From Pine View Farm

January, 2012 archive

Facebook Frolics (Updated) 1

The (US Supreme Court–ed.) justices on Tuesday rejected appeals from Pennsylvania and West Virginia involving questions about the limits on criticism from students and where the authority of school officials ends.

The high-court decision left standing lower-court rulings that two Pennsylvania students could not be disciplined at school for parodies of their principals that they created on home computers and posted online.

In the West Virginia case, an appeals court upheld the suspension of a student who created a web page that suggested another student had a sexually transmitted disease, and invited classmates to comment.

So there’s one precedent that lets punishment for out-of-school behavior stand one one that does not.

That clears things up nicely.

There’s more about the Pennsylvania case here.

Addendum:

See Glomarization’s comment below. H/T to Glomization, Esq., for casting some light on this.

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“An Armed Society Is a Polite Society” 0

A 65-year-old lawyer was arrested Wednesday for carrying a loaded handgun aboard an American Airlines jet at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport.

Judith Kenney was released later Wednesday on her own recognizance, said her attorney, Dallas lawyer David Finn.

Kenney carries a handgun for protection but had forgotten that it was in a computer bag she carried on board the plane, he said. She has no criminal history, he said.

I may be a cynical old grouch, but it seems to me that anyone who forgets he or she is packing heat can’t be trusted to carry a rod.

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Artful Dodger 0

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QOTD 0

Willard Van Orman Quine:

One man’s observation is another man’s closed book or flight of fancy.

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The Edge of Night 0

From Pine View Farm will go dark tomorrow in opposition to the “Let Hollywood Censor the Internet” bill, also known as SOPA.

More here.

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Powerpoint Is Evil 0

The prosecution presents Exhibit 1,342,923,673.5.

Via Balloon Juice.

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Cannibal Capitalism 0

This dude should be on Wall Street, not on 7th Ave. He’s clearly got the bankster moves.

In a blatant attempt to capitalize on the birth of Jay-Z’s and Beyonce’s daughter, a New York City designer has filed an application to trademark the baby’s name so that he can place it on an assortment of children’s clothing.

(snip)

Mbeh’s trademark application was filed without consent or knowledge of the infant’s famous parents. The application, which cost Mbeh $325, was filed by Patricia Elie, a Queens lawyer.

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Legacy 0

Bankster to son:
Click for a larger image.

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Wars and Rumors of War 1

“You furnish the pictures; I’ll furnish the war.–Willam Randolph Hearst.

I’ll quote noz, who said, in a post on something else:

a related issue is the persistent double standard about how we talk about other nations. american candidates regularly and openly discuss which foreign countries they want to attack. but if a foreign leader or potential leader ever did anything like that, the american press would go completely apeshit.

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Peeing in the Wind, Reprise 0

At Psychology Today, Dr. Jack Shafer comments on the absurdity of the belief so dear to Americans, that wars are like John Wayne movies:

We teach our marines to kill and then wonder why they can’t do it humanely. Taking another person’s life is a difficult task. We need a reason to kill someone; a good one. Marines are told who the enemy is and ordered to kill them. The rationale for killing follows soon thereafter, for without rationale, killing becomes a difficult chore.

The easiest way to develop rationale is to place yourself above your enemy. I am better than he is; therefore, he deserves to die. In all military conflicts, the combatants demean their opponents, . . . .

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Droning On 0

On the Media looks at the invasion of the skybots:

The Federal Aviation Administration is preparing to announce new regulations for small camera-equipped drones, versions of which you can already buy at your local mall. Lots of people are eager to hear the FAA’s decision, from energy execs and environmentalists to police and protesters. Brooke talks to Matt Waite, founder of U. Nebraska’s Drone Journalism Lab, about some of the “cool” and “creepy” ramifications of drone technology. Also, check out this blog post for some cool examples of journalistic drones in action.

Follow the link to listen.

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419 on ‘Roids 0

Don’t believe everything you read:

So when a South Korean man received an email promising him tens of millions of dollars in a lottery scheme if he travelled to South Africa, he fell for it.

The offer turned out to be a so-called 419 scam on an epic scale. South African police say the credulous man arrived with his daughter only for both to be taken hostage in a township for four days.

Why persons will believe stuff they read on a computer when the wouldn’t believe the same stuff if it came in the mail continues to baffle me.

H/T to my brother for the link.

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“The Only Nation in the World That Ever Went to the Poor House in an Automobile” 0

Via Atrios.

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The Dog that Didn’t Huntsman 0

Flops with the Flipper.

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QOTD 0

Daniel Boorstein, from the Quotemaster (subscribe here):

It is only a short step from exaggerating what we can find in the world to exaggerating our power to remake the world. Expecting more novelty than there is, more greatness than there is, and more strangeness than there is, we imagine ourselves masters of a plastic universe. But a world we can shape to our will is a shapeless world.

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Everybody Knows Pi R Round 0

There’s a kerfuffle on the left coast about whether Algebra II should be required for high school graduation:

(The Palo Alto math faculty’s) counterpush against raising graduation standards to include Algebra II has angered educators and parents who believe schools, including districts like Palo Alto with strong college-going cultures, are failing poor and minority students by expecting too little of them.

The parents point to startling statistics: In the Palo Alto and Gunn high schools’ 2011 class of seniors, only 15 percent of African-Americans and 40 percent of Latinos completed the prerequisites for the University of California and California State University with a C or better. That compares with 79.5 percent districtwide meeting those so-called A-G requirements.

When I went to school, the “tracking” system was popular. My little high school had academic and general tracks. “Academic” students got the languages, almost all math courses, and all the sciences. If they took shop or typing, it was usually a one year elective; “general students” got less in the way of languages and sciences and more in the way of shop, secretarial skills (typing and shorthand), and how to be a housewife home ec.

Tracking has gone out of fashion; too often, it seemed subject to misuse (the Wikipedia article gives a fairly even-handed description of the objections to it).

I got the whole math deal: two algebras, geometry, trig, and pre-calc (we did not have a calculus class). Algebra I, geometry, and trig were pieces of cake. My mother was my Algebra II teacher; I remember that class for other reasons.

But the pre-calc, well, the stuff wasn’t making any sense to me. When it came to proving that one equals zero, I could do it by rote, but I didn’t see it (to my daughter the math teacher, it’s as obvious as a shark in a swimming pool; she must have gotten the math gene from her mother).

I’m inclined to think the math faculty is on to something. I suspect that Algebra II is not for everybody.

I do know this: since I graduated from high school over four decades ago, I have used Algebra I skills (solve for one variable) precisely five times–that’s more than once per decade!–and Algebra II skills never.

Afterthought:

And don’t tell me Algebra taught me logic. Geometry and Boolean Algebra, maybe. Algebra taught me that X is horizontal and Y is vertical.

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We Need Single Payer 0

The Denver Post talks with a Taiwanese immigrant who is aghast at the expense and inefficiency of the US health insurance industry. A nugget:

He’s figured that (not only that it’s more expensive, but that it doesn’t work very well–ed.) out already as well. “I found in total every year I have to pay $17,000 to the hospital and insurance company if I use maximum service. Compare $17,000 with $700, that’s 24 times difference.”

But he’s not going to get 24 times better health care, which he has discovered as well. “One day my daughter got sick. We sent her to hospital, and imagined this society has good hospitals and advanced technologies that exist to serve people. We waited from 7 p.m. to 11 p.m. in emergency room. With this speed of service, I began to question my understanding of the word ’emergency.’?” He says that he looked it up, just to verify that “emergency” is the word for something that requires immediate action.

Read it.

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Welfare (Cowboy) Cadillacs 0

Putting Ron Paul’s newsletters in the color mirror: A little word substitution makes the hate more noticeable, does it not?

If Ron Paul's news letters had reflected the truth that most welfare recipients are not not-white.

Via Bob Cesca’s Awesome Blog.

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Eyes Averted 0

At the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, MIT professor John Tirman wonders why dead civilians in far-away places with strange sounding names become nonentities in American wars. He identifies several factors, which I have extracted below.

Why the American silence on our wars’ main victims?

  • A large role is played by what cultural historian Richard Slotkin calls our “frontier myth”–by which righteous violence is used to subdue or annihilate the savages of whatever land we’re trying to conquer
  • The frontier myth is also steeped in racism, which is deeply embedded in American culture’s derogatory depictions of the enemy. Such belittling makes it all the easier to put foreigners at risk of violence.
  • More than 30 years ago, social psychologists developed the “just world” theory, which argues that humans naturally assume that the world should be orderly and rational. When our “just world” is disrupted, we tend to explain it away as an aberration.

Follow the link for background on his reasoning and a fuller explanation of each one.

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Two for the Price of One 0

Romney repents his vulture capitalism, so scientists create a Romdroid and a spare Romdroid.  The two robots keep contracdicting each other on every issue.
Click for a larger image.

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