Archive for November, 2006

Thursday November 30, 2006

Posted in News on 30 November 2006 by Johnny

This isn’t just to tweak you, Mellora. But it’s an added bonus. From the Washington Post via MSNBC:

At a recent White House reception for freshman members of Congress, Virginia’s newest senator tried to avoid President Bush. Democrat James Webb declined to stand in a presidential receiving line or to have his picture taken with the man he often criticized on the stump this fall. But it wasn’t long before Bush found him.

“How’s your boy?” Bush asked, referring to Webb’s son, a Marine serving in Iraq.

“I’d like to get them out of Iraq, Mr. President,” Webb responded, echoing a campaign theme.

“That’s not what I asked you,” Bush said. “How’s your boy?”

“That’s between me and my boy, Mr. President,” Webb said coldly, ending the conversation on the State Floor of the East Wing of the White House.

Oh, snap. We’ve been waiting for someone to step up like this for a damn long time. I may not like your stances on most issues, but on Iraq, give ‘em hell, Jim.

Wednesday November 29, 2006

Posted in Sports on 29 November 2006 by Johnny

Ten Best Sporting Events (in my experience) of the Decade

These will be very slanted based on fan bias. But … too bad. It’s my list. Anyway, the final two are games I’ve seen in person, so … that makes a difference.

10. April 24, 2003 — NHL Western Conference Semifinals, Game 1: Anaheim 4, Dallas 3 (5OT)

Playoff hockey is underrated — especially when it goes to ridiculous lengths, because they keep playing until someone scores. Even if it takes five OTs and six hours. Screw shootouts. Play the games until someone wins. This was an epic to watch, though I may have been the only person left on the East Coast to see the end of it. The game seemed like it was going to end dozens of times, but a shot would go just wide, or someone’s skate would be in the crease … incredible drama. The game finally ended just after the start of the eighth period, a goal finally entering the net on the 117th shot on goal of the game.

9. August 5, 2001 — MLB Sunday Night Game of the Week: Cleveland 15, Seattle 14 (11 innings)

The score doesn’t tell the story. The Indians were embarrassing themselves, trailing 14-2 at stretch time.

And then the miraculous happened. Three runs in the 7th. Four runs in the 8th. Two more runs in the 9th before Omar Vizquel hit a bases-clearing triple down the left field line to tie the game. Kenny Lofton scored the winning run in the bottom of the 11th to win the game and set off a crazed celebration at Jacobs Field, capping the biggest comeback in the majors since 1925. Seattle would have the last laugh, though, eliminating the Indians from the playoffs that year.

8. April 4, 2005 — NCAA Basketball National Championship Game: North Carolina 75, Illinois 70

I was in Ireland at the time and stayed up until five in the morning listening to the game on the radio via the Internet, tethered to the computer by a short headphone cord and hence hunched over the desk. UNC got out to a sizable lead then nearly lost it all, only to hold off the Illini in a back-and-forth, nip-and-tuck, down-to-the-wire game (that I was almost certain Carolina was going to lose) and take home the crown. I own many pieces of paraphernalia celebrating this victory.

7. February 1, 2004 — Super Bowl XXXVIII (Houston, Texas): New England 32, Carolina 29

This game didn’t end how I wanted it to, but it was an unbelievable game. It was scoreless for most of the first half, then it was an offensive fireworks display for the last 36 minutes. The greatness of this game was, sadly, overshadowed by Janet Jackson’s breast. Not only did she erase everyone’s memory of the best NFL game of my lifetime, but her stunt compelled social conservatives to sic the FCC on everyone. Good job.

6. January 4, 2006 — Rose Bowl (National Championship): Texas 41, Southern California 38

Reggie Bush and Matt Leinart, both Heisman Trophy winners, could not overcome Vince Young, who threw for 200-some yards and ran for 200 more, the last eight of those on a fourth-down scramble as time ran down to slay the Trojan dynasty and its 34-game winning streak. Two great defenses were just plain run off the field in a game that was absolutely insane to watch. When the BCS gets lucky with two unbeaten teams, great games happen.

5. March 26, 2006 — NCAA Basketball East Region Final: George Mason 86, Connecticut 84 (OT)

This was Hoosiers brought to life. The little school that could (and that had perhaps previously been best known for being one of the great centers of anti-statist economic thought) knocked off national powerhouses Michigan State and North Carolina, then Wichita State in the Sweet 16, and faced off against the #1 team in the country, stocked with pro talent, for a trip to the Final Four. None of George Mason’s players will ever suit it up in the NBA, but that squad pulled off one of the greatest victories in basketball history. It restored just a bit of sports fans’ innocence.

4. October 17-20, 2004 — American League Championship Series: Boston 4, New York 3

You can’t separate these four games; they were one continuous event, one massive tide that destroyed the invincibility of the Yankees in one fell swoop and delighted every fan that hates the Bronx Bombers. The Red Sox reversed the curse in the most spectacular fashion imaginable, starting with Dave Roberts’ steal and ending with the ball in the glove of Doug Mientkiewicz, becoming only the third team in a major North American sports league to come back from 3-0 down to win a best-of-seven series (both in the NHL: the 1942 Maple Leafs and the 1975 Islanders). On a high that could not be topped by any drug on earth, Boston swept the Cardinals to win the World Series the next week.

3. January 3, 2003 — Fiesta Bowl (National Championship): Ohio State 31, Miami 24 (2OT)

When the BCS gets lucky with two unbeaten teams, great games happen. Miami was the defending champion, riding a 34-game winning streak (sound familiar?), and was a prohibitive favorite. Ohio State had gone 13-0, but they had barely escaped inferior opponents in the Big Ten all year and seemed destined for a fall against the far more athletic Miami team. But a funny thing happened on the way to a massacre: the Buckeyes jumped up 17-7 in the third quarter, thanks to the now-infamous Maurice Clarett and anonymous quarterback Craig Krenzel, who led the team in rushing. Miami came back though, despite their star running back (Willis McGahee) blowing his knee out late in the game, and tied the score up at 17 as the final buzzer sounded. Many say Ohio State should have lost the game — and indeed, everyone in the stadium believed they had — in the first overtime, but a late pass interference call gave Ohio State a new lease on life, using it to tie the game at 24 and send things to another round. The Buckeyes held on Miami’s second possession to win the game. “Hang on Sloopy” echoed throughout the desert all night and half of Ohio woke up with a hangover the next day.

2. February 5, 2004 — The Tobacco Road Rivalry: Duke 83, North Carolina 81 (OT)

It sucked to walk out of this game with the Blue Devils victorious. Clevelander Jawad Williams made a three-pointer with three seconds left in regulation to send the Dean Dome into pandemonium, giving the fans five more minutes of great basketball. Then Chris Duhon ran the length of the court to make a relatively uncontested layup with seconds left in overtime to take the lead. Carolina was unable to make their shot and the Dukies dealt a painful blow to the Heels in their house. But the atmosphere was unbelievable. Carolina-Duke is one of the most mythical rivalries in sports and I feel incredibly privileged to have seen it in person. (I stood out in the cold for four hours on a Saturday morning in January, vomiting periodically, as I waited for my number to come up to get my tickets. That would still be quite a bit less painful, though, than ponying up the $800 that it would have cost to get a ticket on eBay. In the che
ap seats.)

Of course, the natural follow-up question would be: What the hell topped seeing Duke-Carolina in person?

1. November 9, 2006 — Thursday Night College Football: Rutgers 28, Louisville 25

This game felt like it was played in a surrealistic haze. The crowd was dead silent when the Scarlet Knights had the ball and created a deafening amount of nonstop noise whenever the Cardinals took possession. (No one on the Rutgers campus, I’m quite certain, could speak the next morning.) This clash of the unbeatens looked like a rout early, with Louisville — then in position for a berth in the National Championship game, with Rutgers its only major obstacle remaining on the schedule — jumping out to a 25-7 lead in the middle of the 2nd quarter, after Rutgers’ defense looked hapless and Louisville seemed to get every break imaginable, including a two-point conversion off their own blocked extra point. “Louisville deserves to play for the title,” I thought to myself at the depths of the 18-point deficit.

Then the defense showed up. Brian Brohm looked like a boy among men, his offense decimated by the swarming blitzes of Rutgers, while Mike Teel and Ray Rice slowly led their team back. Rutgers tied the game at 25 with just over ten minutes left. After stopping Louisville, the Knights got the ball with just over five minutes left in regulation. Seemingly converting about 73 third downs, they made their way down the gridiron to get into field goal position. Jeremy Ito missed his first kick, but a Louisville player was offsides on the kick, so he got another chance. He nailed it right down the middle, then pointed directly at the ESPN SkyCam hanging over the field, as if to taunt the doubters of the State University of New Jersey.

After Louisville’s kickoff return was stopped short, the fans stormed the field. Problem: There were still two seconds left. Roughly a thousand people scampered off the playing surface in mere moments, clearing the turf for play. When Brohm was sacked, the fans flooded the field anew in jubilant celebration. Most of the team was carried off on the fans’ shoulders as many of us celebrated on the field for quite some time after the game had ended.

Rutgers was a laughingstock no more. The birthplace of college football was once again in the sport’s spotlight.

And here we are, playing this Saturday for the Big East championship and a berth in the Orange Bowl. Madness.

Wednesday November 29, 2006

Posted in Sports on 29 November 2006 by Johnny

There’s a piece in the sports section of today’s New York Times where, looking for answers as to the Giants’ epic slow-motion-train wreck collapse last Sunday (coughing up a 21-0 fourth quarter lead in unbelievably incompetent fashion to lose 24-21 to a sub-.500 Tennessee team), the writers turned to … well, you’ll see:

Tonya Reiman and Maxine Lucille Fiel do not know much about football, but they are fluent in body language, one of many areas in which the Giants have appeared suspect recently. … “It’s like they all needed a B-12 shot,” Fiel said yesterday after watching tape of the game. “It’s like nobody was home.”

Oh, there’s more.

“Even when they were winning, their body language wasn’t all that good,” Reiman said. “They seem to have a defeatist attitude. You see disagreement and restrained anger. There’s not a lot of communication among them. … [Body language] is extremely important in sports. If you’re trying to work together, you need some kind of rapport. You show rapport through body language.”

They start analyzing individual players. Turns out one of them has a crush on tight end Jeremy Shockey:

“Oh, is he mad,” Fiel said. “He looks mean and very tough. But I like him. I want him to be my bodyguard. He’s scary. But he’s authentic.”

Okay then. She goes on to conclude that stone-faced coach Tom Coughlin is apparently a misunderstood soul:

“The guy is suffering,” Fiel said. “He looked like his eyes filled up with tears. It is all going on inside of him.”

Then there’s the final paragraph, the punchline that cracked me up and prompted me to post this to start with:

“They need to get that other No. 10, that guy from Tennessee — [quarterback Vince] Young,” [Fiel] said. “He’s so joyous, so joyful. You can feel his joy just watching him. He has so much energy. He’s like a dancer. Maybe he can inspire the Giants.”

One might suggest to her that saying a quarterback is like a dancer would not be a compliment in most circles.

Sunday November 26, 2006

Posted in News on 26 November 2006 by Johnny

Does this sound like a country that wants peace? Really, if the populace wants unmitigated civil war, I see no reason to stop them anymore. From the LA Times:

Angry Shiites hurl stones at Maliki’s motorcade

BAGHDAD — Angry Shiite Muslims pelted Prime Minister Nouri Maliki’s motorcade with stones today after the Iraqi leader pleaded for national reconciliation at a memorial in Sadr City held for victims of a large-scale bombing attack last week.

Maliki, who is also a Shiite, left the scene after he tried without success to calm a crowd of mourners calling for revenge against Sunni Arabs. His pleas were met with shouts of “coward” and “collaborator.”

Thursday’s series of suicide and car bombings killed at least 215 people inside the Shiite neighborhood on the eastern edge of Baghdad, worsening the country’s civil war.

Iraqi political leaders have sought to rein in the violence. Baghdad’s international airport was closed on Thursday and a general curfew imposed, and the measures continued today.

The heckling by Maliki’s fellow Shiites came after a Baghdad meeting at which he appealed for peace, standing alongside Iraq’s Kurdish president, Jalal Talabani, as well as the speaker of parliament and a vice president, both Sunnis. However, even state television on today substituted its usual placid rhetoric with footage of the Shiite deputy health minister lashed out at residents of various Sunni neighborhoods, accusing them of fostering violence.

Mortars fired from the southern edge of Sadr City today hit an American military base, starting a fire. Others were directed at the predominantly Sunni neighborhood of Amariyah, a U.S. military spokesman said.

“I can confirm there was a strike, but I’m not going to give out any assessment,” said Lt. Col. Scott Bleichwehl, the spokesman for U.S. forces in Baghdad.

When asked about what the U.S. military is doing to counter the violence in the capital, he said he would not comment for “operational reasons.” He added that American forces are “working hand-in-hand with the Iraqi security forces [to create] the most secure environment.”

But Sunnis in several Baghdad neighborhoods say they have seen few American patrols and that Iraqi security forces are either not doing anything to protect the Sunnis or are even complicit in the killing of Sunnis.

In Hurriya, one neighborhood where Shiite militias have driven out most of the Sunni residents, Iraqi police and soldiers stood by Friday as other uniformed men in police vehicles launched rocket-propelled grenades into houses and fired their guns at Sunni mosques, according to a policeman who was present.

The head of the Sunni bloc, Adnan Dulaimi, came under attack in Baghdad’s Adel neighborhood today. For an hour, his guards held off armed men who had already lobbed mortar shells toward his house but missed. Eventually, Iraqi and American forces arrived and the gunmen fled, Dulaimi said in an interview later.

Mortar shells continued to slam down on other Baghdad neighborhoods today, inflicting death and injury on both sides of the sectarian divide, Iraqi authorities reported. In the mainly Shiite neighborhood of Karada, two shells killed four civilians and injured five, including the imam of the Zuwiya Mosque. The wounded were taken to Ibn Nafis Hospital, where armed men later tried to break in. Police guarding the hospital fought the attackers, eventually repelling them as reinforcements arrived.

In Mashtal, a mixed area in eastern Baghdad, a mortar shell injured four. Another hit the Sunni enclave of Ghazaliya, west of the Tigris River, but there were no reports of injuries.

In fighting elsewhere, Iraqi authorities reported that a car bomb in Haswah, about 40 miles south of Baghdad, killed seven civilians. Two local council members were gunned down by drive by assassins in Hillah, about 55 miles south of the capital.

The continued fighting also took a bloody toll in Diyala province, just north of Baghdad.

Twelve police officers were kidnapped after they ran out of ammunition during a shootout at a checkpoint near the Shiite village of Dujayl.

In a raid near Kanan on Saturday night, men wearing Iraqi military uniforms seized 25 Shiite men. In the Sunni city of Baqubah, seven teenagers were found handcuffed, blindfolded and executed with bullets to their forehead. Gangs also looted the city’s library, stealing computers, books and furniture.

Meanwhile, the U.S. military announced that American forces had killed four suspected insurgents and detained eleven others. One insurgent was found hiding in a house, dressed as a woman and pretending to nurse a baby.

On Saturday, a soldier assigned to the 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division was killed by a roadside bomb in the province. Two U.S. Marines were killed in separate attacks in Al Anbar province on Saturday, according to a U.S. military statement.

The American military also announced the discovery of 11 bodies in Al Anbar last week. “The 10 men and one youth died from apparent gunshots,” the statement said. A burned-out van was found nearby.

Police in Ramadi reported bloody clashes between local tribes and groups affiliated with Al Qaeda. It was unclear how many, if any, were killed.

Saturday November 25, 2006

Posted in Thought on 25 November 2006 by Johnny

Shamelessly ripped off in full from the Associated Press:

10 is the new 15 as kids grow up faster

Zach Plante is close with his parents — he plays baseball with them and, on weekends, helps with work in the small vineyard they keep at their northern California home.

Lately, though, his parents have begun to notice subtle changes in their son. Among other things, he’s announced that he wants to grow his hair longer — and sometimes greets his father with “Yo, Dad!”

“Little comments will come out of his mouth that have a bit of that teen swagger,” says Tom Plante, Zach’s dad.

Thing is, Zach isn’t a teen. He’s 10 years old — one part, a fun-loving fifth-grader who likes to watch the Animal Planet network and play with his dog and pet gecko, the other a soon-to-be middle schooler who wants an iPod.

In some ways, it’s simply part of a kid’s natural journey toward independence. But child development experts say that physical and behavioral changes that would have been typical of teenagers decades ago are now common among “tweens” — kids ages 8 to 12.

Some of them are going on “dates” and talking on their own cell phones. They listen to sexually charged pop music, play mature-rated video games and spend time gossiping on MySpace. And more girls are wearing makeup and clothing that some consider beyond their years.

Zach is starting to notice it in his friends, too, especially the way they treat their parents.

“A lot of kids can sometimes be annoyed by their parents,” he says. “If I’m playing with them at one of their houses, then they kind of ignore their parents. If their parents do them a favor, they might just say, ‘OK,’ but not notice that much.”

The shift that’s turning tweens into the new teens is complex — and worrisome to parents and some professionals who deal with children. They wonder if kids are equipped to handle the thorny issues that come with the adolescent world.

“I’m sure this isn’t the first time in history people have been talking about it. But I definitely feel like these kids are growing up faster — and I’m not sure it’s always a good thing,” says Dr. Liz Alderman, an adolescent medicine specialist at Montefiore Medical Center in New York City. She’s been in practice for 16 years and has noticed a gradual but undeniable change in attitude in that time.

She and others who study and treat children say the reasons it’s happening are both physical and social.

Several published studies have found, for instance, that some tweens’ bodies are developing faster, with more girls starting menstruation in elementary school — a result doctors often attribute to improved nutrition and, in some cases, obesity. While boys are still being studied, the findings about girls have caused some endocrinologists to lower the limits of early breast development to first or second grade.

Along with that, even young children are having to deal with peer pressure and other societal influences.

Beyond the drugs, sex and rock’n'roll their boomer and Gen X parents navigated, technology and consumerism have accelerated the pace of life, giving kids easy access to influences that may or may not be parent-approved. Sex, violence and foul language that used to be relegated to late-night viewing and R-rated movies are expected fixtures in everyday TV.

And many tweens model what they see, including common plot lines “where the kids are really running the house, not the dysfunctional parents,” says Plante, who in addition to being Zach’s dad is a psychology professor at Santa Clara University in California’s Silicon Valley.

He sees the results of all these factors in his private practice frequently.

Kids look and dress older. They struggle to process the images of sex, violence and adult humor, even when their parents try to shield them. And sometimes, he says, parents end up encouraging the behavior by failing to set limits — in essence, handing over power to their kids.

“You get this kind of perfect storm of variables that would suggest that, yes, kids are becoming teens at an earlier age,” Plante says.

Natalie Wickstrom, a 10-year-old in suburban Atlanta, says girls her age sometimes wear clothes that are “a little inappropriate.” She describes how one friend tied her shirt to show her stomach and “liked to dance, like in rap videos.”

Girls in her class also talk about not only liking but “having relationships” with boys.

“There’s no rules, no limitations to what they can do,” says Natalie, who’s also in fifth grade.

Her mom, Billie Wickstrom, says the teen-like behavior of her daughter’s peers, influences her daughter — as does parents’ willingness to allow it.

“Some parents make it hard on those of us who are trying to hold their kids back a bit,” she says.

So far, she and her husband have resisted letting Natalie get her ears pierced, something many of her friends have already done. Now Natalie is lobbying hard for a cell phone and also wants an iPod.

“Sometimes I just think that maybe, if I got one of these things, I could talk about what they talk about,” Natalie says of the kids she deems the “popular ones.”

It’s an age-old issue. Kids want to fit in — and younger kids want to be like older kids.

But as the limits have been pushed, experts say the stakes also have gotten higher — with parents and tweens having to deal with very grown-up issues such as pregnancy and sexually transmitted diseases. Earlier this year, that point hit home when federal officials recommended a vaccine for HPV — a common STD that can lead to cervical cancer — for girls as young as age 9.

“Physically, they’re adults, but cognitively, they’re children,” says Alderman, the physician in New York. She’s found that cultural influences have affected her own children, too.

Earlier this year, her 12-year-old son heard the popular pop song “Promiscuous” and asked her what the word meant.

“I mean, it’s OK to have that conversation, but when it’s constantly playing, it normalizes it,” Alderman says.

She observes that parents sometimes gravitate to one of two ill-advised extremes — they’re either horrified by such questions from their kids, or they “revel” in the teen-like behavior. As an example of the latter reaction, she notes how some parents think it’s cute when their daughters wear pants or shorts with words such as “hottie” on the back.

“Believe me, I’m a very open-minded person. But it promotes a certain way of thinking about girls and their back sides,” Alderman says. “A 12-year-old isn’t sexy.”

With grown-up influences coming from so many different angles — from peers to the Internet and TV — some parents say the trend is difficult to combat.

Claire Unterseher, a mother in Chicago, says she only allows her children — including an 8-year-old son
and 7-year-old daughter — to watch public television.

And yet, already, they’re coming home from school asking to download songs she considers more appropriate for teens.

“I think I bought my first Abba single when I was 13 or 14 — and here my 7-year-old wants me to download Kelly Clarkson all the time,” Unterseher says. “Why are they so interested in all this adult stuff?”

Part of it, experts say, is marketing — and tweens are much-sought-after consumers.

Advertisers have found that, increasingly, children and teens are influencing the buying decisions in their households — from cars to computers and family vacations. According to 360 Youth, an umbrella organization for various youth marketing groups, tweens represent $51 billion worth of annual spending power on their own from gifts and allowance, and also have a great deal of say about the additional $170 billion spent directly on them each year.

Toymakers also have picked up on tweens’ interest in older themes and developed toy lines to meet the demand — from dolls known as Bratz to video games with more violence.

Diane Levin, a professor of human development and early childhood at Wheelock College in Boston, is among those who’ve taken aim at toys deemed too violent or sexual.

“We’ve crossed a line. We can no longer avoid it — it’s just so in our face,” says Levin, author of the upcoming book “So Sexy So Soon: The Sexualization of Childhood.”

Earlier this year, she and others from a group known as the Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood successfully pressured toy maker Hasbro to drop plans for a line of children’s toys modeled after the singing group Pussycat Dolls.

Other parents, including Clyde Otis III, are trying their own methods.

An attorney with a background in music publishing, Otis has compiled a line of CDs called “Music Talking” that includes classic oldies he believes are interesting to tweens, but age appropriate. Artists include Aretha Franklin, Rose Royce and Blessid Union of Souls.

“I don’t want to be like a prude. But some of the stuff out there, it’s just out of control sometimes,” says Otis, a father of three from Maplewood, N.J.

“Beyonce singing about bouncing her butt all over the place is a little much — at least for an 8-year-old.”

In the end, many parents find it tricky to strike a balance between setting limits and allowing their kids to be more independent.

Plante, in California, discovered that a few weeks ago when he and Zach rode bikes to school, as the two of them have done since the first day of kindergarten.

“You know, dad, you don’t have to bike to school with me anymore,” Zach said.

Plante was taken aback.

“It was a poignant moment,” he says. “There was this notion of being embarrassed of having parents be too close.”

Since then, Zach has been riding by himself — a big step in his dad’s mind.

“Of course, it is hard to let go, but we all need to do so in various ways over time,” Plante says, “as long as we do it thoughtfully and lovingly, I suppose.”

How much do you wanna wager this is a story they use every few years on a slow news day, changing the names and cultural touchstones each time?

Wednesday November 22, 2006

Posted in News on 22 November 2006 by Johnny

From Slate:

On Monday, the federal office that oversees the nation’s family-planning program got a new boss who doesn’t believe in birth control. Eric Keroack is a Massachusetts obstetrician-gynecologist who argues that abstinence until marriage is the only healthy choice for women. Until recently, he served as medical director of a pregnancy-counseling organization that runs down contraception and gives out scientifically false health information—for instance, that condoms “offer virtually no protection” against herpes or HPV. Keroack also promotes a wacky piece of pseudoscience: the claim that premarital sex disrupts brain chemistry so as to create a physiological barrier to happy marriage.

[...]

In Keroack’s own lectures and writing, he also makes claims designed to scare the bejesus out of kids to convince them to remain abstinent. One pet theory involves the neuropeptide oxytocin, which plays a role in mother-child bonding and social affiliation. Keroack claims that that people who engage in premarital sex experience chronic emotional pain, which lowers their oxytocin levels. This in turn impairs their ability to form healthy relationships down the road. “People who have misused their sexual faculty and become bonded to multiple persons will diminish the power of oxytocin to maintain a permanent bond with an individual,” [Keroack] writes.

A cursory web search finds this page, yielding further insight into the mind of the madman who is now in controlling federal birth control policy:

“Sexual activity is a war zone,” he said. “What we have is this ongoing war. So we’re constantly coming up with better equipment,” he said, referring to contraceptive strategies and abortions. “And the truth is that somewhere along the way people die in war,” Keroack added. He acknowledged that deaths from abortion-related complications are rare, but that “they die emotionally.”

Indeed, the right wing is still pulling some strings. In the end, though, the fact that the power of government can be employed to drive his views is the real problem.

Friday November 17, 2006

Posted in Sports on 17 November 2006 by Johnny

Long-time Michigan head coach Bo Schembechler died today from a heart attack — immediately after the taping of a show on local television in Detroit, one day before the previously mentioned Game to End All Games tomorrow in Columbus. That knocks the level of emotion up to mind-boggling levels where the scenario I lay out is honestly about the only way that this match-up could become any more crazed.

All this brings up the issue of a Columbus punk band that has received some notoriety well in advance of this development: the Dead Schembechlers, with such singles as “Bomb Ann Arbor Now.” They were supposed to perform at a “Hate Michigan” rally on the OSU campus. One wonders if that still transpired.

Somehow, I’m thinking this has increased the chance of a massive riot in Columbus, win or lose, by a pretty decent percentage. For what it’s worth, I’ll make a sure-to-be-wildly-incorrect prediction: Ohio State 24, Michigan 13. Hopefully OSU will win by more to make the slim window of Rutgers’ national title hopes that much wider.

(For those of you keeping track at home, the Scarlet Knights would need to win out, have USC beat Notre Dame but lose to either Cal or UCLA, and both Florida and Arkansas would need to lose once — and one of them will, since they play each other for the SEC title. After all this, TGTEAG has to be sufficiently lopsided, preferrably in Ohio State’s favor, to avoid having a rematch for all the marbles in January. Before you laugh, this list was a lot longer last week …)

EDIT (7:30 pm Sat): That was a hell of a game that pretty much lived up to the hype. There’s a decent shot of a rematch for the national championship at this point … especially if USC loses. But then again, you sleep on the Scarlet Knights of Rutgers at your own risk! (Well, actually, Ohio State would kill them. But whatever.)

EDIT (10:45 pm Sat): Fuck you, Cincinnati.

EDIT (4:30 pm Sun): Ready to do it again?

Thursday November 16, 2006

Posted in News on 16 November 2006 by Johnny

From the Los Angeles Times:

The latest in a recent spate of cellphone videos documenting questionable arrest tactics surfaced Wednesday, this one showing a UCLA police officer using a Taser to stun a student who allegedly refused to leave the campus library.

Grainy video of the Tuesday night incident at UCLA’s Powell Library was broadcast Wednesday on TV news and the Internet, prompting a review of the officers’ actions and outrage among students at the Westwood campus.

The footage showed the student, Mostafa Tabatabainejad, falling to the ground and crying out in pain as officers stunned him.

According to a campus police report, the incident began when community service officers, who serve as guards at the library, began their nightly routine of checking to make sure everyone using the library after 11 p.m. is a student or otherwise authorized to be there.

Campus officials said the long-standing policy was adopted to ensure students’ safety.

When Tabatabainejad, 23, refused to provide his ID to the community service officer, the officer told him he would have to show it or leave, the report said.

After repeated requests, the officer left and returned with campus police, who asked Tabatabainejad to leave “multiple times,” according to a statement by the UCLA Police Department.

“He continued to refuse,” the statement said. “As the officers attempted to escort him out, he went limp and continued to refuse to cooperate with officers or leave the building.”

Witnesses disputed that account, saying that when campus police arrived, Tabatabainejad had begun to walk toward the door with his backpack. When an officer approached him and grabbed his arm, the witnesses said, Tabatabainejad told the officer to let go, yelling “Get off me” several times.

“Tabatabainejad encouraged library patrons to join his resistance,” police said. “The officers deemed it necessary to use the Taser.”

Officers stunned Tabatabainejad, causing him to fall to the floor.

The video shows Tabatabainejad yelling, “Here’s your Patriot Act, here’s your … abuse of power,” the Daily Bruin reported, adding he used a profanity.

“It was beyond grotesque,” said UCLA graduate David Remesnitsky of Los Angeles, who witnessed the incident. “By the end they took him over the stairs, lifted him up and Tasered him on his rear end. It seemed like it was inappropriately placed. The Tasering was so unnecessary and they just kept doing it.”

Campus police confirmed that Tabatabainejad was stunned “multiple” times.

By then, Remesnitsky said, a crowd of 50 or 60 had gathered and were shouting at the officers to stop and demanding their names and badge numbers.

Remesnitsky said officers told him to leave or he would be Tasered.

Tabatabainejad declined to comment. He was arrested Tuesday night and cited by campus police for resisting and obstructing a police officer and was released.

The incident was the third videotape of an arrest to surface in the last week in Los Angeles.

One video showed a Los Angeles Police Department officer dousing a handcuffed suspect in the face with pepper spray as the suspect sat in a patrol car.

That video came to light Monday, just days after the LAPD and the FBI launched investigations into another videotape showing a police officer hitting a suspect in the face several times after a foot chase in Hollywood.

UCLA Assistant Police Chief Jeff Young said Wednesday that he had viewed the video of the campus incident on the Internet and would view any other videos that were shot.

“We will gather as many samples as we can find, from different sources,” Young said. “We’ll use it for our own administrative investigation.”

UCLA Acting Chancellor Norman Abrams said in a statement that university police are investigating the incident and the officers’ actions.

“The investigation and review will be thorough, vigorous and fair,” he said, adding that compliance with the library ID policy is “critical for the safety and well-being of everyone.”

Young said Tasers, which discharge an electric current to incapacitate a suspect, are seldom used by the campus police department.

Video of the incident, not surprisingly, is available on YouTube here. Draw your own conclusions.

Thursday November 16, 2006

Posted in News on 16 November 2006 by Johnny

Quoted in full from MSNBC:

Milton Friedman, the Nobel Prize-winning economist who advocated an unfettered free market and had the ear of three U.S. presidents, died Thursday at age 94.

Friedman died in San Francisco, said Robert Fanger, a spokesman for the Milton and Rose D. Friedman Foundation in Indianapolis. The Wall Street Journal quoted his daughter Janet Martell that the cause of death was heart failure.

“Milton’s passion for freedom and liberty has influenced more lives than he ever could possibly know,” said Gordon St. Angelo, the foundation’s president and CEO, said in a statement. “His writings and ideas have transformed the minds of U.S. presidents, world leaders, entrepreneurs and freshmen economic majors alike.

In more than a dozen books, a column in Newsweek and a TV show on PBS, Friedman championed individual freedom in economics and politics. The longtime University of Chicago professor pioneered a school of thought that became known as the Chicago school of economics.

His theory of monetarism, adopted in part by the Nixon, Ford and Reagan administrations, opposed the traditional Keynesian economics that had dominated U.S. policy since the New Deal. He was a member of Reagan’s Economic Policy Advisory Board.

His work in consumption analysis, monetary history and stabilization policy earned him the Nobel Prize in economics in 1976.

“He has used a brilliant mind to advance a moral vision — the vision of a society where men and women are free, free to choose, but where government is not as free to override their decisions,” President Bush said in 2002. “That vision has changed America, and it is changing the world.”

Friedman favored a policy of steady, moderate growth in the money supply, opposed wage and price controls and criticized the Federal Reserve when it tried to fine-tune the economy.

A believer in the principles of 18th century economist Adam Smith, he consistently argued that individual freedom should rule economic policy. Outspoken and controversial, Friedman saw his theories attacked by many traditional economists such as Harvard’s John Kenneth Galbraith.

In an essay titled “Is Capitalism Humane?” he said, “A set of social institutions that stresses individual responsibility, that treats the individual … as responsible for and to himself, will lead to a higher and more desirable moral climate.”

Friedman acknowledged “pure capitalism” did not exist, but said nations that cherished freedom must strive to keep the economy as close to the ideal as possible.

He said government should allow the free market to operate to solve inflation and other economic problems. But he also urged adoption of a “negative income tax” in which people who earn less than a certain amount would get money from the government.

He lived to see free market reforms spread in the former communist world and Latin America, but played down his own influence

“I hope what I wrote contributed to that, but it was not the moving force,” Friedman told The New York Sun in March 2006. “People like myself, what we did was keep these ideas open until the time came when they could be accepted.”

Born in New York City on July 31, 1912, Friedman began developing his economic theories during the Great Depression when President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s based his New Deal on the ideas of Britain’s John Maynard Keynes, the most influential economist of the time.

Keynes argued that the government should intervene in economic affairs to avoid depressions by increasing spending and controlling interest rates.

Friedman graduated from Rutgers University in 1932 and earned his master’s degree the following year at the University of Chicago.

After working for the National Resources Commission in Washington from 1935 to 1937, Friedman was a member of the staff of the National Bureau of Economics Research in New York from 1937 to 1945 and received his doctorate from Columbia University in 1946.

After World War II, he taught at the University of Minnesota, then returned to the University of Chicago. He became a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University in 1977.

Friedman married Rose Director in 1938. They had two children, Janet and David, and she was co-author of some of his books.

Among his most famous books were: “Price Theory,” 1962 (with Rose Friedman); “Capitalism and Freedom,” 1962 (with Anna J. Schwartz); “An Economist’s Protest,” 1972; “There Is No Such Thing As a Free Lunch,” 1975; and “Free to Choose,” 1979, co-authored with his wife. “Free to Choose” also was a series on the Public Broadcasting Service.

Friedman wrote columns for Newsweek from 1966 to 1983 and was one of the few economists to bridge the gap between academia and the public. He involved himself in political campaigns, supporting Barry Goldwater in 1964 and Richard Nixon in 1968. He served on Nixon’s commission for an All-Volunteer Army in 1969 and 1970.

In an interview with Playboy magazine in 1973, later republished in a collection of his essays titled “Bright Promises, Dismal Performance,” Friedman said he was encouraged by an apparent trend away from government control.

“There are faint stirrings and hopeful signs,” he said. “Even some of the intellectuals who were most strongly drawn to the New Deal in the ’30s are rethinking their positions, dabbling just a little with free-market principles. They’re moving slowly and taking each step as though they were exploring a virgin continent. … But it’s not dangerous. Some of us have lived here quite comfortably all along.”

Friedman, whose wit made him a popular guest on radio and television shows, appeared to enjoy sparring with other economists.

In the Playboy interview, he referred to his disagreement with Galbraith, who endorsed wage and price controls. When Nixon went against Friedman’s advice and reluctantly imposed the controls in an effort to slow inflation, Friedman said he wrote a note to Galbraith.

“You must be as chagrined as I am to have Nixon for your disciple,” Friedman wrote. Galbraith didn’t reply, Friedman said.

He brought sanity to macroeconomics in the 1960s and 1970s, a field that had been subsumed by the flawed theories of Keynes. He advocated freedom in fields as varied as the legalization of marijuana and the implementation of school vouchers — something he first agitated for more than half a century ago. He presented us with an incredibly simple, yet highly effective model and policy prescription for economic growth and the supply of money. He did so much for so many, helping end intense poverty for millions in the Third World by advocating privatization, free trade, and flexible exchange rates.

And, of course, he went to Rutgers.

The world lost a great man today.

Reason has a tribute to him here.

My paper on monetarism is here.

Last, his Wikipedia entry is here.

Thursday November 16, 2006

Posted in Satire on 16 November 2006 by Johnny

HEAVEN (AP) — The anticipation for Saturday’s match-up between #1 Ohio State and #2 Michigan has officially reached Biblical proportions.

Jesus Christ, self-proclaimed savior of all humanity, summoned correspondents of the world’s major news outlets to His throne, stationed atop a cumulonimbus cloud floating somewhere above the Indian Ocean.

“I have brought you all here to announce that I will be making My return to Earth, as predicted in the Scriptures, during the first television timeout of the fourth quarter of this Saturday’s Game of the Century.”

“This should take place at approximately 6:00 pm Eastern, 5:00 Central,” He added.

Anticipation for the salvation of mankind has had some impact in Central Ohio, though it has been overshadowed in the minds of some by preparation for the game.

“Look, folks, I know this game has a little more national attention with Jesus coming by, but we’re going to get ready for Michigan just like any other opponent,” Ohio State head coach Jim Tressel said. “We’re just going to focus on the fundamentals of the game and stuff some Bibles into our padding.”

“Honestly, we’re thrilled that Our Lord has decided to come to this fair city,” read a statement from the Greater Columbus Convention and Visitors Bureau. “For far too long, Columbus has been derided as ‘Cowtown USA.’ After an event like this, we’re looking forward to being a dynamic place on the minds of literally billions of people the world over — a place with lots of great shopping and fine dining destinations.”

Churches have accepted pilgrims who have come to Central Ohio from all corners of the globe upon hearing the announcement of the King of Kings, but those hoping to see Him in person will find that tickets to the game are being scalped for as much as $10,000 each. The game will, however, be broadcast nationally on ABC, which has recently begun running TV ads using the slogan “Judgment Day Lives Here.”*

Not to be outdone, the Prophet Muhammad has scheduled an appearance in Los Angeles for a highly anticipated meeting between #4 USC and #17 California. Homeland Security has announced that, being a Muslim male from Saudi Arabia without proper identification, Muhammad will be detained and questioned if seen at Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum.

Further, rumors have suggested that the Hindu god Vishnu will be in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, for the game between #14 Wake Forest and #19 Virginia Tech.

Meanwhile, back in Columbus, Ohio State students had their minds on only one thing.

“It’s going to be one hell of a game on Saturday,” said an unidentified young man before disappearing in a flourish of flames that seemed to appear out of thin air.

(* = No, seriously. This is actually true.)