Monthly Archives: October 2006

The First “W” Is Missing

I am not now and have never been a professional journalist. For a while, however, I was a pretty serious amateur, ending up as News Editor of the Yale Daily News. Back in the day, perhaps because we didn’t know any better, we believed in traditional news gathering and reporting: the “six W’s” — Who, What, Where, When, Why and (W)How Much.

How odd, therefore, to read so much of the coverage of the dust-up over the RNC’s racist ad in the Tennessee Senate race, and to find that the very first “W” is missing.

First, a quick review: The national Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee, Ken Mehlman proprietor, paid for a rather unsubtle racist ad in the Tennessee Senate race. Like much of the old south, the racist vote is small than it used to be, but still far from negligible, and it seems the GOP’s Nixonian “southern strategy” still lives. Times have changed, though, and rather than accept it, many public figures, including to their credit several (mostly retired) Republicans, balked.

So Mr. Mehlman was asked to explain himself on national TV. His answer was breathtakingly disingenuous. He personally saw nothing wrong with the ad, it’s fair he first said, so what’s the problem? (Today’s spin version, heard no NPR, is more cautious — some of his friends don’t like it and he (now) respects that).

In response to requests that the GOP pull the ad, Mehlman stated that he lacked the power to do so: the ad was an “independent” expenditure by an arms-length body created to act independently of Mehlman’s Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee, the national GOP, and the local GOP Senate candidate, Robert Corker (who also asked that the ad be removed).

Strangely, no one in the media seems to have asked for the name of the person Mehlman believes is responsible for the ad and presumably would have had the power to pull it. Who is in charge of the independent expenditure unit? Who are these rogue figures who would ignore a call by Mehlman to pull the ad — had one in fact been made (it wasn’t)? Who are these shadowy figures who would run a supposedly supportive ad in the teeth of a call by the local candidate to pull it?

“Who” — the first “W” — is missing. And if we knew who we might know something about just how independent they really are.

And speaking of missing W’s — where’s George W. Bush on all this? Has he condemned this ad? Why not?

UPDATE: See what W’s spokesperson, Tony Snow, had to say, via Media Matters.

Posted in Politics: US: 2006 Election, The Media | 1 Comment

No Shame

Cheney ♥ Waterboarding: “It’s a no-brainer for me,” Cheney said at one point in an interview.

Note that in WW II the US stated that waterboarding was a war crime— when practiced on US troops by the Japanese.

Posted in Torture | 2 Comments

‘Stay The Course’

The ‘Stay the Course’ video. Much better than news stories that miss the point.

Incredible that the NYT story doesn’t even mention that Bush claimed “we’ve never been stay the course” and instead just ran with the White House line that they were changing the rhetoric.

We have always been at war with Oceana.

Posted in Iraq | 2 Comments

Jim Webb Does a Good Commercial

Since I previously knocked Jim Webb’s advertising, it seems only fair to point out that this time he’s done a good one.

Or, rather, Mark Warner does a good one for Jim Webb.

Speaking of Jim Webb, here’s an effective ad produced by Lars Sandvik, a Washington ad-maker who doesn’t usually do political ads and isn’t part of the Beltway consultant mafia. He did it for free, on his own, without consulting the Webb campaign. Now the question is whether anyone will find the money to put it on TV.

Incidentally, the ad is designed to be customizable at low cost — all you have to do is change the handle if the pitch fits another candidate.

Bottom line: even if Jim Webb himself isn’t the best TV performer, he’s got the right sort of friends. (And, the latest poll shows Webb with a narrow lead over Sen. George Allen, 47% to 44%. But as this is something of an outlier from all the other polls that show Allen ahead, I’m not going to believe it until I see it confirmed at least once, maybe twice.)

Posted in Politics: US: 2006 Election | 3 Comments

Firefox 2.0 – Maybe Next Week

OK, this is pretty impressive. Almost all of the 26 Firefox
extensions I have installed at home are already ready for 2.0. 

Only seven extensions I currently have installed are not ready.  Of these two are just frills (Shazou and Timetracker).  Spelling is built in, so
I won’t need Spellbound.

Of the other four that are not yet ready, there is one which I’ll certainly miss but can manage without (Autofill). There is really only one showstopper — TabMix Plus. And the developer of that says he needs a week or so to get it ready.  So it looks like I will only
have to wait a week or so to upgrade to 2.0.

Here’s the list of what I use with info on upgrade status
drawn from the amazing Bill’s
Big List of Firefox® 2.0 Compatible Extensions

Ready
for 2.0

Adblock
Plus

Chatzilla
CoLT
del.icio.us
Complete 1.3

Download
Statusbar 0.9.4

dragdropupload
1.5.21

EditCSS
0.3.6

ErrorZilla
Mod 0.1.1

Extended
Statusbar 1.2.5

FireFTP
0.94.4

Gmail
Space 0.5.1

Googlepedia
0.4.1

gTranslate
0.3

MR Tech
Local Install 5.3.1.1

ScrapBook
1.2.0.6

Searchbar
Autosizer 1.1.2

Video
Downloader 2.0

View
Source Chart 2.4.05

X-Ray
0.8.1

Not
(officially)
ready for 2.0

  1. Autofill
  2. Bugmenot 
  3. Shazou
  4. The functionality of Spellbound is, I gather, built in to
    2.0
  5. TabmixPlus is not
    ready yet, but should
    be ready Real Soon Now
     

    I REALIZE THAT FIREFOX 2
    IS GOING TO BE RELEASE ON TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24.
    A NEW VERSION OF TAB MIX PLUS IS GOING TO BE RELEASE SHORTLY AFTER
    THAT, IN LESS THAN A WEEK. PLEASE BE PATIENT, FOR NOW YOU CAN TRY THIS
    VERSION EARLY.
    http://tmp.garyr.net/forum/viewtopic.php?t=3515

  6. Timetracker
  7. Wayback (but this is somewhat obsoleted by ErrorZilla)
Posted in Software | 1 Comment

Scott Adams Can Speak Again

Scott Adams, the author of Dilbert has become the first person in recorded history to recover from Spasmodic Dysphonia (an inability to speak). It’s an amazing story.

Incidentally, I was horrified to discover recently that my children appear to think Dilbert is the Great Guide to Office Life. They take it as nearly true, just as they used to treat Calvin and Hobbes as the Guide to Excruciatingly Appropriate Household Behavior.

Posted in Science/Medicine | 5 Comments