Archive for 2015

WELL, YES, SHE’S BELLIGERENT: Byron York: “Hillary Clinton: The Fightingest Fighter in the Fight.

Franklin Delano Roosevelt had the Four Freedoms. Hillary Rodham Clinton has the Four Fights. . . .

Indeed, in her speech, the former secretary of state suggested that she is so much a fighter that she will fight not one, not two, not three, but four fights on behalf of the American people. “If you’ll give me the chance, I’ll wage and win Four Fights for you,” Clinton told the crowd. Those fights are: 1) the fight “to make the economy work for everyday Americans”; 2) the fight “to strengthen America’s families”; 3) the fight “to harness all of America’s power, smarts, and values to maintain our leadership for peace, security, and prosperity”; and 4) the fight for “reforming our government and revitalizing our democracy.” . . .

It’s not clear whether Clinton’s characterization of herself as a fighter will resonate with voters. The last time she ran for president, in the most intense days of her Democratic primary battle with Barack Obama, Clinton did the same “fighter” thing, and it didn’t work.

The whole “I’m a fighter” theme is exhausting. I think most people would prefer a leader. We’ve had enough fighting, and it’s time for some problem solving. That takes leadership.

BETTING ON SCHOOL CHOICE: Clint Bolick explains Nevada’s new “Education Savings Account.

ESAs allow parents to pull their children out of public schools and put the allotted tax dollars toward an education they prefer. This makes the phrase “school choice” a reality.

Unlike vouchers, which make public dollars available only for private-school tuition, the savings accounts can be used for a range of educational options, for private schools or distance learning, tutoring, computer software, educational therapies, public-school classes and activities, and community college classes. Any money left after graduation can be put toward college. This will give Nevada parents more than $5,000 to work with. . . .

The emergence of education savings accounts may mark the beginning of the end for an ossified education-delivery system that is has changed little since the 19th century. It begins an important shift of government from a monopoly provider of education into an enabler of education in whatever form or forum it most benefits the child.

Amen. Faster, please!

NOBEL PEACE PRIZE UPDATE: Still No Legal Authorization For The War Against ISIS. “The lack of congressional authorization for the war is of more than just purely legal interest. Obama’s failure to obtain congressional authorization is part of a broader failure to build a political consensus behind the intervention, and to articulate clear objectives for it.” Leadership!

NOTHING TO SEE HERE, KEEP MOVING: Explaining away the Ferguson Effect. Heather MacDonald explains the price of anti-police agitation by the political left:

Faced with the prospect of ending up in a widely distributed video if an arrest goes awry, and possibly being indicted, officers tell me that they are increasingly reluctant to investigate suspicious behavior. St. Louis police chief Sam Dotson last fall called the relationship between decreased enforcement and increased crime the “Ferguson effect.” I noted that if it continues the primary victims will be the millions of law-abiding residents of inner-city neighborhoods who rely on police to keep order.

A sharply critical response from some quarters greeted the article. It belonged to a “long line of conservative efforts to undermine racial equality,” wrote Columbia University law professor Bernard Harcourt in the Guardian, decrying the article as “crime fiction” intended to undermine “the country’s newest civil rights movement.” Charles Blow of the New York Times called me a “fear-mongering iron fist-er” who was using “racial pathology arguments” and “smearing the blood running in the street onto the hands holding the placards.” The article was part of a “growing backlash against police reform,” an attempt to “shame people who dare to speak up about police abuse,” wrote journalist Radley Balko in the Washington Post. . . .

Police are not backing off from what Mr. Blow and others presumably think of as “normal police work”: responding to 911 calls for emergency assistance. Officers continue to rush to crime scenes, sometimes getting shot at in the process. They are, however, refraining from precisely the kind of policing that many in the media, along with legions of activists, have denounced over the past year: pedestrian stops and enforcement of low-level, quality-of-life laws (known as “broken windows” policing). . . .

Many residents of high-crime areas don’t look at proactive and public-order enforcement the way their alleged advocates do. In a recent Quinnipiac poll of New York City voters, 61% of black respondents said they wanted the police to actively enforce quality-of-life laws in their neighborhood, compared with 59% of white voters.

There’s a difference between police harassment and proactive policing. The former exacerbates distrust of police and makes things worse. The latter improves the quality of life in a community. There is undoubtedly a need for police to be aware of the difference between the two, and receive training to understand the dividing line, for which attitude is important. But overplaying the race and “police are pigs” cards doesn’t advance the discussion; it only makes matters worse in high crime communities.

ROGER SIMON: Will Michael Oren Change the Jewish Vote? “Obama doesn’t like the Israel that exists. Well, that’s not a shocking conclusion, given his behavior. (Where is that Rashid Khalidi tape anyway?) But that such a conclusion could emanate, even indirectly, from a report by Michael Oren should shake a lot of people.”

Because so many Jews hate Republicans and Evangelicals, it’s hard for me to imagine anything shifting them. But perhaps I’m wrong.

EXPLOITERS OF THE LESS FORTUNATE: Hillary Clinton’s unpaid intern limbo: a grassroots campaign of ‘free help.’

Experienced, adult political operatives who want to do grassroots work for Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign currently have no choice but to work as unpaid, full-time interns, raising new questions about how the White House frontrunner runs her own labor force as she prepares to double down on young people’s role in the American economy.

The Clinton campaign is currently in the midst of what multiple Democratic sources described as a “hiring freeze” for paid organizing positions in the early campaign states where the former Secretary of State is laying the foundations of a massive national staff, with few if any paying jobs available for field operations.

Clinton’s camp has made headlines about its frugality and a hard sell on its fellowship program, which allows aspiring politicos between the ages of 18 and 24 to spend this summer as full-time campaign volunteers. The result, however, is the human-resources reality of a campaign – one scheduled to hold at least 26 fundraisers this month alone – that isn’t just taking on college students with political science degrees but expecting political veterans to gamble their careers on her without pay.

Shouldn’t they at least get that $15/hour minimum wage Hillary likes?

THE COUNTRY’S IN THE VERY BEST OF HANDS: Cuomo created ‘total cluster f—k’ in escaped-killers hunt. “The massive manhunt for two escaped murderers from the Dannemora prison has been hampered by State Police secrecy, inter-agency rivalries, and the disrupting involvement of Gov. Cuomo on the first day of the breakout, law-enforcement sources have told The Post. Cuomo’s surprise arrival at a still-unfolding escape scene a week ago Saturday generated considerable national publicity for the governor, but distracted investigators at a time when the full facts of the escape were not yet known, the sources said.” Got him on CNN, though.

ASHE SCHOW LOOKS AT efforts to make “Yes Means Yes” part of the Model Penal Code, so that it will apply everywhere, not just on college campuses.

The American Law Institute was founded in 1923 “to promote the clarification and simplification of the law and its better adaptation to social needs, to secure the better administration of justice, and to encourage and carry on scholarly and scientific legal work,” according to its charter. It is a consequential organization. The Institute’s Model Penal Code of 1962 was adopted almost entirely in New Jersey, New York and Oregon, with nearly two-thirds of the states using at least some portion of it.

So, Schulhofer and Murphy want to change an important document.

The two presented their first draft of a new model penal code for sexual offenses to the Institute’s 2014 annual meeting. Members discussed the draft vigorously. Because the discussion ran out of time, the draft was referred back to Schulhofer and Murphy for reworking.

They presented a reworked draft at ALI’s 2015 annual meeting in Washington, D.C. It was dated April 28, just three weeks before the meeting on May 19. Schulhofer and Murphy were criticized for providing the draft so close to the meeting, giving lawyers limited time to read and analyze its 250 pages. But the “reworked” draft is actually just a reorganized version of the 2014 draft, with hardly any changes.

This made it easy for opponents to produce an opposition letter with 22 co-signers to pick the document apart. It also showed that Schulhofer and Murphy did not allow the feedback received in 2014 to affect their views.

Opponents say the draft would further burden an already over-criminalized and over-incarcerated American public.

Indeed. Less academic tinkering with people’s sex-lives is in order, not more.

HIGHER EDUCATION BUBBLE UPDATE, ENDOWMENT INEQUALITY EDITION: The $400 Million Question: What could the rest of higher education do with a gift as large as the one pledged last week to Harvard?

That’s why I favor a federal excise tax on “excessive” endowments, with the proceeds to redistributed to the less fortunate schools that didn’t win the endowment lottery like Harvard. Because it’s better for everyone when you spread the wealth around. Harvard didn’t build that endowment. We all did.

AND THE PRESS, LIKE JOHN DICKERSON HERE, ALWAYS LETS THEM GET AWAY WITH IT: Hillary campaign manager denies poll reality.

Despite numerous polls showing that voters do not trust Hillary Clinton, her campaign manager Robby Mook repeatedly asserted on CBS’s “Face the Nation” Sunday that “no poll shows that voters don’t trust Hillary.”

A new CNN/ORC poll that found 57% of Americans do not find Clinton “honest and trustworthy” and that more people have an unfavorable view of her now than at any time since 2001.

Even Democrats and people who want Hillary to win believe “the biggest problem for her is trust,” said host John Dickerson. “The voters and the polls have shown this. Voters do not trust her. How does she overcome that?”

“First of all, no poll shows that voters don’t trust Hillary,” said Mook.

“They don’t find her honest and trustworthy,” argued Dickerson.

“Well, no poll says that,” said Mook.

Unfortunately the host did not rebut Mook with the poll data as he launched into his Hillary pitch, including a reference to the “stacked deck” and said the “central question” for voters is not trustworthiness but whether Hillary Clinton will “be a tenacious fighter for them, to go to bat for them.”

That “I’ll fight for you” line sounds like a late-night plaintiffs’ lawyer ad. When things are looking down . . . look me up!

Hey, this story sounds familiar.

UPDATE: I’m a bit unfair to Dickerson here, as I’ve noted in a later post.

JOURNALISM: The Intellectual Weakness of The Fourth Estate.

Math doesn’t lie. This is a moronic supposition that should have been rejected after 10 seconds of doodling on a scratch pad.

After thousands of examples of the intellectual flaccidity and inferiority of the journalists in our midst, we have to accept the fact that they are not the best and the brightest. They are, overwhelmingly, college students who couldn’t handle college math, couldn’t manage to do the work to pass Biology 101 and Chemistry 101, and were daunted by the prospect of reading a bunch of long books with lots of facts in them, so history was not an option either.

So what was left? (fill in the blank)_____ Studies or Journalism.

Factcheck: Mostly True.

OF COURSE THEY DID: ISIS tweets Pam Geller’s home address. “#GoForth,” the Tweet urged via a hashtag after revealing Geller’s New York City address, apartment number and all. The Twitter account that sent out the address has since been suspended. I hope she owns a gun, and has some security guards.