Archive for 2005

PEOPLE WANT TO KNOW if I’m going to rerun the Digital Camera Carnival again this week. Nope! If anybody else wants to host one, go ahead.

HMM: “[T]he UK will start recording the movements of all vehicles on the roads, upgrading the already existing CCTV network so that they can automatically read license plates numbers as they pass by, and keeping that information for two years. And with no FISA court authorization.” This gives me an idea: Perhaps Bush should simply say that he’s surrendering to critics’ demands that we take a “more European” approach to national security.

I’LL GIVE UP MY IPOD AND MY XM2Go when they pry them from my cold, dead hands. Which this guy thinks might not be such a bad idea:

“Our culture is about distraction, numbing oneself,” said David Greenfield, a Connecticut psychologist who specializes in high-tech issues. “There is no self-reflection, no sitting still. It’s absolutely exhausting.” . . .

“Part of the reason is the hype, the commercial selling of it,” he said. “Some people feel the products will improve the quality of their lives. But do we really need to be connected in every way, shape or form?”

So are we numbed, or connected? Either way, I think he’s wrong. I think the gadgets really do improve my life, and I’d hate to do without laptops, iPods, etc.

TRANSIT STRIKE UPDATE:

New York commuters began Day 3 without subways and buses Thursday, and union leaders faced a court date to explain why they shouldn’t be held in criminal contempt for halting the city’s mass transit system.

As legal and financial pressures mounted on the union, State Supreme Court Justice Theodore Jones ordered Transport Workers Union Local 100 President Roger Toussaint and his deputies to appear in court Thursday, warning jail time was a “distinct possibility.”

Many will cheer, I suspect, if this happens.

ARE BLOGGERS a sickly lot?

MEGAN MCARDLE has more on the NYC Transit strike:

The people being hurt by the strike, unfortunately, are mostly people who make less than the transit workers do. Small businesses are being gutted by this; the last few days before Christmas is the busiest time of the year for most retail establishments, and their customers can’t get to them. One of the news shows had small businessmen complaining that this was going to bankrupt them, and I’ve no doubt that it’s true for at least some of New York’s retail stores, which often operate on a shoestring.

Meanwhile, poor workers, who tend to work hourly, are losing salary that they can ill-afford.

Read this, too.

NANOTECHNOLOGY UPDATE: If you’d like to donate to the Foresight Institute before year-end (disclosure: I’m on their board) you can go here to do it — donations are being matched 1-1 up to $40,000.

And here’s a link to Foresight’s nanotechnology roadmap project.

GOOD NEWS:

The U.S. economy grew at the fastest pace in 1 1/2 years in the summer as booming auto sales offset the adverse effects of hurricanes Katrina and Rita. But the year is expected to end with much slower growth.

The U.S. Commerce Department reported Wednesday that the gross domestic product, the broadest measure of economic health, grew at a 4.1 per cent annual rate from July through September.

That was down from a 4.3 per cent estimate made a month ago but it was still the fastest pace since early 2004. The gain was even more remarkable considering that the country was hit by devastating hurricanes and gasoline prices that topped $3 US per gallon.

Let’s hope this lasts.

PORKBUSTERS UPDATE: Mark Tapscott has two pieces of interesting news.

DAN DARLING: “CIA Director Porter Goss and FBI Director Mueller’s visits to Turkey received extremely little attention in the Western press, but from the stuff that’s leaked out in the Turkish press, there is reason to think that it might do well for all of us to pay attention to what’s going on there.”

LUTTIG SLAPS THE ADMINISTRATION in the Padilla case, suggesting that claims that the Fourth Circuit is a “constitution-free zone” were, um, premature.

OMAR has more on the Iraqi elections.

UPDATE: Still more from Omar here, and worries from Publius. I’m not sure what to make of events so far, but Kaus’s argument that more, closer-together elections would be better is looking pretty good.

ANOTHER UPDATE: Reader Michael McFatter thinks Publius’s concerns are premature:

But this is precisely the point at which democrats don’t exchange blows and instead follow the law. His characterization of “real liberal democracy” being composed of groups who are genuinely “working for the better of the whole country” is I think a little Pollyannish. What distinguishes real liberal democracies from psuedo-democracies is that when a crisis has arisen, like now, leaders seek a resolution which involves compromise on both sides within the rule of law. We have yet to see what Iraqis will do, but this was always going to be the riskiest part of the plan. Will they truly reject quasi-fascist tribalism for peace and prosperity or will the region persist in the road to self-destruction. It’s always been in their hands. Our invasion and assistance has only made the choice explicit and more immediate.

Democratization is a process, not an event. We’ll soon see just how far along in the process we’ve progressed.

MORE: Tom Friedman and Greg Djerejian share guarded optimism, and a cab.

JOHN SCHMIDT, who was Associate Attorney General under Clinton, says that the President has inherent authority to wiretap suspected terrorists for national security reasons.

President Bush’s post- Sept. 11, 2001, authorization to the National Security Agency to carry out electronic surveillance into private phone calls and e-mails is consistent with court decisions and with the positions of the Justice Department under prior presidents.

This may or may not be right as a matter of law, but as with the Jamie Gorelick testimony I noted below, it undercuts the silly notion that this argument is a novel creation of the out-of-control Bushitler regime.

UPDATE: Orin Kerr has more thoughts on the story. In answer to one of his concerns, the question of U.S. jurisdiction over satellites does not depend on whether they are over the United States, but rather on whether they are carried on the U.S. registry. Whether this impacts the Fourth Amendment analysis is not clear; the argument as to whether the constitution “follows the flag” onto U.S. spacecraft is unsettled, though the answer is probably “not necessarily.” That topic gets more discussion here; should it become more important I’ll post something on it.

Meanwhile, via the comments to Orin’s post, here’s a post by Cass Sunstein that also supports the Bush Administration’s position:

It is therefore reasonable to say that the AUMF, by authorizing the use of “all necessary and appropriate force,” also authorizes surveillance of those associated with Al Qaeda or any other organizations that “planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks” of September 11.

The reason is that surveillance, including wiretapping, is reasonably believed to be an incident of the use of force. It standardly occurs during war. If the President’s wiretapping has been limited to those reasonably believed to be associated with Al Qaeda and its affiliates — as indeed he has said — then the Attorney General’s argument is entirely plausible.

Read the whole thing; we don’t know, of course, exactly who was being wiretapped, which matters. Regardless, the Bushitler claims seem quite ill-founded.

UPDATE: Bill Quick says the press doesn’t care about the history here.

WILL THE ’06 ELECTIONS BE LIKE ’02? The Hotline blog thinks they might.

UPDATE: James Somers emails:

If you’d asked me (and you didn’t) three months ago, I would have said ’06 is looking like ’94. But it is indeed heading towards the ’02 paradigm now instead. The “domestic spying” issue reinforces this. I expect CNN, CBS, etc, will be too frightened to actually commission a poll on the NSA wiretap issue. They know what they’ll find – a solid majority of Americans is going to have no problem with what the Administration has done here. In fact, they probably already assumed it was doing exactly this sort of thing.

But for some people, it’s always 1972 – you know, back when George McGovern won in a landslide because Americans were anti-Vietnam war.

Yes.

IN THE MAIL: Tobias Buckell’s Crystal Rain. The cover art, as I think you’ll agree, is delightfully retro, and it gets an excellent blurb from Cory Doctorow.

DAVID WHITE says the White House has finally woken up.

DAN GILLMOR is launching a nonprofit and nonpartisan Center for Citizens’ Media: “We need a thriving media and journalism ecosystem. We need what big institutions do so well, but we also need the bottom-up — or, more accurately, edge-in — knowledge and ideas of what I’ve called the “former audience” that has become a vital part of the system. I’m also anxious to see that it’s done honorably and in a way that helps foster a truly informed citizenry. I think I can help.”

I’m a fan of Dan’s, and I hope to help too.

DENSITY IS DESTINY: An interesting look at sprawl, urbanization, and the red-blue divide.

GEORGE CLOONEY: NeoCon!

MORE WIKIPEDIA news.