Sunday, November 15, 2009

Looking Back vs Looking Ahead

I caught this article in the Kansas City Star about the city's industrial past and uncertain future. A few things struck me:

- The Star doesn't include itself in the list of rapidly-dwindling employers. They've been through two rounds of layoffs, and are rumored to still be having trouble.

- The article references a Norman Rockwell painting called The Kansas City Spirit without actually showing it, and assumes the reader is familiar with it. Since the painting was made in the 50's, I suppose the author is writing mainly for readers in their 60's, which would explain the point above about the Star's troubles.

- it dwells on the past and only casually touches on some options for Kansas City's growth, such as Animal Science.

I think this article does a great job of capturing the Kansas City mentality of looking back nostalgically at the past with no clue on how to move forward. KC gets more and more backwater each year.

Monday, October 26, 2009

In case there was still any doubt...


... about what the Republicans think about America. Via Americablog, I see the latest racist excrement finding its way out of the belly of the GOP.

And just for bonus points, is the President eating fried chicken? It is a safe bet some of the people espousing views like this have their own black relatives. Why else would they be so upset?

I could go on and on about how stupid and shortsighted views like this represent, but what's the point? It should be evident to all but the most self-delusional among us that the core of the Republican Party is lost to the rest of the country.


And if this is what they are about, good riddance.

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Blackface and Crackers


The picture above made me laugh because I think the guy actually believes he's disguised himself as a black person. This is different from traditional blackface which seeks to make fun of black people and grossly exaggerates their features.

The photo comes from this Der Spiegel story. A well-known German film maker "disguised" himself as a "black" German to see how differently people reacted to him. The story is well-worth a read, if only for the critical view of such behavior which I'd never expect to see in US-based publication. The article doesn't duck, dodge or deny racism.

And in case you're wondering, here is a useful guide to the difference between a White Person and a "Cracker".

Links

http://colinresponse.wordpress.com/2007/10/30/white-people-vs-crackers/

http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/0,1518,656569,00.html

Monday, October 19, 2009

Paging Troy McClure










I remember actor Troy McClure, voiced by the late great Phil Hartman, hosting a special episode of "The Simpsons" which featured some possible spinoffs of the show. They were quite silly, and consequently funny to look at. "Could they really be that dumb?", I thought.

Apparently, "they" could, if "The Cleveland Show" is any indication. I've touched on the before, but found a much better discussion of the issue from The New Republic's John McWhorter.

McWhorter's point is that the show is simply a retread of Family Guy with black characters in the main roles:

The Cleveland Show is reminiscent of all-black productions of musicals in the old days such as the Hello, Dolly! with Pearl Bailey. The underlying notion was that because you couldn’t cast a black performer in a non-black role in a mainstream production, it made theatrical sense to concoct an occasion for there to be a black Dolly, a black Horace Vandergelder, a black Barnaby singing “It Only Takes a Moment.” What mattered was not the particulars of the performances – the names of the performers in these all-black mock-ups, other than the superstar leads, were quickly forgotten – but the fact that black people were doing them at all.
So, instead of a new comedy with a strong cast, McWhorter argues we're getting Family Guy in blackface, and I find it hard to disagree.

Thursday, October 15, 2009

This is "Post-Racial" America?!



Another racist redneck thinks my family isn't legitimate: Interracial Couple denied marriage license.

Did it ever occur to this brain-dead fucking moron that marriage has never been a precondition for interracial couples in this country. I seem to recall a certain First Lady has interracial ancestors. Which makes her interracial, I guess.

Or does it not count to this fuck-tard because her great-great-grandfather owned her great-great-grandmother?

Are these people even capable of thinking rationally?

Attn Michael Steele: This is "What Up"

The "new" GOP.com website--which I'm NOT linking to--probably would have had a much better launch yesterday if they'd just had Megan McCain on it.

Monday, October 12, 2009

Too Little (Price) Discrimination can be a bad thing

I saw this article the other day in the LA Times reporting the the University of California is going to start charging a premium for some undergrad Engineering classes. They believe this makes sense because the affected majors have "higher than average" salaries. Since I'm a lapsed--or failed--Econ major, it piqued my curiosity.

Price Discrimination, for those of you who have a life, is the act of charging different prices for the same thing. This Wikipedia article gives a good introduction. I'm sure you can think of many examples, but airline fares are a common one. The same product--a seat on a plane--is sold by the airlines for vastly different prices. Producers can get away with this because they're able to segment the market into groups of consumers who are willing to pay the differing prices.

It seems to me if UC believes a little price discrimination is good, why shouldn't it apply this across majors? If Engineering degrees lead to a higher earning potential, shouldn't ones such as Education and Social Work be much cheaper, since graduates in them have lower than average earnings?

Links
LA Times - UC may hike tuition for some undergraduate majors
Washington Monthly - College for $99 a Month

Wikipedia - Price discrimination

http://thefilter.blogs.com/thefilter/2008/06/price-discrimin.html

Friday, October 9, 2009

Kennett KKK Kard




I feel very lucky to have spent a lot of my childhood in and around the South and managed to avoid getting indoctrinated with the racist mentality which permeates the place.

From the Field Negro, I found this video about a woman in Kennett Missouri, home of Sheryl Crow and just 10 miles from where my father spent most of his life.

A young woman has been accused of cutting in line at Wal-mart. Apparently that's a serious crime there, although I never saw any problems with it the last time I was in there. But this woman is now looking at 15 years in prison for assaulting a police officer.

When the woman and her family organized a protest, a policeman showed up at their house with a "KKK" Card that said "this time the visit is social, but next time it won't be".

I have to respect the woman's mom for not trying to beat that racist redneck down right there. But since he was a cop, maybe even in uniform, I guess she had to restrain herself.

Update: A more detailed account of the story can be found here.

Thursday, October 1, 2009

The Train through NIMBY-land

The California High Speed Rail Authority has released their recommended alternatives for the route between San Jose and San Francisco. This is rife with NIMBY issues, because the very rich, cosmopolitan residents of the Peninsula are all for "Green" transit, as long as it doesn't go through their neighborhood.

For Kansas City-based readers, this issue is similar to figuring out the best route to take a train traveling 100+mph through the best parts of Leawood and Mission Hills.

Great Fun!

Since I'm local to Sunnyvale, its interesting to see they're recommending going underground, either as a tunnel or an open trench. I can only imagine how disruptive that is going to be. They're already tearing the streets up for the Murphy Avenue improvement project.

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Am I worse off because I didn't go to MIT?




There was a time in my youth when I was naive--and silly--enough to think I could go to MIT. I had no idea what I wanted to do when got there, but that's beside the point.

I ended up going to a public state school, flunking out, and then eventually graduating from a different public institution.

So what did I miss? Am I permanently locked out of the best opportunities available because I graduated from a "lower-tier" school?

If economists Alan Krueger and Stacey Dale are correct, it only matters that I graduated, not so much where from. In a Working Paper titled "Estimating the Payoff to Attending a More Selective College: An Application of Selection on Observables and Unobservables", available here, they suggest that students with a choice of going to an elite or lower-tier school end up just about the same regardless of where they go. You can find more details, including video, at the New York Times' Economix blog.

As for going to MIT, now just about anyone can do it online.

Friday, September 25, 2009

Flash Movie Reviews: "Surrogates"

So I went to see "Surrogates" tonight, and came away mixed. The film treads on interesting territory. What would the world be like if we all stayed home and experienced everything through an artificial interface?

One thing that leaped out at me about the film's notion of robots being the only things walking around was, where would people eat? I can't believe everyone would just eat take-out, or make their food at home. Eating is too wrapped up with how we socialize. And you certainly couldn't do that with a robotic avatar.

On top of that, the movie mixes together multiple elements and wraps them up just a little too neatly for my taste. I would have preferred a film which stopped to think about the world it created instead of just rushing through it to tidy conclusion.

It's worth a viewing, but wait for the DVD. Or maybe you can just download it?

A Picture is worth (certain) words




Via Andrew Sullivan, we see a picture that tells us all we need to know about the current yelling on the right about how President Obama is a "Socialist".

What they really mean: "Socialism" is giving everybody a taste of the privileges historically reserved for us white people here in the US.

Thursday, September 24, 2009

"Blacks"



Why do some white people refer to all black people as "blacks"? Not "black people", "black folks", African-Americans, etc, but "blacks".

It seems as if they're not talking about individual people, but some homogeneous horde of formless, faceless others. I can't account for it myself because the notion makes no sense. My son is considered black thanks to the one-drop rule. Would they call him "a black" if they saw him with me?

All this reminds me of an offensive episode of "Californication". In it, Hank is anxiously waiting for one of the many women he's slept with to have her baby, so he can make sure it's not his. Eventually he ends up being present when the baby is born, and it comes out black. Not a little dark, but very dark-complected. So dark, in fact, that its utterly unrealistic. Most children are born with light skin which gets darker as they get a little older. While its common to use older babies in TV and movies because truly newborns aren't convenient--or available--this was way too over-the-top.

But the step-father's reaction was even worse. Yes, the woman Hank banged was with someone else. He solemnly held the child and showed it to its mother, proudly saying "I will raise this black child as my own". Why did he have to use the word "black"? Does it require clarification? Had the baby been born white as a polar bear, would he have needed to qualify his feelings by saying something like "I will raise this bastard child as my own"? Technically, that's what the baby is.

I was solidly offended. The unrealistically portrayed baby was used as a comic prop and treated as less than legitimate because it was black.

"Californication" doesn't have a monopoly on tone-deaf portrayal of black people though. "Family Guy" has developed a schizophrenic relationship with black folks. Cleveland, one of the main characters is getting his own show, premiering this Sunday. Once he's gone, Peter, Lois and the rest of the gang will no longer have their "black friend". They'll instead have to maintain an unsteady relationship with the few black or other POC who somehow end up in Quohog.

And let's not even get started on the slavery bit they did in the "Panic Room" episode....

Why do some white people view anyone who doesn't look like them as some threatening "Other"?

We now return to Anti-terrorism, already in progress



I just saw on TPM that the Justice Department has indicted Najibullah Zazi, the airport shuttle driver from Denver, on charges he planned to blow up targets in New York.

Isn't it interesting how different this is from previous plots? No massive news conference, no Orange Terror Alert--do you have enough duct tape? Instead, it was a deliberate process that probably would have been even more subtle if an NYPD informant hadn't tipped off the suspects they were under surveillance.

I notice that Drudge and Fox News manage to mention this, underneath blaring headlines about schoolchildren "forced to sing Obama's praises". As if he's Kim Jong-Il or something...

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

WTF: White Jim Crow?!




Rush is worried about a "White Jim Crow". Does he think he's going to have to give up his private plane to Jay-Z or something?

Or is he worried about being lynched? I don't think there's a tree branch big enough to hold up his fat ass. Besides, when the rampaging hordes of "blacks" (as he likes to call them) from "Obama's America" (as opposed to Real America), come for him, he can just barricade himself in his Palm Beach mansion with a shitload of Oxycontin and ride it out.

Rush and his ilk must be terrified that payback is a bitch. Of course, that's not how it works. Even as America changes, there's no threat white privilege will go away any time soon. The typical black person also doesn't have it in for white people the way racists like Rush think they do.

Through his comments, it looks like Rush, and those who support what he says, are projecting their own racial anger and resentment onto others.

Flash Movie Review: State of Play

Laid-off Wonkette employee watches All the President's Men one too many times. Actually, the movie is pretty good, even if its got that nostalgic for the good old days of newspapers feel to it. And it has Ben Affleck's best performance since Hollywoodland.

Open Thread

House is to Trance as Jazz is to....

Moore's Law and College Students




While a lot of the coverage of the MIT students getting images of the earth's curvature using only $150 worth of stuff talks about their ingenuity--and they have that--it also says a lot about how powerful technology is available to just anybody.

It would have been a lot more work to accomplish that task just 10 years ago. For example, I doubt they could have obtained the GPS receiver alone for less that $150. And it wouldn't have been feasible to track it with a cell phone. And the camera would have been either larger or produced much lower quality images. And so on... but you get the point.

This is just another small example of Moore's Law making technology ubiquitous.

The real point here is that clever or motivated people have very powerful tools at their disposal, if they just take the time and effort to use them. Which is not a comforting thought, since it means these guys do too.

But you already knew that. The real question is not what bloodthirsty regimes will do with it, but what will YOU and I do? If a balloon, hand warmers, and a Styrofoam cooler can be used to photograph the darkness of space, what can we do with everyday stuff we take for granted?

Here are some places to get started:

Cracked: 7 Items You Won't Believe Are Actually Legal

Make: Technology on your time