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"Every performer tonight in their own way, either verbally or through their music, through their lyrics, have conveyed to you the heart and soul of our country." -- Kerry, July 8
| --"The other day, my opponent said he thought you could find the heart and soul of America in Hollywood." -- Bush, Aug. 18
"My goal, my diplomacy, my statesmanship is to get our troops reduced in number and I believe if you do the statesmanship properly, I believe if you do the kind of alliance building that is available to us, that it's appropriate to have a goal of reducing the troops over that period of time [the first six months of a Kerry administration]. Obviously, we'd have to see how events unfold. . . . It is an appropriate goal to have and I'm going to try to achieve it." -- Kerry, Aug. 9
"I took exception when my opponent said if he's elected, we'll substantially reduce the troops in six months. He shouldn't have said that. See, it sends a mixed signal to the enemy for starters. So the enemy hangs around for six months and one day. . . . It says, maybe America isn't going to keep its word." -- Bush, Aug. 18
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A2693 5-2004Aug23.html" title="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A2693 5-2004Aug23.html" target="_blank"http://www.washingtonpost.com...
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| Trying to teach the blind to see |
| 08.21.04 (4:12 pm) [edit] |
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If you feel that a group should abstain from a particular activity for the simple reason that they lack the ability to fully appreciate the consequences of carrying out such an activity, then what sense does if make to try to convince them of that? Indeed, either such an enterprise would undermine the very basis for having them abstain from the activity in the first place (by helping see the possible consequences of a given course of action), or it would be a complete waste of time (i.e., they would not grasp the link between a given course of action and a possible outcome). However, such seems to be the case for many school programs. Teachers regularly delineate possible outcomes of certain activities (e.g., choosing to become sexually active). They then test them to see whether they understand these links. At the end of the day, however, no teacher that I know tells students that have mastered the subject matter that they should now feel free to become, say, sexually active.
At best, what can be said in, say, the case of alcohol is this: "Yes, there are plenty of teenagers that know how to drink responsibly and you might be one of them. However there is a critical mass of teenagers that do not. With this in mind, the courts have set the drinking limit at 19. Now, in order for the law to be workable, the law must target all of those under the age of 19 and not just those who drink irresponsibly.”
Continuing on in rant mode, it is clear that the just say no drugs and alcohol model simply does not work. Now, let me add to the speculation as to why. Somehow it is not dawned on the just say no crowd that some teenagers will continue to drink and do drugs no matter what and that by tailoring their message only to those kids who are having drugs pushed on them they are, among other things, failing to reach one of the most influential segments of teenager culture, viz., those that push drugs onto other kids. One needs to acknowledge this group and teach them to respect those who refuse their overtures.
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| Tuition Hikes |
| 08.15.04 (12:48 pm) [edit] |
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I am puzzled as to why I keep coming across the following rather stupid argument for hiking tuition fees in Canada. The argument goes something like this. There is a wide income gap between people with university degrees and those without degrees. Clearly, obtaining a university degree leads to better things and given that gap seems to be ever widening, having a degree will probably be even more valuable in the future than it is now. That being the case, it is only right that those that who benefit from obtaining a degree pay more towards what it costs to educate them.
Now, leaving aside the problems associated with drawing a causal relation from a correlation, problems associated with projecting data well into the future and whole host of other missing caveats, let us just assume that they have hit the nail on the head. Obtaining a university degree is well worth it.
Does it follow from this that the only way of having students give back to society is by having them pay higher tuition fees? Of course, it does not. As a population, those with degrees earn more than the rest of the population and so pay more taxes. Once more, the way the system is currently set up the more you benefit from your degree the more you pay.
I dare say, the tax route is a much more attractive option for other reasons too. People are not burdened with the expense of having to pay for their education at a time when they can least afford it (when they first step into the working world), but will instead be able to pay for it at a time that they can most afford it. What is more, this way the person that benefits from the having a degree is more likely to assume more of the financial burden. After all, in many cases a student’s family fits all or part of the cost associated with obtaining a degree.
The real beauty of this argument, though, is that it can be employed against those who object to tax option on the grounds that a degree holder pays the same tax rate as a non degree holder in the same tax bracket. Tongue firmly in cheek, simply agree that, alas, this is true. Despite the fact past graduates had their education supplemented by tax payers to a much larger degree then is the case now, university graduates pay no more than non degree holders in the same tax bracket. Having said so, ask the following question: If current students, who have yet to benefit from their education, should be made to pay for a larger chunk of what it costs to educate them, should those who are currently benefiting from having a degree also be made to pay retroactively for a greater chunk of what it cost to educate them?
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| IOC's bankrupt take on Performance enhancers |
| 08.12.04 (4:10 pm) [edit] |
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IOC should stop trying to ban every conceivable substance that might enhance an athlete's performance. There is simply no way of ever achieving a mythical level playing field. Indeed, it is farcical for the IOC to on the one hand prevent someone from downing a few cans of Coke because it may give a competitor an “unfair” advantage and at some time remain silent on how superior trainers, nutrition and facilities give Western competitors a huge advantage over competitors from non-Western countries. However, proof of IOC’s perverse reasoning comes from talks they had about banning oxygen cambers. The issue at hand was if these chambers help speed up the healing process -- god forbid! --, did they thereby give competitors that use them an “artificial” advantage.
What the IOC should seek to do is to ban substances that both improve performance and that have not been proven to be safe. In other words, the IOC should seek only to ban substances whose use would threaten workplace safety.
This should go for other sports organizations as well. As it stands, the emphasis on potentially banning any substance that may improve performance, regardless of the health costs associated with it, has obscured the concerns of many athletes have with the use of potentially harmful performance enhancers. No where is this more apparent than in major league baseball. Fearing what testing might mean for a few individual players, the major league players union has lost sight of the following. According to an SI investigation, most major leaguers who use steroids, say, feel that the lax testing in baseball, do in large part to the players union, has created an environment where they are forced to take them in order to keep up with other players that use. Asked if they would then welcome more stringent testing, the vast majority said yes. In fact, at various times the players have tried to press the issue. A few years back upwards of 20 White Sox players tired to force the leagues hand by refusing to take a drug test. Under league rules such a refusal counts as a fail and a critical mass of failures would have meant stricter testing. The League though simply ignored their refusal to take the test.
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| Major US scandal brewing |
| 08.08.04 (4:14 pm) [edit] |
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It has not been a good week for the Bush administration. First, it seems they have cried wolf one time many times. Last week’s terror alert was met with a fair degree of press skepticism, especially after it was revealed that much of the information was three to four years old. It is too bad for the Democrats that Dean made a meal of all of this. An argument can be made that the administration was right to do what it did. More importantly, from a political standpoint, it only served to obscure July 29ths scandalous announcement.
On July 19th, the New Republic http://www.tnr.com/doc.mhtml?pt=FmacZwInTBdNEpGc DbWQDx" title="http://www.tnr.com/doc.mhtml?pt=FmacZwInTBdNEpGc DbWQDx" target="_blank"http://www.tnr.com/doc.mhtml?...%3D%3D announced that the Pakistanis were being pressured to produce a high level Al Qaeda operative sometime during the Democratic convention. Pakistan did not disappoint. On July 25th they arrested Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani, who was wanted in connection with the bombing of the US embassy in Tanzania. On Friday, July 30th, at 12:00 in the morning in Islamabad the Pakistanis held a press conference to announce Ghailani’s capture. By the looks of things, the announcement was timed to please both the Pakistanis and the Bush administration. It assured that the capture would get as little attention in Pakistan as possible and it would be announced as breaking news at 6 pm on the East coast on the day of Kerry’s speech. In the July 19 article, The New Republic reported that a Pakistani official was told in the spring "it would be best if the arrest or killing of [any] HVT were announced on twenty-six, twenty-seven, or twenty-eight July".
Now, not only was the timing of the announcement dubious, but the New Republic and others have pointed out so was the announcement itself. As alluded to above, the Pakistanis are not eager to remind their public of their cooperation in the war on terror. Moreover, according to the New Republic, a number of intelligence agents wanted Ghailani’s capture kept quiet in the hope of rounding up more suspects.
On Friday, things got a whole lot worse for the administration. Earlier in the week, they had announced that on July 13 an Al Qaeda computer expert by the name of Muhammad Naeem Noor Khan had also been arrested and he was infact a bigger catch than Ghailani. For not only did computer files in his possession lay out plans for an Al Qaeda attack on various finicial buildings in Washington DC and New York city, but his capture also led to the arrest of 11 Al Qaeda suspects in Britian.
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/08/08/politics/0 8plot.html" title="http://www.nytimes.com/2004/08/08/politics/0 8plot.html" target="_blank"http://www.nytimes.com/2004/0... The problem, though was, according to British Home Minister Blunkett and Pakistani Interior Minister Faisal Saleh Hayat http://www.juancole.com/" title="http://www.juancole.com/" target="_blank"http://www.juancole.com/, after his capture Khan was being used as double agent and was darn good one at that. Blunkett contended that as a result of Khan’s name being released Britian had to 1) arrest the 11 Al Qaeda in daylight as opposed to a less riskly series of nighttime raids, and 2) the British authorties were not able to make a strong case against the men as they had hoped. 13 people were taken into custody. It is not clear why 2 were released, or whether their release can be tied to Khan being outed. Worse still, it has come out today that Khan was connect with 6 Al Qaeda operatives working in the US and the chances to apprehend them now seemed to have been reduced. http://msnbc.msn.com/id/5636688/site/newsw eek/" title="http://msnbc.msn.com/id/5636688/site/newsw eek/" target="_blank"http://msnbc.msn.com/id/56366...
Proving once again that she is at once an extremly bad liar and at another a grossely incompetent NSA, Rice said today that yes the adminstration had released Khan’s name, but that she did not know he was a double agent. (After the 16 word scandal broke last year, Rice said while someone in the “bowels” of the CIA might have known that Niger information was dubious, no top adminstration official knew. She was made to eat her words when it was revealed that the CIA was in direct contact with her second in comand Stephen Hadley about the subject, that she had a memo sent to her about it and that Cheney, through Wilson, likely knew as well.)
Also this weekend, fighting erupted between American forces and Sadr's milita. Finally today, an arrest warrant was given for former Pentagon darling Ahmad Chalabi http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/front/2725393" title="http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/front/2725393" target="_blank"http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/s... .
Chalabi's arrest, by CIA and State Department man Allawi no less, is just further confirmation that the State Department and not the Pentagon is calling the shots in Iraq now.
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