Saturday, December 29, 2007

Christmas Baby Talk

The high pressure shock front of my last couple of finals and the cold, low-pressure negative phase that followed (concepts which I have promised to discuss), have resulted in no posts for nearly two weeks, leading to one seriously unfortunate consequence: any regular readers have been greeted with Jared Fogel's bright and saggy face for the entire period. Lesson: Negative reinforcement is not a winning strategy when you're trying to build a following.
However, I'm not sure you would have been much better off if I had posted. See, I usually spend Christmas in Arizona with my brother's family, which includes five adorable little girls ranging in age from 3 to 10. Consequently, I spend a great deal of time pretending to be an evil snow monster, alerting unsuspecting victims that according to my watch it is now "tickle time," and generally living life under a pile of over-excited little girls. Generally, after a few days of this, my ability to carry on a normal conversation with adults starts to suffer. For example, two years ago, during my first week back to work after a week in Arizona, I was walking with a colleague and pointed out to him that the color of the folder I was carrying was red. He asked me what the hell I was talking about, and I had to tactfully explain to him that I had temporarily mistaken him for a three-year-old.

Unfortunately, things may only get worse in the future. My sister gave birth to twin daughters six weeks ago, bringing the total number of adorable little girls in the family to eight. (Picture of her growing gang, inset.)

There are upsides, though. They are all getting older, so the conversations/activities are becoming more cerebral and interesting. Last year we started playing Clue, which, it turns out, I absolutely love. In addition, my sister-in-law has decided to form a girls basketball team with her daughters. So, I got to spend some time with niece J. shooting baskets on then new basketball hoop (which I assembled) and showing her how to shoot lay-ups (a necessity for any budding point guard). Great fun!
Anyway, I hope you had a Merry Christmas and a wonderful holiday season. I did!

Sunday, December 16, 2007

Meet the New Jared Fogle

Has anyone noticed that Subway's poster boy has gone from this:

to this?

Peter Griffin from Family Guy is featured in Subway's new "Feast Your Face" ad campaign. Though, Jared fans, don't fret - you can still see his smiling face on the healthy choices menu in the restaurants.

Anyway, this turn of events, along with Wendy's introduction of the new Baconator(tm), leads me to believe that this whole healthy-fast-food craze is over. It wasn't so long ago that fast food companies were worried about being the next industry, after tobacco, to get sued for generally contributing to the failure of our national health. Perhaps now that they all have introduced healthy options, like apples and milk in place of fries and pop, they feel they are better insulated from suit.

Of course, there are other possible explanations. Maybe Subway agrees with Sarah Silverman that Jared has become "too preachy." Or maybe there are going to be some changes in upcoming episodes of Family Guy...

Friday, December 14, 2007

Shocking! (In a cool way.)

Via BABlog, here's a great set of photos from the SF Fleet Week airshow. My favorite (below), shows an F-18 flying LOW and FAAAAASTTT..... but how fast?



If you look underneath, you'll see a white V in the water under the plane. If you thought this was from the jet exhaust, you're a little off - it actually starts ahead of the tail. Instead, it the result of the shock wave caused by the plane as it passes through the air, perhaps at supersonic speed. Here's a closer look:



Notice the blurring in the air extending from the plane at an angle above and below. That's the shock front. It is actually a three dimensional cone extending in all directions that moves with the plane. When you hear a sonic boom, it is the effect of that wave crossing over your ears.

The author of the photo says that the plane isn't yet supersonic, but as an amateur appreciator of shock waves, I'm a bit skeptical. I'm baffled at the idea that anything would be able to create a V shaped shock front without being super sonic. Given certain assumptions and the angle of the cone, one (perhaps smarter than I) should be able to calculate just how fast this plane is going.

After I take my Patent Law exam tomorrow and my Business Associations exam Monday, I swear, the first thing I'm going to do (after maybe having a drink and a nap) is look into this thing further and report back here.

Even if I forget, which I might, trust me that it is a damn fascinating effect once you realize exactly what is happening in the air around this plane. But, like I said, for now, you'll just have to trust me (or look it up yourself).

Nerd Sniping


I'm loving xkcd.

Thank God I don't even know how to begin solving that problem.

Monday, December 10, 2007

...better to be silent than remove all doubt.

I'm in the middle of finals so my posts will continue to be short and mindless - but not as mindless as this. This weekend Dana Perino, White House Press Secretary, appeared on NPR's "Wait, Wait... Don't Tell Me" and admitted that last October a reporter referenced the Cuban Missile Crisis in a question and..... she didn't know what the Cuban Missile Crisis was! C'mon! Really?!?!

I mean, I've always rooted for her. She seems like a genuinely nice person stuck in the worst job in the world. She's cute too, but I'm just going to pretend that doesn't factor in. But seriously, how does this happen?

I guess stuff like this shouldn't surprise me so much. I've been baffled a lot recently. I keep saying things like, "Don't they remember Watergate?" "Have they forgotten about Vietnam?" etc. Cheney and Bush were alive back then, after all. But then again, maybe they prefer to just forget and surround themselves with people who never knew.

At any rate, a quick shout-out to Marty, who for some misguided reason thinks girls with "long hair = good / short hair = not as good as long hair." I think this is a shallow oversimplification of the wonderfully nuanced subject of female beauty. Some women look better (great even!) with short hair. Take a look at this old picture of Dana Perino for an example.

Saturday, December 8, 2007

Chip Reese dead at 56


The poker world lost a legend this week. David "Chip" Reese was perhaps the greatest cash game player of all time. In 1974 Chip visited Vegas on his way to begin law school at Stanford, but he quickly found that the old pros were playing 7 card stud all wrong. The $400 he brought with him ballooned to $66,000, and he decided he couldn't afford not to stay.

Because Reese played in relatively few tournaments, he was rarely seen on television even during the recent poker-boom. Instead, he played the biggest cash games in Vegas with minimum stakes exceeding $100,000.

Poker draws a lot of wild personalities, but by all accounts Chip was a mild-mannered, generous, and considerate person who knew the "object of the game." An excellent, if reluctant, ambassador for professional poker.

Friday, December 7, 2007

Thursday, December 6, 2007

Best Sequel Ever!

Here is the new trailer for Harold & Kumar Escape From Guantanamo Bay staring Harold, Kumar, and, of course, Neil Patrick Harris as Neil Patrick Harris. Enjoy!

Due to adult language and content this video is Not Safe For Work (or Mom).

Tuesday, December 4, 2007

So This Is What Philosophers Do...

Mary Midgley writes a great article strattling the devide in the ongoing debate over Intelligent Design and Evolution entitled: A Plague On Both Their Houses. Here's an excerpt:
Any apparent clashes between [religion and science] must... arise either from faulty religion or faulty science, or both....

It should surely be obvious that there is nothing scientific about atheism. God’s existence is not a question for the tests of physical science; it belongs to metaphysics. What is wrong with fundamentalism is not its theism – theists do not need to take this line – but its sheer irrelevance. Fundamentalism is a perverse attempt to use a particular, bronze-age Hebrew vision of God to resolve factual questions in science and history. Opponents who answer fundamentalism on its own terms by arguing against this mixed project as a package-deal merely perpetuate its characteristic confusion between the realms of fact and meaning.
She nails it. Big tip of the hat to Uncommon Descent, a shameless disingenuous ID rag. :)

I Wish I Was the Walrus

"You can break 6 of the 10 commandments in America, but please, Thou Shalt not Violate the Brand." - David Brooks, No Sex Magazines Please, We're Wal-Mart Shoppers

Consider a man, we'll call him Bob. We don't need to know anything about Bob except that he has been charged with a crime. Bob spent Monday night in jail. Now it is Tuesday morning and Bob is sitting on a bench in the courthouse, wearing handcuffs and shrouded in the presumption of innocence, awaiting his hearing before a judge.

He will have to wait a little longer. Two teams of sharp-dressed lawyers have swept past him into the courtroom, jumping him in the queue. It so happens that late Sunday a phone company started running ads in prime time television that portray a talking walrus in a negative light. Unfortunately, this talking walrus looks alarmingly similar to the talking walrus another company uses to sell mops. The mop company filed for a preliminary injunction on Monday to protect the integrity of their own fictional talking walrus. To prevent any further harm to the fictional talking walrus, the court has granted the companies an immediate hearing.

Meanwhile Bob waits on the bench, in handcuffs and shrouded in the presumption in innocence. Maybe he attempts to figure out how much harm accrues to his own reputation every hour he remains charged with this crime and whether it is more or less important than the reputation of a fictional talking walrus.

Friday, November 30, 2007

Happiness is Sliding Off a Cliff

A few years ago I was climbing a mountain in the Collegiate Range of Colorado with my good friend Patrick. Although the fourteeners in the area are good climbs, we wanted to trek something a little less trodden, and so chose a random peak tucked back off the state highway. The summit was probably at around 11,000 feet, and the snow was knee-deep on average, deeper in some spots. It was a beautiful day. I had never used an ice axe before, necessary here because of the steep slope, so Pat ran me through the techniques for aided climbing and self-arrest. Up we went in the cold, clear Colorado morning. Moving up a steep draw we hit a somewhat vertical rocky outcropping, and Pat attacked it first. It was probably less than a dozen feet high, and I watched him ascend and aggressively dig into the rock at the top with his axe as he pulled himself over the lip. I followed his lead, but being somewhat less physically inclined and less certain of my technique, I limped rather than powered my way over the lip. Without any momentum, I failed to clear the edge and began slipping backwards over it. I sprawled out to stop my slide, and Patrick, further up the mountain, descended towards me to help.

At this point I should note that a slip over the edge probably wouldn’t have been fatal, and the extent of any injury would have depended on what I hit on the way down, or if I starting sliding upon hitting the snow. Regardless of reality, that cliff seemed a lot higher and the fall a lot nastier as I lay sprawled on the rock with one foot hanging over the edge. As I waited for Pat, I deliberately turned my head to take in the view. Breathtaking. The sapphire sky was nearly cloudless and the mountains surrounding us were snow-covered and gleaming in the sun, with space enough between peaks to consider each on its own, this openness enhancing their enormity. The fear of falling enhanced everything: colors seemed bolder, edges and boundaries dramatically defined, and the whole scene seemed to expand and wrap around my mind the way things sometimes do when I’ve had way too much coffee. I breathed deep, exhilarated by the poignancy of it all. By that time Patrick was holding fast to a small pine tree and lowering his ice axe by the strap for me to grab, after which he hauled my sorry self away from the edge.

I miss experiences like that – not being in harm’s way, but rather the state of mind that comes from the efforts that sometimes lead us there. I have experienced similar moments while sitting firmly on solid ground and in no direct danger. For example, looking towards the distant Rockies from the rim above Salt Creek Canyon in Utah fills me with a profound peace and joy that is similarly satisfying – yet different – as the exhilaration I felt on that cliff. What is important is the struggle that brings one to a place, a wild place removed from the support of civilization. I think the solitude that these situations evoke is an important factor in all of this – an internal solitude that can be felt even in the company of others, and that purifies and isolates the essential elements of whatever one is experiencing. More intense struggles, after all, necessarily evoke more personalized reflection, as one drifts further from the bounds of common experience and therefore from common interpretations of experience. Perhaps in a similar way, scientists sometimes test extreme models of a given system to isolate and identify its properties.

Late one September my friend Julie and I climbed Pike’s Peak, a 14,000-foot mountain in Colorado’s Front Range. Along the twelve-mile hike to the summit we passed through a variety of ecosystems, including glorious stands of aspen with leaves arrayed in brilliant reds and yellows, quaking in the mild breeze, the sun shining behind them, the air brisk and pregnant with their soft and powdery perfume. The hike is fairly strenuous and took us about seven hours to complete. At the summit, we were greeted by the usual throngs of tourists who either drove up the road on the back side of the mountain or took the cog railroad, milling about a summit house complete with donut shop and souvenirs. People rightly flock to the top of this mountain for the beautiful view, and I’m glad so many appreciate it. Indeed, Katherine Lee Bates wrote America the Beautiful from that very spot!

But I saw something different than those who drove or rode to the top. I remember times past when I’ve pulled into a scenic overlook along the highway and appreciated a beautiful landscape. But that, like driving up the mountain, affords a different kind of appreciation. After ascending Pike’s Peak, I looked back and envisioned the entire trail we had just traversed: I could smell the aspen, hear the quaking leaves, feel the trail under my feet, remember Julie’s conversation, and most of all I could feel an intimacy with the mountain. Twelve miles is a good hike, especially up a slope that covers a 7,000-foot altitude gain from the trailhead. The last couple miles are especially steep and difficult in the thin air. I, trudging a few steps at a time, pausing for breath, feeling my legs and lungs burn, contemplated the exhaustion and weakness that this mountain inflicted upon me. I was humbled by it, conscious of being atop something very large that was indifferent to my well-being. This wasn’t a nice view from a car, detached, cheaply gained. This was a big damn mountain, ponderous and ancient, creaking and groaning over a fault-line, with a thin film of life clinging to its rocky mass… this was earth piled so high that the thin air and harsh environment stunted life and then choked it off, the lonely summit home only to the howling wind and to marmots scrambling among the lichen-encrusted rocks. This is what we had dared to invade with our footsteps, groping our way up its bulk. It was awesome, standing on top of this giant thing we had climbed, and feeling it. To contemplate the whole of it, to feel that awe, first required experiencing it with our feet and hands, seeing it, smelling it, tasting it, hearing it… all twelve miles and 7,000 feet of it.

For a while I didn’t really notice the car-borne people around me. Neither did I see the same scene they saw, for our frames of reference were completely different. I couldn’t relate to them, just as I couldn’t relate my thoughts at that moment to my thoughts in the past at those scenic highway overlooks. What I was experiencing was more than an appreciative gaze above the fruited plain: I had pushed myself against the mountain and it had pushed back, exposing me, and now I rejoiced at having achieved the summit. The scene I saw included a landscape that had constituted a personal trial, and that therefore had a personal dimension complimenting its innate beauty.

I miss those moments of rapture. I live in a big city now, and I am struggling to adjust. I am not a stranger to intellectual struggle, athletic struggle, even a degree of artistic struggle. These are part of the big picture, and thankfully I find them here in my urban home. But they do not satisfy the need for those profound moments that I find in the powerful and indifferent embrace of wild places. It’s all relative, I suppose: I merely dip my toe into the sea of the wild, and derive great benefit in doing so. Yet I have friends who wade much farther from shore, and know of others still who dive headlong into the deep, sometimes never resurfacing. Would my own experiences be wild enough to fulfill them? Is a hike in a local park fulfilling for those who grew up in the city?

I wonder if there is an urban equivalent of what I crave, but I have a hard time believing that there is. It’s not just the struggle, it’s the ritual act of going out there to encounter it. There is something unique about removing oneself from the support of civilization, and something primal and irreducible about the struggles and experiences in the wild that reveals primal and irreducible truths about ourselves. These experiences remind me that I’m alive and that life is precious and precarious, and that’s what I miss.

OMG! WTF!

Gallup: Republicans Report Much Better Mental Health Than Others
(Relationship persists even when controlling for other variables.)

Ok. I don't have time to cut this apart right now, but if you read this and can't find the glaring issue in this survey that goes untouched in the analysis, then you were absent the day they were handing out common sense, and/or you have a job waiting for you at Gallup.

I'll post an adendum when I have time.

Thursday, November 29, 2007

Here's Your Pledge and My Signing Statement.

According to the Washington Post, earlier this month the Virginia Board of Elections approved a VA Republican Party plan to require all GOP primary voters to sign a pledge stating they intend to support the party's Presidential nominee in the fall, no matter who he is. No pledge, no vote.

Here in Virginia, we don't provide a party affiliation when we register to vote. Consequently, we get to choose which primary we participate in, if any. The sta- er, Commonwealth GOP is paranoid about independents and (GASP!) liberals casting ballots in the primary, so they have decided to clear up any confusion in the mind of voters. If you were a little unclear about whether the GOP is a big tent party open to a range of opinions, this ought to settle the question. May only he who votes in lockstep enter here!

Of course, there are a lot of silly things to point out about this pledge business. First, it is entirely unenforceable; the GOP can't tell who you vote for in the fall. Second, by letting independents know that they aren't welcome to voice a preference unless they would be comfortable with any nominee, the GOP is just ensuring that their nominee will appeal to fewer voters in the general election. Third, it just isn't great PR when someone drives all the way down to the polling station to participate in party politics and gets turned away over some silly pledge. Fourth, it is more of this, "Everybody is out to get us!" paranoia that I keep hearing from the right: "Golly! There's a war on Christmans, gays are trying to cheapen my marriage, athiest want to teach my kids we came from monkeys, and now the liberals want to tamper with our honest elections!?!? Thank God the party is looking out for us!"

Fifth, and most importantly, it illustrates the fact that the people who end up working for political parties (on either side) are the sort that think everyone on my team is better than anyone on the other team. Total nonsense. The dissatisfaction among Republicans with President Bush ought to be evidence enough that one Republican isn't just as good as another. If they were, why bother with a primary? They should just be fiscally conservative and draw from a hat. Nonetheless, I'd like to see these hacks eat their pledges if Ron Paul is nominated.

Anyway, the party is also pushing to put party affiliation on VA voter registration forms so they don't have to mess around with these messy loyalty pledges. I'm against that. Political parties are private organizations, not government entities. But people forget this because parties get so much official recognition from the government. I might be alone in this, but when I worked in the House of Representatives I thought it was weird that Congress provided separate Republican and Deomcratic Cloakrooms right on the House floor. That's prime real estate! If it's for private use, the party should have to pay for it. Go rent a room at the Radisson if you want to have a caucus!

Not to be over-dramatic, but whenever I see the government remember that it isn't its job to carry water for political parties, as I did when I registered to vote here in the sweet Commonwealth of Virginia, I think that maybe there might be some hope for this country yet.

But I digress back to one last point on the loyalty pledge. The leader of the national Republican Party, our dear President (a man of conscience, I might add), has had little trouble putting his signature to hundreds of laws which he has had little intention of either enforcing or abiding by. Perhaps would-be VA primary voters, who don't intend to decide who to vote for next fall until they actually know who is running, may sooth their consciences by taking a page from the the President's playbook. When the GOP puts the pledge in front of you, just add a signing statement to let them know the pledge doesn't apply to you. That way we can all feel Presidential on voting day!

Monday, November 26, 2007

Topics in Public Faith

Such a pithy title deserves a dissertation, but alas, one is not forthcoming today. Or, if it does, then Project 5, which is due tomorrow, will be in rough shape.

Anyway, looking at my entries, I've noticed that I've been a bit hard on the old-tyme religion as of late, and I feel like it is high time I announced some premises/positions for future exploration in detail... later. My co-collaborators are welcome to jump in wherever they feel compelled to agree or disagree.

1. Inquiries that begin with the conclusion are doomed. Examples: Undertaking a scientific study of the world after first concluding that whatever you will find must conform to a literal interpretation of some holy text (not just looking at you Christians).

2. Neither evolution nor the big bang theory make any claims regarding the existence of supernatural deities or the creation of the universe. Those questions are beyond the scope of science. You can be a scientist who believes these things and devoutly follow any number of mainstream religions.

3. This is not a Christian nation. It is a nation of laws in which people are free to hold the beliefs that they choose without fear of coercion or harassment. Religious people set it up this way because they were sick of being coerced and harassed.

4. Faith is GREAT, for individuals. If you wish to take a position based on faith, it is your right. However, the moment you attempt to make decisions about other people's rights and property, you had better have evidence to convince them that what you propose is right. Example: Because of his religious beliefs, the owner of Chik'fil'a (sp?) closes all of his restaurants on Sundays. Good for him! They belong to him, he can do what he wants with them. However, if he were to lobby the government to force all restaurants to close on Sundays, he had better be able to make an objective case for the policy change that even folks who don't share his faith could find reasonable. "God says so," ceases to cut it.

5. Though people may have souls, the nation certainly does not. Using the state to advance a religious agenda at home or abroad saves no one. You can't get all of America into heaven by having the government force righteousness upon everyone, and the ones doing the forcing probably won't make it either. Instead, people need to focus on themselves and their families to make sure they are righteous in the eyes of their God.

6. The government is a tool we use to get along with one another, and secularism is a great approach for deciding just how it should work. We're a nation of a lot of people who believe a lot of different things. Holding debates on public policy within the domain of material facts which all parties can ascertain and share with others is the best way to come to conclusions that satisfy the most people's needs. When policy debate bears the burden of religious dogma, compromise, the original goal, becomes heresy enforced by damnation, and consequently, unpalatable to all sides concerned. What gets done?

7. Secular doesn't mean Hollywood. Secular doesn't mean relativism, either. Just because you hear these things lumped together in straw-man arguments (as I heard in this Sunday's homily), it doesn't mean they are all the same thing. It is possible to come to conclusions about right and wrong without relying on any particular group's religious views (see Philosophy in general). The alternative isn't resorting to hedonism.

That's good for now. I could go further, but I have a J.D. to get.

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Pseudonyms are for Suckers

This is my first original posting on a blog site. As such, in it I will wet my proverbial feet (I don’t have actual feet) by posting some feelings about the internet in general, and will follow up in the weeks to come with postings of more substance.

First: any personal information submitted on an internet site is bogus. I bet most of you didn’t know that Mark is 43 years old and heavy-set, wears a perpetual smirk, an intense rust-colored beard, and a Merlin robe (with rhinestones), and carries around a plastic pumpkin pail in which he collects unusual rocks. Browsing this site you’d think him a savvy, youngish student of law. I, on the other hand, haven’t even given you my real name, so imagine what I’m like. If it’s any consolation, the internet is weird for me, too. This dribble I’m posting could be read by anyone, including but not limited to inquisitive Homeland Security agents, militant grad students, communists, or Mark’s mom.

More substantive postings will follow. I just wanted to first establish my love-hate relationship with the internet: glorious medium for sharing ideas on the one hand, disarming privacy-devouring succubus on the other. I will initially struggle to write postings meaningful to an audience that theoretically encapsulates all of the English-reading internet-connected people of planet earth. I will then think about that for a moment, start drinking, and post whatever saucy Greek-laced nonsense comes to mind. Because that's how I roll. None of it will be personal, but all of it might just be glorious. So...

Allons! I go for the millionth time to encounter the world of cyberspace, and to forge in the smithy of my soul the uncreated dribble of the internet! Allons!!

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

New Contributors

If you are a diligent reader of this blog, either you have noticed that there are two new contributors, or you have noticed that you are now a new contributor. Yes, Megas Janis and Asself have decided to join the fun at Martian Cat Problem, and we (by that, I mean I) are (am) excited to have them.

However, this does raise two issues:

First, I can only assume that my new accomplices have elected to write under psuedonyms in order to remain annoymous. Either that, or in the case of Asself, he wishes to sound more dignified. Either way, I can't help but feel a little jealous. It makes me wonder whether I should also adopt a pseudonym, if only to fit in with the in-crowd.

Second, what good is a pseudonym if the domain includes my full name anyway. Maybe we should move, since this isn't soley my gig any longer. Either that or I'll just take responsibility for the content of Megas Janis' drunken, greek-laced rants. Of course, moving shouldn't be taken lightly, since we might end up confusing our most loyal readers. Of course, I could always call Mom and give her the new address.

Anyway, if you would like to weigh in on the psuedonym/domain name issue, just, you know, comment or something. Yeah.

Monday, November 19, 2007

Intelligent Design Proponents Have Cajones

A quick follow-up to my post on the NOVA Judgment Day special on Evolution and Intelligent Design...

According to New Scientist, the Discovery Institute, an Intelligent Design think tank and publisher of the book Of Pandas and People which was a prominent feature of the Dover trial, has alleged that the teaching materials that accompany the NOVA special "encourage unconstitutional teaching practices."

At issue are teaching materials that state:
Q: Can you accept evolution and still believe in religion?
A: Yes. The common view that evolution is inherently anit-religious is simply false?
This is an interesting issue. Unfortunately, I haven't gotten this far in Constitutional Law yet, but I'll take a stab.

We need to ask whether these statements either promote or criticize a particular religious view. This depends on how you read the statements. Are these statements about evolution or about religion? Here is an example of two ways someone could paraphrase the statements in question.

1. "Evolution does not make any claim about the validity of religion." (about evolution)
2. "Religions that are inconsistent with evolution are false." (about religion)

If you think the Q&A boils down to statement 1, then you would think it is constitutional. If you think statement 2 is a fair assessment of the Q&A, then you should think that these statements are unconstitutional.

Obviously, I'm in the statement 1 camp. Evolution doesn't rule out God, and I think that is the point that these statements are trying to get across. However, I can see how the statement 2 folks have an argument. If you believed in a religion that didn't support evolution, you might conclude that the Q&A was speaking directly to your religion rather than religion in general.

Even if statement 1 was intended by the authors, the effect of promoting or suppressing a particular religious position is probably enough to make it unconstitutional. Though, I have to believe there is some sort of reasonableness standard that applies here.

But how do you decide whether this is a reasonable conclusion for someone to make? Imagine if the Q&A had been about "eating pork" or "engaging in premarital sex." There are some religions which strongly abhor these practices. Is it a religious statement to say, "The common view that (eating pork/engaging in premarital sex) is anti-religious is simply false"?

In thinking about this, I keep drifting back to the validity of the statements. The Q&A is unquestionably true. It could be false only if no one believed in both evolution and some religion. Since there are probably more than a hundred million Americans who hold both views, the statement certainly isn't false.

A religious statement, on the other hand, would be much harder to validate. I don't think we could say definitively whether statement 2 is true or false. However, statement 1 is verifiable like the Q&A. But does any of this matter?

At any rate, in raising this issue, the Discovery Institute has made it clear that they think there are religious implications to evolution. For an organization that worked so hard to sanitize ID so that they could pass it off as science rather than religion, this is a gutsy position.

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

cdesign proponentsist


The title of this post is a transitional form - it is the missing link between creationism and intelligent design.

This week the PBS program NOVA aired an excellent account of the controversy resulting from the Dover, PA school board's efforts to insert Intelligent Design into the school's science curriculum. Two years ago this week the controversy culminated in a Federal District Court case brought by some Dover parents to enjoin the introduction of Intelligent Design along-side evolution. (Thanks to BABlog for letting me know it would be on the air, and I encourage everyone to watch the program either on the tube or at the PBS website.)

Intelligent Design (ID) is the belief that certain features of life as we observe them today are so complex that they could not come about through natural processes like evolution. Rather, this 'irreducible complexity' is a clear sign that these features and the creatures who possess them were designed and created whole cloth by some 'intelligent agent'. Savvy proponents of ID are careful not to equate 'intelligent agent' with a particular religious deity, but True Christians(tm) tend to view ID as an acceptable belief system because of the perceived compatibility with a literal interpretation of Genesis. True Scientists(tm), such as the science teachers in Dover, view it as a philosophical proposition that neither makes any testable predictions nor guides further inquiry. Consequently, it doesn't belong in the science classroom. If anywhere, it belongs in a Philosophy or Theology class. I first encountered it in Philo 101 where it was referred to as the Teleological Argument - not a theory, an argument.

Back to Dover: The parents' claim was that the School Board violated the establishment clause of the First Amendment which states, "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion..." The requirements of this amendment trickle down to the states and all of their subdivisions, including public school boards. To show a violation of the establishment clause, the parents needed to show that the actions of School Board were either motivated by a desire to promote a religious view or had the effect of promoting a religious view.

Their case took the form of two separate inquiries which the show cleverly presents in parallel. The first inquiry delved into the meaning of science and the theory of evolution to demonstrate to the court how ID fundamentally fails to stand up as a genuine scientific alternative to evolution. The second inquiry was an exploration of the motivations behind proponents of ID and those on the Dover School Board who wished to bring it into the science classroom. One inquiry was scientific and the other was legal, but both used similar methods to arrive at knowledge that could be presented convincingly to the court.

Inquiry 1: Evolution v. Intelligent Design

The problem with ID is that it is merely a critique of evolution. Proponents of ID point to gaps in the evolutionary understanding of life, declare that these gaps can never be explained by science, then conclude by saying that the only other alternative is that this 'intelligent agent' did it.

A difficulty for these ID proponents is that these "gaps" that can never be explained are routinely explained by new discoveries. For example, ID proponents and creationist often say, if one type of animal descends from another type, why don't we have "transitional forms," fossils of creatures somewhere between the two known animals? If you get your science from Kirk Cameron (Mike Seaver from Growing Pains) you will believe that "Science has never found a genuine transitional form..."

Somehow he overlooks Archaeopteryx, pictured above, which is considered the first known bird. It was feathered, but it had teeth and is likely a relative of the velociraptor of Jurassic Park fame. The program walks the viewer through several of these, including Tiktaalik which was discovered during the Dover trial.

Tiktaalik is a transitional species between fish and amphibians (one of the first 4 legged land creatures). Based on the fossil record, scientists knew that the first land creatures lived about 370 million years ago. So, they decided to look for rocks of that age to search for transitional fossils of the first land critters. They found some exposed rocks of that age in Northern Canada, and after three years of looking (Topeka!) they found fossils of Tiktaalik. This critter has scales like a fish, a flat head with eyes on top like an amphibian, and appendages that have fin-like webbing and the beginnings of shoulder, elbow, and wrist joints.

In short, we have a theory (evolution) that gives rise to a testable prediction (fish gave rise to amphibians ~370 mya) and a test (guys went out to rocks that old and they find evidence that the theory was correct). This happens all the time!

Suppose you are a proponent of ID. What used to be a "gap" that could never be explained by science gets explained by science. What do you do? You should just pack up and call it a day, but instead you either ignore it or pick another gap and claim that gap #2 can never be explained by science.

Inquiry 2: Intelligent Design = Creationism

Beginning with the Scopes "Monkey Trial" in 1925, evolution and creationism had been hot topics in the courts until the Supreme Court found that Creation Science "embodies [the] particular religious tenant" that we were created by a divine creator. Edwards v. Aguillard, 482 U.S. 578 (1987). Consequently, the promotion of "Creation Science" was thereafter prohibited in public school classrooms.

However, the Dover School Board wasn't attempting to teach "Creation Science." They wanted to present Intelligent Design to their students as an alternative to evolution. To do so, they proposed a companion book called Of Pandas and People. According to the School Board this was neither a Creation text nor even a religious text. Instead, they argued that this is a legitimate scientific viewpoint that happens to resonate with them because of its compatibility with their own independent religious views.

Now, this is where lawyers become Archaeologists. Pandas came out in 1989 after several years of development. The Parents subpoenaed all the old drafts of the book from the publisher. This amounted to about 7000 pages. However, they had a theory to guide their search. They compared the pre-Edwards drafts of Pandas with the post-Edwards drafts. This is what they found:
Pre-Edwards: "Creation means that various forms of life began abruptly through the agency of an intelligent Creator with their distinctive features already intact - fish with fins and scales, birds with feathers, beaks, and wings, etc.

Posts-Edwards: "Intelligent design means that various forms of life began abruptly through an intelligent agency, with their distinctive features already intact..." [emphasis added]
Two words, same definition. They even found instances in the drafts where the authors were careless in their efforts to cleanse the text. For example, in one case they inserted 'design proponents' without taking out all of 'creationist' leaving "cdesign proponentsist."

In short, we have a theory (ID is merely creationism repackaged) that gives rise to a testable prediction (creationists relabeled their theory after the Supreme Court ruling) and a test (diligent lawyers look at texts from that period and find that they were right). Now that is how you win a court case!

And they did. Judge John E. Jones, III, ruled that "it is unconstitutional to teach ID as an alternative to evolution in a public school classroom," the school was ordered to pay the parents' legal fees, the city voted out the entire school board, and Pat Robertson told them not to turn to God if a disaster strikes Dover. All is right with the world!

Anyway, this post is no spoiler. You should still watch the program. It does a great job of chronicling the turmoil and division in the town during the controversy, with many interviews with people from both sides. It was an amazing event that was not without costs.

If you would like to learn more, I recommend that you read this excerpt from the trial transcript. It is the testimony and cross examination of Kevin Padian, a paleontologist from U.C. Berkeley and expert witness for the parents. He does an amazing job of laying out the depth and breadth of evolutionary theory and contrasting it with ID.

The program mentions how the reporters who sat through the trial wondered why they didn't learn this stuff in school. The reason: evolution has been so controversial, even after 1987, that text book publishers have chosen to gloss over it so their sales won't be threatened. In the words of the Judge: "In an era when we're trying to cure cancer, where we're trying to prevent pandemics, where we're trying to keep Science and Math education on the cutting edge in the United States, to introduce and teach bad science to 9th grade students makes very little sense to me. Garbage in, garbage out. It doesn't benefit any of us."

Monday, November 5, 2007

Who's Watching You at the Table?

[My, how time flies when I'm consumed by my studies! Here's a quick post on a topic near to my heart (poker) to help get me back into the swing of things. However, I recently attended a thought provoking (er, and disturbing) speech by the founder of the pro-life group Operation Rescue, so a post on that topic is in the works. But first, let there be poker!]

My mother (Hi Mom!) will be pleased to know that I haven't been playing much poker lately due to time constraints and such. However, three weeks ago I did take a jaunt out to Atlantic City with my close, personal friend Megas Janis, and there I managed to log some table time.

It got me thinking about the differences between online and live poker, and why I prefer the latter. The most obvious difference, of course, is the fact that you can't see your opponents when you play online. For people who put a lot of stock in detecting 'tells' which betray the strength of their opponents' hands, this is a pretty big issue. However, for me tells aren't a big part of my game - I don't spend a lot of time looking for them, and I think I'm good about keeping mine concealed (unless Marty would like to inform me otherwise).

Thus, it has always puzzled me why I seem to do better live. If the difference isn't in the tells, then where is it? Well, let's just say, if I handn't figured out the answer, then this would be a very short post.

In the live game, I can tell who is paying attention to the hands I play and how I play them. It turns out, this is kind of a big deal. See, the practice of establishing an expectation in the minds of your opponents and then strategically violating that expectation in the most profitable way possible is a critical component of a winning poker game. You create the expectation through your play of past hands, but you can't know whether you've succeeded unless you know whether your opponent was paying attention.

Online an opponent could be focusing intently on every move you make; he could be playing 8 tables at once; or he could be drunk, half-asleep, and watching football while he plays. You would never know.

But in a casino, I can see who is watching the table and who is watching TV. I can even engage people in conversations about the action to see what they have noticed. Heck, often, players will come out an tell you how they have assessed you. For example, in AC one guy said to the table, "[Mark] is just trying to sucker us into a big pot." At the WSOP, another guy announced, "You sure like hands like 9-7 offsuit, don't you?" These guys are doing me a favor! Not only are they telling me what they think, their educating the whole table. Once I know what everyone thinks of me, it is easy to act accordingly.

As a result of this revelation, I think I will focus more on playing in a manner that will make me the center of attention at a table - drive the action a little more. If I can make people notice, I will know what they have noticed - plus, its lots of fun.

Now, I just need to find the time to actually play poker.

BONUS for Mom: This Wall Street Journal Law Blog post is about two distinguished Harvard Law professors and their personal and professional interests in poker. Here's a great quote from Prof. Charles Nesson:

It's really the poker way of thinking that is the most deeply intriguing thing to me. The essence of poker is this business of seeing from the other person's point of view... If [law students] want to do something useful in their outside time, they should play poker.

Tuesday, October 9, 2007

Silly Presidents And Their Magical Thinking

On June 22, 2004, President Bush said:
"The values of our country are such that torture is not part of our soul - our being."
It's funny, the way he said it made me think of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad at Columbia two weeks ago:

"In Iran, we don't have homosexuals, like in your country - we don't have that in our country."

Both men would prefer that their statements were true, but they know, perhaps better than anyone, that they aren't. Maybe convincing us is almost as good as making it a reality.

Of course, the sad part is Ahmadinejad is busy doing all (the executions) that he can to make his fantasy a reality, while Bush would veto any attempt to make his own dream come true.

I guess our President is more of a dreamer. :)

Monday, October 8, 2007

Archimedes Knew Calculus... Almost

According to this article in sciencenews.org, about 2200 years ago the Greek mathematician Archimedes was working on some of the same problems that motivated Newton and Leibniz to each invent calculus. Until recently, it was believed that his strict adherence to Aristotle's ideas about infinity held him back, but new findings show he got really darn close to nailing it - 1900 years early. Bright fellow!

Anyway, we only know of this because Archimedes wrote it on a papyrus scroll. Some time later, somebody copied it to parchment. Then, about 700 years ago a monk needed some parchment, so he grabbed some useless old Greek scroll (that happened to contain ideas that humanity wouldn't rediscover for another 400 years), scraped off the ink, and made a prayer book out of it. Dark ages, indeed!

In 1908, someone discovered that the faint Greek letters running up the pages belonged to Archimedes. The book was studied for a while, but then mysteriously disappeared. Ten years ago, it turned up in someone's closet, was auctioned to an anonymous bidder for $2.0 million, and began a long restoration and research effort. The results are starting to come out now.

Pretty cool.

Ending the War on Science

For once Hillary is speaking my language...
I will end the politicization of scientific research that has marked the Bush Administration and restore a climate of scientific integrity and innovation. We will no longer place ideology ahead of evidence…
From her remarks at the Carnegie Institution for Science.

[Thanks to BABlog.com]

Sunday, October 7, 2007

Don't Put This on the Troops

The attitude that the general public has toward our warfighters (soldiers, sailors, airmen, and marines) today seems overwhelmingly positive. You hear about spontaneous applause for them in airports, they are constantly being thanked for their service by strangers, and "Support Our Troops" stickers are ubiquitous. All of this is outstanding, particularly when you contrast it with the heat Vietnam era warfighters took from the anti-war movement in the 60's and 70's. It was as if the warfighters themselves were being blamed, irrationally, for the war and its outcome - this even though so many were drafted. Today, it seems that the vast majority of the public able to separate a warfighter's participation in a war from an administration's decision to undertake it.


That said, when I do occasionally run across some loon who finds it necessary to hold warfighters responsible for the Iraq war, my hide gets seriously chapped.

For example, here is an excerpt from a reader comment following an interview a close friend of mine did with the Huffington Post about her experience in Iraq, her return home, and her recovery from her injuries:
SCOOPDJOUR: My nephew was wounded on his second tour of Iraq. As much as I love him, he knew, his father and mother knew, IT'S A VOLUNTEER ARMY.
I did not ask you or him to volunteer, I am and was then 100% against this war. I cannot be proud of or grateful towards glory seekers coming back wounded.
Granted, comments like this are rare, but they make me seriously angry.

Yes, we have a volunteer military. So what? Even though they volunteer, we as a nation still have a responsibility to ensure that they aren't put in harm's way unnecessarily. They don't get to pick the wars they fight in. They don't get to opt out of conflicts that they think aren't worth while. Rather, warfighters voluntarily place themselves at the service of the country for whatever conflict in which they are needed. We don't get to write off an injury or fatality because someone volunteered. We are still responsible. If anything, the fact that they volunteered only increases our duty as a nation to make sure their commitment is not abused.

Here's another comment excerpt from a different interview with a different warfighter:
NORTHSHOREDUDE: If the troops would refuse to fight and unjust and illegal war - there would be no war.... So, in the meantime, if you support the troops - you are effectively supporting the war. And don't call me a traitor - just bringing up a reasonable argument.
Again, infuriating. It just shouldn't be a warfighter's job to figure out whether the war is just or not. They have enough on their plates without having to deal with a fuzzy moral/political question. Frankly, I can't imagine the experience. I can only guess that if, for example, I were trying to defend a police station that was under siege and taking fire from the outside while simultaneously trying to subdue a prison riot that was taking place inside, all the while desperately hoping that the preparations I have made for occurrences like this are enough to keep the soldiers under my command alive, then I might not want to be bothered with the question of whether or not I did the right thing by complying with my deployment orders.

We expect so much of them as it is. They put themselves at our mercy, yet someone would suggest that we should also expect them to also be martyrs - to accept a court martial when we fail to choose our wars wisely. Infuriating!

But, like I said, these comments are rare. The people to take these positions usually get put in their place pretty quickly by more reasonable folks. Thankfully, people opposed to the war have largely figured out that the warfighters aren't to blame.

Disturbingly, the folks who are for the war seem to be moving in the opposite direction. I'm starting to see instances where the hawks attempt to paint the choice to serve the country in the military as a personal adoption of administration policy.

For example, Rush Limbaugh caused a ruckus recently when he coined the term "phony soldiers" to identify warfighters who are opposed to the Iraq war. Here's an excerpt:

CALLER 2: ...what's really funny is, they never talk to real soldiers. They like to pull these soldiers that come up out of the blue and talk to the media.

LIMBAUGH: The phony soldiers.

CALLER 2: The phony soldiers. If you talk to a real soldier, they are proud to serve. They want to be over in Iraq. They understand their sacrifice, and they're willing to sacrifice for their country.

LIMBAUGH: They joined to be in Iraq. They joined --

CALLER 2: A lot of them -- the new kids, yeah.

LIMBAUGH: Well, you know where you're going these days, the last four years, if you signed up. The odds are you're going there or Afghanistan or somewhere.

CALLER 2: Exactly, sir.

Obviously, the "phony soldier" thing is bad, really insulting. But I'm also concerned about the view that is being pushed right after it. Supposedly, the "kids" are signing up to go to Iraq, and in Limbaugh's eyes, that means they approve of the war itself. This makes me uncomfortable because the practice of equating service with approval would seem to embolden the arguments made above about the soldiers being responsible for the conflict itself. Suppose Rush were against this war, would he feel compelled to also hold them culpable for it because they are enlisting?

In my view, the warfighters have signed up to be skilled and responsible agents of our national security, and that is enough. We can't thrust upon them the responsibilities of the President, Congress, and the public to make policy decisions. We shouldn't blame them when we think things are going wrong, and we shouldn't parade them out when we think things are going right. We should just make damned sure we're being fair to them by honoring them with a commitment equal or greater to the commitment they have given us.

Thursday, October 4, 2007

Flo Control


Never doubt that for any obscure problem there is someone out there with the unique expertise (and enough time!) to deal with it. Now, thanks to the internet, they can tell us all about it.

Meet Flo:
[Flo] has a habit of catching various animals, dragging them inside through the cat door, and letting them loose so they can be chased for hours. Very cruel. To put an end to this we have built a computer-controlled device that visually determines if Flo is carrying anything in her mouth when she enters, and if she does, it simply does not let her in.
Brilliant! The site gives an interesting account of how they put image-recognition algorithms to use to keep Flo's prey outside. They even have a real-time record of all the critter encounters the device has registered and how it responded. It even keeps out curious skunks too!

Monday, October 1, 2007

What Are Rainbows Worth?

Radiohead's seventh album, In Rainbows, comes out this month, and the band has opted to get a little unorthodox with their business model. Physical copies of the album don't become available until early December, but the songs are available for download beginning Oct. 10. The kicker: you get to decide how much you want to pay. Really. That's right, set your own price. No kidding!

Following the release of their last album, 2003's Hail to the Theif, Radiohead satisfied the terms of their multi-album contract with Capitol/EMI. Rather than negotiate a new one, they have opted to go sans label (so to speak). Despite Radiohead's resources and die-hard following, this was a bold move in an industry dominated by monopoly powers. This pricing scheme is probably their best bet to succeed as an 'independent,' and their success will be a great thing for music lovers in general.

Radiohead has two things it needs to accomplish: 1) make money from sales of the album and 2) get their music out there so that people will come to see them play live.

They don't have the benefit of a label paying to get their songs on the radio. (Oh, did you think that was illegal? That's cute.) So they need to make it inexpensive for new fans to get access to the music. Old, die-hard, must-get-my-Radiohead-fix fans like myself are more likely to pay a fair price (I'm thinking 9 Pounds). Also, we're suckers for the hard-copy which is just tailored made for us suckers. It includes: the CD, two 12in. vinyl records, album art, lyrics, and a bonus CD with b-sides. Price: 40 Pounds Sterling! That's $82! Did I mention we were suckers?

Anyway, Radiohead is resorting to price discrimination. It sounds bad, but it isn't because this is voluntary price discrimination. Its bizarre, but it is the smartest thing they could do.

They are going to get a bunch of new fans to listen for cheap and perhaps buy concert tickets, while squeezing every dime out of us old-timers (who will also buy tickets). Plus, the fervor around this just might get their stuff on the radio without having to pay.

That last bit is the best. Record labels have had a deadlock on airplay for years now. It is the only service they actually provide to a band, that a band can't get done themselves. Hopefully Radiohead is paving the way for a lot of other bands, new and old, to cut out the middle-man and open up the marketplace of music.

I'm just so excited, I can hardly wait. Coming soon: The Martian Cat Problem Experience... From Space! We're gonna be the best band ever!

Thursday, September 27, 2007

Dan Rather Stands by His Story

http://www.salon.com/opinion/blumenthal/2007/09/27/dan_rather_suit/

This is a great article that recounts the events of "Rather-gate," Dan Rather's report on the unexplained gaps in Bush's National Guard Duty during the Vietnam War and the blow-back CBS/Viacom received from the administration.

According to this account, the documents showing Bush never showed up for duty were authentic to any reasonable journalistic standard and corroborated all the other evidence gathered in the investigation. However, CBS, still sore from the bruises and "liberal media" labels received by the Administration after being the first to run the Abu Ghraib scandal, and Viacom, hoping for a Bush victory and continued FCC deregulation, were not pleased about another controversial story so close to the election.

CBS/Viacom assembled a panel to ostensibly investigate the validity of the report, but instead they rail-roaded Rather and the producers. The panel concluded that the truth of the story was inconclusive and allegedly ignored its own evidence in support of the story.

Rather, Mapes and 3 other producers were fired.

Rather has now filed a lawsuit against CBS and refuses to settle. He intends to use subpeona power to investigate his improper firing and, in the process, demonstrate that CBS knew the story was true.

Pretty amazing stuff. As much as "liberal media" gets thrown around, all the major outlets are still run by corporations, regardless of who is in the news room. I never considered the fact that FCC deregulation could be a big carrot being held out in front of all of the networks.

If it's true, it kinda sucks for you and me. Just one more way for dishonorable people to retain power once they have it, and one more muzzle on the people whose responsibility it is to let us know how dishonorable the powerful are.

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Thanks a lot guys...

...why didn't any of you tell me I didn't have time to blog every day? Sheesh. I'm blaming you, Rajlich.

Sunday, September 23, 2007

Tender Vitters

Here I go. Three days into blogging, and I'm already cutting corners... Does this mean someone from the comments section wins a bet?

According to the Times-Picayune, Louisiana Senator David Vitter has earmarked $100,000 in federal funds for the group Louisiana Family Forum to develop "improvements" to the state education curriculum that will promote faith-based alternatives to evolution.

"…when people thought the earth was flat, they were wrong. When people thought the earth was spherical, they were wrong. But if you think that thinking the earth is spherical is just as wrong as thinking the earth is flat, then your view is wronger than both of them put together."
- Isaac Asimov (Thanks to BABlog)

Friday, September 21, 2007

When may one tase a 'Bro'?

This week the tasing of a University of Florida student at a speech by John Kerry was a big story. (You can view the incident here and here.) While looking for these I found several other examples of taser use. This video shows the tasing of a UCLA student in a campus computer cluster last November. This video shows a handcuffed woman being tasered while in the holding area of local police force in Ohio.

I don't know about you, but I found these hard to watch. Sure, the UF student was a bit of a snot and had been warned; the UCLA student refused to stand up and also had been warned; and the Ohio woman was uncooperative, but are these sufficient reasons to shock the hell out of someone?

Without question, police should be allowed to use a taser in some situations. Whenever the use of deadly force is justified and a taser would be just as successful as a gun to secure the safety of the officer and the public, the police should be given the option of a taser. Having a taser in this circumstance is pareto superior to not having a taser. That is, nobody is worse off. The tasee avoids getting shot (and likely killed) for something that, in retrospect (if he is alive enough to be reflective), he probably wouldn't decide to do again, given the outcome. Likewise, the police are at minimum, no worse off, but in all likelihood, if there is a psychological cost to killing someone or participating in an accidental shooting, the police actually benefit significantly from having a taser available. Of course, when deadly force is justified and a taser isn't adequate to protect the officer or the public, then fire away.

The hard cases come when deadly force is not justified. At UF, the student was unarmed and being held down by 6 police officers. It's hard to imagine what he would have to do to get (deservingly) shot in such a situation.

There is a lot of guidance available in a Police Assessment Resource Center (PARC) report commissioned by UCLA after their own student tasing (video above). The report includes a Comparative Summary of Taser Policies from other UC campus police forces, municipal police departments, and model police policies.

The report concludes that "the UCLAPD policy stands alone in its legitimization of the Taser as a pain compliance device against passive resistors," and recommends that this be corrected. Among other jurisdictions, taser use is generally limited to violent or actively aggressive suspects. In addition, UCLAPD had the most permissive policy toward tasing handcuffed subjects. This scenario is uncontemplated by many other policies and explicitly prohibited by the vast majority of the rest.

But why not tase passive resistors? Well, because passive resistors are an inconvenience rather than a danger. I know cops have a hard and dangerous job. I'm all for anything that will make the police safer. Tasers, in some situations, can serve such a function. Any time a dangerous subject is dangerous, but not dangerous enough to kill, we make cops a little safer whenever we give them a tool to use like a nightstick or taser.

However, when we allow police to use a nightstick or taser on someone who is not dangerous, only to achieve compliance, like the three cases I linked to above, we're only making a cop's job easier at the expense of pain and risk of death to the subject. Given the cost, I'm OK with cops being inconvenienced.

Also, lets not forget that using more force than you need to can actually be dangerous to the police themselves. The cops in Ohio didn't have much to worry about because they were in their own holding area. The cops at UF had a little more to be worried about. You can hear the students respond negatively once the tasing begins. At UCLA, the students were well behaved, but curious, through the first two tasings. However, during tasings three and four it takes more cops to control the crowd than it would to carry the student out in the first place.

Of course, if you had to pick a crowd based on harmlessness and compliance with authority, a bunch of college kids is about the best you could do. Could you imagine if the UCLA or UF police had done what they did among a bunch of soccer hooligans??

Nevermind, you don't have to imagine. This ends badly.

So, unless someone is an actual danger, lets keep the tasers in their holsters.


BONUS: A quick shout-out to intellectual property. While Taser is the brand name of the products made by Taser International, it has also become a generic term for the species of product itself. Consequently, there is no trademark protection for its use. Taser could have used a good IP attorney to protect their good name. They should give me a call in a year or two. :)

Inaugural Address

Today I begin blogging.

Unlike most folks, I'm not necessarily blogging to express myself here - I'm blogging for exercise.

Allow me to explain: I'm in the beginning of my second year of law school, and one thing I've noticed about the life of a law student is there is a hell of a lot more reading to do than writing. Yet when we are finally called upon to put fingers to keys (final exams, occasional major writing projects) each course grade depends entirely on our ability to clearly, comprehensively, and convincingly express ourselves as quickly as humanly possible. Not to mention that a practicing lawyer's life is spent expressing himself in memos and letters to clients, partners, and even boring old files.

So, noticing that I was getting rusty, and recognizing that all the time I spend with my nose in a book and thinking deeply about the material is for naught if I can't get it on the page efficiently, I thought: "Why not start a blog!?"

One consequence of my "exercise" mission is that I don't have any particular subject I plan to blog about. Instead, I have only two requirements: (1) each post needs to be in the form of an argument, and (2) I need to post every day.

So here we... er... I am. I'm sure you're not here yet. But if you do decide to join me, you should know a few things. First, Requirement 1 supra is going to make it difficult to talk much about myself, which is perfectly fine with me and probably you too (whoever you are). But if you had your heart set on reading about my cat, then you're out of luck (1) because there aren't a lot of arguments to be made about my cat (see Requirement 1), and (2) because, despite the name of the blog, I don't own a cat. (For cat stuff, go here. Marty has two of them. Sorry Marty.)

That brings us to Requirement 2. Because I will be posting every day, there will be plenty of opportunities for me to tell you exactly what "The Martian Cat Problem" means, though I might have to look into it myself first. In the meantime, you can expect a healthy dose of science, philosophy, political ranting, religious discourse, and yes law-stuff.

So, welcome! Feel free to comment if/when I say something absurd. It's bound to happen soon, and I don't mind being raked over the proverbial coals.