Appearances be damned!

GOP and tech lobbyists: Appearances be damned!

[O]ne leading Republican in the room was brazen about his cozy relationship with the industry.

Rules Committee Chairman David Dreier (R-Calif.) cited a newspaper headline saying he was in the “hip pocket” of the high-tech lobby and said he “proudly pleads guilty” to helping an industry that has been responsible for so much growth in the gross domestic product in recent years.

A technology-industry insider, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said Dreier has indeed been one of the sector’s best friends over the past few years. He said Dreier’s one of the few who “get it.” But, he cautioned, Dreier likely isn’t in it for the cash because the tech sector is notoriously inept at political giving.

OK, everything’s cool as long as the bribe-givers are inept.

If you think the media will follow up on things like this, recall that Randy “Il Duce” Cunningham lived on a yacht in DC and drove a Rolls Royce to the Capital and the Washington Press Corp didn’t seem to notice. mjh

Presidents deserve to be punished for insulting our intelligence

The Democrats’ Real Problem By E. J. Dionne Jr.

Bush critics will almost always point first to the administration’s arrogance, a word used recently not by some left-wing Bush hater but by the loyal conservative writer Byron York. In the New Republic, York chose the A-word to explain why Republicans are turning on the White House’s “we-know-best approach.”

The cure for an arrogant government that doesn’t take critics seriously is accountability. Divided government never looked so good. That’s especially true at a moment when polls suggest that a majority is yearning for more competence and greater moderation.

For example, moderates and liberals alike are mystified by budget policies saddling our kids with debt tomorrow to pay for tax cuts for the wealthy today. Moderating this radical fiscal approach is something the voters clearly could accomplish with their ballots this fall. …

Presidents deserve to be punished for insulting our intelligence.

[F]ighting bad policies is actually constructive… [B]etween presidential elections, keeping matters from getting worse is sometimes the most positive alternative on offer.

The Dim-wit’s Defense

Federal report predicted cataclysm By Bill Walsh

Bush’s front-line disaster agency, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, was predicting the worst. In a Power Point slide show dated Aug. 27 and obtained by The Times-Picayune, the agency spelled out the death and destruction anticipated by Hurricane Pam and warned that Katrina was likely to be worse. …

“Overall the impacts described herein are conservative,” the report said.

The report focuses on the disastrous results of levee failure.

“The potential for severe storm surge to overwhelm Lake Pontchartrain levees is the greatest concern for New Orleans,” it said. “Any storm rated Category 4 on the Saffir-Simpson (hurricane) scale will likely lead to severe flooding and/or levee breaching. This could leave the New Orleans metro area submerged for weeks or months.”

Four days later, President Bush said on ABC’s “Good Morning America,” “I don’t think anyone anticipated the breach of the levees.”

It’s not a lie if he can’t remember the truth. mjh

Museum of the Egoist

Museum of the Egoist Graffiti alá commode. The only more fitting place for this artist is inside the museum.

I assume “gank” (or is it “gauk”?) is slang for “clueless,” as in, “that punk is so gank he’s an idiot.” This little pissant has urinated all over the neighborhood; I’m sure the other dawgs are impressed.

Yes, I appreciate the irony of a blogger castigating anyone for self-centeredness. And, in fact, I have seen grafitti I regarded as great public art. Not to equate them, but I’d love to see more murals (and less advertising) in public places.

I also appreciate the potential impact of a single utterance or gesture. Brevity may be the soul of wit.

But a signature calls for something before it, something worthy of claim. You might point me to John Hancock, but his signature became iconic because of what it was attached to, much as gank’s mighty work fits its place. One Kilroy was enough, thank you.

Of course, the graffitist is just a child overwhelmed with the chemicals of adult-becoming, a little werewolf who will, perhaps, do worse before the prickly fog of adolescence subsides in a decade. mjh

New Mexico’s Loss

I’ve known former-Judge Tommy Jewell for a couple of decades in the most superficial social way. I run with lawyers and judges the way some run with wolves. A very long time ago, I attended a party at which Woody and the Woodpeckers, a band of judges, played — Jewell was their drummer.

I do know that Jewell served for many years as a judge and, particularly, with matters of family law. And, it matters little to me, but he is married and has children. We might call him a pillar of the community.

So, soon after his retirement as a judge, his appointment to head Children, Youth and Family in New Mexico seemed a very good fit. Here is a judicious man used to getting difficult things done.

So what happened? How did the wheels fly off the cart in such a short time? What is Tommy Jewell guilty of?

I have no idea; do you? I know that soon after his nomination, an anonymous women pointed out a sealed court case involving her and Jewell and a restraining order. Now, I respect her right to privacy, which has to be slightly greater than for a public figure like Jewell. And, I know restraining orders are good and necessary tools to protect victims of abuse. Of course, restraining orders can also be abused, as we saw in the case of the lunatic in Santa Fe attempting to restrain Letterman from communicating with her via TV.

How can Jewell be driven out of this by something so lacking in details? I don’t want the detail — let the Governor or state Supreme Court look into it. If there is something in this situation, other than inuendo and controversy, that disqualifies Jewell from this position, I want him disqualified. If there is something genuinely unseemly involved, I’m not sure I want to know.

What troubles me most, even more than the constant assault on public figures (to which I mightily contribute), is the underlying secrecy. Again, I respect privacy. But secrecy is becoming a national obsession that threatens our freedom. And secrecy in this case may be denying us the best person for the job. mjh

ABQjournal: Jewell Declines CYFD Position; Former Judge Was Set To Take Over Today By Leann Holt, Journal Staff Writer

According to news reports about the domestic violence case, a Sandoval County judge did not grant the woman a temporary restraining order, saying her accusations were “unsubstantiated and scandalous.” The judge then sealed the case. …

Jewell, a nationally recognized children’s advocate and leader in juvenile justice reform, apologized in his letter for not telling the governor about the domestic violence allegations before taking the job.

“Since the accusations were reported in the media and the case was sealed, I believed it was resolved and in the past,” he wrote.

Tom Swisstack, director of the Bernalillo County Juvenile Detention Center, said Jewell was instrumental in making Bernalillo County a national model for detention reform when he was a judge. He said Jewell’s ability to help people work together was something the department needed.

ABQjournal: Appointee Vetting to Change; Gov. To Require Disclosure Form By Deborah Baker, The Associated Press

A woman— not Jewell’s wife— requested a temporary restraining order against the judge in 1999. The case was shifted to Sandoval County, where a judge didn’t grant the order— calling the accusations “unsubstantiated and scandalous”— and sealed the case. …

“Here was a man with an impeccable record, a great reputation. A community leader. We thought we had a real gem,” Richardson said. “And, obviously, I wish he had said, ‘Well, by the way, there was this incident.’ ”

As Hinton Says…

Just a couple of days ago, I wrote that one should not quote me as evidence in support of an argument. Now, I find I have been quoted in just such a case.

New Mexicans for Science and Reason March 2006 Newsletter

Hinton on Gammill…

NMSR has been arguing with Intelligent Design
creationist Paul Gammill for a decade. Albuquerque blogger
Mark Justice Hinton jumped into the fray last September, after
another of Gammill’s letters was published in the Albuquerque
Journal. Hinton wrote “Because we haven’t explained it, we
can’t ever? Thank god that perspective didn’t take hold before
the Enlightenment (though the same people tried their
darndest to hang onto the Dark Ages). Genetic code is a
language? So, is the author crediting god with all language,
too? Or, as the creators of language, can we also create life?
NO exceptions or no known exceptions? ID proponents seem
very quick to embrace endless ignorance. Gammill seems to
confuse the way he views the world with the way the world is.
Common mistake among the arrogant. …”

Nice to see other folks are getting it!

www.edgewiseblog.com/mjh/001053.htm

Dear NMSR,

I am surprised and honored to find myself implicitly among reasonable New Mexicans. In the interest of fairness, I will admit ample evidence to the contrary, though I hope no evidence of me being anti-science can be found. Of course, that quote about world-view and arrogance will surely be used against me; I hope I am the first to do so.

peace, mjh