Archive for 2010

FRANK CAGLE IS dreading the Civil War sesquicentennial. I can see why, but by his own terms we’ve come a long way since the centennial, when the South was full of segregationist Democratic politicians who were standing in the schoolhouse door. Now we’ve got Republicans promising to stand up for constitutional rights!

WELL, THIS STORY DOESN’T INSPIRE CONFIDENCE.

CATHY YOUNG: Tea Partiers Racist? Not So Fast. “The lead investigator, political science professor Christopher Parker, graciously provided me with the fuller data — which strongly contradict the notion of the Tea Parties as a unique hotbed of racism.” Given that Joan Walsh was stumped by a veiled Keith Olbermann reference I wouldn’t expect her to tease out much useful information here, so I’m hardly surprised to find that her take is wrong.

A REVIEW of the Singularity Is Near movie, based, of course, on Ray Kurzweil’s book, The Singularity Is Near. Short take: “It’s awesome.”

Here, FYI, is my review of the book for the Wall Street Journal.

EVEN IF THEY HAVE CANDY: Stephen Hawking: Don’t Talk To Aliens. “The aliens are out there and Earth had better watch out, at least according to Stephen Hawking. He has suggested that extraterrestrials are almost certain to exist — but that instead of seeking them out, humanity should be doing all it that can to avoid any contact.”

I also recommend this piece by Gregg Easterbrook, if you’re interested in the subject.

UPDATE: Fausta Wertz brings the inevitable allusion.

ANOTHER UPDATE: Reader John McCray writes:

From Charles Pelligrino’s The Killing Star,

“Three Laws of Alien Behavior: 1) Their survival will be more important than our survival. 2) Wimps don’t become top dogs. 3) They will assume that the first two laws apply to us.”

Sounds plausible to me.

MATT WELCH: President follows Europe into places Europeans no longer want to go. “What’s worse for us is that we’ve pretty much given up trying to address the root problem, which is the decade long spending binge initiated by George W. Bush and then tripled down on by Barack Obama. The VAT isn’t a way to streamline a complicated tax code; it’s a new spigot to flood money into the pockets of teachers who can’t be fired, and securities regulators who can’t get enough porn. The grand irony here is that the very continent we’re scrambling to emulate has been moving aggressively in the opposite direction on taxes and economic policy. While the US keeps corporate taxes frozen near 40%, EU countries have slashed them down to an average of around 25%. Top marginal income tax rates, which in the US are 35%, are under 25% all across the former East Bloc.”