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May 17, 2008

DAVID POST ON TEACHING LAW THE HARD WAY: In my seminars I often substitute unedited cases for the casebooks, on exactly this basis: Real lawyers don't read excerpts, they read cases.

DAVID POST ON TEACHING LAW THE HARD WAY: In my seminars I often substitute unedited cases for the casebooks, on exactly this basis: Real lawyers don't read excerpts, they read cases.

THE POLAR BEAR: A new libertarian mascot. Yep, as with "racial harassment" complaints for saying bad things about Dead White males at universities, use of environmental laws to stop government programs seems an area ripe for some guerrilla lawyering.

POLITICO: NARAL Reeling from Obama Endorsement.

TOM HARKIN, CONT'D: Phony Hero Blasts Real Hero. It seems like every election cycle, fake war hero Tom Harkin reappears with this stuff.

UPDATE: More on Harkin here.

A PACK, NOT A HERD:

A man with a semiautomatic rifle opened fire at a festival outside a Southern California church Saturday, wounding three people, one of them critically, police said.

Shots rang out shortly before 11 a.m. outside St. John Baptist de la Salle, a Roman Catholic church in Granada Hills, Officer Norma Eisenman said. Bystanders tackled the man and held him until he was taken into police custody, she said.

Better than hiding under the table.

HEH: "'Slutbucks'? Seriously? That's not very creative. 'Seattle's Breast' works much better."

UPDATE: Some more background on the Starbucks logo.

JOE HUFFMAN: "Barb and I have been watching The Nazis: A Warning from History. This presentation casts doubts on my fantasy of going back in time to assassinate Hitler."

WE'RE ALL FEMINISTS NOW: Blogging as a feminist legal method.

GETTING EMERGENCY POWER from a solar blimp? Not sure this is actually all that practical, but it's creative.

RETURN OF THE Jensen Interceptor.

IN KNOXVILLE, MIXED ECONOMIC NEWS. First there's this:

Jewelry Television has eliminated more than 200 jobs as part of a restructuring the company said Friday is needed to improve its competitive position during the current economic downturn.

The Knoxville-based home shopping network also plans to put the Shop At Home facility and equipment it acquired in 2006 for $17 million in Nashville on the market. No sales price has been established yet.

On the other hand, there's also this:

In the face of rising demand for coal, Knoxville-based National Coal Corp. plans to expand production by re-opening some idle mines in Tennessee and Alabama and by digging one new underground mine in Tennessee.

Up? Down? Sideways?

IN THE MAIL: Chris Hedges' I Don't Believe in Atheists.

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Another pic from Richy Kreme, Alcoa Tennessee.

NELSON MUNTZ on the newspaper industry.

MICHAEL TOTTEN ON LEBANON'S FUTURE: "Lebanon will not become Gaza." Not that it'll become Disneyland, either.

TOM HARKIN: McCain is too "military."

NEW YORK: The Trooper Plot Thickens.

TOM BEVAN: Hillary's fatal mistake.

THE AMAZON KINDLE gets a pretty thorough review from Charlie Martin.

GREG BARTO: "Here, in two paragraphs, is why I will be voting for McCain this November."

MAKING JET FUEL OUT OF ALGAE:

Plane maker Airbus and diversified manufacturer Honeywell International Inc. on Thursday said they are developing a biofuel that by 2030 could satisfy nearly a third of the worldwide demand from commercial aircraft, without affecting food supplies.

Along with JetBlue Airways Corp. and International Aero Engines, they plan to produce fuel from vegetation and algae-based oils that do not compete with existing food production or land and water resources.

Faster, please.

May 16, 2008

BUSH GETS BUPKIS FROM THE SAUDIS in terms of increased production.

I'm not surprised. I'm actually not sure they can increase their production all that much at the moment, as I suspect they've been overstating their capacity all along. Also, alas, they seem to have caught on to the Malcolm S. Forbes plan. Guess I shouldn't have blogged it . . . .:

One clue comes from the March bulletin of OAPEC, the Arab sub-group of the OPEC producers' cartel. It notes sourly that President Bush is aiming to reduce US dependency on oil imports "particularly from the Middle East”, by 75pc by the year 2025.

"This has created some ambiguity in the US position on the future of oil consumption," it said. Touchee.

King Abdullah's retort to the Bush speech was to announce that Saudi Arabia would stop developing big projects after the Khurais field comes on stream in next year with 1.2m bpd, leaving the country's oil in the ground for future generations.

Were America the imperial power that its critics claim, of course, we'd have simply seized the oil after 9/11 -- it would have been easier than invading Iraq -- killed a bunch of Saudis and gone our way. Instead, however, we probably won't do much. If we were as serious as we say we are about energy, we'd start developing domestic sources. But we can't even get shale oil past Congress.

UPDATE: Ouch.

TOM MAGUIRE ON worthy disaster-relief efforts.

UNLIKE SOME OTHER SEARCH ENGINES: A nice thank-you to the troops at Dogpile.com.

SHATNER ON SHATNER: On, uhh, Shatner.

UPDATE: Bill Quick: "Since I know Shatner fairly well, and I’ve spent a fair amount of time with him, I can tell you that this is pretty much the way he really is. He’s not putting anything on here."

ADVICE TO OBAMA FROM ANN ALTHOUSE, who voted for him:

Don't lie! I mean, I know you've been having an unimaginably powerful experience with millions of people buying the things you say, but don't get cocky. We do still have our lie detectors, and we can reactivate them if we get in the mood to. Don't push us. Keep the magic alive.

To perform at such a level requires more self-knowledge and self-discipline than most politicians possess.

STICKING WITH THE NARRATIVE at The Washington Post.

SEBASTIAN LIVEBLOGGED MCCAIN'S NRA SPEECH: "The theme seems to be 'I suck a little, but my opponents suck more.'"

Now there's a winning formula!

UPDATE: Checking my email, I got a copy of the speech, which is pasted below -- hit "read more" to read it. But McCain doesn't seem to support a ban on private sales, just an extension of instant background checks to gun shows.:

Over the years, I haven't agreed with the NRA on every issue. I have supported efforts to have NICS background checks apply to gun sales at gun shows. I recognize that gun shows are enjoyed by millions of law-abiding Americans. I do not support efforts by those who seek to regulate them out of existence. But I believe an accurate, fair and instant background check at guns shows is a reasonable requirement. I also oppose efforts to require federal regulation of all private sales such as the transfer between a father and son or husband and wife. I supported campaign finance reform because I strongly believed our system of financing campaigns was influencing elected officials to put the interests of "soft money" donors ahead of the public interest. It is neither my purpose nor the purpose of the legislation to prevent gun owners or any other group of citizens from making their voices heard in the legislative process.

Whole text below.

Read More »


WELL, OKAY, BUT DID RON PAUL EVER CLAIM to be a "compassionate conservative?" Though admittedly, congratulating the University of Kansas' football team isn't within Congress's enumerated powers either . . . .

GIGAPIXEL PHOTOS: Coming soon to a camera near you. They've actually been around for a while, but this makes it easier.

DOG BITES MAN: Charges of double standards at Human Rights Watch.

INTEGRATING NANOTECHNOLOGY with silicon wafer technology.

MAKING YOUR KITCHEN Plastic-free.

IGNORANT, RACIST HEARTLANDERS angry, bitter at media name-calling.

ARE YOU NOW OR HAVE YOU EVER BEEN a member of the American Constitution Society?

ADVICE TO MCCAIN: Run against Congress.

AUSTIN BAY: Limited options in Burma. Yeah, as Shannon Love notes about people agitating for a humanitarian invasion: "It’s not a bad idea except it is at least 6 months too late."

MICHAEL ON MICHAEL: Totten on Yon, that is. It's a review of Michael Yon's Moment of Truth in Iraq by Michael Totten.

GENERATING NEITHER LUST NOR RESPECT: The Geo Metro. Chris Hafner says it deserves the latter, anyway. "I like both the Smart and the Prius--there's something gadgety about them that appeals to me--but if your goal is just to have a useful gas-sipping car, it would be hard to do better than a Geo Metro."

A PRO-NUKE PROGRESSIVE? Tennessee Democratic Senate Candidate Calls for Removal of Harry Reid over Reid's opposition to nuclear power.

WELCOME TO the new diplomacy.

SMALL SHELLS, BIG BOOM: A look at the military's new miniature arsenal.

IN THE MAIL: 10 Books That Screwed Up the World: And 5 Others That Didn't Help. I don't think I agree with all the choices here.

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Richy-Kreme Donuts, Alcoa, Tennessee. They start selling donuts in the morning, and they close when they run out. Best donuts I've ever had -- sweet, fluffy, but not the least bit greasy. Yum.

YEAH, THAT'LL HELP MATTERS: "Revolutionary Defeatism" on the right.

MORE NEWS ON the automotive X-Prize.

P.J. O'ROURKE SUMS UP THE ELECTIONS:

Two substantive political issues are the federal budget deficit and the war in Iraq. Now, if you're electing Democrats to control government spending, then you're marrying Angelina Jolie for her brains. This leaves the Democrats with one real issue: Iraq. And so far the best that any Democratic presidential candidate has been able to manage with Iraq is to make what I think of as the high school sex promise: I will pull out in time, honest dear.

Though, actually, I think Angelina Jolie is smarter than Obama when it comes to Iraq.

SO IF THE REPUBLICANS ARE IN TROUBLE, WHY ARE THESE PEOPLE SO HAPPY? I'm at the NRA Convention in Louisville, Kentucky. I haven't been to a big gun event in probably a decade, and the change in mood is striking: People are, well . . . not ebullient, really, but noticeably cheerful and confident. The defensive crouch of a decade ago is gone. Will that change if the Democrats take the White House?

They don't seem to think so here. Ten years ago, gun rights were under siege. Now the two Democratic presidential candidates are bending over backward to try to paint themselves as pro-gun. It's a lie, of course. But it's a lie that shows where the political balance of power, er, lies on this issue. The Democrats are electing new members of Congress, too -- but, again, they're running as pro-gun. People here, I think, feel like they've got the momentum regardless of what happens in November.

That's bad news for the Republicans, in a way. Scared gun-rights people vote Republican, and work hard to get Republican candidates elected. Confident gun-rights people figure that they can force Democrats to protect their rights, too. Probably the best thing that could happen for John McCain's candidacy -- and for the GOP's Congressional prospects -- would be a Supreme Court decision upholding D.C.'s gun-ban law. Will that happen? Well, possibly. The smart money says "no," but counting Supreme Court votes is a risky business. We'll see.

McCain's speaking here this afternoon -- alas, after I have to leave to return home, as I'm just here to give a talk on the Heller case this morning and will then head back -- and it's the only event in which people aren't allowed to carry guns. That's the Secret Service's demand. If I were McCain, I'd note that I'd feel safer in an audience of armed NRA members. It's likely true, and it would make a point.

LOOK WHO'S DRILLING: Petrobras Hires 80% of Deepwater Rigs, Inflates Rents.

Petroleo Brasileiro SA, Brazil's state-controlled oil company, leased about 80 percent of the world's deepest-drilling offshore rigs to explore prospects including the Western Hemisphere's biggest discovery in decades.

Petrobras, as the Rio de Janeiro-based company is known, is hiring rigs that can drill in at least 3,000 meters (9,800 feet) of water, Chief Executive Officer Jose Sergio Gabrielli said in an interview last week. The world has 21 such vessels, according to Rigzone.com, which tracks the offshore drilling industry.

The company's ``insatiable'' demand is forcing producers including Exxon Mobil Corp. and BP Plc to pay more as they compete for the remaining units, said Kjell Erik Eilertsen and Truls Olsen, analysts at Fearnley Fonds AS in Oslo. Explorers that don't have rigs under contract may delay projects or pay rents of more than $600,000 a day.

Sounds like they're onto something. And maybe we need to be doing more drilling at home? Hell, thanks to Congress we can't even get shale oil going.

A LOOK AT ANGRY DEMOCRATIC WOMEN. It wasn't supposed to turn out this way.

HEH: "Selling well is the best revenge." I'll note that only one of these books was featured on The Glenn and Helen Show. Guess which one?

HAS THE LA TIMES UNCOVERED Obama's Bosnian sniper tale? Video at the link.

SISTERHOOD OF THE TRAVELING PLANTS?

May 15, 2008

ROCKET MAN FLIES ON JET-POWERED WINGS:

After one last wave to the crowd the rocket man tipped his wings, flipped onto his back and leveled out again, executing a perfect 360-degree roll that most birds would find impossible.

"That was to impress the girls," he later admitted.

Isn't it always? Play your cards right and you might wind up with Jennifer Connelly.

THE BLOGGER MEETUP WAS FUN: Met a bunch of bloggers, some of whom I already knew, including SayUncle, Bitter, Sebastian, Murdoc, etc., and firearms legend Ronnie Barrett dropped by, which was kinda cool. There were probably about 50 people there, which is a pretty good-sized turnout of gunbloggers.

BECAUSE IT'S NOT LIKE WE NEED ANY DOMESTIC OIL OR ANYTHING

The Senate Appropriations Committee today narrowly defeated Sen. Wayne Allard's attempt to end a moratorium related to oil shale development in Colorado. . . .

The moratorium prevents the Department of Interior from issuing regulations so that oil companies can move forward on oil-shale projects in Colorado and Utah. Allard said the moratorium has left uncertainties at a time when companies need to move forward and in the long term make the United States more energy independent.

"If we are really serious about reducing pain at the pump, this is a vote that would make a difference in people's lives," Allard argued.

But in a 14-15 vote, the committee spilt strictly on party lines and rejected the amendment.

Are these guys on the Saudi payroll, or what?

UPDATE: Link was wrong before. Fixed now. Sorry!

WHAT'S WITH THOSE 10% OF BLACK PEOPLE who don't support Obama? Yeah, get with the program.

COMMERCE AND COMMERCIALS: "I’m going to be straight with you—if you don’t click one of the ads on this page, we’re all doomed."

MY REVIEW OF THE HP MINI-NOTE LAPTOP is now online at Popular Mechanics.

HERE'S MORE ON MASSACHUSETTS' anti-Income Tax crusade.

CALIFORNIA'S SUPREME COURT STRIKES DOWN the state's ban on gay marriages. Did it just hand the state to McCain? Well, possibly.

Personally, I favor gay marriage, but I think it would be much better if it were adopted through political, rather than judicial, channels -- though I realize that some would call that a distinction without a difference where California is concerned. . . .

UPDATE: More thoughts here.

MEMO TO THE OBAMA CAMPAIGN: When somebody condemns appeasement, it doesn't help things to jump up and yell "Hey, he's talking about me!"

SO I'M IN LOUISVILLE, where I'll be talking about the Second Amendment and the Heller case tomorrow. ("Scheduled posts" kept the site hopping while I drove, somewhat blearily, up from Knoxville, though I did stop at a Cracker Barrel in Lexington for coffee and a quick blog-and-email check.) I don't think I'll see much of the fleshpots while I'm here, though there's a blogger get-together in an hour or so that I'll visit. After last night's limited sleep, I don't think I'll be out late tonight. . . .

THE PRIVATE SECTOR ROLE in global higher education. " in many countries, as in the United States, demand for higher education is growing fast, sometimes outstripping the ability of traditional colleges — which, in many countries, means government-run institutions — to fulfill the need. . . . And to kick off the meeting, the group turned to Douglas L. Becker, chairman and chief executive officer of Laureate Education, Inc., whose company has built a 300,000-student, $2 billion a year enterprise by focusing solely on creating private institutions in foreign lands — so far, 70 campuses in 17 countries."

THE NEXT THING for Fred Thompson.

DYING LAW PROFESSOR teaches last class.

IRON MAN: Beneath the Armor.

SIX WAYS THE G.O.P. CAN save itself. It had better do something.

DATING THE DIVORCED: The latest Ask Dr. Helen column is up!

MORE RAMPANT CHRISTIANISM.

LOOKING INSIDE Britain's alien files. "Although they didn't want their names to be included in the report covering the event, they believed it was a UFO. And they were sober."

GOOD QUESTION: What could Hillary Clinton want from Obama?

MEGAN MCARDLE ON JOB INTERVIEWS: "Frankly, it's a miracle unemployment is as low as it is."

NANOTECHNOLOGY gangs up on cancer cells.

MORE QUESTIONS ABOUT OBAMA, from Steve Gill.

HACKING A GEO METRO with the Cornell X-Prize team.

IN THE MAIL: Instructions for American Servicemen in France during World War II.

maryvillefire.jpg

Fire Station, Maryville, Tennessee.

CONGRATULATIONS TO RANDY NEAL as an accredited blogger to the Democratic Convention. (Via Michael Silence).

THOMAS EDSALL: Union Leaders' Clash Over Dem Endorsements A Sign Of Racial Polarization.

Plus, apparently, rampant sexism!

UPDATE: Had the wrong link for Edsall before. Fixed now. Sorry!

ANOTHER UPDATE: NARAL Affiliates Question Obama Endorsement.

BILL ARDOLINO: From Rusafa to Sadr City.

LARRY TRIBE: Thanks for boning, ma and pa. Um, ditto, I guess. More here. It's really just a variation on the Neal Stephenson "stupendous badass" point.

AUSTIN BAY: Dictatorships kill. And steal.

A WINDFALL PROFITS TAX FOR FARMERS? Heavens No!

MICKEY KAUS: "HuffPo Off Message: Rachel Sklar comes dangerously close to Fisking the NYT's book-length Pentagon Message Machine scoop."

CALLING AHMADINEJAD SWEETIE? Actually, that could be fun.

OUCH: "Robert Samuelson's argument is so self-evident no politician can ever state it."

BRAZILIAN BABES FOR dropping the ethanol tariff.

BACK HOME, after six hours at the Children's E.R. Things turned out about as well as could be, considering. Blogging may be a bit, er, sparse in the morning, though.

UPDATE: Thanks to all the people who sent thoughts and prayers. Doesn't appear to have been anything serious. Alas, I didn't get six hours of sleep to make up for the E.R. time.

May 14, 2008

AN INTERVIEW WITH Tom Wolfe.

And some useful background here.

SPACE NEWS: SpaceX Claims Crew Transfer Ability by 2011.

CROSS-CULTURAL PROCRASTINATION STUDIES. I wonder why no one got around to that before . . . .?

TEST-DRIVING THE 2008 Porsche 911. How come I never get assignments like that?

MEGAN MCARDLE: Democrats: the party of . . . rich farmers? That would explain the ethanol enthusiasm . . . .

A STEAMPUNK ROUNDUP.