Friday, August 6, 2010

Rest in Peace Tony Judt

British historian, author and NYU professor Tony Judt has died at the age of 62 from ALS.
I admire Judt not only for his  intellect, his firmly held principles and fearlessness but also for his incredible skill as a writer. His last essay in the New York Review of Books sits on my writing desk,
Cultural insecurity begets its linguistic doppelgänger. The same is true of technical advance. In a world of Facebook, MySpace, and Twitter (not to mention texting), pithy allusion substitutes for exposition. Where once the Internet seemed an opportunity for unrestricted communication, the increasingly commercial bias of the medium—”I am what I buy”—brings impoverishment of its own. My children observe of their own generation that the communicative shorthand of their hardware has begun to seep into communication itself: “people talk like texts.[..]”

In “Politics and the English Language,” Orwell castigated contemporaries for using language to mystify rather than inform. His critique was directed at bad faith: people wrote poorly because they were trying to say something unclear or else deliberately prevaricating. Our problem, it seems to me, is different. Shoddy prose today bespeaks intellectual insecurity: we speak and write badly because we don’t feel confident in what we think and are reluctant to assert it unambiguously (“It’s only my opinion…”). Rather than suffering from the onset of “newspeak,” we risk the rise of “nospeak.[..]"

Though I am now more sympathetic to those constrained to silence I remain contemptuous of garbled language. No longer free to exercise it myself, I appreciate more than ever how vital communication is to the republic: not just the means by which we live together but part of what living together means. The wealth of words in which I was raised were a public space in their own right—and properly preserved public spaces are what we so lack today. If words fall into disrepair, what will substitute? They are all we have.

Zakaria Rebukes ADL

Fareed Zakaria returns an award and $10,000 honorarium from the Anti-Defamation League over the ADL's opposition to the ground zero Islamic center.

Garcia Choice a Tip of Hick's Hand?

I don't know Joe Garcia personally but I've heard positive things about him for several years. I had heard that Christine Scanlon was the favorite to be Hickenlooper's pick so I can't say I saw Garcia coming but he's not an out-of-left field pick either.

What caught my ear the other night was Hickenlooper's emphasis on Garcia's experience in higher education. Not his executive experience within higher ed but his experience in higher ed generally. That's interesting because the governor of Colorado has no direct authority over higher education. Colorado's system of higher education is run by the Colorado Commission on Higher Education. Commissioners are appointed by the governor but no one political party may hold more than 6 seats on the 11 member board.

So why pick someone with serious Higher Education credentials? Well, if you have big plans of reforming our higher education system a guy like Garcia makes a lot of sense. I'm purely speculating at this point but given the precarious condition of higher ed funding in Colorado, the overall condition of the state's budget and the outspoken call for reforms by CU President Bruce Benson I wouldn't be surprised if a big reorganization of higher ed was being discussed.

Larry Summers: Prick

That's gist of what Ezra Klein reports. I bet White House staff would have less butt-hurt over Larry Summers if unemployment wasn't at 9.5%. These types of personality and managerial conflicts flare up when the mission is failing and any sentient being on the President's economic team right now is feeling a tightening in their throat.

"I Left It all Behind Me and I Travelled Far..."

This time tomorrow I'll be pulling into Telluride...

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Dodging the Bullet

I blogged about the looming public employment crisis a few weeks back. Without Federal dollars we could face the layoff of hundreds of thousands of public employees, sending the economy spiraling further down. Via Andrew Oh-Willeke I see that we've (partially) dodged that bullet. $26 billion in aid is only a fraction of what is needed but it's a start.

One of Those Great Days for Mankind

One of Andrew Sullivan's readers emailing about the opinion in the Prop 8 case,
His clerks made that trial record their bitch, and Judge Walker took that dog for a walk.

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

Yglesias: We Should Be Making Policy Decisions on Ignorance and Personal Biases

Matt Yglesias,
Whenever you propose trying to measure anything in education, people come out of the woodwork to point out that there are some flaws in almost any measurement system you can devise. This is true enough, but the current practice of simply not measuring whether or not training programs improve teacher performance is even worse. 
This is laughably absurd. Yglesias is arguing that we engage in data collection and analysis and  then that we use that analysis to shape teacher training programs. But he's also arguing that we shouldn't care if we're measuring anything worthwhile at all or if we're measuring accurately but those measurements should still be used to "evaluate" teacher training programs, shape curriculum and, presumably, direct funding.

Can you imagine Matt Yglesias making this argument about any other policy issue? In what other area of public policy would he be arguing that evidence, facts and rational decision are secondary considerations? Why even go through the motions of pretending to gather data? We should just make all of our policy decisions based on ignorance and our personal biases. If it snows in the winter that means climate change is a hoax.

Vacuous seems too polite of a word, no?

Monday, August 2, 2010

Carlin, Still On Point

I think my general mood is well summed up by the late George Carlin,




HT John Cole

The Romanoff Surge

Marc Ambinder from The Atlantic weighs in on the Colorado Democratic Primary,

Plenty of polls have showed Bennet leading Romanoff narrowly. In June, SurveyUSA found that Bennet had a 17 point lead -- the only poll ever to show him with anything resembling that kind of margin.  Now SurveyUSA has Romanoff ahead by several points. It's a surge...providing you ignore the numerous public polls, both internal and public, that have shown a close race for months. SurveyUSA uses automation to conduct polls, which automatically makes it suspect for many consultants and analysts.  (The jury is still out for me.)

The activists I know are feeling excited about the Survey USA poll, they feel as though Romanoff has held the grassroots support all along and finally that momentum has carried their candidate to the lead. Peaking at the right time, as one friend put it. 

I think getting an accurate poll of primary voters in a small state like Colorado is tough. Things seem to be pointing Romanoff's way but who really knows?

Latest at TFT

My first post-exam post is up at TFT - tying together Krugman, The Financial Times and Robert Reich as we survey the wreckage of the American middle-class and the American liberal movement.

On a related note Matt Yglesias responded to Krugman's column today by staking out an admittedly optimistic scenario, 
The difference between this situation and the situation with Congress and fiscal policy—and the reason I’m not necessarily as pessimistic as Krugman—is that there is a tractable path forward for improving monetary policy. Congress is only going to become more hostile to fiscal stimulus, but Barack Obama’s two appointments to the Federal Reserve Board of Governors are going to get confirmed one of these days and perhaps they’ll shift the median vote on the Open Market Committee in a better direction. If they don’t, we’re in big trouble. But they might. The puzzling thing is that both the White House and the Congressional leadership have been so lackadaisical about getting this done. 
I think the fact that Obama and Congressional leadership have been so lackadaisical with these nominations is pretty good evidence that there's no agenda for improved monetary policy forthcoming. The inaction from all parties just reinforces Krugman's thesis that our policy makers do not feel any urgency to address our 9.5% unemployment rate.

Sunday, August 1, 2010

Things Which I Pray To FSM Are True

TBogg says there is a rumor that Tancredo is trying to recruit Michelle Malkin as his running mate.

Update: Reading the comments at TBogg's it seems that this idea came from some sort of listener poll on Peter Boyles show. Also in the running, Jon Caldera and John Andrews. Really any of the three would be spectacular. Why not run a slate? Caldera could run for Treasurer and Andrews could be Secretary of State.