Scared Straight Backfires

Ken AshfordRandom MusingsLeave a Comment

Ummm, they probably should have thought this through more:

OCEANSIDE, Calif. (AP) – On a Monday morning last month, highway patrol officers visited 20 classrooms at El Camino High School to announce some horrible news: Several students had been killed in car wrecks over the weekend.

Classmates wept. Some became hysterical.

A few hours and many tears later, though, the pain turned to fury when the teenagers learned that it was all a hoax—a scared-straight exercise designed by school officials to dramatize the consequences of drinking and driving.

As seniors prepare for graduation parties Friday, school officials in the largely prosperous San Diego suburb are defending themselves against allegations they went too far.

At school assemblies, some students held up posters that read: "Death is real. Don’t play with our emotions."

Michelle de Gracia, 16, was in physics class when an officer announced that her missing classmate David, a popular basketball player, had died instantly after being rear-ended by a drunken driver. She said she felt nauseated but was too stunned to cry.

"They got the shock they wanted," she said.

Some of her classmates became extremely upset, prompting the teacher to tell them immediately it was all staged.

"People started yelling at the teacher," she said. "It was pretty hectic."

Others, including many who heard the news of the 26 deaths between classes, were left in the dark until the missing students reappeared hours later.

I guess it’s good that the students got the message.  Still, it’s a little mean….

Tax Policies of McCain and Obama

Ken AshfordEconomy & Jobs & Deficit, Election 2008Leave a Comment

The Tax Policy Center today released an exhaustive comparison of the tax plans of Barack Obama and John McCain.

The graph below shows the change in income (up being more income, down being less income) under the Obama (blue) and McCain (reddish) tax plans.

Blog_tpc_obama_mccain_tax_plans

Bottom line:  The people who need money the most will benefit most from Obama’s plan; the people who have tons of money will benefit most from McCain’s plan.

Oh, and middle-class families would do better under Obama (who would cut their taxes by $1000 in 2009) than McCain (who would cut them by only $300).

Prez Race Tight In NC

Ken AshfordElection 2008Leave a Comment

Rasmussen. 6/10. Likely voters. MoE 4% (5/8 results)

McCain (R) 45 (48)
Obama (D) 43 (45)

The internals:

6/10  Total   Men Wom  GOP Dem Other
McCain  45     45  45   88  16  36
Obama   43     43  43    6  76  39

5/8   Total   Men Wom  GOP Dem Other
McCain  48     52  44   81  20  49
Obama   45     39  49   15  71  40

We’re definitely a swing state, which is unusual for NC.

Marine Expelled For Puppy Throwing

Ken AshfordIraqLeave a Comment

You may have heard about this story a few months ago.

It’s about the U.S. soldier in Iraq who threw a puppy off a cliff.  Here’s the video [WARNING:  This is a very disturbing video]

Justice is (somewhat) served.  According to the AP:

The Marine Corps said Wednesday it was expelling one Marine and disciplining another for their roles in a video showing a Marine throwing a puppy off a cliff while on patrol in Iraq.

The 17-second video posted on YouTube drew sharp condemnation from animal rights groups when it came to light in March.

The clip shows two Marines joking before one hurls the puppy into a rocky gully. A yelping sound is heard as it flips through the air.

"That’s mean. That’s mean, Motari," an off-camera Marine is heard telling the Marine who tossed the black and white dog. The off-camera Marine snickered slightly afterward.

Lance Cpl. David Motari, assigned to the 1st Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment at Kaneohe Bay, is "being processed for separation" from the Marine Corps, the Marine Corps said in a news release. He also received unspecified "non-judicial punishment."

Gitmo Detainees Have Habeus Rights

Ken AshfordConstitution, Supreme Court, War on Terrorism/TortureLeave a Comment

OK.  Permit me to get all law geeky, but this is big legal news.  Well, it’s big news for anyone who believes in our Constitution, really.  Aned a big blow to the Bush Administration.

About an hour ago, the Supreme Court ruled that foreign nationals held at Guantanamo Bay have a right to pursue habeas challenges to their detention.

What does that mean?

A habeus petition is an extraordinary (meaning "out-of-the-ordinary", rather than "wow-gee-willikers") process by which people incarcerated can challenge their incarceration in court.  This usually happens after all trials and appeals have failed.  It’s really thought of as the "last resort" for justice — the last bite at the apple.  The writ of habeus corpus is old — older than the Constitution.  It’s one of the few rights that is in the original Constitution, rather than the Bill of Rights (the amendments) tacked on afterward — that’s how important the framers thought it was.

Now, according to the Constitution, the habeus writ cannot be suspended except "in Cases of Rebellion or Invasion the public safety may require it." [U.S. Constitution, Art. I, Sec. 9, Clause 2]. 

Lincoln suspended the writ during the Civil War. 

Sadly, it was also suspended in 1941, when Japanese-Americans were denied the ability to challenge their internment during WWII.

Okay, so what happened here?

Well, 9/11.  We went to war.  We rounded up a bunch of "enemy combatents".  Well, not really — most of those held at Gitmo were captured by the Pakistani government or the Northern Alliance, so we don’t really know if they were "enemy combatents" or not.  [UPDATE:  In fact, according to the NYT:

The man who gave the case its title, Lakhdar Boumediene, is one of six Algerians who immigrated to Bosnia in the 1990’s and were legal residents there. They were arrested by Bosnian police within weeks of the Sept. 11 attacks on suspicion of plotting to attack the United States embassy in Sarajevo — “plucked from their homes, from their wives and children,” as their lawyer, Seth P. Waxman, a former solicitor general put it in the argument before the justices on Dec. 5.

So this guy is an "enemy combatent" in our War on Terror?  Maybe.  Maybe not.  But we should try and convict him before we detain him for 6 years, right?]

But hundreds languished at Gitmo, without trial, without being charged.  Over time, our government quietly transferred hundreds of them back to their home countries, most of them for release.  ("Oops, our bad")

But hundreds remained, and still remain, at Gitmo.

The Bush Administration and the republican-controlled Congress has tried to pass laws suspending the writ to these guys.  Over the past few years (and for reasons I won’t get into), the Supreme Court has struck those attempts down.

The latest case essentially stems from the argument (made by the Bush Administration) that the detainees do not have a constitutional right to the writ of habeus corpus, because they are being held at Gitmo, which is not U.S. sovereign territory.  (Under prior cases, it would be clear that if the foreign nationals were detained within the contiinental United States, they would have rights to habeus relief). 

So today, the majority of justices (in a 5-4 decision, with Kennedy being the swing) didn’t buy that; They recognized that the U.S. was trying to get around the habeus requirement by having these guys held in some place other than in U.S. territory:

"The test for determining the scope of [the Suspension Clause] must not be subject to manipulation by those whose power it is designed to restrain."

In other words, because the Government chose to detain these prisoners at Gitmo for the very purpose of avoiding a judicial check on the legality of the detentions, the Court has ensured that the constitutional guarantee extends to the naval base.

Bottom line: these detainees who have been held for as long as six years without trial, without being charged, will get their day in court.

As it should be.

[Law geeks can read the opinion here.  Read Scalia’s dissent — he sounds like Jack Nicholson in A Few Good Men ("All you’ve down is risked lives today"), but Souter’s concurrence in rebuttal takes care of Scalia.  Good reading]

FURTHER THOUGHTS ON SCALIA DISSENT.  Scalia wrote:

“…it sets our military commanders the impossible task of proving to a civilian court, under whatever standards this Court devises in the future, that evidence supports the confinement of each and every enemy prisoner. The Nation will live to regret what the Court has done today.”

Yeah.  It would be easier for our government if they could just imprison people without having to, you know, prove guilt.  But I don’t think that’s what our forefathers, and the soldiers who gave their lives afterwards, envisioned and gave the full measure of their lives to protect.  This isn’t some banana republic, Scalia.

UPDATE: From the Center for Constitutional Rights, which represented defendants in these cases:

"The Supreme Court has finally brought an end to one of our nation’s most egregious injustices,” said CCR Executive Director Vincent Warren. “It has finally given the men held at Guantánamo the justice that they have long deserved. By granting the writ of habeas corpus, the Supreme Court recognizes a rule of law established hundreds of years ago and essential to American jurisprudence since our nation’s founding. This six-year-long nightmare is a lesson in how fragile our constitutional protections truly are in the hands of an overzealous executive."

Yup.

LAST UPDATE, I PROMISE:  For those of you who are ambivalent or reject the Court’s decision today, I ask you to consider this, from Glenn Greenwald:

The laws and Constitution are designed to survive, and remain in force, in extraordinary times. Liberty and security can be reconciled; and in our system, they are reconciled within the framework of law. The Framers decided that habeas corpus, a right of first importance, must be a part of that framework, part of that law.  In ruling that the CSRT’s woefully fail to provide those safeguards, the Court quoted Alexander Hamilton’s Federalist No. 84: "The practice of arbitrary imprisonments, in all ages, is the favorite and most formidable instruments of tyranny." It is that deeply tyrannical practice — implemented by the Bush administration and authorized by a bipartisan act of Congress — which the U.S. Supreme Court, today, struck down.

***

The greatest victim of the 9/11 attack — by far — has been our core, defining constitutional liberties. Of all the powers seized by this administration in the name of keeping us Safe, the power to imprison people indefinitely with no charges and no real process is the most pernicious.

Any disagreements with that?

Site Changes

Ken AshfordBloggingLeave a Comment

I added a widget in the left column with my Google calendar.

I added a widget in the right column listing my Facebook status updates, as well as those of my friends (click the arrows in the title bar).

UPDATE:  And the clock.  Let me know if there are any problems….

Michael Medved And The Nazi/Gay Issue

Ken AshfordHistory, Sex/Morality/Family ValuesLeave a Comment

Seriously stupid:

Germany recently unveiled a memorial to what the press called “the Nazis’ long-ignored gay victims.” Across the road from Berlin’s monument to Jewish Holocaust victims, the new shrine features a pavilion-sized concrete slab with a window through which visitors view a video of two men kissing.

Ok….

This commemoration follows a longstanding, misleading attempt to depict homosexuals as prime targets of Hitler.

Whoa, whoa, whoa there Michael!  Who exactly has been saying that homosexuals were a prime target of Hitler?  Certainly they were one of them along with Jews, intellectuals, Catholics, etc.  Let’s roll the videotape of Heinrich Himmler:

I would like to develop a couple of ideas for you on the question of homosexuality. There are those homosexuals who take the view: what I do is my business, a purely private matter. However, all things which take place in the sexual sphere are not the private affair of the individual, but signify the life and death of the nation, signify world power…

After likening the homosexual who was killed and thrown into a peat bog to the weeding process in a garden, Himmler continued his tirade:

…In the SS, today, we still have about one case of homosexuality a month. In a whole year, about eight to ten cases occur in the entire SS. I have now decided upon the following: in each case, these people will naturally be publicly degraded, expelled, and handed over to the courts. Following completion of the punishment imposed by the court, they will be sent, by my order, to a concentration camp, and they will be shot in the concentration camp, while attempting to escape. I will make that known by order to the unit to which the person so infected belonged. Thereby, I hope finally to have done with persons of this type in the SS, and the increasingly healthy blood which we are cultivating for Germany, will be kept pure.

But back to Medved:

In fact, even historical material released with the memorial noted only “an estimated 10,000 to 15,000 gay men deported to concentration camps” – and by no means all of them were killed.

No, just about 60% of them, according to historians.  So that’s about 6,000 to 8,000 people killed.

While homosexuals surely outnumbered the less-than-one-percent of the German population that was Jewish, Jewish victims of Nazi death camps outnumbered estimated gay victims by more than 500 to 1.

Your point, Mike?

Persecution of any group deserves condemnation and remembrance, but it’s wrong to exaggerate the extent of victimization for politically correct P.R. purposes.

Who exaaggerated?  Mike, you just cited as authority the numbers from the "historical material released with the memorial"!  Roughly 7,000 men and women were killed for being gay!  That’s not worthy of a memorial???

What Michael also omits is the fact that in 1935, Nazis made homosexuality illegal.  50,000 were convicted that crime, and roughly 25% of them went to concentration camps.  The remaining (who survived) had a criminal conviction on their records, and many were re-arrested after WWII.  They finally received pardons… in 2002.

Medved the Moustache gives lip service to the "condemnation" of this persecuted group, but he has trouble with a memorial for that purpose?

Medved

Pictured above: Michael Medved, a not gay man.

The Religious Vote In 2008

Ken AshfordElection 2008, GodstuffLeave a Comment

Barna, the pre-eminent pollers of religion-related issues, says the landscape is changing:

The Christian community in the U.S. has largely shifted its loyalty to the Democratic nominee in this year’s race. In the 2004 election, 81% of evangelicals voted for the Republican incumbent George W. Bush. Currently, 78% of the likely voters who are evangelical expect to vote for Sen. McCain. Evangelicals represent 8% of the adult population and just 9% of all likely voters.

But the big news in the faith realm is the sizeable defection from Republican circles of the much larger non-evangelical born again and the notional Christian segments. The non-evangelical born again adults constitute 37% of the likely voters in November, and the notional Christians are expected to be 39% of the likely voters. Among the non-evangelical born again adults, 52% supported President Bush in 2004; yet, only 38% are currently supporting Sen. McCain, while 48% are siding with Sen. Obama. Although notional Christians voted for John Kerry in 2004 by an 11-point margin, that gap has more than doubled to 26 points in this year’s election. Protestants and Catholics have moved toward the Democratic challenger in equal proportions since 2004.

The New York Times today notes that evangelical support for McCain is soft at best:

…what remains one of Mr. McCain’s biggest challenges as he faces a general election contest with Senator Barack Obama: a continued wariness toward him among evangelicals and other Christian conservatives, a critical voting bloc for Republicans that could stay home in the fall or at least be decidedly unenthusiastic in their efforts to get out the vote.

And why are they not gung-ho for McCain?

Mr. McCain’s relationship with evangelicals has long been troubled. In 2000, when he was running against Mr. Bush for the Republican nomination, Mr. McCain castigated Pat Robertson and the Rev. Jerry Falwell as “agents of intolerance.”

In a sign of the lingering distrust, Mr. McCain finished last out of nine Republican candidates in a straw poll last year at the Values Voter Summit in Washington, a gathering for socially conservative activists.

James C. Dobson, the influential founder of the evangelical group Focus on the Family, released a statement in February, when Mr. McCain was on the verge of securing the Republican nomination, affirming that he would not vote for Mr. McCain and would instead stay home if he became the nominee. Dr. Dobson later softened his stance and said he would vote but has remained critical of Mr. McCain.

“For John McCain to be competitive, he has to connect with the base to the point that they’re intense enough that they’re contagious,” said Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council. “Right now they’re not even coughing.”

The balancing act Mr. McCain faces in appealing to both moderate voters and evangelicals was starkly illustrated last month when he rejected the endorsements of the Rev. John Hagee and the Rev. Rod Parsley, prominent evangelical leaders, after controversial statements by the two came to light. Mr. Parsley has been vocally anti-Islam and Mr. Hagee, in a sermon, said Hitler and the Holocaust had been part of God’s plan to drive the Jews to Palestine.

Mr. McCain’s actions complicated his relationship with evangelical leaders, some of whom said in interviews that the senator’s actions contributed to the impression among some evangelicals that he did not know or understand them. They argued that he should have stood by them, while making clear that he did not necessarily agree with all of their views.

He also supported financing for embryonic stem cell research.

Robert Novak jusmps in the fray:

Shortcomings by John McCain’s campaign in the art of politics are alienating two organizations of Christian conservatives. James Dobson’s Focus on the Family is estranged following the failure of Dobson and McCain to talk out their differences. Evangelicals who follow the Rev. John Hagee resent McCain’s disavowal of him.

The evangelicals are not an isolated problem for the Arizona senator. Enthusiasm for McCain inside the Republican coalition is in short supply. During the four months since McCain clinched the nomination, he has not satisfied conservatives opposed to his positions on global warming, campaign finance reform, immigration, domestic oil drilling and how to ban same-sex marriages.

The particular problem for McCain is that if he moves to the right to pick up the "base", he’ll not only be seen as pandering (and a flip-flopper), but he’s likely to lose people in the center.

I don’t envy his position, but I’m glad he’s in it.

But No Superhuman Abilty To Wage Mind Control

Ken AshfordPersonal1 Comment

Human Resources at the place I work is asking employees to take a Clifton Strengthfinder Test, to show our strengths and talents.  It’s a serious psychological test (not one of those BS internet things).  It assesses your strengths, giving you five "talents" out of 36 metrics.

Here’s my results:

Learner

You love to learn. The subject matter that interests you most will be determined by your other themes and experiences, but whatever the subject, you will always be drawn to the process of learning. The process, more than the content or the result, is especially exciting for you. You are energized by the steady and deliberate journey from ignorance to competence. The thrill of the first few facts, the early efforts to recite or practice what you have learned, the growing confidence of a skill mastered—this is the process that entices you. Your excitement leads you to engage in adult learning experiences—yoga or piano lessons or graduate classes. It enables you to thrive in dynamic work environments where you are asked to take on short project assignments and are expected to learn a lot about the new subject matter in a short period of time and then move on to the next one. This Learner theme does not necessarily mean that you seek to become the subject matter expert, or that you are striving for the respect that accompanies a professional or academic credential. The outcome of the learning is less significant than the “getting there.”

Ideation

You are fascinated by ideas. What is an idea? An idea is a concept, the best explanation of the most events. You are delighted when you discover beneath the complex surface an elegantly simple concept to explain why things are the way they are. An idea is a connection. Yours is the kind of mind that is always looking for connections, and so you are intrigued when seemingly disparate phenomena can be linked by an obscure connection. An idea is a new perspective on familiar challenges. You revel in taking the world we all know and turning it around so we can view it from a strange but strangely enlightening angle. You love all these ideas because they are profound, because they are novel, because they are clarifying, because they are contrary, because they are bizarre. For all these reasons you derive a jolt of energy whenever a new idea occurs to you. Others may label you creative or original or conceptual or even smart. Perhaps you are all of these. Who can be sure? What you are sure of is that ideas are thrilling. And on most days this is enough.

Input

You are inquisitive. You collect things. You might collect information—words, facts, books, and quotations—or you might collect tangible objects such as butterflies, baseball cards, porcelain dolls, or sepia photographs. Whatever you collect, you collect it because it interests you. And yours is the kind of mind that finds so many things interesting. The world is exciting precisely because of its infinite variety and complexity. If you read a great deal, it is not necessarily to refine your theories but, rather, to add more information to your archives. If you like to travel, it is because each new location offers novel artifacts and facts. These can be acquired and then stored away. Why are they worth storing? At the time of storing it is often hard to say exactly when or why you might need them, but who knows when they might become useful? With all those possible uses in mind, you really don’t feel comfortable throwing anything away. So you keep acquiring and compiling and filing stuff away. It’s interesting. It keeps your mind fresh. And perhaps one day some of it will prove valuable.

Individualization

Your Individualization theme leads you to be intrigued by the unique qualities of each person. You are impatient with generalizations or “types” because you don’t want to obscure what is special and distinct about each person. Instead, you focus on the differences between individuals. You instinctively observe each person’s style, each person’s motivation, how each thinks, and how each builds relationships. You hear the one-of-a-kind stories in each person’s life. This theme explains why you pick your friends just the right birthday gift, why you know that one person prefers praise in public and another detests it, and why you tailor your teaching style to accommodate one person’s need to be shown and another’s desire to “figure it out as I go.” Because you are such a keen observer of other people’s strengths, you can draw out the best in each person. This Individualization theme also helps you build productive teams. While some search around for the perfect team “structure” or “process,” you know instinctively that the secret to great teams is casting by individual strengths so that everyone can do a lot of what they do well.

Intellection

You like to think. You like mental activity. You like exercising the “muscles” of your brain, stretching them in multiple directions. This need for mental activity may be focused; for example, you may be trying to solve a problem or develop an idea or understand another person’s feelings. The exact focus will depend on your other strengths. On the other hand, this mental activity may very well lack focus. The theme of Intellection does not dictate what you are thinking about; it simply describes that you like to think. You are the kind of person who enjoys your time alone because it is your time for musing and reflection. You are introspective. In a sense you are your own best companion, as you pose yourself questions and try out answers on yourself to see how they sound. This introspection may lead you to a slight sense of discontent as you compare what you are actually doing with all the thoughts and ideas that your mind conceives. Or this introspection may tend toward more pragmatic matters such as the events of the day or a conversation that you plan to have later. Wherever it leads you, this mental hum is one of the constants of your life.

Whatever.  Below the fold is all 34 themes for me, in order…

Read More

Gas Information

Ken AshfordEnergy and ConservationLeave a Comment

As a public service, I’ve set up a separate page on this blog giving information about gas prices — including the cheapest gas prices in the Winston-Salem area within the past 24 hours. This link will be permanently available on the right hand column.

Enjoy.

Office Worker Freaks Out

Ken AshfordRandom MusingsLeave a Comment

It’s viral now — you’ve probably seen it already.  Happened a couple weeks ago.

I’m going to go out on a limb and say this is a hoax.  Probably some viral video marketing campaign….