Communion Of Dreams


Say what?
January 13, 2009, 10:12 am
Filed under: NPR, Society

Usually, I tend to dismiss the supposed ‘elitist’ label applied to NPR.  You don’t have to be in the upper class to be well informed, or have a wide range of interests.  You don’t need an advanced degree, or a high-paying job, to listen to intelligent discussions or appreciate good artwork in any medium.  In fact, I am none of those things – not upper class, no advanced degree, never held a high-paying job – and yet I am fairly well addicted to NPR and have been for almost 30 years.

But every once in a while they run a piece that just makes me scratch my head.  No, I’m not talking about a segment on some obscure bit of literature or music that only a few people know enough about to appreciate.  I’m talking about an attitude that is  so widely divorced from my reality that I have a hard time wrapping my head around it.  One piece on Weekend Edition Sunday two days ago did exactly this.  It was about “food trends” for 2009, particularly discussing the impact of the recession on the topic, and contained this comment from the featured subject of the piece:

Home Cooking With A Twist

The recession has brought back home-cooked meals in a big way, Wolf says.

“It will mean an increase in cooking classes, because people will have to learn how to cook since we haven’t been cooking at home for many years,” she says.

Say what?

Who the hell never cooks at home?  Nobody I know since I left college.  Yeah, sure, Americans have tended towards more “prepared foods” for decades, to make our busy lives a little easier.  Most people can’t spend hours each day preparing all their meals from scratch – it just isn’t practical.  But that doesn’t mean we don’t cook at home.  Most people I know only eat out (or bring home take-out food) a couple of times a month, at most.  And while some “prepared foods” are complete meals, almost always there is some level of actual cooking involved.  The notion that people will have to take cooking classes in order to manage even basic cooking at home is absurd to my mind.  Sure, there are probably very few people who can manage a Julia Child level of cooking at home, but that doesn’t mean that most of us are eating out or surviving on hotdogs.

Sheesh.

Jim Downey



Hey, it’s not like it’s *their* money.
January 6, 2009, 9:41 pm
Filed under: ACLU, Bruce Schneier, Civil Rights, Government, NPR, Predictions, Society, Terrorism, Travel

Well, in spite of the fact that I doubt it will really change anything, this is good news:

Transportation Security Administration officials and JetBlue Airways are paying $240,000 to settle (.pdf) a discrimination lawsuit against a District of Columbia man who, as a condition of boarding a domestic flight, was forced to cover his shirt that displayed Arabic writing.

Oh noes! Not evil Arabic writing!!  Next thing you know, there’ll be evil Arabic numerals, taking over our culture!

According to a civil rights lawsuit, TSA and JetBlue demanded Raed Jarrar to sit at the back of a 2006 flight from New York to Oakland because his shirt read “We Will Not Be Silent” in English and Arabic.

As Jarrar was waiting to board, TSA officials approached him and said he was required to remove his shirt because passengers were not comfortable with it, according to the lawsuit. The suit claimed one TSA official commented that the Arabic lettering was akin to wearing a T-shirt at a bank stating, “I am a robber.”

The lawsuit claimed Jarrar, 30, invoked the First Amendment but acquiesced after it became clear to him that he would not be allowed to fly if he did not cover his shirt with one given to him by JetBlue officials.

From Jarrar’s blog, this:

“All people in this country have the right to be free of discrimination and to express their own opinions,” said Jarrar, who is currently employed with the American Friends Service Committee, an organization committed to peace and social justice. “With this outcome, I am hopeful that TSA and airlines officials will think twice before practicing illegal discrimination and that other travelers will be spared the treatment I endured.”

Nice sentiment. And not a bad settlement – I’m glad to see him get the money.  But I am highly skeptical that it will really change anything – it’s not, after all, like the people who did this will be paying the money out of their own pockets.  The Security Theater will continue, and there will still be instances of absurd behaviour such as we saw last week:

All Things Considered, January 2, 2009 · A Muslim-American passenger, one of nine members of a family detained and questioned at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport after fellow passengers on their AirTran flight reported hearing a suspicious conversation, says the family is trying not to be angry at what happened.

So, yeah, Jarrar’s settlement is good news, but only one small bit of good news, and mostly for him.

Jim Downey

(Cross posted to UTI.)



It’s always worse than they first tell you.
January 4, 2009, 9:55 pm
Filed under: ACLU, Civil Rights, Government, Politics, Privacy, Society, Terrorism

That’s pretty much my maxim for dealing with any government agency, at any level: no matter what they tell you, the situation will always turn out to be worse the more you find out about it.

You know what’s going to happen when they’re talking about road construction being delayed or taxes having to go up.  I expect it when I hear that the economy is “having difficulties”.  That’s bad enough.  But when they start talking about infringements on your civil liberties, you might as well reach for the lube and grab your ankles.

Latest such instance:

More Groups Than Thought Monitored in Police Spying

The Maryland State Police surveillance of advocacy groups was far more extensive than previously acknowledged, with records showing that troopers monitored — and labeled as terrorists — activists devoted to such wide-ranging causes as promoting human rights and establishing bike lanes.

Yeah, those evil bike-lane loving terrorists had to be watched!

Police have acknowledged that the monitoring, which took place during the administration of then-Gov. Robert L. Ehrlich Jr. (R), spiraled out of control, with an undercover trooper spending 14 months infiltrating peaceful protest groups. Troopers have said they inappropriately labeled 53 individuals as terrorists in their database, information that was shared with federal authorities. But the new documents reveal a far more expansive set of police targets and indicate that police did not close some files until late 2007.

Your tax dollars at work.  Well, if you live in Maryland.  But note that bit about sharing the information with the federal authorities?  Here’s a bit more from the same article:

The activists fear that they will land on federal watch lists, in part because the police shared their intelligence information with at least seven area law enforcement agencies.

HIDTA Director Tom Carr said his organization’s database became a dead end for the information because law enforcement agencies cannot access the data directly. The database instead acts as a “pointer”: Investigators enter case information and the database indicates whether another agency has related material and instructs investigators to contact that agency. The activists were not a match with any other data, Carr said, and their information has since purged.

“The problem lies in the fact that once [the state police] checked it out and found it was not accurate, they should have removed it from the system,” Carr said. “And they did not do that.”

So of course, we should trust that they have done it now, right?

Sure.

See, if you’re a member of, say, PETA or the ACLU, those organizations had a file tied to that federal database.  One which indicated that there was something worth monitoring.  Giving justification to any other agency which found that such a file existed to “investigate further”, regardless of the fact that the file should have never existed in the first place.

Kafka would be proud.

Remember: it’s always worse than they first tell you.

Jim Downey

(Cross posted to UTI.)



Revenge? Justice?
December 30, 2008, 3:23 pm
Filed under: Civil Rights, Constitution, Government, MetaFilter, Religion, Society, Violence

This will not be an easy post to read. If you’re looking for something light and happy, move along.

So, when is something an act of revenge and torture? And when is it a simple act of justice?

A doctor can remove your hand to save you from death by gangrene, or a doctor can remove your hand as a state-sanctioned punishment. What is the difference?

I’m going to be very up-front about my bias here: my father was murdered, and were it up to me his killer would have been put to death just as soon as there was no reasonable doubt that he was guilty of the crime. That’s a simple hankering after revenge. I also think that there is a legitimate case to be made that it makes sense for the State to execute murderers, but that’s not what I want to talk about here. Rather I just mention this so you know where my bias is.

A man blinds a woman who has rejected his offer of marriage. Does it with acid. What punishment does he deserve? Can you envision being blinded with acid could be a legitimate, state-sanctioned punishment? Now wait, there’s more to the story:

Late last month, an Iranian court ordered that five drops of the same chemical be placed in each of her attacker’s eyes, acceding to Bahrami’s demand that he be punished according to a principle in Islamic jurisprudence that allows a victim to seek retribution for a crime. The sentence has not yet been carried out.

The implementation of corporal punishments allowed under Islamic law, including lashing, amputation and stoning, has often provoked controversy in Iran, where many people have decried such sentences as barbaric. This case is different.

Yes, it is different. The usual sentence under the law is for the offending person to pay “blood money” compensation to his victim. And in the society where women are not valued as much as men, this penalty can be a small amount – enough so that such acid attacks are on the rise. But there is one way in which men and women are equal under the law: she can demand retribution. In this case, literally an ‘eye for an eye’. From the same article:

“At an age at which I should be putting on a wedding dress, I am asking for someone’s eyes to be dripped with acid,” she said in a recent interview, as rain poured against the windows of her parents’ small apartment in a lower-middle-class neighborhood of Tehran. “I am doing that because I don’t want this to happen to any other women.”

Some officials also said the punishment would be a deterrent.

“If propaganda is carried out on how acid attackers are punished, it will prevent such crimes in the future,” Mahmoud Salarkia, deputy attorney general of Tehran, told reporters after the court issued its ruling.

OK, revenge? Justice?

I spent a good deal of time reading about this case, and the reactions that people have to it, over on MeFi. Here’s a good comment I want to share:

Cruelty isn’t justice.

There is no such thing as justice. Some wrongs, once perpetrated, can never be undone, balanced, or compensated for. Justice is a fiction we permit ourselves to aid in codifying society’s response to rule breakers. If we do too little, we live at the mercy of the most brutal among us. If we do too much, we become the most brutal among us. So we try to find a middle ground, and we call that justice, and try to forget that there is no magic formula for deterring violence or relieving the victims of cruelty. A cruel and brutal response to cruelty and brutality absolutely can and does continue the cycle. Unfortunately, a measured and merciful response to cruelty and brutality doesn’t necessarily break the cycle, either. So we aim for whatever measure of consistency best helps us sleep at night. And as always, your mileage will vary.

And here’s an excerpt from another:

Laws are a citizen’s primary education in justice, and Shari’ah is quite clear. Women living under Shari’ah are second-class citizens from the perspective of testimony, inheritance, marriage, and divorce. Two female witnesses are needed to convict one man, a woman inherits half of what her brother will receive, Muslim women may not marry non-Muslim men, but Muslim men may marry non-Muslim women, (plus polygamy is allowed but not polyandry,) and men may initiate a divorce but women may not.

Is it any surprise that men who grow up with such laws would sometimes choose to destroy the face of their beloved? Shari’ah law enforces a sexist double standard that disadvantages women, and so everyone treats them as disadvantaged. Such legal standards have a strong educative effect: they persuade citizens of their justice because they are backed by the tripartite authorities of tradition, the state’s allegedly justified violence, and God’s Word. Yet within that tradition, from the position of an authorized jurist, and with the backing of an alternative interpretation of Scripture, there are plenty of nuances and interpretive freedoms that would allow a jurist to steer Shari’ah towards more progressive ends.

The one place where women aren’t supposed to be unequal is in regards to their equality before Allah. Thus, in matters of retribution, they deserve the same protections that a man would receive. Unfortunately, so many of the other procedural inequalities don’t really allow that, which is why this seemingly barbarous punishment is the best way to achieve equal procedural consideration for women and men: the question before the court was equality or patriarchy, and it has chosen equality. Equality, in this case, means judicial blinding.

Without laws that are basically fair and equitable, how can we expect citizens to relate to each other as equals? And without equality, how can there be an end to the acid, for both victims and perpetrators?

There’s a lot to make you think – and think hard – in that thread, about what is the nature of justice and revenge. We make the assumption now that jail time is the appropriate form of punishment for almost all serious crimes, fines for lesser ones. But those forms of punishment do not hit all equally, nor do they really seem to work particularly well. Then add in the layer that in this situation, in this country, a woman getting equal treatment under the law is actually progress.

As I said, I have a bias. I am of the opinion that there are many crimes which when committed, place one outside the usual humane treatment of society (as an aside, that’s what the term “outlaw” actually used to mean – that you were outside the protection of the law, and could be attacked and even murdered without legal retribution.) If you do thus-and-such, you no longer deserve to be treated humanely. Murder, torture, maiming – these are such crimes, as far as I am concerned. I’d have no problems at all with the punishment of blinding by acid for what this man did.

But I’m not sure I’d want our society to function that way.

So, revenge? Justice?

Both?

Jim Downey

(Cross posted to UTI.)



Kill your TV.
December 29, 2008, 8:25 pm
Filed under: Alzheimer's, Politics, Religion, Society

Let’s see how many people I can piss off . . .

Saw a good thread over on Balloon Juice. In a nice rant about the stupidity of how the mainstream media is covering the effects of the financial collapse on Wall Street, John Cole made the comment “I may have to just shoot my tv.”

This particular sentiment was picked up in the discussion which followed. One of the best passages from that said, in part:

Fifteen years ago I was so broke I sold my tv to make rent. I didn’t have much of a withdrawl. I spent the next 10 years without a tv, and I began to notice very weird things. I noticed how a ton of people couldn’t describe an event or situation without referring to some TV show. I call it the Seinfeld Effect, because at that time so many people would try to describe some event in their life and they just couldn’t without saying ‘Omygod it’s just like that Seinfeld where George and Jerry do that thing with..blah blah blah’.

I don’t watch TV. We got out of the habit when caring for my Mother-in-Law, since regular programing would greatly confuse her Alzheimer’s-addled brain. Eventually, we just dropped our cable service altogether, and didn’t bother to reconnect it once she passed away. I don’t miss it in the slightest. I get my news online and from the radio, I watch movies (and a few select TV shows which enough people will recommend) via DVD/NetFlix. And I think that I think more clearly as a result. It’s a lot like giving up on religion.

Seriously – you stop believing stuff just because it is on the tube. You stop buying-into the whole cultural imperative to be on top of the latest fad, the latest product, the latest brainwashing. You start to think more for yourself, and to give less of yourself over to others.

This isn’t the first time I have given up on TV. While in grad school my TV died, and I really didn’t see the sense in buying a new one. For about four years I just didn’t watch TV. Then I learned the same lessons as I have this time. Except this time, I look back on the period between those two absences, when I did occasionally watch TV (though still a hell of a lot less than average), and I am convinced that I lost more of myself to being sucked into the TV than I ever thought possible at the time. It is only when you are outside of that trap that you see just how insidious it is.

So, the old adage is right: kill your television. Because it is killing your ability to think.

Jim Downey

(Cross posted to UTI.)



Convergence of interests.
December 28, 2008, 9:25 am
Filed under: Ballistics, Flu, Guns, Health, Pandemic, Preparedness, Society, Survival

Naturally enough, given the backstory and plot devices in Communion of Dreams, I have written here many times about the threat of pandemic flu.  And given my recent involvement in the Ballistics by the inch project, I have also written about ballistics fairly often.  But it is still a little weird to see the two things come together.

Say what?

I was doing a little checking on the Bbti site stats this morning, since we created the site a month ago (didn’t go public with it until two days later).  To date we’ve had just under (by about 2,000) a third of a million hits to that site.  In looking at where the site had been mentioned (referring links), I noticed that early this month it had been posted in a thread over at PANDEMIC FLU INFORMATION FORUM.

Weird.

Sure, it makes sense.  As I have argued here, being prepared for a pandemic may well mean being armed.  And in making some intelligent decisions about firearm ownership, particularly for those who are not already firearms owners, having a resource like Bbti can be very helpful.  This was one of the primary reasons we came up with the project, after all.  Still, it was a little odd to see the site mentioned and discussed in the context of pandemic flu for me this morning.

Now if I could just get them to mention Communion of Dreams . . .

Jim Downey



I wonder if the coffee was any good.
December 23, 2008, 6:17 pm
Filed under: Humor, Marketing, Society, Violence, YouTube

Another brief post – been busy all day – but had to share this delightful YouTube post:

It’s a series of short advertisements that Jim Henson did which are surprisingly violent but also pretty damned funny.

Yes, I have a twisted sense of humor.

Jim Downey



Watch out,
December 22, 2008, 11:37 am
Filed under: Art, Humor, PZ Myers, Society

Dr. Horrible – there’s a new league of Superheros around!

Wow – that’s just awesome. So, what would your Superhero name be? I’ve already been GalleryMan, but I suppose I would need to come up with something new now. Hmm…

Jim Downey

Via PZ. Cross posted to UTI



Just write the $^@&!(# check.
December 22, 2008, 11:09 am
Filed under: Art, Emergency, Failure, Government, Politics, Predictions, Society

So, last time I borrowed money from a bank, for a Federally-guaranteed Small Business Loan, it was a bit of a nightmare.  They wanted to know everything down to my shoe size, with a fair amount of documentation to support the claim that I wear an 11 wide.  And, needless to say, they wanted to know exactly what I was going to do with the $50,000 I wanted to borrow – complete with a detailed business plan, revenue forecasts, et cetera.  Given that I wanted to borrow the money, I didn’t find this too onerous; rather it seemed to be a reasonable expectation, if a tad tedious.

But don’t expect that street to run both ways.

Where’d the bailout money go? Shhhh, it’s a secret

WASHINGTON – It’s something any bank would demand to know before handing out a loan: Where’s the money going?

But after receiving billions in aid from U.S. taxpayers, the nation’s largest banks say they can’t track exactly how they’re spending the money or they simply refuse to discuss it.

“We’ve lent some of it. We’ve not lent some of it. We’ve not given any accounting of, ‘Here’s how we’re doing it,'” said Thomas Kelly, a spokesman for JPMorgan Chase, which received $25 billion in emergency bailout money. “We have not disclosed that to the public. We’re declining to.”

The Associated Press contacted 21 banks that received at least $1 billion in government money and asked four questions: How much has been spent? What was it spent on? How much is being held in savings, and what’s the plan for the rest?

None of the banks provided specific answers.

Well, no, of course they didn’t. It might lead to somewhat awkward revelations, such as this:

AP study finds $1.6B went to bailed-out bank execs

Banks that are getting taxpayer bailouts awarded their top executives nearly $1.6 billion in salaries, bonuses, and other benefits last year, an Associated Press analysis reveals.

The rewards came even at banks where poor results last year foretold the economic crisis that sent them to Washington for a government rescue. Some trimmed their executive compensation due to lagging bank performance, but still forked over multimillion-dollar executive pay packages.

Benefits included cash bonuses, stock options, personal use of company jets and chauffeurs, home security, country club memberships and professional money management, the AP review of federal securities documents found.

Your tax dollars at work.

Jim Downey

(Cross posted to UTI and dKos.)



Talk about a breath of fresh air…
December 20, 2008, 10:35 am
Filed under: Climate Change, Global Warming, Government, Politics, Preparedness, Religion, Science, Society

From landing on the moon, to sequencing the human genome, to inventing the Internet, America has been the first to cross that new frontier because we had leaders who paved the way: leaders like President Kennedy, who inspired us to push the boundaries of the known world and achieve the impossible; leaders who not only invested in our scientists, but who respected the integrity of the scientific process.

Because the truth is that promoting science isn’t just about providing resources – it’s about protecting free and open inquiry.  It’s about ensuring that facts and evidence are never twisted or obscured by politics or ideology.  It’s about listening to what our scientists have to say, even when it’s inconvenient – especially when it’s inconvenient.  Because the highest purpose of science is the search for knowledge, truth and a greater understanding of the world around us.  That will be my goal as President of the United States – and I could not have a better team to guide me in this work.

That’s President-elect Obama, in his weekly radio address this morning, announcing his top science advisors.

Compare that to the mindset we’ve put up with from the Bush administration, the latest round of which was announced yesterday:

WASHINGTON — The Bush administration announced its “conscience protection” rule for the health-care industry Thursday, giving everyone from doctors and hospitals to receptionists and volunteers in medical experiments the right to refuse to participate in medical care they find morally objectionable.

“This rule protects the right of medical providers to care for their patients in accord with their conscience,” said Health and Human Services Secretary Mike Leavitt.

The right-to-refuse rule includes abortion, but Leavitt’s office said it extends to other aspects of health care where moral concerns could arise, including birth control, emergency contraception, in vitro fertilization, stem cell research or assisted suicide.

Science hasn’t been a priority for the last eight years – conforming to ideological and religious demands has been.  That may be a good way to make your political base happy, but it sure as hell is a bad way to deal with the problems we face as a nation and a planet.

Even with the misgivings I may feel about the prospect of an Obama administration, this is a very welcome breath of fresh air.  We’ve got real problems facing us, and for once in a long while it feels to me like we have adults back in charge of dealing with them.

Jim Downey


Cross-posted to UTI.




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