April 22, 2005

But Enough About Me

I was recently interviewed by someone doing an academic project on academic bloggers. He asked a number of questions I found hard to answer (“Why do you do this?”), and one I found nearly impossible to answer with confidence: “Who are your readers?”

So this is my invitation to you, the reader, to please enter a comment telling me something about who you are. If you don’t want to use your name out of modesty or fear of guilt by association, that’s fine — tell me where you live, and a little something something about your circumstances.


Posted by Michael : April 22, 2005 12:01 AM | Discourse.net | TechnoLinks
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Comments

Hey, I get to be first to comment. Long time lurker, first time commenter, I guess...

I moved down to Miami six months ago, and right before I moved down, I googled "Miami blog", and this turned up. As a slavish reader of the Washington Post (I'm from DC originally), once I made the connection, well, how could I say no?

That, and my brother is studying IPR (albeit in music), so ever once in a while I'll pick up a gem that makes me look intelligent with him.

Posted by: mike d at April 22, 2005 12:20 AM

Who reads law professor blogs? Well, other law professor bloggers do.

Posted by: Orin Kerr at April 22, 2005 12:48 AM

I retired from NASA in 2003 so have time to read a bunch of blogs daily. I live in a blue state in a blue town. When we see a Bush/Cheney bumpersticker we know it's someone from out of town. Pictures of Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt hang in City Hall. It's a great place to live.

The blogs I read daily are arranged in alphabetic order, from Atrios to Yglesias. You follow Fafblog!

Posted by: ej at April 22, 2005 12:58 AM

I'm a Stanford PhD student in Computer Science.

Posted by: Mike at April 22, 2005 02:19 AM

I'm a musician. Married 35 years and the father of two grown children. I've been interested in the law since my Mother started working for a judge when I was very young. Interested in politics because I discovered at an early age that if I wanted to participate in the what my family was always talking about, I had to be. Love your site.

Posted by: Mickey Finn at April 22, 2005 02:47 AM

I'm a computer programmer guy. I'll be 30 next month. I'm a liberal atheist in constant disappointment with the evil machinations of our government and the ineptitude of our fellow citizens. I'm not an elitist, just a little more optimistic than I probably should be.

Posted by: Rob at April 22, 2005 03:24 AM

Long time review of the blog, don't really remember how I stumbled here, Legal Fiction maybe?

I'm a consultant in the disaster recovery (data) planning and secondary storage vertical. 25. Not really sure how I became interested in politics but I was a political science major in college and history is amongst one of my favorite subjects. I particuarly enjoy the mix of current events/tech/lawyerly stuff (my girlfriend is a lawyer).

Posted by: Greg at April 22, 2005 04:01 AM

Retired Army Warrant Officer now living in western Washington State. Attended one year of law school before I realized I didn't want to spend a second career pole-vaulting over mouse turds. Now I work for a State agency and contend with buckets of mouse turds on a daily basis. Spend my free time blogging, reading other blogs, and occassionally flying small aircraft just for fun.

Posted by: yankeedoodle at April 22, 2005 06:48 AM

I am a chicken-loving law student.

Posted by: Heidi at April 22, 2005 07:10 AM

not just other law professor bloggers, but other law professor bloggers named "kerr" !

Posted by: ian kerr at April 22, 2005 07:27 AM

Yep, other law profs, some who are just "Kerr" wannabes.

Posted by: Ann Bartow at April 22, 2005 07:56 AM

Middle-age, male, white, lawyer, fed. gov. employee in DC, left leaning, etc.

Posted by: dmh at April 22, 2005 08:28 AM

I'm a college student at UM (where M=Maryland). Comp Sci major. No idea how I got here, but it's always been interesting.

Posted by: Orin Tresnjak at April 22, 2005 08:45 AM

Computer Systems Admin/Consultant, web developer. San Francisco Bay Area. 40ish and leftish. Been reading your site for quite a while. I think it was my mom who recommended your site to me. Liked what I saw and stayed on.

Posted by: DrLaniac at April 22, 2005 08:48 AM

I'm a PhD student in Culture & Communication at NYU studying the philosophy of technology and exploring how information and communications technologies are a crucial medium for asserting social, political, and moral values such as freedom, autonomy, justice, privacy, and democracy.

Posted by: Michael Zimmer at April 22, 2005 08:49 AM

I'm a law clerk in North Carolina.

Posted by: Neal at April 22, 2005 09:03 AM

I am a law clerk in Miami with professorial aspirations.

Posted by: Lindsay at April 22, 2005 09:11 AM

I'm a 4o year-old, white, middle-class lesbian lawyer from Ann Arbor.

Posted by: Kim McGinnis at April 22, 2005 09:26 AM

I am the Executive Editor at MIT Press and have been following your work since we met at a CFP in Chicago in 1994 or so.

Posted by: Bob Prior at April 22, 2005 09:28 AM

I am a former student of yours, Professor Froomkin, from your first civil procedure class at UM. I am now a federal prosecutor, and very thankful for all of your coverage of the outrageous torture/detention policies of the current administration.

Posted by: Slashjc at April 22, 2005 09:30 AM

Patent attorney in the DC area

Posted by: MF at April 22, 2005 09:30 AM

Patent attorney in the DC area

Posted by: MF at April 22, 2005 09:31 AM

My name is Kwame M'Buku, and I am a bank manager in Nigeria...

No, I'm a privacy advocate who enjoys your work, and appreciates your coverage of torture and other such issues.

Posted by: Kwame M'Buku at April 22, 2005 09:38 AM

I am an artist/painting conservator, mother,politically involved resident of an island in Maine. I found your site while researching a topic during an online argument in one of the political discussion forums. Its really helpful to read a lawyer's point of view on some of the issues of the day.

Posted by: Laurie at April 22, 2005 10:24 AM

I'm a computer programmer in Atlanta, in law school at Georgia State University at nights. I'm involved with various liberal organizations and I read far too many blogs.

Posted by: Richard Campbell at April 22, 2005 10:24 AM

I'm a biological scientist working at a university in upstate New York.
I've been interested in constitutional law issues since a (required) class
my first undergrad year got me to understand the role of the supreme court.
I appreciate the good work you are doing with this web-log.
Also, I appreciate the high signal:noise ratio you maintain here!

Posted by: turbonerd at April 22, 2005 10:38 AM

Practicing attorney in Philadelphia who sometimes wishes he was a law professor, reads blogs a few minutes a day, and recognized your name from being in some of the same classes undergrad 20+ years ago.

Posted by: arthur stock at April 22, 2005 10:40 AM

I'm a 1L at UM. I found your blog when I did a google search for University of MIami Law School a while back.

Posted by: AB at April 22, 2005 10:56 AM

41 years old, married, three kids. I'm a graphic designer in Vancouver BC.

Posted by: Kevin at April 22, 2005 11:13 AM

JD/PhD Student in law and philosophy at Penn- I think I first came here through a link by Brian Lieter.

Posted by: Matt at April 22, 2005 11:19 AM

I'm a 33-year-old male, married software engineer from Seattle.

Posted by: TTop at April 22, 2005 11:29 AM

Computer Systems manager... Dallas TX
Was given the link by my sister in the Seatle area. She is the brains in the family.
I am my companies token heretic and liberal.

Posted by: rachel at April 22, 2005 11:30 AM

I'm a health law/public policy attorney in Oklahoma, where I work for a consortium of social service non-profits.

Posted by: Ereshkigal at April 22, 2005 11:39 AM

I'm a middle aged graphic design, with an fine arts degree. I don't 'think like a lawyer' so I'm facinated by a legal take on all the news that flows around us. I too am a proud member of the reality-based community, in the blue state of Minnesota.

Posted by: phil at April 22, 2005 11:45 AM

65; lawyer since 1966; bored with it; about ready to do something else. Rural area of Central Texas. Would rather write, garden, haul manure for the garden, and party with friends than do this law stuff for much longer. In fact, I am fed up with my law practice getting in the way of my REAL career goals. I read you, among other "thinking" blogs like Legal Fiction and Balken, for the good writing, the intelligence underlying the writing, and your keen analytical skills. Keep it up, please.

Posted by: george at April 22, 2005 11:49 AM

28 year old bookkeeper in LA, started reading your brother's column a while back, then ended up here somehow. Wish I could send your parents a thank-you note. Bravo!

Posted by: Tom at April 22, 2005 11:55 AM

Since you asked--

Economics professor at a regional campus of a state university system. Primary interests are labor economics, sports economics, urban economic development.

And rational, fact-based responses to the political/economic/legal issues of the day.

Posted by: Donald A. Coffin at April 22, 2005 11:56 AM

Math Phd (UC Berkeley, 1977), works for a software company in Oakland CA. Found you from Atrios's blog list. (Wish you would comment more on guantanamo, padilla, etc.)

Posted by: David Margolies at April 22, 2005 11:56 AM

I'm a liberal-leaning, middle aged, male actuary from the Northeast. I follow an eclectic collection of blogs on law, science, religion, culture, technology and policy and this is one of my favorites.

Posted by: ruidh at April 22, 2005 12:20 PM

I am a 62 year old male computer support engineer living and working near Denver CO. Don't recall how I originally linked to your blog, but most likely it was a link from another blog.

Posted by: Kent at April 22, 2005 12:40 PM

U Wash. Law (1977); legal aid lawyer in Oregon.

Posted by: spencer at April 22, 2005 12:40 PM

Retired technical writer with a web log of my own (at it on the internet in one form or another since 1978), one-time Chicago reporter who covered crime, criminal courts, and Mayor Daley (the real Mayor Daley), former editorial minion at the Harvard Center for Law and Education. Massachusetts liberal from deepest south Georgia.

Posted by: Tom Parmenter at April 22, 2005 12:41 PM

54 YO electrical engineer in MD, can't remember how I first got here (to your blog, that is) -- I bounce around a lot but there's a definite core I read almost daily. I think I already have a good handle on science/technical stuff from other sources, so I tend to read blogs with other points of view (law - yours among others, economics - the Brads, Angry Bear, Max, Quiggen, other subject areas similarly).

Posted by: John at April 22, 2005 01:14 PM

56 year old psychotherapist in Santa Cruz, CA area. Very liberal. 5 children - aged 26 and up. I find your take on current legal issues interesting and appreciate the occasional info updates on Mozilla. First found you through your brother's WP blog. The legal goings-on in FL probably were the initial attraction but I've stayed to check in daily to read your thoughts. BTW - you're a good writer too.

Posted by: Deborah at April 22, 2005 01:24 PM

53-year-old political activist and gardener; female, western Virginia. First came to the blog to read your posts on the OLC torture memos. I'm addicted to blogs (a regular reader since 1997), and yours is a regular stop.

Posted by: Nell Lancaster at April 22, 2005 01:37 PM

I'm an UM law school grad from the class of 81. Going on 20 years as an Assistant Public Defender, working up Hwy. 27 a ways. I'm quite liberal. Not suprisingly based on my career. (Though we have a few APDs who are quite conserative) Not sure how I found your blog but it is one of the few I read.

Posted by: Paul at April 22, 2005 01:47 PM

I'm not a lawyer or a professor. I'm a 33yo, married woman, sales account executive from Boston. I don't remember how I found your site, but it's always been a good read. I never post, so I wanted to say thanks for the work you put into your blog. It's appreciated!

Posted by: amici at April 22, 2005 02:12 PM

University IT administrator in the inland northwest. Late 40's married. LIfelong liberal. Sometimes Democratic party actiivist. Prior careers in economic and business.

I read about 10 blogs regularly, of which you are one.

Posted by: Desert Donkey at April 22, 2005 02:18 PM

41 yr old land use / water rights attorney in Southern California. Moderately liberal. Found this blog thru Volokh's links. Visit about once a week. (And I can be found infesting the comments at Obsidian Wings.)

Posted by: Francis at April 22, 2005 02:35 PM

Middle-aged white woman. Political junkie. Interested enough in the law that I considered going to law school in my 40s but decided against it. One of my hobbies: reading Supreme Court opinions. Another hobby: reading blogs.

Posted by: Becca at April 22, 2005 03:11 PM

Middle aged white guy working in Chicago (commercial finance)...married with two young kids...

Posted by: Steve at April 22, 2005 03:25 PM

Occupation: Drafting at home. 51 years old Auburn AL now, lived in Florida for 50 years.

Read you daily, like your perspective; if it raises itself high enough to get your attention, I pay attention. Thanks to your wife and family who must have to give a little to accomodate this.......I appreciate them, too.

Mary

Posted by: Mary Stromberg at April 22, 2005 03:28 PM

I'm an attorney in Houston, Texas, now writing practitioner's guides for lawyers. I've increased my interest in law and politics over the past couple of years, and also have a side interest in technology law, which you cover with some regularity. You have a sensible, readable style that I enjoy. Plus, I have family in Florida, so I like to keep tabs on the state...

Posted by: Kenneth Fair at April 22, 2005 03:47 PM

College-age lady attending university in a red state. Moderately liberal. My field is psychology but I am also an absolute political junkie.

Posted by: C.B. at April 22, 2005 03:51 PM

I'm a retired college librarian. I live in Garland, Texas.

John Ferguson

Posted by: John Ferguson at April 22, 2005 03:57 PM

Yet another legal academic.

Posted by: TJ McIntyre at April 22, 2005 04:26 PM

Main gig: Civil rights lawyer. Other gigs: activist, technogeek, writer, troublemaker. On the east coast, possible future (5+ yrs) professorial ambitions, yadda yadda.

Posted by: Paul Gowder at April 22, 2005 05:00 PM

Yet another lawprof.

Posted by: Joe Liu at April 22, 2005 05:20 PM

See here. (Philosophy prof.) And thanks for your blog.

Posted by: hilzoy at April 22, 2005 05:26 PM

Another law professor here (at Indiana University--Indianapolis), and a blogger on-and-off since May 2002.

Posted by: Jeff Cooper at April 22, 2005 05:30 PM

I am a student in your Administrative Law class who could not get enough of you in class. I wanted more and you are giving it to me on this blog.

Posted by: Robert Folsom at April 22, 2005 05:50 PM

Sister to Rachel who listed above. How did she get here before me today?
Started adult life as a holographer/electro optics tech. That was three carreer changes ago. I lead a small/determined/somewhat effective group of neighbors fighting for long-term, rational transportation and urban planning from a variety of undercover programming day jobs hidden inside some of the larger mega-corps in the Puget Sound area. 35. white. married. childfree. hoping to be accepted at the UW (Washington) this fall so I can finally get started on the next thing I want to be when I grow up.
Got here from BoingBoing (I think). Read daily. Grew up in the most conservative family I have ever known - reading Newsweek and USNews since grade school in my grandfather's shop. Moved far, far away from that in several dimensions, but the political fascination stuck. Love your analysis and your references. Like Mary said - THANKS TO YOUR FAMILY for sharing you with us!!

Posted by: Gwendolyn High at April 22, 2005 06:15 PM

Freelance writer in Portland, OR, soon to be a graduate student in MIT's Comparative Media Studies Department.

Posted by: A. C. Austin at April 22, 2005 06:21 PM

I am a 55 year old woman who lives in California (the Bay Area). I read your blog because you make me think. I appreciate your legal expertise, and I think you write vey well.

Posted by: Deborah at April 22, 2005 07:23 PM

Brooklyn based small technology business owner, 32 years old. Been reading your output on various mailing lists ever since a CFP some time back. Libertarian with Democrat leanings.

Posted by: Jamie at April 22, 2005 07:45 PM

male, 63, secular jewish and progressive family background, university registrar, in second marriage. occasional activist (more in past than present.) mid-atlantic region.

Posted by: BroD at April 22, 2005 07:56 PM

I am a paralegal at a small IP firm during the day and a law student at night in Orlando, Florida. I read your article on your Web site regarding which classes to take during law school. Indeed, solely on the impression you made with your various IP-related Web sites, I applied and was accepted to UM. I was prepared to matriculate until I saw the cost of tuition. Ouch. Perhaps I could take Administrative Law over the Web...

Posted by: Larry Staton Jr. at April 22, 2005 08:03 PM

Male, 40, systems administrator, Silly Valley, immigrant from the northern edge of Europe. I added your blog to my list during your torture posts.

Posted by: idook at April 22, 2005 09:02 PM

Retired Air Force Intelligence; now defense contractor in West Texas. Usually the only liberal in the room. Found you from Eric Muller's site.

Posted by: Mojo at April 22, 2005 09:50 PM

I grew up in the South, got an Ivy-League degree, and am now a law student in Philadelphia. I don't remember how I got to this blog, but it was through liberal politics, not the law, but I stay for both, and for the occassional crazy link, like PostSecret.

Posted by: Max at April 23, 2005 12:14 AM

So here I am reading this *twenty-seven minutes* after you posted it, and already you've got seventy responses . . .

Jon Weinberg

Posted by: Jon at April 23, 2005 12:27 AM

Oops -- that was one day and twenty-seven minutes. Never mind.

Posted by: Jon at April 23, 2005 12:30 AM

I used to care who my readers were. I think all new bloggers do, so I'm not surprised a reporter asked. But I no longer think it matters. It wouldn't change what or how I write.

Bret Fausett
Los Angeles Lawyer

Posted by: Bret Fausett at April 23, 2005 01:49 AM

58, Israeli-Jewish, left-left wing (not European style, i.e. not an anti-Semite), professor, engineering, DC, 3 adult kids, son of holocaust survivor, law through expert witnessing

Posted by: lakelobos at April 23, 2005 05:49 AM

Somehow discovered you during my undergraduate days at the University of Miami (College of Engineering). I grew up in Coral Gables--I saw you at a city public meeting once. I've lived in DC and am now living in England. My brother is a 2L at UM Law. I've encouraged him to take your classes, even to apply to be your assistant, but he isn't interested--he's heard you assign 100 pages of reading a night and is for some reason put off by your ever-present bow tie. His loss. I like reading your blog to discover further parallels in our lives, hear news of home, and gather interesting tidbits of news and opinion.

Posted by: Andrew at April 23, 2005 08:41 PM

I'm 19 and a student of neurobiology at the University of Texas. Found your site doing research for my social science class earlier this semester. (The class is taught by Benjamin Gregg, who has written articles on indeterminacy in jurisprudence among others things.) Awesome blog!

Posted by: Christof at April 24, 2005 07:04 PM

21 year old left-leaning Computer Science and Neuroscience student at Dartmouth.

Posted by: Adam Riggall at April 24, 2005 11:13 PM

Male, software quality engineer, married but separated, resident of the 36th District in Seattle, Soviet of Washington. In Germany, I'd probably be a mild Social Democrat; in the US, I'm a dangerous radical, one part lefty, one part yellow-dog, and either way a born-to Democrat from a red state.

Posted by: michael at April 25, 2005 01:50 AM

67-year old professor of history & archaeology, 4 children, 7 grandchildren.

Posted by: Brian at April 25, 2005 06:13 PM

Me. Ish.

wg

Posted by: Wendy M. Grossman at April 26, 2005 06:07 AM

I was your research assistant for three semesters while attending UM's school of law, and I have been reading this blog since its inception.

Posted by: Case at April 26, 2005 03:09 PM

lawyer in a small firm in the East Bay of San Francisco, represent local public agencies. 47/married/3 stepkids/Democrat/Catholic, etc. Found this blog through a search on the torture memos and was so impressed with the analysis that I linked the site and have been checking in ever since.

Posted by: ABCJr at April 27, 2005 02:44 PM

I'm a 28-year old 1L (for a couple weeks, anyway) at the University of Wyoming.

Posted by: Mackenzie at May 2, 2005 09:33 PM

22 year old 1L at Washington and Lee University

Posted by: VA1L at May 2, 2005 09:45 PM

I am a automotive techncian. I am in school for C.J. associates to start. I finished my Crime Scene Technician certificate. I am interested in learning how our private phone calls can be used against us. How the Patriot Act is killing the Bill Of Rights and why the AMERICA Constitution is falling apart. Will it ever get better?

Posted by: CHARLES BEX at May 9, 2005 07:29 PM

I'm a J.D./Ph.D. (English) and a public official (Chapel Hill, N.C., Town Council). Also, as of this fall, an adjunct prof at UNC Law teaching a course in civil rights law and rhetoric. I think it's cool that you're into Habermas.

Posted by: Sally at May 13, 2005 02:54 PM

Professor of computer science in DC. Interested in politics, labor movements, complex organizational systems (research) and IP/Patent legal cases as applied to computers and especially software technology.

Posted by: lakelobos at May 18, 2005 08:31 PM

I have read a few of your law review articles. I am a former free lance writer who now only writes on the web and a middle aged graduate of Cardozo Law School who after the first year of law school didn't like the idea of practicing law. I don't know what made me go back to law school but somehow I did at age 42. Strange, but I should have known because I grew up in a law school, living with my parents in married student housing while my father went to the University of Miami Law School, circa 1963.

My interests are mainly philosophical but if you could somehow turn law into poetry and then maybe I could write about law.

Your subject of administrative law was my second favorite subject in law school. My first was conflict of laws. If I could choose to teach any two subjects it would be these two. (Though John Ashberry makes more sense than most conflict of laws cases.)

The reason I came to your weblog was to read about the 'torture memos' which I have been writing about lately on my weblog.

Jerry Monaco
New York

Posted by: Jerry Monaco at June 9, 2005 07:32 PM

36 years old, philosopher, jurist and ex-Publishing Editor from Holland.
Currently writing a PhD thesis on the effect of the Internet on state power and its consequences for theories of state formation/development.

Posted by: Rudolf at July 1, 2005 03:46 AM

Law professor blogger
friend of and co-blogger w/ C.B.
compatriot in the culture wars
Mom, runner, scrapbooker (extraordinaire)

Posted by: Christine Hurt at July 6, 2005 10:23 PM

US attorney, 37, male, based in Shanghai. I focus on foreign investment, labor law, contract law. I am disgusted and amazed at what our nation has come to, and thank you for your activism.

Posted by: LACJ at July 17, 2005 10:20 PM

English prof who blogs (ir)regularly and reads other academic blogs. But oddly enough I got to you via google while looking for a list of charities that Dreamhost (my hosting service) listed in the last year.

Posted by: beautiful at August 5, 2005 09:50 PM

Expat, Yokohama, Japan.

Posted by: richard at August 9, 2005 01:39 AM

Teaching computer science at a DC university. I am Yellow Dog Blue. Trying to find in blogs what is badly missing in today’s media: decency, outspokenness, in-your-face to whatever administration is in power. I find most blogs almost as bad as the media. I like this one because it is personal and decent; its writing quality is good too (the media is bad writing). I also like Kleiman, Eric Muller and am fed up with Crooked Timber, Brad Delong for being too esoteric and contain posts as long as the Potomac. Have no affinity towards the mainstream of Blue blogging – preaching, and they really preach, to the choir is as interesting as a middle of the week service in shul.

Posted by: RedWolf at August 27, 2005 06:04 AM

UM law grad, Class of '01
Former Froomkin student (Admin Law, 2000 (+/- a year!))
40 years old; Husband, father of 2
Coast Guard Officer/Judge Advocate
Right now (2005) teaching undergrad law at US Coast Guard Academy.

Posted by: Jim Carlson at September 5, 2005 09:37 PM

Hello Everyone,
Lets see...where do I start..there is so much to say..so many issues to cover...its overwhelming.
George W. Bush....nothing ever sticks on him...lied to the nation about Iraq, stole the elections, not once but twice. Had been on vacation most of the time before 9/11, and guess where he was when Hurricane Katrina was to hit. Thats right..no points for guessing....'A working Vacation'. Failed to react and act immediately even after being talked to by Mayor Nagin, even after knowing fully well, the extent of impact caused by Hurricane Katrina. Did us all a HUGE favor by calling his vacation short by all those (2) days. Had systematically eaten into/ cut the financial bugdets of so many agencies its mind boggling...the FEMA, the Army corps of Engineers (whose budget was slashed by 41%, these guys are responsible for the levee's), diverted BILLIONS of dollars to IRAQ, not to mention the NATIONAL GUARD, has given $250 BILLION, yes B I L L I O N to Israel, in the last 30 years(your and mine hard earned tax money) , repeatedly lied about creating a great response team for natural/man-made disasters, infringed upon numerous civil rights in the name of fighting terror (Patriotic Act 1 & 2). Mismanaged Fiscal policies by his TAX CUTS that come at the cost of Social programs, my gosh, the list is endless.......
What is the first thing, our Commander-in-chief does in response to HURRICANE KATRINA, he relaxes the EPA laws to enable oil companies produce more oil and endanger the environment more.
Second thing, he does is meets with ALAN GREENSPAN to see the effect on the economy this will cause. All this while people wait on their roof tops and attics with water upto their necks...waiting for him to act and send help. The help arrives but 7 days late. Thats right 7 days late. Killing all those helpless people who had hoped that help would arrive sooner and they could be saved. BUSH Adminstration has blood on its hands.......
In comes the MEDIA...fox,cnn,nbc, all all those in between.....they tell us, even if the levee's had been repaired and managed New Orleans could not have been saved. Right, you immediately know who those guys are working for, they are working their asses to save the BUSH Administration's face.
They never ask the real questions......just enough to keep us thinking that they are doing a wonderful job. the MEDIA led us to believe that Iraq had WMD which led to billions of dollars being diverted to IRAQ and other BUSH fantasies, they are equal partner in crime. The media my fellow Americans has blood on their hands. They are slowly trying to assasinate Mayor Ray Nagin's character and shove blame on him, but American people have bene fooled way to many times, this time, they are not buying.
Mayor Ray Nagin, acted when he could, called for a mandatory evacuation of New Orleans, imagine if he had not done so Imagine New Orleaners going about in their city as they did....Imagine the Tens of thousands of lives that would have been lost...All those lives all those people that left the city because of the Mandatory Evacuation, all those peoples lives were saved by one man...MAYOR RAY NAGIN. He did organize buses to take people out those who did not have cars..but people are poeple they did not leave for so many reasons. He did whatever he could...now he is being gone after because he made the BUSH Administration get up from its sweet slumber, and forced them to act...Making the BUSH Admin do its job is a grave sin, my fellow americans. And like so many of you, I will be heart broken if of all people Ray Nagin pays for it.
God be with the evacuess of New Orleans, and God bless all those people helping in this time of need.
-Saira
(p.s. I could write a book right now, but am just overwhelmed)

Posted by: Saira Syed at September 7, 2005 04:20 PM

US born from Barcelonans studying their Ph.D.’s in Northwestern University. Back in the metropolis I became a lawyer, now working in-house for a pharma company. Thirty-four years old, father of 2. I first visited this blog searching for information about the legal reasoning behind the invasion of Iraq. Indeed, although I do commercial law for a living, what I really enjoy analyzing (as a jurist) is the interaction of norms and politics (this last term understood in the classic, non-partisan sense). Since Prof. Froomkin also seems to appreciate this kind of analysis, I visit regularly.

Posted by: Joaquim Barbera at September 22, 2005 10:56 AM

Hi here, just been feeling so depressed I am a lawyer of 13 years standing now 45 and considered intelligent but kind of wasted my time between 30 and now when i got married and was under orders not to work or do anything. This marriage crashed and I now need to work but everyone thinks I am too old for a job and this is sending me crazy is the world so hard out here. Where do I go after this terrible exit from the outside world now I am back in it with no where to go to. I am worried any one there willing to help. I am a nigerian not a scammer please.

Posted by: beatrice at September 27, 2005 11:54 AM

The "EU" has no right to negotiate for rights to control the internet. I am from Europe and it is important for those outside Europe to recognise that this organisation does not represent Europeans - it has never been elected by us. As for trying to control the internet - this is typical of these people. I would urge your government to have nothing to do with them - keep the internet free!

Posted by: Kenton Phillips at October 1, 2005 09:15 AM

This is scary, these sort of people are everywhere and are working toghether to secure their power. And I am no conspiracy theorist, I'm someone who has eventually come to this sort of conclusion after a long time of deliberation and of coming across unbelievable things.

We're in for an interesting next 20-50 years...

Posted by: Sean Hugo at October 9, 2005 03:00 AM

You have to diversify your reading list - That's why I read this blog.

Posted by: Greg Hoffman at October 19, 2005 03:01 PM

Dear Sir,

It's me Ghadeer, 24 From iran. I am in LOve with Discourse. So i found your website. let me ask you a question: can you help me on giving some information regarding the Discourse-based approach to writing????????

I would appreciate if you or anyone of your readers could do me this faivor. I am actually in need.

thanks.

Posted by: Ghadeer at October 28, 2005 03:39 AM

ummm... i just Media and Cultural studies student, just looking for some answers... i guess!

Posted by: Fhamida at November 6, 2005 01:35 PM

ummm... i just Media and Cultural studies student, just looking for some answers... i guess!

Posted by: Fhamida at November 6, 2005 01:37 PM

ummm... im just a Media and Cultural studies student, just looking for some answers... i guess!

Posted by: Fhamida at November 6, 2005 01:37 PM

Discourse.net was linked from Progressive Blog Digest http://pbd.blogspot.com

Posted by: otravez at November 18, 2005 02:01 PM

29 year-old collection attorney in orlando.

Posted by: molly at November 22, 2005 11:55 AM

former student (administrative law, spring 2002); currently a law clerk in new york city. like the sense of humor, critical thought & miami updates; amused at the bow tie icon.

Posted by: DML at December 2, 2005 09:57 AM

I am 22 year old waitress in Sooke. In my leisure time I study the philosophy of technology, knowledge and power.

Posted by: Meg at December 4, 2005 01:37 PM

White female working in commercial real estate in Chicago, big fan of your brother's Post column. Almost completely disgusted with the MSM, always searching for the truth. I love Jesus (no, seriously, I'm not being ironic), squirrels, dark chocolate, Patrick Fitzgerald's bald spot.

Posted by: Anonymous at December 13, 2005 02:13 PM

I am a high school senior torn between naval engineering and anthropology (specializing in linguistics and ethnology). I recently registered to vote for the very first time, and seek to become as informed and responsible as feasibly possible. I enjoy surveying a variety of views and debates.

Posted by: SamW at January 27, 2006 02:52 PM

Miami attorney and former student of the Prof. A big fan of energy innovation and independence, and public education, sans unconstitutional vouchers. Intimidated by the bow-tie.

Posted by: JoshS at February 2, 2006 05:02 PM

I am a Law Student from the Midwest with a socially, philosophically, and politically oriented blog, who hopes to become an appeals attorney in Chicago.

Posted by: theDonnybrook at March 19, 2006 03:18 PM

I'm Professor Froomkin's research assistant. I'm inspired by the bow-tie.

Posted by: Dan B at March 28, 2006 09:44 PM

I am a 27 year old lawyer, with an LLM from the University of Miami. Currently I live in Ecuador, and I practice corporate and financial law. A few years ago I took a class at UM with proffesor Froomkin, since then I am a regular reader of discourse.net.

Posted by: Clemente at March 29, 2006 02:03 PM

i am a UM student and ex-Admissions Office occupant; just discovered discourse through picketline. . . or was it the law school strike blog?

Posted by: Liza at April 2, 2006 06:52 PM

Wow. I can't believe so many people read this blog (with all due respect to Prof. Froomkin). We really are a bunch of navel gazers (lawyers, that is). I'm presently an associate at a DC law firm, soon to be clerk on the Third Circuit.

Posted by: Geoff Neri at May 3, 2006 06:45 PM

I'm a 59 year old software developer from Brisbane, Australia. I'm a left wing atheist with strong concerns about the state of the world and real worries about the path being followed by the US. I'm always interested in finding evidence that America is more than Bush and Business. I was pleased to discover Discourse.net from a link on Making Light. I almost never comment on other people's blogs, but was interested in this invitation to introduce myself. And I almost never read blog comments. I have enough trouble finding the time to read the principal posts without taking a great deal more to wade through comments which I have found to be almost universally not worth the extra effort. I'm looking forward to adding Discourse.net to my regular reading.

Posted by: Greg Black at May 5, 2006 08:32 AM

25 y/o labour organizer presently working in Ontario, Canada. Wandered in looking for strike coverage and stayed.

Posted by: Fspider at May 6, 2006 05:20 PM

Law student from isreal

Posted by: Yifat at May 8, 2006 01:15 PM

I am orig from eastern Europe and new one on the block,and teaching special ed,second graders in wonderful sunny Florida/this is a great experience.I have lived in 5 different countries prior here.Now US is my home.
As far as teaching goes.I also have another certification in History,should have gone to law school.but I enjoy what I am doing now,I am also enrolled in graduate school and now single,very active in community .I do yoga and run in my spare time.I am 40.Now you know more about me ,I am fighting for a good cause.I think people should be more aware of disability rights of ESE children and their education ,just sending money to easter seals is not enough. so much things could be done.spend an hr in a month in a nonprofit org for a cause,be volunteer like me.
I love your comments Dr Froomkin.It really makes my day.

Posted by: yasmine at May 10, 2006 01:03 PM

I am a shitkicker at a small engineering works.

Posted by: CIM at May 19, 2006 09:34 PM

17 y/o Canadian from Duncan, BC. Making the transition from highschool to an English degree at UNBC. This website is probably my most boring dirty little secret.

Posted by: Franklin Hudson at June 29, 2006 06:42 PM

recent ucla grad (english) in the unfamiliar territory of having to find a job.

great site, my kind of liberalism. i like salon.com too but it's getting a tad preachy and cute.

Posted by: tld_holden at July 8, 2006 12:40 PM

Freshman Law Student in the University of the Philippines.

This blog saves me from becoming emo while drowning in cases.

Posted by: Emma Maglaque at August 10, 2006 07:22 PM

Nice to meet you all. Let me introduce myself... please watch my politically 'incorrect' video.. I hope you find it amusing..

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jUg9CR98Hp4

Posted by: texasbush55 at August 17, 2006 03:43 PM

Everyday, I learn. Thank you for this blog. 31yo woman, Fort Lauderdale native. Liberal, proud of it.

Posted by: Wilder at September 28, 2006 10:04 PM

I´am law student.

Posted by: Betty at October 23, 2006 10:14 AM

I'm in LA, found this site about 6 months ago doing a search on some random topic and just recently have started digging deeper and depepr into this site, as time has permitted. So, that's me!

Posted by: Education at October 30, 2006 04:17 PM

Northern Irish exile ... married and living in Ontario ... reformed Bush backer ... this blog was one of a number that helped me to clarify the true nature of Bush admin workings. Ever grateful.

Posted by: aidan at January 21, 2007 06:09 PM

Another law prof -- & your colleague.
Donna

Posted by: Donna at February 8, 2007 08:06 PM

I am a gay, liberal UM law graduate practicing immigration law. I wish I had taken one of your classes while I was a student. Administrative law would have been very useful.

Posted by: howard at March 6, 2007 06:52 PM

I'm a lawyer who recently opened my own firm. Donner Law Firm PL is a dispute resolution and litigation firm concentrating in the areas of commercial, administrative, and government litigation.

I have undergraduate and law degrees from the University of Florida. I practiced with big firms for about 6.5 years before spending 14 months in the City of Miami Beach City Attorney's Office. I got some great experience practicing with those large organizations, and I finally made the leap. Wish me luck--better yet, refer me potential clients. Miami is an expensive place to live.

Posted by: Jeff Donner at March 23, 2007 11:26 PM

Short, white, leftist, feminist law professor.

Posted by: KCSheehan at May 6, 2007 07:55 PM

Short, white, leftist, feminist law professor.

Posted by: KCSheehan at May 6, 2007 10:46 PM

Retired, computer-type, left-leaning artist and SF Bay Area home cook who started following political blogs daily in 2000. Since then legal issues have become more and more serious. As I am sure you know.

Posted by: Lindata at June 11, 2007 11:16 AM

I'm a PhD student finishing my dissertation on the discourse/ideology of hate violence, law and culture. Born and raised in San Francisco, lived in Los Angeles for graduate school, and now a resident of Arlington, VA teaching part-time at George Mason University.

Posted by: Disoriented at June 19, 2007 03:23 PM

Political junkie (caused by being raised in Ottawa, Canada). Starting the blog thing and learning more everyday. Not much more to learn about politics-if it stinks (you know the rest).

Posted by: Dave B at July 2, 2007 12:44 AM

I'm an ALJ in Washington, DC. Draft lottery number 353 in 1971. J.D. in 1977.

Posted by: Joe at November 29, 2007 10:41 AM

floridian, blogger, fan of dinosaurs and demonstrations.

Posted by: hipparchia at December 1, 2007 02:42 AM

Once a copyfree blogger (on your voices list), now turned money burning commercial communications lawyer from Europe. Not just ready to jump back in the blogosphere.

Posted by: DDRL at December 2, 2007 06:03 PM

Non-traditional (over 40) Rutgers University 3L

Posted by: mmf at January 14, 2008 02:55 PM

Hey -- your link to my story, "Life and Death in NYC: Three Days in the Life of an RNC Protester" - that link is dead. I wouldn't mind giving you the story here directly so you don't have to worry about other web sites dying off over time. Please email me back if you'd like it again.

Best Regards,
Jim Gaites
Arlington, VA

Posted by: James Gaites at April 10, 2008 08:51 PM

I am a PhD student working on my dissertation interested in how rhetoric relates to laws and contracts, and in discourse of course.

Posted by: anca codreanu at April 20, 2008 12:40 PM

"I'm a computer programmer in Atlanta, in law school at Georgia State University at nights. I'm involved with various liberal organizations and I read far too many blogs.
Posted by: Richard Campbell at April 22, 2005 10:24 AM"

Huh. I must have missed the 2006 and 2007 versions. But what the hell: now I'm a lawyer in Atlanta, less involved with various liberal organizations based on time commitments, but still reading far too many blogs.

Posted by: Richard Campbell at April 22, 2008 12:35 AM

Retired civil servant with interests in Fla politics and human rights.

Posted by: ot at April 22, 2008 08:43 AM

PhD student, specializing in literature and philosophy, but fascinated by the law. I came across your student note on the unitary executive, really liked it, and started reading the blog.

Posted by: Alix Cavanaugh at April 22, 2008 08:43 AM

2L at UM, married, with a kid on the way - and trying to survive the exam period coming up...

Posted by: kevin g at April 22, 2008 10:12 AM

I am a bureaucrat/lawyer in Tallahassee. (FLORIDA STATE! FLORIDA STATE! FLORIDA STATE!) I first met you through mutual work on privacy and technology issues, but now read your blog to get a heads-up on events and issues, such as treatment of the Guantanamo detainees and what it takes to get home repairs done in Miami.

Posted by: SH at April 22, 2008 10:46 AM

I'm a 36 year-old social worker in Salt Lake City, UT. I've been reading this site for several years and have no recollection of how I found it.

Posted by: jg at April 22, 2008 11:11 AM

30 year old artist.

Posted by: Adam at April 22, 2008 11:28 AM

Patent Attorney in Minneapolis; Develop software on the side. Latest venture is http://www.patentbuddy.com

Posted by: Janal Kalis at April 22, 2008 11:32 AM

61 year old, White, Male, Married for 33 years IN A ROW!, two Awesome kids, and I'm a Grandpa, High Tech Systems Analyst in the computer field, Liberal, 20 year military vet, everything from Intel to sitting in an ICBM control capsule up in Grand Forks with my finger on the Key ( It's a key, not a button ). Enjoy watching your observations on Law and Life , aka Lex Legis et Vita. I guess 2 semesters of Latin One in High School wasn't entirely wasted. Like Physics, Math, Computers and Nancy, not necessarily in that order.

Posted by: Chuck at April 22, 2008 11:47 AM

2002 UM Law School graduate, working as senior associate at large antitrust shop in DC, and working on my Ph.D in History with hopes of joining the ranks of academia. My scholarly interest-Supreme Court history, specifically the Fuller Court and free speech/antitrust jurisprudence

Posted by: TD at April 22, 2008 12:07 PM

Retired 62 year old female MIT graduate living in the silicon valley (my husband and I have lived here nearly 40 years and totally avoided making lots of money). I cook, do art, read lefty blogs and await grandchildren.

Posted by: Lindata at April 22, 2008 12:22 PM

went to law school long ago to save the world (that turned out well); came to paris on a sabbatical for cooking classes, met someone and stayed. am much happier as a medical/scientific translator than I ever was as a lawyer. probably got here from Brad DeLong, long long ago -- he sent me here and to Making Light -- maybe i should thank him some day.

Posted by: jodyinparis at April 22, 2008 12:56 PM

52 year-old male; live in Phoenix; single; straight; semi-retired (no previous career, just a succession of jobs); college-educated (even though I can't write full sentences); politically aware since 1968, but never actively involved; registered "independent", but on the mainstream left (what used to be called "mainstream" -- Barney Frank comes closest to my political preferences).

Posted by: kay gus at April 22, 2008 01:09 PM

Law clerk in Montgomery, AL with professorial aspirations as well...

Posted by: BR at April 22, 2008 01:10 PM

52 year-old male; live in Phoenix; single; straight; semi-retired (no previous career, just a succession of jobs); college-educated (even though I can't write full sentences); politically aware since 1968, but never actively involved; registered "independent", but on the mainstream left (what used to be called "mainstream" -- Barney Frank comes closest to my political preferences).

Posted by: kgus at April 22, 2008 01:13 PM

Attorney of 1 year, I come to this website to laugh at Froomkins ignorant and offensive postings. I also laugh at how anyone can take this dude seriously. I don't know what is worse, the ones who actually think Bush is a good president, and the one's who actually think Froomkin has anything intellectual and intelligent to say! lol

I think the latter is worse... but then again who am I to judge.

Posted by: You are all Sheep at April 22, 2008 01:33 PM

Australian, male, 62, retired judge, blogger.

Posted by: Stumblng Tumblr at April 22, 2008 02:14 PM

Magazine editor (architecture), 69, with '60s-'80s background in computer systems research and lively lifelong interests in law, poetry, engineering and the visual arts.

Posted by: John at April 22, 2008 03:20 PM

54 year old law librarian, retired USAF JAG, and semi-expert on the PATRIOT Act. I've been reading your blog for years; I'm especially interested in the torture issues and other civil rights "stuff."

Posted by: Leah at April 22, 2008 04:18 PM

Middle-aged geek living in Canada, technical writer by trade. I often attend CFP and other conferences of that ilk, which should explain how my interests overlap with yours. We've met; you know the person to whom I'm married.

Posted by: kmh at April 22, 2008 06:41 PM

30 y, journalist based in Brussels, met Dr Froomkin last Feb in Miami to get a lesson on American federalism and reading (from time to time) his blog to get some inspiration. The best is when he is commenting some current judicial affairs.

Posted by: mehmet at April 22, 2008 10:16 PM

Software engineer by day, hopping risky startups since 1996.

By night, robot experimenter, sponsor of illegal NYC warehouse events, proud Santa and zombie, and the sort of person who spends nine months preparing for Burning Man, not to mention the after party.

And yes, at 35, I'm finding it difficult to keep up. On both fronts. I very nearly went to law school three years ago. Ultimately, I'm glad I didn't, I think. That said, software bores me at this point.

Waiting for that 'hit' on the work front, but even if that doesn't happen, I'll be retiring to cheap land and a new career of some sort in five or so years. If nothing else, it is much easier to blow things up and make complicated, potentially dangerous machines without attracting the wrong sort of attention when you're not in NYC.

I've followed tech-legal issues since I started doing tech. Used to subscribe to the cypherpunks list (it was good for humor, at least), and would like to find a way to contribute more to actual, functional ways of defining, defending, and entrenching civil liberties in what looks to be an even stranger future than we were guessing at 15 years ago.

Posted by: Just someone at April 22, 2008 11:51 PM

3L at Rutgers University. Been reading for at leat a year. Don't remember what the link was.

Posted by: MMF at April 23, 2008 12:38 AM

Male, 61, consultant and writer (architecture, urban planning and historical preservation); South Florida resident.

Posted by: Floridan at April 23, 2008 08:16 AM

I started reading during law school, a couple of years ago probably, and I'm in a clerkship now.

Posted by: MTF at April 23, 2008 09:16 AM

Chicago area, 59; software developer & consultant; onetime lit student and librarian; atheist & leftie; lover of the arts; citizen of the world; closely following news and issues of civil liberties and human rights.

Posted by: BillJ at April 23, 2008 09:40 AM

nearing 60, "faculty slave" er... I mean document delivery assistant/pseudo researcher/pseudo reference person at UM School of Law Library.

Posted by: Sue Ann at April 23, 2008 09:46 AM

Followed a link once a few years ago, probably Atrios to your site. Enjoyed the eclectic collection of information. As a former Miami resident I enjoy the local info too.

Let's Go Canes!

P.S. Can you overnight me a medianoche?

From the hinterlands of Northern Nevada

Posted by: George at April 23, 2008 02:43 PM

61 year old Virginian, happily in her fifth career, as a 3D computer programmer (what a long, strange trip it's been).

Found you a couple years ago via a family recommend. (Actually found your brother's WaPo column from one of your links.)

Stop by a couple times a week, always interesting and informative; Japanese Smoke on the Water made my day - Thanks!

Posted by: Lisa at April 23, 2008 05:41 PM

I'm a health law attorney from Philly (who still loves what she does after many years at it), who meandered here a year or so ago and decided to stay around.

I'm a political junkie (still mad at my state for being responsible for keeping the democratic primary going) and I also keep up with the various constitutional legal issues that have been discarded by the current people in charge. Hardly ever write about health care/law -- too much like work.

Posted by: JudiPhilly at April 25, 2008 08:22 AM

Male, 35, lifelong resident of Tallahassee (except for a couple of years).

Adjunct professor at two colleges in north Florida, blogger and activist.

More importantly, husband and father of three young sons.

Posted by: Kenneth Quinnell at May 1, 2008 12:32 PM

Male, DC, Federal Government Attorney. Thanks for the great posts, please keep it up...

Posted by: Gapik at May 9, 2008 02:17 PM

I'm an MA candidate at the University of Chicago.

There are two philosophical/literary/cultural/religious spoof videos on my website I think you & your readers might appreciate. (http://www.youtube.com/kleistgeistzeit) One is "Wishmaster Misheard Odysseus' Idealist Alchemical Revolution" and the other is the less exalted, short and sweet Badiou video.

Posted by: TCS at June 1, 2008 05:11 PM

39 y.o Computer Programmer, in the corporate cube environ to for many years.

Posted by: Janie Meiss at June 23, 2008 11:34 PM

Retired female IT person who now creates art and reads lefty blogs...you and firedoglake for the legal take on things.

Posted by: Lindata at July 24, 2008 11:34 AM

English, 22 y/o media studies graduate, who spent most of that time reading and writing about Habermas. Now about to start a Master's in Philosophy, Politics and Economics.

I came across this blog last week, after returning from a trip stateside to find one of those TSA 'We've searched your bag' cards in my suitcase. I was reading around on the legal issues surrounding these searches, and was impressed by the level of discussion that I found in the comment threads.

Posted by: MJC at September 17, 2008 08:20 AM

32 female, retired school teacher now full blown housewife ! Addicted to reading blogs such as this.

Posted by: Jenny Brice at October 28, 2008 10:28 PM

Retired and traveling. I enjoy reading blogs and this one is no exception.

Posted by: Miami Tours at November 9, 2008 05:32 AM

But you know who I am. :)

wg

Posted by: Wendy M. Grossman at November 21, 2008 01:03 PM

2nd year University of Miami law student. Thanks for all of the great posts, and I hope to take a few courses with you soon. (They keep filling up before my registration time!) Did you get out to the David Byrne concert last night? Unbelievable show!

Posted by: Joshua Kritzer at December 14, 2008 10:59 AM

A dutch lawyer in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. I picked up your blog sometime after the 2006 elections when I was lining in New York. Stuck around since then.

Posted by: Anderj at December 14, 2008 01:18 PM

I think there are seats in both of my classes for the Spring. And if there are not now, experiences suggests there will be by the end of add/drop. (It's not just personal -- the things I'm teaching next term are luxury items like Jurisprudence and Internet Law; students get wait listed for basic courses, and transfer into them when seats open up.)

Posted by: michael at December 14, 2008 09:21 PM

Re: Bush - Final/shminal!

Bush commuted Scooter Libby's sentence.

Where did he get the power and authority to "commute" anything? Read Art. II, Sec. 2[1] of the Constitution: It provides for reprieves and pardons, but no commutation!

State governors have commutation power, but not the President of the U.S.

Law.com would like us to think he does, but if I can't see it, I can't buy it!

Papa Bush "pardoned" Casper Weinberger BEFORE he was convicted. Gimme a break!

Why is everyone playing ostrich?

Posted by: Lori View at December 27, 2008 01:12 PM

I think you can tell by my name.

Posted by: san francisco intellectual property attorney at February 19, 2009 11:08 AM

A female - don't ask me for my age - who loves to travel, virtually and of course in reality.

Posted by: A tea and travel fan at February 19, 2009 04:15 PM

Female, 26, Vancouver, BC, working my way into law school...

Posted by: Kandi at April 12, 2009 02:15 PM

I'm a software engineer from Toronto, Canada. I spend a lot of time on blogs between compiles.

Posted by: Angie at April 21, 2009 03:35 AM

I'm a manager at a professional society. I can't remember where I first got linked, but I read via a LiveJournal feed. And you are awesome.

Posted by: Nora Bombay at April 22, 2009 01:01 AM

Late 30's white guy, management consultant, fairly liberal Democrat, passionately interested in your posts on abuses of executive power.

Posted by: KR at April 22, 2009 01:57 PM

Law professor in Greensboro, NC. Neo-anarcho-syndicalist, wannabe alt-country performer, fanatical fly-fisher. I've been reading Discourse for a few years and its consistently been among my favorites, especially among the various law professor blogs. I have a blog where I post sporadically, mostly political kvetching and music, seldom about law or teaching. About 12 people read it and I know 10 of them personally, so I've never been inspired to do a survey like this.

Posted by: eric at April 22, 2009 03:57 PM

I thought I did this back in the day. Anyway here goes again.
Male, 73, retired NASA engineer. Spent all of my working lifetime sucking on the US gov tit in one way or another. Helped design things to kill Viet Namese back in the 60's. Worked on the Lunar Surface Magetometer for a few years. Worked on basic missile structural dynamics information used in targeting MM3 plus Reagan's PeaceKeeper in the late 60's to early 70's. Joined NASA to escape Nixon's war on the So Cal defense industry. Had a lot of fun working on ways to improve the fuel efficiency of transport aircraft - studied the "modern airship" which gave me the chance to meet some of the old helium heads. Help build aerodynamic test facilities.
Always interested in history but knew there was no way to make a living doing that. In history almost all things political, legal and military come together. I think I learned of your blog thru Brad Delong.
Currently working on making our new house in the California foothills fit our needs. I read blogs, ride horses, ski, snowshoe, hike, kayak and race/cruise a small sailboat. The transition from NASA to retirement was easy as the last projects I worked on were shutdown when the full effects of the end of the cold war were realized.
Thanks for all your efforts.

Posted by: dilbert dogbert at April 23, 2009 01:10 AM

Retired AP foreign correspondent, Miami Beach, Democratic blogger, sailor.

Posted by: Larry Thorson at April 23, 2009 10:11 AM

Lawyer and writer in San Francisco. History of activism on homeless rights and police misconduct issues. Trying to write a book on the Tule Lake internment camp site in Northern California.

Posted by: Martha Bridegam at April 25, 2009 01:37 PM

UK law professor who has visited at Miami. I like this blog because it covers a range of subjects I don't find elsewhere. It's intelligent, opinionated and direct.

Posted by: John Flood at April 28, 2009 06:30 AM

38yo Attorney in Los Angeles. I enjoy reading your posts. Continue doing what you do.

Posted by: Elder Abuse Attorney at May 14, 2009 04:56 AM

About 30 yrs old - male - S.Fla. - lawyer - federal practice - larger firm - sick of lawyering - found your blog by accident - read it daily

Posted by: Just me at May 20, 2009 05:41 PM

Wow there are so many comments here.. i love it

anyways, I am a student plus businessman. I do websites and marketing. I somehow found this place but now i think i will be visiting this place regularly :)

Posted by: nggmnt Rngs at May 21, 2009 11:24 AM

Late 20's, asian, female, I specialize in technical writing for pharmaceuticals

Posted by: Anne Footalee at June 12, 2009 01:40 AM

I run a business in Australia selling natural stone products and enjoying playing golf.

Posted by: Natural Stone at June 12, 2009 02:24 AM

I'm an Hispanic Male in my mid 30's, I'm a management consultant and I would say that I'm a fairly liberal Democrat, passionately interested in your posts on abuses of executive power.

Posted by: small businesses at June 26, 2009 12:22 PM

Hi, I am a webmaster and I own few sites related to few niche's Including Loans, Health, Gaming, Seo, Etc.

Posted by: loans consolidate at June 26, 2009 05:41 PM

Hey this is marx. Doing interior design since past 20 years in the UK.

Posted by: Gold Chain at July 1, 2009 06:15 PM

Hi this is martha . Housewife with 5 kids. I enjoy listening to music.

Posted by: Option trading at July 1, 2009 06:16 PM

Hi this akriti. Fdrom the uS i enjoy driving and love music

Posted by: Paypal Vcc at July 1, 2009 06:19 PM
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