly every gripe and observation in ''The End of
Blackness'' will be familiar. One does not write a book like this. One gets
over it.
One thing on which all parties agree is the message the book
sends: get over it. MOST reviews make note of the message and I see it myself,
though because I approached the book with certain preconceived notions I can
choose not to see it. That the message is near universally perceived is a good
argument that it's in there, but it's an equally good argument that she hit
either side of a universal nerve. Still, it doesn't seem very many people found
her convincing. If the "coming attractions" article on her site accurately
describes her intent then I have to say she puts it across much better in the
various interviews I've seen laying around the net.
Making The Point
The End of Blackness isn't the first book to suggest Black
people's strategies should assume the mainstream has gone as far as they will
in attacking racism. Derek Bell's "Faces at the Bottom of the Well" is
subtitled "The Permanence of Racism," and is filled with allegories that
explore the repercussions of the idea (ask me about The Racial Preferences Licensing
Act some day). I myself agree strongly about with several point in the preview
quoted above. I just question how it's been said here. In the Village Voice
article, she says:
Whites account for half of her e-mail, she said. "I
hadn't thought about whether whites were trying to move beyond where they are.
I thought they think the race issue is for black people. At first, I was sort
of dismayed by all the e-mails, and said, 'Maybe it is just what white people
want to hear.' "
If she honestly thought "the race issue is for black people,"
she is not the one to teach on racial issues.
Yet I've learned that the inability to put support a point
doesn't necessarily mean the point is false.







