Yearly Archives: 2008

Off to New Haven

I'm off to New Haven for a conference in honor of the 10th anniversary of the Yale Information Society Project. I was very involved in the early days — I think I spoke at the first three or four conferences, but have been less involved recently.

The folks at the Yale ISP were kind enough to recently to make me an 'Affiliated Fellow' of the Yale ISP, so I hope to be involved more in the future.

I like to going to Yale events, as they are both substantive and nostalgic for me (Yale '82, Yale Law '87)…but I HATE the journey. Flying into New Haven is expensive and usually involves a long layover in Philly followed by a wind-up plane. Flying into Hartford gets you an easy drive…but the two direct planes a day are too early and too late, and why change planes just to drive afterward?

Flying into New York is quickest and cheapest…but then there's the land portion. CT Limo is so appalling that I vowed never to use it again after last time. And the time before. And the time before that. So this time I'm going to drive.

The trouble with driving is that I get lost. Easily. I was never the most directionally intuitive driver, and I've gotten softer from years of being married to a very reliable navigator. I don't own a GPS, although I'm thinking about it. I've asked for one in the rental car as a sort of, well, test drive, to see how I like it. (The other trouble is that I'm landing at 3pm, and will hit the Friday afternoon rush more than likely, but there's not a lot I can do about that.)

Posted in Talks & Conferences | 7 Comments

Good Thing I Wasn’t Expecting a Government Job

NYT, For a Washington Job, Be Prepared to Tell All, reports on the very detailed questionnaire being required of applicants for jobs in the Obama admin. This is one group that will be vetted thoroughly! (Even so, given the numbers, odds are something on someone will slip through the cracks, and by the strange logic of politics, the fact that Team Obama took responsibility for vetting will mean that the press will treat the failure as more significant than if they hadn't tried so hard. Go figure.)

The NYT article has this arresting graphic, which suggests that bloggers just might have a little trouble getting a policy (as opposed to blogger outreach) job:

Posted in Blogs | 3 Comments

The War Is Not Over

Cute little video (well, a bit self-serving, but why not), by the pranksters who brought you today's fake NYT, complete with headline announcing the end of the Iraq war.


New York Times Special Edition Video News Release.

Wish I could get one in Miami. And the web site seems totally slashdotted….

(Speculations as to who is behind it, from Gawker.)

Posted in Completely Different | Comments Off on The War Is Not Over

Breaking: Bush Admin Official Apologizes For WMD Lies

Rice Apologizes for W.M.D. Scare: 300,000 Troops Never Faced Risk of Instant Obliteration .

I think the apology comes more than a little belatedly, don't you?

Continue reading

Posted in Completely Different | 2 Comments

Rube Goldberg’s Spirit Alive and Well in Miami

This place really is amazing. This morning's Herald had this beauty: Balloon birds = lights out,

A run-in between a singing Hannah Montana balloon and a flock of birds knocked out power to a Miami neighborhood Monday.

The incident unfolded about 7:30 a.m. outside Jose De Diego Middle School, 3100 NW Fifth Ave..

Fire officials said the balloon may have scared about 300 birds that roost on power lines near the school, knocking a line loose when the birds fled.

It caused a power outage in a five-block radius for a few hours, and forced the rescheduling of an event at the school with Superintendent Alberto Carvalho and Miami Mayor Manny Diaz.

All the birds survived.

The small pink-and-silver Hannah Montana balloon was the only thing that did not emerge unscathed — though it did greet Miami Fire Rescue personnel with the teen singer's hit The Best of Both Worlds.

Rube Goldberg would be proud.

Power was out in my neighborhood for most of Saturday afternoon. I wonder if we had a balloon too?

Posted in Miami | Comments Off on Rube Goldberg’s Spirit Alive and Well in Miami

Call Your Senator about Lieberman (UPDATED)

Help remind your Democratic Senator that Lieberman should go (or at least pay a very serious price) for his election-season behavior.

Call Your Senators NOW

Clicking above will take you to a tool that will ask you for your phone number. When you submit, it calls you, plays a recording with suggestions as to you how to frame your conversation, then connects you with your senator's office. No actual phone dialing is required.

UPDATE: Not sure if this is worth the trouble in light of this news from the HuffPo: Obama Wants Lieberman To Remain In Democratic Caucus.

There is some daylight between “remain in caucus” and “remain unpunished” so I suppose it's not yet an unmitigated disaster, but it will soon be.

I think this shows two things. First, that Obama will tack heavily to the right on many, most issues outside those few liberal issues he directly campaigned on. Rahm Emanuel may be only the beginning.

Second, I think it shows that the Obama people haven't learned as much from the Clinton admin as they should — or are the Clinton admin!

Recall that President Clinton's first controversy was over 'don't ask, don't tell'. He'd said he was going to do something to increase gay rights in the military. Senior brass objected. Clinton backed down. The lesson learned by the Hill was that Clinton had no backbone as he could be buffaloed even by people who had to salute him. And the costs were soon seen as Clinton's health care and other parts of his legislative package plan went down in flames (although there were substantive reasons for the health care plan to run into trouble, the political reality was that Clinton looked weak).

There's a similar danger to Obama if the lesson learned from the Lieberman episode on the Hill is that there's no cost to trashing Obama.

Posted in Politics: US | 5 Comments