Archive for May, 2009

ROGER KIMBALL: A spoke in the news cycle: slow down and join a freedom brigade near you. “Really what is needed is not a 12-step support group for damaged souls but a network of back-stiffening resource groups equipped to sound the alarm over the government’s astonishing encroachments upon prosperity of the United States and the freedoms of its citizens.”

Plus, TigerHawk on the mistaken but understandable desire to keep your head down. On this day of all days, perhaps people need to start showing a bit more backbone.

UPDATE: Protesting “corrupt media” at MSNBC headquarters. Why not send busloads of protesters to executives’ homes? It’s a tactic that’s ACORN-approved! But will it get the same boffo press coverage? Don’t count on it!

More here.

NEOLOGIC SPASM: Village Voice chokes on Jeff Goldstein’s vocabulary. They’d better hope they never encounter the armadillo. . . .

UPDATE: Coming soon at the Village Voice: A blog “expert” who can tell Moe Lane from Erick Erickson!

ANOTHER UPDATE: Gender confusion? Nothing new about that at the Voice! But confusing Jules Crittenden and Ed Driscoll? One’s a towering giant who can kick your ass without breaking a sweat. The other — is the really scary one.

COOLING YOUR PLACE EFFICIENTLY, with Big Ass Fans.

TOM MAGUIRE: Who Will Ombud the Ombudsmen?

Clark Hoyt, ombudsman of the NY Times, goes into the tank for Edmund Andrews, author of “Busted”, who was busted by Megan McArdle.

To recap – Edmund Andrews, Times financial reporter, is promoting a new book claiming to detail his personal journey through the dark underside of easy mortgages and financial distress.

The NY Times gave him space in the NY Times magazine to talk up his story and his book. But missing from the story is any mention of the fact that his wife has filed for personal bankruptcy not once, but twice. For a story about personal finances, that is a staggering omission, leading to some absurd phoniness in the Andrews tale.

However, Clark Hoyt addresses it this way:

Well, you’ll just have to read the whole thing. I don’t want to spoil Maguire’s work. But here’s the conclusion: “Let me join the bashing with a frontal assault – there is no way the Edmunds story can be read as accurate, honest depiction of his experience.”

IT’S AN ICE-CREAM MAKER! IT’S A KICKBALL! It’s both!

UPDATE: Reader Brett Belmore writes:

Actually, my mother bought that thing as a gift for various kids in the family last year. “Kickball”? You read the instructions, and it’s more like, a “roll gently back and forth, and don’t you DARE kick it!” ball. (Guess the plastic gets brittle at ice cream temperatures, or some such.) Boring!

Bummer. I liked the idea of having kids kick the thing around, then eat ice cream.

LORD OF THE RINGTONES: Are mobile devices enslaving us?

He shut his eyes and struggled for a while; but resistance became unbearable, and at last he slowly drew out the chain, and slipped the Ring on the forefinger of his left hand.

Immediately, though everything else remained as before, dim and dark, the shapes became terribly clear.
—J.R.R. Tolkien, The Fellowship of the Ring

That scene from Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings trilogy flashes to mind during any tedious work meeting: the hand moves inexorably toward the iPhone; the urge to check email, texts, Facebook, even favorite blogs begins to overwhelm; one enters the shadowy, virtual world of online friends and welcome strangers, ever oblivious to the surrounding real world.

Such scenes are repeated daily in boardrooms, around dinner tables, on trains, and even (gasp!) on our freeways. The ineluctable pull of mobile devices and the ubiquitous cloud of connectivity tempts us away from the task at hand, rendering us invisible—or at least unavailable—to the physical world around us.

Once you’re partway into the wraithworld, all sorts of evil spirits — like blog-comment trolls! — acquire a measure of power over you. . . .

HAPPY MEMORIAL DAY. Just remember, it’s not all about picnics and beer.

YEAH, LIGHT BLOGGING. I’m on a family trip and have no internet — getting one bar on a 1xrtt connection that craps out if a sparrow flies between me and the cell tower. So it’s mostly just been the posts I scheduled before I left. Back to normal later tomorrow.

FASTER, PLEASE: Healing The Heart With Bone-Marrow Cells: “Injecting the hearts of angina sufferers with cells extracted from their own bone marrow can reverse the condition and relieve its symptoms, a new study suggests. The Dutch cardiologists behind the placebo-controlled study say that the results may lead to radical new treatments for patients for whom surgery and medication bring little or no relief from this painful and debilitating condition, which results from narrowed arteries that cannot supply enough blood to the heart during exercise. All 50 subjects involved in the study were resistant to existing treatments. Three months after being given the injections, patients’ hearts were less starved of blood, and they were able to exercise more, researchers report in the latest issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.”

I THINK IT’S BECAUSE THE ENVIRONMENT HAS BECOME HOSTILE: Trying to account for the “lost men” on campus. I don’t think that efforts to “disrupt hegemonic masculinity” will do much to address the problem; I suspect, in fact, that the mentality revealed in this story is the problem.

I had some thoughts on this subject a while back, here.

UPDATE: Reader Andrew Berman writes:

I suggest that college administrators look to two organizations which have a spectacular track record in creating wonderful men: The United States Military and the Boy Scouts. The main difference between these organizations and most colleges is that they don’t treat men as imperfect women.

Good point.

BEWARE THE DREADED Shatnerquake.

IN THE MAIL: From Edward Willett, Marseguro.

COOL: Rotating Space Elevator Propels Its Own Load. “The idea of the space elevator just got a little crazier. While the ‘traditional’ concept involved using rocket propulsion or laser light pressure to propel loads up a cable anchored to Earth, a new study shows that a rotating space elevator could do away with engines or laser light pressure application completely. Instead, the unique double rotating motion of looped strings could provide a mechanism for objects to slide up the elevator cable into outer space. The space elevator could launch satellites and spacecraft with humans, and even be used to host space stations and research posts.”