Archive for 2015

MEGAN MCARDLE: How Hollywood Can Save Our Families.

Equally naturally, there is pushback from those who see the problem as primarily one of economics and insufficient government spending, as well as from those who argue that there are lots of good ways to raise kids outside the straitjacket of mid-century, middle-class mores.

I have been trying to find a more delicate way to phrase this, but I can’t: This is nonsense. The advantages that two people raising their own biological or jointly adopted children have over “nontraditional” family arrangements are too obvious to need enumeration, but apparently mere obviousness is not enough to forestall contrary arguments, so let me enumerate them anyway.

Raising children the way an increasing percentages of Americans are — in loosely attached cohabitation arrangements that break up all too frequently, followed by the formation of new households with new children by different parents — is an enormous financial and emotional drain. Supporting two households rather than one is expensive, and it diverts money that could otherwise be invested in the kids. The parent in the home has no one to help shoulder the load of caring for kids, meaning less investment of time and more emotional strain on the custodial parent. Children will spend less time with their noncustodial parent, especially if that parent has other offspring. Add in conflict between the parents over money and time, and it can infect relationships with the children. As one researcher told me when I wrote an article on the state of modern marriage, you frequently see fathers investing time and money with the kids whose mother they get along with the best, while the other children struggle along on crumbs.

People often argue that extended families can substitute, but of course, two-parent families also have extended families — two of them — so single-parent families remain at a disadvantage, especially because other members of the extended family are often themselves struggling with the challenges of single parenthood. Extended families just can’t substitute for the benefits of a two-parent family. Government can’t, either; universal preschool is not going to make up for an uninvolved parent, or one stretched too thin to give their kids enough time. Government can sand the rough edges off the economic hardship, of course, but even in a social democratic paradise such as Sweden, kids raised in single-parent households do worse than kids raised with both their parents in the home.

Yes, but if you point that out, you won’t be “edgy.”

I’M INCREASINGLY IN FAVOR OF BACKYARD TARRING-AND-FEATHERINGS THAT TARGET THE EPA: Backyard burger and wiener roasts targeted by EPA.

The Environmental Protection Agency has its eyes on pollution from backyard barbecues.

The agency announced that it is funding a University of California project to limit emissions resulting in grease drippings with a special tray to catch them and a “catalytic” filtration system.

The $15,000 project has the “potential for global application,” said the school.

The school said that the technology they will study with the EPA grant is intended to reduce air pollution and cut the health hazards to BBQ “pit masters” from propane-fueled cookers.

Charged with keeping America’s air, water and soil clean, the EPA has been increasingly looking at homeowners, especially their use of pollution emitting tools like lawn mowers.

Their budget is obviously too big.

But I’m not the only one feeling the spirit of rebellion here: Lawmaker calls for a rebellion against EPA pollution emissions for backyard barbecues. “‘The idea that the EPA wants to find their way into our back yards, where we’re congregating with our neighbors, having a good time, on the 4th of July, barbecuing pork steak or hamburgers, is ridiculous and it’s emblematic of agency that’s sort of out of control,’ Schmitt said.”

THE HILL: Holder goes out swinging.

He should go out apologizing for his deplorable race-baiting in the Zimmerman and Ferguson cases, and for his utter disregard for civil rights and privacy. But that’s not going to happen, of course. Instead he’s going out with a lie: “There is no politicization of this Justice Department. I’m proud of the work that we’ve done over the past six years, the historic things that we have done.”

No politicization? There’s been almost nothing else.

IRA STOLL: Preet’s Revolving Door. “You don’t have to be a cynic to see a kind of parallel between the actions of the former prosecutors and the accusations they are making against those they are prosecuting. One group is making money by trading on their insider knowledge and unique relationships. And the other group… I’d love to see the Times (or someone else) do an info-graphic with photographs of U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara’s nine prosecutors who have left the Wall Street task force, along with the firms they have left for, the annual profits per partner at those firms, and the names of some of their new clients. Maybe we’ll try it here.”

Another case for my revolving-door surtax.

DON SURBER: Journalistic liars cost 8,000 households $250 million in Ferguson.

I am sure Jonathan Capehart of the Washington Post felt warm and fuzzy when he posted, ” ‘Hands up, don’t shoot’ was built on a lie.”

Admitting his mistake is a start.

When will he pony up some money to help the 8,192 households in Ferguson, Missouri, recover the approximately $250 million in lost property values caused by his sloppy journalism and to be blunt, racism?

Jonathan Capehart is not alone in repeating this outrageous lie, of course, but before he pats himself on the back for finally admitting the truth, four months after the truth came out, how about some cash. This is a tort. Jonathan Capehart, Comcast (through MSNBC) and dozens of other news organizations made stacks of money by repeating a lie for months.

They should pay.

Ferguson, Missouri, was an inner suburb of St. Louis in August when the media began repeating the lie that Michael Brown, 18, was “hunted down” (to use the words of Comcast’s Al Sharpton) by a racist white cop.

Today it is a shambles.

Ouch.

SO I LEARNED TWO THINGS FROM GOOGLE TODAY: First, I’m apparently the first one ever to use the phrase “hibernophobic hate-science,” and, second, boy, people sure do pick my stuff up fast.

NOBODY SPIKES MICKEY! Mickey Kaus quits Daily Caller after Tucker Carlson pulls critical Fox News column. Reports: “I wrote a piece attacking Fox for not being the opposition on immigration and amnesty — for filling up the airwaves with reports on ISIS and terrorism, and not fulfilling their responsibility of being the opposition on amnesty and immigration…. I posted it at 6:30 in the morning. When I got up, Tucker had taken it down. He said, ‘We can’t trash Fox on the site. I work there.'”

POPULARITY: Dodge Halts Ordering On New Hellcats. “Dodge has halted customer orders of the Challenger SRT Hellcat and Charger SRT Hellcat, as demand has overwhelmed the available supply. As reported by Allpar.com, the company could reopen the order books in August.”

I’D BE OPTIMISTIC, TOO, IF MY EVANGELISM HAD LEFT ME RICHER THAN MITT ROMNEY: The New Optimism of Al Gore.

No, really, Al’s richer than Mitt Romney. But if he runs for President, nobody in the press will be making Richie Rich jokes about him, because he’s a Democrat.

ISRAEL: Netanyahu Declares Victory. Biggest loser? Obama, who put it on the line with money and advisers to defeat him.

SO IS THIS STEALTH PRO-HILLARY SPIN? Older Really Can Mean Wiser. “The picture that emerges from these findings is of an older brain that moves more slowly than its younger self, but is just as accurate in many areas and more adept at reading others’ moods — on top of being more knowledgeable. That’s a handy combination, given that so many important decisions people make intimately affects others.”

HIGHER EDUCATION BUBBLE UPDATE: “I know that might sound somewhat esoteric to other people, but I’m an intellectual, so that’s what I intended.”

Halnon started shouting in the middle of a 2 1/2-hour flight from Managua, Nicaragua, to Miami, Fla., on Saturday, the Miami New Times reported.

One passenger filmed the impromptu lecture on a phone.

“My great hero, Hugo Chavez, nationalized the oil supply so that the people would own the oil,” she shouts. “Not ExxonMobil. Tell ExxonMobil to go away.”

Another video from the same passenger shows Halnon lighting a cigarette in her seat and taking a few puffs, which is not allowed on airlines.

Halnon told the Daily News her illegal light was meant to be “a symbol for a smoking gun,” and also a way to show her affinity with tobacco-loving “revolutionaries” like Fidel Castro. . . .

Halnon has been teaching sociology at Penn State-Abington since 1999, according to her biography on the college’s website. She previously taught at Bowdoin College in Brunswick, Maine, and at the University of Vermont in Burlington.

Her list of academic interests in her biography include “Central or Latin American studies,” “stigma,” “Women and madness,” “marijuana” and “Marxist theory.”

Fruits of the poisonous tree.