2009 archive
Stand and Deliver 6
This is the pastor who prays for Mr. Obama to die.
Never in my life–and I’ve attended churches most of my life–have I heard a pastor pray for someone to die.
Or preach about how to pee.
Update: Whoops! Forgot to add a title.
Via Balloon Juice.
I’m a Southern Boy. I Know the Code. 0
Saxby Chambliss warns Obama, “Don’t be uppity.“
eBook Reader 0
I found a neat free and open source ebook reader. It’s not big on eye candy, but it is quite functional.
It was designed for Android, but has been ported to both Windows XP and Linux desktop versions. I reviewed it at Geekazine.
I decided to mention it here because I know that my two or three regular readers also read books.
Buzzwords, Reprise 0
In a follow-up to the article I mentioned here, Mike Armstrong writes:
Brendan Remembers 9/11 0
In this week’s column.
Never Wrong. Always Right. 0
Because they are Masters of the Universe.
“Ladybug, Ladybug, Fly Away Home” 0
’cause we miss you:
You Know You Are a Geek When . . . 0
. . . you see an automobile commercial talking about RPMs and you think of “Redhat Package Management.”
Study Hard. Stay in School. 0
Social Insurance 0
Jim Henley considers health insurance as “social insurance.” The whole think is worth a look; I’ve omitted all but his definition of “social insurance” and his conclusion:
(snip)
There are perfectly coherent ideological arguments against social insurance. If you believe all taxation is theft, that government is illegitimate, social insurance is a form of taxation, and a crime. If you believe that what’s good about “the American system of free enterprise” is that fear of catastrophe keeps people in line, then social insurance undermines social cohesion, and that’s bad. If you believe that “people make their own luck,” or that fortune is a sign of divine favor and misfortune the judgment of the Almighty, then social insurance rewards the undeserving. I don’t find these arguments compelling any more, but they exist and are viable positions.
There are also incoherent arguments against social insurance, the chief of which is the notion that any version of it must somehow be worse than the bizarre patchwork of subsidies, regulations, entry barriers and backstops that we have now. But these are arguments against doing social insurance, not refutations of the concept.
Emails 0
Oliver Burkeman, writing at the Guardian, has obtained super-secret completely made-up presidential emails.
One of them:
To: Malia Obama
Subject: Re: Day off next Tuesday?No you can NOT take the day off school in order to avoid being turned into a communist by “the most dangerously liberal president in America’s history”. . . Also, communists and liberals are totally different. Ask your sister.
Contradictions 0
I could not have said it as well as Noz.
Dossiers 0
On the Media reports:
A key to their strategy is using certain video games to collect data.
Follow the link to listen or listen below (MP3):
The transcript is scheduled to be added Monday.
Ahh! To Be in Pennsylvania for the Whisperings of Autumn 0
Teacher strikes. It’s tradition in southeastern Pennsylvania.
Union officials said the school board had made work-rule changes that amounted to a lockout, mainly adding 20 minutes to the elementary-school schedule. The board contended that any work stoppage would be illegal without 48 hours’ notice.
By and large, teachers in this part of the world are paid pretty well. Not great, but okay.
In such circumstances, strikes and threats of strikes usually have more to do with working conditions and with a sense of being generally mistreated by management than with any quantifiable item, though unions will ask for pay or hours changes because you cannot negotiate courtesy.
I worked in a unionized industry for many years. The managers and departments who had “union problems” (grievances, work-to-rule, and stuff like that) were invariably–not usually, invariably–the ones who treated their workers like dirt.