Posts Tagged ‘politics’

What I’m reading ed. 100705

Monday, July 5th, 2010

Moving and being in a wedding take up lots of time. Next update will have real content. Promise!

 

Things in the news: World Cup! Kagan, McChrystal, BP Oil Spill (slowly fading), Economic falterings, July 4th, and did I mention the World Cup? (Oh, I suppose Wimbledon as well. And the Tour de France. And the Lebron James Sweepstakes.)

 

Here’s your top 5

  1. The Renegade General (McChrystal)(RollingStone)
  2. Kagan hearing write-ups.
  3. Who’s a scientist? 7th graders describe and draw scientists after a visit to Fermilab
  4. James Sturm is quitting the internet
  5. Life inside the North Korean bubble (BBC + video, 15 min, worth watching)

 

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What I’m reading ed. 100617

Thursday, June 17th, 2010

You know the drill –

 

Topics in the news: Israel, Gaza, BP, World Cup, Kyrgyzstan, Afghanistan

 

Must reads over the past two weeks

  1. Countdown to the BP disaster (GQ)
  2. What if political scientists wrote the news? (Salon)
  3. Science Funding: The “Broader Impacts” requirement (Nature)
  4. Solitude and Leadership (delivered at West Point)
  5. What is Israel blockading, really? (graphic, analysis)

And…one for fun BP coffee spill.

 

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Things I’m reading ed. 100531

Monday, May 31st, 2010

Happy(?) Memorial Day, everybody. Lots of long articles worth reading this time, but you’ve got the rest of the night off, right? Big news is the BP Oil Spill and the failure of Top Kill. Will the leak ever end?

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Top 5

  1. The inside story on how health care reform got enacted (Cohn)
  2. Obama vs Wall Street (NYMag)
  3. The Race to the Top: Education Reform and Teachers Unions (NYT)
  4. Video from 25 feet below the oil slick. (abc)
  5. Saving the Rust Belt (Reason)

 

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What I’m reading ed. 100523

Sunday, May 23rd, 2010

The BP Disaster is mindboggling. Also in the news: Britain’s elections, the Iran nuclear non-deal and sanctions, Greece, Elena Kagan, Thailand, FinReg, Carbon cap ‘n trade, Rand Paul, Arizona’s Illegal Immigration Law.

The Top 5:

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What I’m reading ed. 100509

Sunday, May 9th, 2010

Wow, light post, considering that it’s been a month. Maybe I _am_ slowly breaking the death-grip of RSS. Unfortunately, for you, that means links will be far less timely. It was hard picking a top 5 6 this time, but here they are. Real post coming soon. Just gotta deal with that pesky real life thing first…

  1. Politics: Killing the (public) career of a judge near you.
  2. Bad News: Roundup Ready Resistant weeds proliferate (NYT)
  3. Oil Slickonomics
  4. The Economics of Climate Change Reduction (NYT, Krugman)
  5. The Dollar ReDe$ign Project
  6. Vietnam, revisited (photos, warning: graphic)

 

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What I’m reading ed. 100412

Monday, April 12th, 2010

Nowhere near as comprehensive as my previous endeavours, but hopefully there’s enough to keep you interested and entertained.

  1. Whoops, maybe flooding the developing world with cheap US agriculture wasn’t so smart after all.
  2. Selections from Best Science Writing on the Blogs 2009: I recommend Cosmopithecus and Bittersweet.
  3. The Art of the Brick (Art Gallery)
  4. Mashed-up Culture (NYT)
  5. Inspiring: 2010 Winter Paralympics (Photos)

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What I’m reading ed. 100315

Monday, March 15th, 2010

Ooof, this is what happens when you don’t post for 3 weeks. There’s a huge post below the cut, so here’re my top five reads.

    1. Our tax code is a mess (Bartlett)
    2. It’s the economy, stupid
    3. Waterboarding detailed: (caution, some may find this disturbing.)
    4. Iraqi elections reactions from Iraq and the Middle East
    5. Nature vs genetically modified wheat: Wheat stem rust makes a comeback. (Wired)

    And one for fun:  2010 SXSW mp3’s (legal)

    As usual, highlights are in red.

     

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    What I’m reading ed. 100221

    Monday, February 22nd, 2010

    I really did try to get this out last week, Livia, really I did. But I didn’t, and now this post has become bloated in size just like all of the others. *sigh*

     

    I didn’t know how to categorize this first link, so I’ll just let it stand alone above the cut.

    • Jens Galschiot’s Survival of the Fattest

      There’s an inscription: “I’m sitting on the back of a man. He is sinking under the burden. I would do anything to help him. Except stepping down from his back.”

     

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    What I’m reading ed. 100131

    Sunday, January 31st, 2010

    If you haven’t read the State of the Union and the Obama-GOP Q&A, go ahead and read them now.  Otherwise, here’s the news of the past two weeks.  As usual, highlights are in red.

     


     

    Politics

    • Political corruption or political gratitude? Or just politics? (Rauch)

      Consider Rep. Patricia Porker, a member of the Ways and Means Committee. She is running for re-election.

      Consider, next, Marvin Moneybags. He is a wealthy individual with interests before Ways and Means.

      Now consider two scenarios.

      1) Porker calls up Moneybags and says, “Say, Marvin. I need about $300,000 to run campaign ads, but I’m not allowed to take donations that big. I know you’d hate to see anything happen to those tax credits I’ve helped you with. Just a thought: Go spend $300,000 on ads supporting my candidacy. You won’t regret it.”

      2) Moneybags is a friend and an enthusiastic supporter of Porker’s. Acting on his own, without consulting Porker, he spends $300,000 on “Vote for Porker!” ads.

      Why is Scenario 1 illegal and Scenario 2 legal?

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    Your (dys) functional government: 177 appointments on hold

    Thursday, January 21st, 2010

     

    Mainstream media is going nuts over the election of Scott Brown over Martha Coakley and what that means for health care reform and Obama’s agenda and blah blah blah. While I’ll agree that this probably doesn’t bode well for having Congress accomplish anything important in the foreseeable future, they seem to be missing the point:

     

    Why has “government” become an arena for our two political parties to posture and preen and strut and vie for power instead of a place where, y’know, actual governing takes place.

     

    *ahem* They seem to be missing the point as well as contributing to the problem.

     

    Read this: 177 out of 631 political appointments still unconfirmed

     

    (for comparison, Bush II had 70 unconfirmed appointees after 1 year)

     

    Ugh, the fact that political parties(y) and special interests are playing games with our government sickens me.

     

    What kind of games? I’ve already showed you that the filibuster game has experienced a dramatic increase in popularity lately, so let’s look at another game. A game called “let’s not appoint government officials and then blame government for not working”

     

    It might have been useful, perhaps to have a someone in charge of the TSA in the aftermath of the Christmas terrorist attempt. Having someone in a position like that might have even helped to say, thwart the attack. (Ok, probably not, but let me stand on my soapbox here.) What? You say that there is a position like that? And that someone highly qualified has been appointed? And that a vote on his nomination has been put off for 4 months?!?! (Southers has since withdrawn his nomination)

     

    You would figure that in this terrible economy it might be important to have a full complement of assistant secretaries at the Treasury Department. Clearly, not everyone thinks that, since 4 out of 10 are still awaiting confirmation. (Though, to be fair, Obama, what took you so long to nominate them?)

     

    You might also think that maintaining strong diplomatic relationships with Brazil, only the largest economy in South America, the 8th largest country in the world, and one of the the four fast-growing BRIC countries, would be well-advised. Unless, of course, you were an American Congressman and decided to ice the nominee for over seven months.

     

    I’ll be upfront and say that I can’t comment on the quality of the nominees. There could very well be a legitimate concerns (I’m looking at you, Harriet Myers.) However, don’t pull crap like this and expect me to give you the benefit of the doubt in the future.

     

    The most absurd hold of 2009, perhaps, was on Miriam Sapiro, whom the Obama administration appointed to become a U.S. trade representative. Sen. Jim Bunning, a Republican from Kentucky, held up the respected Internet policy specialist’s nomination over — really — candy-flavored cigarettes. Big Tobacco, with Bunning on its side, wanted the Obama administration to lobby against Canada’s banning of flavored cigarettes like cloves, which are particularly popular among underage smokers. According to the New York Times, Bunning lifted the hold only when Democrats agreed to put a Republican, Michael Khouri, on the Federal Maritime Commission. (In the end, Bunning didn’t even attend the vote that confirmed Sapiro.)

     

    Ok. I’ll step off the soapbox now.

     

    Partial list of held appointments below the cut.

     

    The full list @ whitehouse.gov
    This post brought to you by Foreign Policy Ezra Klein and Matt Yglesias

     

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