Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Farm Bill Shame

Friday, May 16th, 2008

This is just nuts…nuts. In a world with skyrocketing agricultural commodity prices, congress wants to push through a $300 billion farm bill filled with juicy nuggets of pork like subsidies for racehorse breeders and $5 billion in direct payment to farmers whether they need it or not. Most of it is going to megafarms of course.

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Gatekeepers

Monday, May 12th, 2008

This post is a “sibling” post to my post on political gatekeepers at Freedom Democrats. Please check it out as well, although the theme is the same the points are different. This post focuses on gatekeepers in the libertarian movement, or the lack thereof, while the Freedom Democrats post focuses on liberal gatekeepers online.

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Another story of excessive tazing

Monday, May 12th, 2008

I have trouble imagining anything more excessive than this. Lindsay Beyerstein posts “Cops tase 82-year-old heart patient in bed“:

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Cory Maye: A Victim of the Politics of Fear

Monday, May 12th, 2008

The sad case of Cory Maye probably needs no introduction at this blog. A struggling father trying to make ends meet in the poor rural South, Cory Maye defended himself, his home, and his 18 month old daughter by using deadly force against an unknown intruder. Under most circumstances, the case would be closed in acknowledgment that Cory Maye was simply exercising his constitutional rights. But, unfortunately, the unknown intruder turned out to be a white police officer and Cory Maye is black. The rest . . .

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Horseraceblogging

Sunday, May 11th, 2008

I’m on deadline for a book review due tomorrow night so for the moment I only have more primary-blogging to offer. More in a day or two. Meantime, my cobloggers continue to put up awesome stuff.

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Balance of Power

Thursday, May 8th, 2008

Libertarianism, of the non-anarchic variety, has typically favored a decentralized and federalist approach to government. Modern liberalism tends to take the opposite view, favoring centralized government. In the former, federalism protects you from the tyranny of the national government and decentralization enables you to move around and force local and state governments to compete. In the latter, centralization allows for a uniform protection of your civil liberties across the nation and for the local minority to be protected by local majorities. Ideally.

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Where Did Berkeley Get Its Reputation

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

Professor J. Bradford DeLong writes to the Chair of Berkeley’s academic senate to request that a special committee, comprising

members of the faculty with expertise in moral philosophy, the role of the university, international relations, human rights, and constitutional law. I ask you to instruct this committee to write of a public report to the Academic Senate no later than this Labor Day, advising the Senate of the pros and cons of actions that the Academic Senate might or might not take in the matter of Professor John Yoo . . .

Because, as the Professor puts it, “I am enough of a liberal and enough of an academic to believe that discussion of these issues will help.”

But there are problems!

One is, according to said Chair of said senate, even convening a committee to take up the question of Yoo’s alleged misfeasance would be “defamatory.” That’s curious. But the other objection makes one wonder what Berkeley is doing with all that tax and tuition money they rake in:

Besides that, there’s the practical problem of finding committee members with the expertise you outline.

Professor Drummond, excuse me, sir. My name is Jim Henley, blogging at Unqualified Offerings and The Art of the Possible, and I was just wondering - are you shitting me?!

Let me rephrase that. No, on second thought, let me retype that question in all caps with an even larger count of fissiparous interrobangs: ARE YOU SHITTING ME?!?!?!?!?!?!

Yeah, I bolded it too.

UC Berkeley, jewel in the crown of the California University system can’t fill a committee with “faculty with expertise in moral philosophy, the role of the university, international relations, human rights, and constitutional law?” I mean, ARE YOU - ahem. Point made.

See also the Editors.

Please Allow Me to Introduce Myself . . .

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

Greetings to the readers of the Art of the Possible. Some of you may know me from the blog Freedom Democrats, an online community occupying the niche of libertarianism within the Democratic Party. For those readers who are encountering me for the first time, I have been an amateur activist in libertarianism, the Democratic Party, and blogging off and on for several years now. I am very thankful for the opportunity to blog here at the Art of the Possible and wanted to take advantage of the timing of Mona’s most recent blog post on this site’s purpose to introduce myself, and my views, more fully.

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Another of Jim’s Occasional Primary Prediction Posts

Monday, May 5th, 2008

My system is very simple: assume the winner does no worse than her advantage in already-decided voters in the latest RCP average. On that basis, I’ll call for Obama by 8 in NC and Clinton by 7 in Indiana. On Wednesday, Clinton will have gained no ground in the delegate count, Obama will have stopped his short, post-Wright losing streak, and Clinton and the media will still be demanding to know why "Obama can’t close the deal" rather than demanding to know why Clinton can’t make up any ground on him, and how she ever lost the lead to a Boojie neophyte in the first place if she’s all that.

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Where You Goin’?

Monday, May 5th, 2008

At the American Conservative’s @tac blog, Kara Hopkins explains the amazing withdrawal plans of the Democratic candidates. "Looks like we’re going to be very busy—while getting out?" she writes of Hillary Clinton’s statements about leaving and training and protecting the massive US Embassy (and theme park?) and paying attention to Iranian influence and all sorts of things that sound like they will make packing to leave a really frazzling experience for the troops. As for the other guy:

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QOTD

Sunday, May 4th, 2008

If there’s anything we should have learned from George W. Bush, it’s that generalized combativeness is not a good thing in a President.

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In which I agree with Will Wilkinson

Thursday, May 1st, 2008

This does not happen often:

Political freedom loses much of its point in the absence of psychological freedom. Rationality and the capacity for moral agency develop. That’s why we do not think children have the same rights and responsibilities as adults: they haven’t developed the requisite capacities. But this development can be retarded, creating adults with little more than a child’s capacities, reinforcing childlike dependency. If you don’t worry about this, then I wonder in what sense you care about human freedom. (more…)

Prepare Two Envelopes

Thursday, May 1st, 2008

Reading Scott Horton and seeing

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Homeland security snakes eats own tail

Thursday, May 1st, 2008

Federal Air Marshals are getting left on the ground because their names got on the no-fly list. So now we’ll get some action on the bloated and festering problem, perhaps? As for the rest of us who are inconvenienced, serves us right for having the same names as dirty terrorists, doesn’t it. (more…)

Burned Black

Wednesday, April 30th, 2008

There’s a surface plausibility to the Jeremiah Wright conspiracy theory that Bob Murphy provisionally endorses. In fact, I heard an African-American caller to Air America this morning offer the same suggestion.

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Negative Zone

Tuesday, April 29th, 2008

"There’s too much zoning" seems to be one of those general principles many libertarians and liberals could agree on. At some point into a reform program, the median libertarian will want to keep removing land-use restrictions while the modal liberal will believe that "we’ve done quite enough now." But right now, in lots of places, there’s work to be done together. See Matthew Yglesias and Tyler Cowen.

Cutting-Edge Photo Journalism

Monday, April 28th, 2008

From Dennis Perrin.

Sustainability

Monday, April 28th, 2008

Stooksbury on farming. Seems related to an argument downblog about whether small-scale production or large-scale production is more "efficient." Stooksbury says, let’s stop externalizing the producer costs of large-scale farm production and find out.

Wussy Like a Fox?

Sunday, April 27th, 2008

In comments downblog, Comrade Kevin suggests that not hitting back at Hillary Clinton in certain ways marks Obama as "a wuss." I am inclined to the view, rather, that:

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Credit Where Credit is Grew

Saturday, April 26th, 2008

Clark Stooksbury notes the surprising fact: Al Gore is not behind the global food shortage.

Right, Wrong, Rights and Errors

Friday, April 25th, 2008

One Cato blogger expressed happiness that "A federal court in Argentina has decriminalized the personal consumption of drugs in that country." But it made another sad:

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What I clicked, and why it’s worth reading

Thursday, April 24th, 2008

Talkleft — Snipes gets the max Wesley got Martha’d. Hard to root for the man who brought us Money Train, but isn’t equal protection of the law supposed to be a good thing?

Matthew Yglesias — Credit Where Due Yglesias showers Hillary with faint praise — or is it real praise? — for being a better obfuscator than Obama.

Andrew Leonard — The Washington Food Crisis Consensus Poor countries strongarmed into cutting support to farmers now feeling the pain?

Nabakov’s last work will not be burned Contrary to his dying wishes.

Megan McArdle — Commodity Soothsaying Megan refuses to play the commodities forecasting game. Mentions The Economist’s “$5 oil”cover story in 1999, just as oil started to run up. A gold star to any reader who finds me a jpeg of that cover plus the text.

Greenpeace activists targets Taiwanese fishing boats Just bizarre. Who died and made you the tuna police, Greenpeace? I’m all about protecting fish stocks, but not vigilante environmentalists boarding vessels and “confiscating” fish aggregation devices.

UPDATE: Better Taipei Times story with more details about what happened exactly. Will write more about the Tuna situation shortly. (more…)

Math is Hardass

Thursday, April 24th, 2008

Daniel Koffler schools Terry McAuliffe on the contradictions in his popular vote "argument." And you have to figure a man who has worked for Reason AND Dissent knows from contradictions.

Hacktacular Liberalism

Thursday, April 24th, 2008

Sometimes I listen to Bill Press in the car on the way to lunch lately. He’s fun radio in a lot of ways, but his anti-anti-ethanolism reminds me of nothing so much as a late-stage climate-change denialist brandishing at every stray story or trend that might, if you squint, befog the issue. Today it was the runup in rice prices. The logic seemed to be that rice isn’t corn and rice is expensive so, like, there. More charitably, if rice is going up and the costs of other foods are going up for reasons that include the growing wealth of substantial parts of Asia and the rising cost of inputs including energy, then we should lay off ethanol subsidies and incentives to grow corn even though they also play a causal role in food-price inflation because - well, I don’t really know why. The best answer I can come up with is, because Bill Press lives in the midwest.

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How many calories is that lemon loaf in the window?

Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008

Dubner observes that Starbucks in Manhattan are now listing the staggering calorie count of their stale and awful baked goods and mediocre coffee beverages in anticipation of NYC regulation that would require such postings on restaurant with more than 15 locations in the city.

A great natural experiment, he thought…

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