Author Archives: Michael Froomkin

Read ‘White House Briefing’

My brother has an unusually good column today, Caught on Tape, capping a good week.

You read enough of this stuff, and you wonder just how much incompetence and lying we must endure before a handful of Republican patriots wake up to idea that war crimes is an impeachable offense.

And then of course reality sets in: the Democrats would have to go first. Seen even a baker’s dozen of gutsy national-party Democrats recently?

Posted in Dan Froomkin, Politics: The Party of Sleaze | Comments Off on Read ‘White House Briefing’

Life’s Little Disasters

Disaster struck late last night, just after I finished reviewing my slides for my second presentation at FC06 (I got roped in as a substitute for Stephan Brands in the panel on Identity Management; would that I were a real substitute for one of the word’s top crypographers!).

I’d started preparing my talk at home, and had six pages of notes that I was gradually turning into slides. After I finished the last slide while sitting propped up in the hotel bed, I got out of the bed. In the process I slipped, and while flailing around my arm caught the neck strap (laniard) that is attached to my USB drive. The force wrenched it out of its slot on the side of my laptop, ripping it into two parts: the memory part came apart from the metal tongue, which remained in the usb slot of the laptop, complete with dangling bits of metal strip that had formerly joined the RAM to the tongue. I got the metal out of the laptop, but that was it for my data.

Humpty dumpty was not going to be put back together again. And what backups I have are on my desktop in Miami, not on my laptop. (I do hope I have a recent backupl of my calendar, or I’m going to miss some meeting or deadline…)

So, starting around 11pm, I had to reconstruct an hour’s talk from memory and redo about thirty slides. The resulting version had, I’d guess, about 85% of the content of the original and only a few of the cute pictures. And of course I was pretty tired when I gave the talk in the morning. The audience was kind, but the subject is fairly depressing and I think we had more fun yesterday.

On the bright side it didn’t actually rain yesterday, and the sky looks OK now, although it seems a little hot and sunny out right now to go walking anywhere, and we’re a ways from the beach.

Posted in Sufficiently Advanced Technology, Talks & Conferences | 1 Comment

Law Firm or Cult?

Law firm or cult? Jill poses the question as she looks on life After the law firm.

Posted in Law: Practice | Comments Off on Law Firm or Cult?

Response Launched to UM Response to Strikers

My colleague Michael Fischl forwarded me a statement “signed by a rapidly growing number of faculty and students in response to the ‘Statement Regarding Possible Strike’ distributed to the University community via email.” He writes that people wanting to sign it are should send a message to that effect to worker_justice_um@yahoo.com.

Here’s the text of the statement:

Continue reading

Posted in U.Miami: Strike'06 | Comments Off on Response Launched to UM Response to Strikers

No Strike Roulette: The House Has Fixed the Game

In the UM Strike FAQ provided by the administration, they say the following:

Q: Will picket lines be established around campus perimeters or in front of University of Miami buildings?

A: No. Any potential picket lines should be confined to the pre-designated entrance to the Coral Gablescampus reserved for UNICCO employees. This reserved entrance has been established pursuant to NLRB rulings that seek to avoid enmeshing individuals who are not parties to the dispute. UNICCO, UNICCO employees, and union organizers are aware of the designated location, which will be clearly indicated with appropriate signage. The designated location is at the parking lot entrance just south of the Alumni House between Brescia Avenueand Red Road.

Q: Will faculty, staff, students, vendors, or visitors be required to cross or pass a picket line in order to gain access to campus parking lots or buildings?

A: No. Any potential picket lines should be confined to the pre-designated entrance to the Coral Gables campus reserved for UNICCO employees. This reserved entrance has been established pursuant to NLRB rulings that seek to avoid enmeshing individuals who are not parties to the dispute. UNICCO, UNICCO employees, and union organizers are aware of the designated location, which will be clearly indicated with appropriate signage. The designated location is at the parking lot entrance just south of the Alumni House between Brescia Avenue and Red Road.

In other words, no roving pickets, no strike roulette.

But if there’s one legal and symbolic picket location (in a corner of the campus where most students never go, I might add), then we have no choice but to treat the entire campus as covered by a picket line, do we?

Is the really bad national publicity worth this sort of hardball?

I’m glad I took a big load of books and papers home last Monday. Now I just don’t know whether to hope that faculty meetings will or will not be held on campus….

Posted in U.Miami: Strike'06 | 1 Comment

Strike Roulette Starts Today

The Orlando Sentinel has a better story on the UM strike than any I’ve seen in the Herald, although the Herald does report that the limited strike starts today.

Perhaps because the University is not actually the party against whom the union is striking, the consensus seems to be that if there’s no actual picket line at your building, it’s OK to go in (and, I hope, to leave it if the strikers turn up later?). As there are only 450 or so workers in the would-be bargaining unit, and we have three large campuses, they can’t be everywhere. So it’s sort of strike roulette. I do find this odd: I know that at Yale we considered the campus off limits whether or not picketers happened to be in a particular place. Perhaps there’s some subtlety about secondary boycott law I’m missing here.

Or maybe it’s just the times: shortly before I left Miami, a colleague told me an awful story. He opened class on Monday with some remarks about how he would deal with the strike, and after a while some students put up their hands and said, in effect, “what strike?”. They had heard nothing about it. Then another student put up a hand and asked what this “picket line” thing was that he was talking about. It emerged that the student had never seen or heard of a picket line in his entire life. Not in the news, movies nor books. The labor movement is indeed in trouble.

Posted in U.Miami: Strike'06 | 54 Comments