Category: News

  • BN eReader for iPad Available

    Barnes and Noble has finally released the eReader application for the iPad. The new reader application has functionality similar to the Kindle for iPad app, and can read e-books for the B&N Nook as well as from the eReader bookstore. It has connectivity with the user’s B&N online bookstore and purchased library, and like the Kindle app searching for new e-books fires up the Safari browser.

    BN eReader does bring one cool feature from the Nook — the LendMe option. Some e-books can be lent to friends for 14 days; such books are clearly marked as indicated in the screen shot below. Lending an e-book disables it so make sure you read it before loaning it to another eReader user.

    Related research on GigaOM Pro (sub. req’d): Irrational Exuberance Over E-Books?



    Atimi: Software Development, On Time. Learn more about Atimi »

  • LiDAR Used to Map Maya





    What is extraordinary about Mayan civilization is that it ended so completely.  Perhaps remnants existed to greet the Spaniards but those remnants were no different that that of dark age Western Europe.
    There is no later overlay and the whole civilization can be mapped in fine detail today and perhaps even partially restored with careful reintegration of population’s revitalizing the agricultural base.
    This item reports on the success of radar work in now properly mapping the region and Caracol in particular.
    Four days was sufficient to map out the urban complex around Caracol.  Obviously big budgets can do it all wonderfully today and provide scholars with data for decades of work.
    I expect that the economy of the Maya will emerge again as we learn how to modernize the agricultural protocols.  Ditch and Bank in particular screams for modern methods to restore activity.
    Space technology used to study the Maya
    by Staff Writers

    Orlando, Fla. (UPI) May 18, 2010 

    University of Central Florida scientists say they have used laser technology to collect 25 years worth of archaeological data on the Maya in four days.

    The researchers said a flyover of Belize‘s thick jungles using LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) equipment has revolutionized archaeology, illustrating the complex urban centers developed by one of the most-studied ancient civilizations — the Maya.

    Aboard a Cessna 337, the scientists used LiDAR to bounce laser beams to sensors on the ground, penetrating the thick tree canopy and producing images of the ancient settlement and environmental modifications made by the inhabitants of the Maya city of Caracol.

    The researchers said the technology detected thousands of new structures, 11 new causeways, tens of thousands of agricultural terraces and many hidden caves.

    “It’s very exciting,” said UCF anthropology Professor Arlen Chase. “The images not only reveal topography and built features, but also demonstrate the integration of residential groups, monumental architecture, roadways and agricultural terraces, vividly illustrating a complete communication, transportation and subsistence system.”

    UCF Biology Professor John Weishampel, who designed the unique LiDAR approach, said it was the first time the specific technology fully recorded an archaeological ruin under a tropical rainforest.

    “Further applications of airborne LiDAR undoubtedly will Â… effectively render obsolete traditional methods of surveying,” Chase said.
  • What is a Good Credit Score

    A good credit score can save you tens of thousands of dollars over your lifetime. I don’t know about you, but that’s the kind of thing that’s worth my time and effort to make sure I get right. Unfortunately most people don’t know much about credit scores. Frankly, I don’t blame them. No class in my school system even uttered the phrase “credit score.” I’m too Lazy to conduct an informal man on the street survey, but I’m guessing that people don’t know their FICO from their FDIC. Today, I thought I’d go into a details on what a good credit score entails. There is more to it than you might think.

    In case you are one of those people who don’t know what FICO is, let’s start there. The Fair Isaac COrporation (FICO, get it?) created a formula for consumer credit more than fifty years ago. The three major credit reporting agencies use this model in defining the number universally known as the “FICO score.” Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion all use FICO software, but calculate their own credit score numbers. Each considers factors such as payment history, types of debt, as well as the level of current debt when creating a score. If you have pulled your credit report, you may have noticed that the numbers vary between agencies. They differ because these bureaus weigh these factors according to their own criteria. What are the formulas? It’s a well-guarded secret leading to little credit score transparency.

    What, then, is a good credit score? Fortunately, lenders are in consensus as to how they view that number on the page. However, while any score above 700 should be considered good, it is not necessarily the excellent score that many assume. The top tier of FICO scores ranges from 760-849. Lenders view a score in this range as outstanding; the borrower should qualify for the best possible loan terms and interest rates.

    Below this tier lies the 700-759 range; if your score is in this range, fear not! You should still qualify for excellent credit terms from most lenders.

    Scores within the 659 to 580 range, as one might expect, remain less attractive to lenders. Keep in mind that it is quite possible to still get a loan if your credit score is in this range, but the terms will not be good.

    A poor score falls within 580-619, the lowest tier. In this economy, the borrower may find some lenders unwilling to lend at all. All three major reporting agencies view a score below 579 as extremely poor – so you definitely want to stay out of that range.

    Different lenders also have different criteria. These criteria remain subject to larger economic trends. For example, during the housing boom, banks lent money to borrowers with a 680 score in the belief that housing equity would remain high. Now mortgage brokers save their preferred rates and terms to those with a higher score, such as a 720 or better. This relative nature of credit scores makes it difficult to pin down exactly what a good credit score is.

    Understanding what constitutes a good credit score has become a fundamental cornerstone in making wise decision when it comes to spending and saving. If you are looking to improve your credit score, I recommend you learn how to fix your credit at my other site, How To Fix.

    Related posts:

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  • Rusty room divider

    Materials: Expedit 2×4, Expedit 4×4

    Description: It all started with placing two Expedit units on top of each other; I ended up with something very colourful. There are way too many stages in this project to explain it all in 5 pictures. If you’d like to see more, go here.

    1. As I wanted to separate my dining table from my office I fixed two Expedit units on top of each other, with on the wallside a small storing space (for long objects).

    2. Even though it was very functional, it still looked very much like, well.. two stacked Expedit units. And I wanted something a bit more groovy. Also, I wanted to separate my office/work room a bit more.

    3. Adhesive plastic foil was used to stick on the insides of the compartments: yellow, orange, blue and black, in a semi-random fashion.

    4. From 2 large sheets of 4mm MDF new fronts were made, covering more compartments on the side of the dinner table, so I could use them for office stuff without exposing it in the living room.

    5. More MDF parts were attached to it, creating a doorway on the right, and a large mirror on top, right under the ceiling.

    6. The sides of the expedit unit were covered in black adhesive plastic foil.

    7. The fronts were treated with a paint that has iron particles. After that a couple of layers of acid (ferrochloride) were applayed to make the iron rust very fast (within a couple of days). The rusty metal gives it sort of an industrial feel.

    8. There are 4 “tv shaped” compartments with a removable panel, which fit exactly an LP record cover, so I can make some changes to it every now and then.

    See more of Bram’s Expedit room divider.

    ~ Bram D., Netherlands


  • Toy Story 3 is out to prove a point

    Avalanche Studios has made it known that they’re well-aware of the reception of movie-games, and they’re constantly trying to prove that Toy Story 3 will be different. From the looks of things, they seem to be on

  • Car design: Car Rendering Techniques

    Please take a look at this interesting 3D Car design concept

  • Stimulus Raised GDP 4.2% in First Quarter

    Stimulus Raised GDP 4.2% in First Quarter
    The massive U.S. stimulus package put up to 3.4 million people to work and boosted GDP by up to 4.6 percent in the first three months of 2010, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office said on Tuesday. CBO’s latest estimate does not differ significantly from its previous assessments of the impact of the $893 billion package, passed in 2009.

  • Stop me if you’ve heard this before

    Stop me if you’ve heard this before
    BP is optimistic there is mud in your pipe.

    (pic from Kevin Dooley via Flickr)

    Hey look everybody, everything is looking like it’s no problem — yet again!

    BP Plc Chief Operating Officer Doug Suttles said on Wednesday it appears drilling mud, not oil, was gushing from a ruptured undersea well six hours into an effort to halt a month-old oil spill.

    And we’ve no reason to ever doubt their word, so surely this means the corner has been turned and we can go back to being eviscerated by big banks again. Or maybe not them alone.

  • South Atlantic Claims






    It is high time that a general international system was established to determine subsea rights beyond the established 200 mile zone that generally captures the continental shelf.
    I think that the 200 mile zone should be modified to include to the edge of the continental shelf for simple practical reasons of management jurisdiction.
    Then we have the problem of the intervening sub sea and high seas jurisdiction.  First of, I think it should all be directly managed by the UN as one entity under regulations established independently and ratified by the equivalent of a global vote determined by population.  In that way it is settled however arranged.
    The new regime to be administered can establish title for subsea surface blocks and also for specific exploited marine fish stocks.  Some integration will be needed with land based states, but is likely to be in the form of small groups.
    The main thing is to separate the creation of title under a rule of law from its administration and to open the door for ownership and compliance.
    Otherwise, the present unsatisfactory situation will continue to arise were we afraid to expand national interests.
    South Atlantic Map Plots Falklands Claims
    by Staff Writers

    Durham, UK (SPX) May 17, 2010


    Researchers at Durham University have drawn up new maps to show the competing claims of Argentina and the UK for resources in the South Atlantic and Southern Oceans.

    The publication of the maps follows the discovery of oil south of theFalkland Islands by a British company, Rockhopper Exploration, and a series of historical arguments about sovereignty and the rights to resources in the South Atlantic.

    Argentina and Britain went to war over sovereignty of the Falklands in 1982, and despite the former’s surrender, the South American state has maintained its territorial claims to the islands.

    In December 2009, Argentina passed a law declaring its sovereignty of the islands and other British overseas territories in the region.

    The Durham map was compiled using data from a variety of sources, including the submissions of the two states to the United Nations Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf. Specialist mapping software (CARIS LOTS) was used to construct the jurisdictional limits depicted on the map.

    The decision by Durham University to comprehensively map the claims in the area highlights the complicated issues that remain following the British defeat of the Argentineans almost 30 years ago. The information is the first ever comparative map of resource claims in the region.

    The Durham map shows:

    + where Argentina claims rights over marine resources
    + where UK claims rights over marine resources
    + competing claims

    Director of Research at Durham University‘s International Boundaries Research Unit (IBRU), Martin Pratt said: “The map is designed to show the extent of the competing claims between the UK and Argentina and highlights the complications that exist in determining the claims for resources in the South Atlantic and Southern Oceans.

    “The islands generate rights over the resources of more than 2.5 million square kilometres of sea and seabed in the South Atlantic Ocean alone, and both countries have recently defined the areas over which they claim sovereign rights. IBRU’s maps highlight the nature of those claims and identify the areas in which the claims overlap.

    With the search for oil in this area continuing to intensify, the potential for conflict over the sovereignty of the waters between Argentina and the UK remains high.

    Some oil companies estimate a potential 3.5 billion barrels of oil and nine trillion cubic feet of natural gas exist under the South Atlantic waiting to be extracted. A study by the British Geological Society suggested that up to 60 billion barrels of oil could lie beneath the seas to the north of the Falklands – a similar-sized deposit to that in the North Sea.

    Martin Pratt said: “The discovery of oil in the North Falkland Basin is likely to exacerbate tensions between the UK and Argentina concerning sovereignty over the Falkland Islands, South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands.

    “Although sovereignty over the islands remains the key issue, determining maritime jurisdiction around the islands – and off disputed territory in Antarctica – will be a complex and challenging task.”
    Following British claims on the potentially highly lucrative deep sea oil fields within the islands’ 200-mile economic zone, Argentinean officials have revived the country’s claims to sovereignty over the Falkland Islands.

    In February 2010, British warships were on standby in response to rising tensions in the area over British firms exploring for oil. Argentina demanded a halt to the drilling which it deemed was illegal and imposed a permit restriction on ships approaching the islands.

  • BP Goes In for the Top Kill

    BP Goes In for the Top Kill
    The news that British Petroleum began its latest attempt to contain the massive Gulf of Mexico oil spill Wednesday afternoon with the “top kill” stopgap strategy would be more heartening if it didn’t come so late in the game—and if there was more of a guarantee that it would do the job.  —KA The New York Times: The Coast Guard gave BP approval on Wednesday morning to move forward with the maneuver after consulting with government scientists, as technicians completed preparatory diagnostic work. A live video feed of the leak was available online throughout the procedure, BP officials said. Tony Hayward, chief executive office of BP said, it would be “a day or two before we can have certainty that it’s worked.” On the other hand, failure could become apparent within minutes or hours, a technician involved in the procedure said. Either way, President Obama will return to Louisiana on Friday to survey the spill’s damage, the White House said. The consequences for BP are profound: A successful capping of the leaking well could finally begin to mend the company’s brittle image after weeks of failed efforts, and perhaps limit the damage to wildlife and marine life from reaching catastrophic levels. Read more

    top drill method

    The news that British Petroleum began its latest attempt to contain the massive Gulf of Mexico oil spill Wednesday afternoon with the “top kill” stopgap strategy would be more heartening if it didn’t come so late in the game—and if there was more of a guarantee that it would do the job.? —KA

    The New York Times:

    The Coast Guard gave BP approval on Wednesday morning to move forward with the maneuver after consulting with government scientists, as technicians completed preparatory diagnostic work. A live video feed of the leak was available online throughout the procedure, BP officials said.

    Tony Hayward, chief executive office of BP said, it would be “a day or two before we can have certainty that it’s worked.” On the other hand, failure could become apparent within minutes or hours, a technician involved in the procedure said.

    Either way, President Obama will return to Louisiana on Friday to survey the spill’s damage, the White House said.

    The consequences for BP are profound: A successful capping of the leaking well could finally begin to mend the company’s brittle image after weeks of failed efforts, and perhaps limit the damage to wildlife and marine life from reaching catastrophic levels.

    Read more

    Related Entries


  • Richard (RJ) Eskow: “No More Secrecy”: Open The Wall Street Negotiations and Empower Voters

    Richard (RJ) Eskow: “No More Secrecy”: Open The Wall Street Negotiations and Empower Voters
    The Campaign for America’s Future (CAF), CREDO, and MoveOn have launched a petition campaign to ensure that the House/Senate deliberations on financial reform be “fully…

    Obama Oil Spill Speech: President To Take Questions, Cite Report, On Gulf Oil Spill
    WASHINGTON — Escalating his administration’s response to the disastrous Gulf oil spill, President Barack Obama plans to announce Thursday that a moratorium on new deepwater…

    Azadeh Shahshahani: College Educator or Immigration Police? Why Universities Should Not Enter Dangerous Terrain of Local Enforcement of Immigration Laws
    Jessica Colotl, the 21-year-old exemplary Kennesaw State college student who fell victim to the Cobb sheriff’s abuse of the 287(g) power, which delegates some federal…

  • David Plouffe hits Chicago June 30 for Giannoulias fund-raiser

    WASHINGTON–In another boost for Alexi Giannoulias’ Illinois Democratic Senate campaign, David Plouffe, President Obama’s campaign manager, hits Chicago on June 30 for a grass roots fund-raiser. Plouffe ran the presidential campaign from its Chicago headquarters and helped mastermind the strategy that expanded the Obama electorate, bringing younger and first time voters in the process.

    Giannoulias is looking to broaden his fund-raising base and jazz up and organize the troops with Plouffe. After the campaign, the Obama for America organization was folded into the Democratic National Committee, reconstituted as Organizing for America. Last month, Obama helped OFA kick off its “Vote 2010” mid-term election drive to get those first time Obama voters to the polls in November. Plouffe is advising OFA on its mid-term election strategy.

    Plouffe is no stranger to Illinois Senate contests. Joining the Chicago-based firm founded by now White House Senior Advisor David Axelrod in 2001, Plouffe was a strategist for Obama’s 2004 Illinois Senate contest.

    Plouffe is the third figure from the Obama White House orbit coming to Chicago to help Giannoulias, locked in a battle with GOP nominee Rep. Mark Kirk (R-Ill.) Education Secretary Arne Duncan–the former Chicago Board of Education chief– arrives June 17 for a fund-raiser and a press event. On June 19 Jim Messina, Deputy Chief of Staff–he works for Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel–travels to Chicago for a fund-raiser.

  • Beck falsely claims Obama will not “honor our troops” on Memorial Day

    Beck falsely claims Obama will not “honor our troops” on Memorial Day

    Glenn Beck falsely claimed that President Obama “has decided not to honor our troops on Memorial Day.” In fact, Obama will speak at a Memorial Day service at a dedicated Veterans Affairs cemetery in Illinois; Obama is not the first president to commemorate the holiday somewhere other than Arlington National Cemetery.

    Beck falsely claims Obama “has decided not to honor our troops on Memorial Day”

    From the May 26 edition of Premiere Radio Networks’ The Glenn Beck Program:

    BECK: The president has decided not to honor our troops on Memorial Day and go to — can you find out the last president that decided to take a vacation and then go to a Paul McCartney — come back for a Paul McCartney concert, but not for the laying of a wreath on Memorial Day? Maybe this has happened before. I don’t recall it.

    Obama will commemorate Memorial Day in Illinois ceremony

    Obama will speak at veterans cemetery; Biden to lay wreath at Arlington National Cemetery. A White House press release states: “On Monday, the President will participate in a Memorial Day ceremony at Abraham Lincoln National Cemetery in Elwood, Illinois. Also on Monday, the Vice President and Dr. Jill Biden will host a breakfast for Gold Star Families at the White House. Afterwards, the Vice President and Dr. Biden will participate in a wreath-laying ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery.” Abraham Lincoln National Cemetery is dedicated as a national cemetery within the VA’s National Cemetery Administration. [WhiteHouse.gov, 5/24/10]

    Previous presidents have honored Memorial Day away from Arlington Cemetery

    1983: Reagan attended summit meeting; Defense Department official Thayer laid wreath at Arlington. Deputy Secretary of Defense W. Paul Thayer laid a wreath at Arlington Cemetery during the Memorial Day ceremony in 1983, according to a May 31, 1983, Washington Post article (retrieved from the Nexis database). The Associated Press reported that President Reagan attended a “summit meeting in Williamsburg, Va., with leaders of the industrialized democracies.”

    1992: George H.W. Bush allowed VP Quayle to lay wreath. In 1992, Vice President Dan Quayle laid a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknowns at Arlington National Cemetery on Memorial Day, according to a May 26, 1992, Boston Globe article (from Nexis). The Globe reported that President George H.W. Bush attended a wreath-laying ceremony and made brief remarks at an American Legion hall in Kennebunkport, Maine, where he also played a round of golf.

    2002: George W. Bush spoke at commemoration in Normandy. On May 27, 2002, President George W. Bush spoke at a Memorial Day commemoration in Normandy, France.

    Bush remained in Texas for Veterans Day in 2007

    Veterans Day 2007: Cheney attended ceremony to pay tribute at Arlington as Bush remained in Texas. On November 11, 2007, the AP reported that “President Bush honored U.S. troops past and present at a tearful ceremony Sunday for four Texans who died there.” The AP further reported that “Vice President Dick Cheney went to Arlington to pay tribute to Iraq veterans.”

  • Bonobo Week at the Intersection Starts Today: Announcing Guest Blogger Vanessa Woods | The Intersection

    I’m pleased to announce that beginning today and running for a week at the Intersection, we will have daily guest posts from Vanessa Woods, author of the new book, Bonobo Handshake. Vanessa is a Research Scientist in Evolutionary Anthropology at Duke University and studies the cognition of chimpanzees and bonobos in Congo, and her posts will be about her new book. I’ve already seen the content, and it is spectacular….so, let bonobo week begin! The first post appears later today.

  • Report: Blogger Claiming Affair Has Years Of Text Messages With SC Gov Candidate

    Report: Blogger Claiming Affair Has Years Of Text Messages With SC Gov Candidate
    The website of the prominent South Carolina blogger who claims he had an “inappropriate physical relationship” with gubernatorial front-runner Nikki Haley is claiming in a new post that there are five years worth of emails, voicemails, and text messages between the two — though the site, FITSNews, isn’t saying much about what the correspondence reveals.


    South CarolinaNikki HaleyPoliticsWebsiteWill Folks

    Probe Finds MMS Inspectors Got Free Peach Bowl Tickets, Looked At Porn
    An inspector general report on the Lake Charles, LA, office of the Minerals Management Service found that inspectors accepted a free trip to the 2005 Peach Bowl paid for by an oil company.

    New Gun-Rights Gambit Sweeping Nation: ‘Firearms Freedom’
    Supporters of gun rights have hit on a new gambit that ties in perfectly with the far-right’s fears during the Obama era.


    Gun politicsGun ControlPro-Gun RightsBrady CampaignPeter Hamm

  • New York Book Expo: Duchess Sarah & 40 pounds of free books!

    New York Book Expo: Duchess Sarah & 40 pounds of free books!
    The 2010 New York Book Expo moved into full swing today. Last night Barbra Streisand gave the keynote speech and I positively hung on (and wrote down) every single word. But it will take me forever to transcribe all that, so you will just have to wait to find out what “La Streisand” actually said. […]

  • Two-year-old smokes 40 cigarettes a day

    Two years old smokes 40 cigarettes a dayI don’t know if you remember Liangliang Tong, a two-year-old who smoked like a 40-years-old. However, Tong was an apprentice compared to the giant Ardi Rizal, unfortunately.

    Ardi lives in Sumatra (Indonesia), has two years and smokes forty cigarettes a day. Sumatra is a small fishing village of Musi Banyuasin where 25% of children already tried smoking and 3.2% are active smokers. No doubt their parents know how to care of their son, Mohamed (30 years), the father of the child, gave him his first cigarette when Ardi was 18-months-old and is not at all worried about the health of small boy … He says he looks healthy!

    The two-year-old who weighs 25 kilos, has trouble walking and if he doesn’t get cigarettes he gets angry, screams and bangs his head against the wall “, as confirmed by Diana (26 years), mother the baby.

    Diana insists that he is “an addict”, and when Ardi doesn’t smoke, “says he feels dizzy and sick.”

    Organizations defending the rights of children in Indonesia begun to discuss openly about the health damage caused by the smoke, in a country where one third of the population is addicted to smoking and cigarettes can be bought for about a few cents.

    The health minister Endang Sedyaningsih acknowledged that convincing  young people that smoking is harmful is difficult, because in Indonesia is perceived as something positive and cigarette companies are big sponsors of scholarships, sporting events and campaigns of all kinds.

    Related posts:

    1. Chain-smoker Toddler Burns 40 Sticks Daily
    2. Watch a Two-year-old Smoking Like a Pro
    3. New ‘No Smoking’ signs in Massachusetts

  • Ensign Gears Up to Run Again

    Ensign Gears Up to Run Again
    Despite an ethics investigation and an extramarital affair he had with a staffer, Sen. John Ensign (R-NV) is determined to run for re-election, the Los Angeles Times reports.

    “The Nevadan has started organizing fundraisers and making calls to donors for help in winning a third term in 2012. Ensign, once a rising star in the Republican leadership, collected a mere $50 during the first quarter of this year, but he’s confident that is about to change.”

    Said Ensign: “We just took some time off. We’re getting it geared back up.”

    Blumenthal Keeps Big Lead Over McMahon
    A new Quinnipiac poll in Connecticut finds Richard Blumenthal (D) leads Linda McMahon (R) by 25 points in the U.S. Senare race, 56% to 31%.

    Blumenthal held a 33 point lead in March.

    Said pollster Douglas Schwartz: “It looks like Connecticut voters forgive Attorney General Richard Blumenthal, or feel that there is nothing to forgive in the Vietnam service flap. While he has taken a hit with voters, his poll numbers were so high to begin with that he still maintains a commanding lead over Linda McMahon.”

    He added: “What is surprising is that McMahon gets no bounce from her Republican convention victory. Her negatives went up 13 points from 26 percent unfavorable to 39 percent unfavorable. The more voters get to know McMahon the less they like her.”

  • Are Goldman Sachs and the Megabanks Able to Wipe out an Entire Economy with a Keystroke?

    Are Goldman Sachs and the Megabanks Able to Wipe out an Entire Economy with a Keystroke?
    How artificial intelligence and robotrading pose a growing threat to the global marketplace.

    How artificial intelligence and robotrading pose a growing threat to the global marketplace.

    10 Things You Need (But Don’t Want) To Know About the BP Oil Spill
    How the owner of the exploded oil rig has made $270 million off the disaster, and nine other shocking, depressing facts about the oil spill.

    How the owner of the exploded oil rig has made $270 million off the disaster, and nine other shocking, depressing facts about the oil spill.

    Will Congress Finally Tax The Billionaires?
    Wall Street tycoons get taxed at lower rates the the people who clean their buildings. Congress might be about to change that.

    Wall Street tycoons get taxed at lower rates the the people who clean their buildings. Congress might be about to change that.

  • Peter Beinart Lashes His Lobby Critics (UPDATE) ++Dershowitz

    Peter Beinart Lashes His Lobby Critics (UPDATE) ++Dershowitz
    The original piece is below. It is about Dershowitz. I’m updating with Peter Beinart’s excellent response to the Jeff Goldbergs of the world, who are going after Beinart the way they go after…anyone who dares criticize the Israeli government. Except…


    Middle EastAlan DershowitzWarfare and ConflictUnited StatesIsrael

    Rand Paul Supports Tax Dollars Being Used to Enforce Private Discrimination
    Seeing this piece at the Edge of the West, I couldn’t help noting the complete absurdity of the distinction Rand Paul makes between opposing “public” segregation while opposing laws that stop “private segregation.” Edge of the West suggests someone ask…



    LawRand PaulUnited StatesPoliceCivil and political rights

    Why Wall Street’s Political Poison Is Still Catnip for Many Incumbents
    Today’s quiz: At a time when California’s Republican gubernatorial candidate Meg Whitman is losing ground to her Republican rival in the primary because of her ties to Wall Street, when Utah’s incumbent Senator Robert Bennett was just booted out by…



    Wall StreetUtahRepublicanMeg WhitmanCalifornia