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A blog about political change, among other things

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RIP Vincent Bugliosi

The New Neo Posted on June 10, 2015 by neoJune 10, 2015

Vincent Bugliosi, the prosecutor who gained fame with the Tate murder prosecutions of Manson and his gang, and who wrote an excellent book on the subject, has died at the age of 80.

The obituary mentions many books that Bugliosi wrote (including one that was highly anti-Bush), but it says that the book of which he was proudest was his painstaking examination and debunking of the conspiracy theories regarding President Kennedy’s assassination, entitled Reclaiming History.

The book is a tome, too big and heavy for most people to even contemplate reading. I’ve read about half of it (including the summary chapters, which run about 500 pages or so and are riveting), and highly recommend taking a look if you’re interested in the subject. I’ve written about the book before, here and here, and most of the text of the book is available for free online here.

Posted in History, People of interest | 27 Replies

TV and our changing culture

The New Neo Posted on June 10, 2015 by neoJune 10, 2015

There’s been a “silent cultural revolution” in the past few years that has changed Americans’ attitudes towards gay people, gay marriage, and now is working towards changing attitudes about transgendered people, according to the NY Post’s Kyle Smith.

I don’t know why he calls it “silent,” though. It seems to me it’s been pretty loudly vocal. But I agree that it has occurred.

Smith mentions that one of the reasons it’s happened is that older and more traditionally-minded Americans are dying off. But he doesn’t focus on what’s been happening within the schools, which seems to me to be extremely important influence in shaping the minds of young people growing up today. However, he does single out popular entertainment as a huge factor, and with that I agree.

I say this as a person who tends to the libertarian side of things myself as far as gay marriage is concerned (as long as it’s left to the states; I’m not in favor of the courts imposing it as a federal matter and do not think it’s a right embodied in the Constitution). But as a person who also respects the views of Christians, I am deeply alarmed at the animus directed towards those who oppose gay marriage on religious grounds.

We tend to make light of popular entertainment—sitcoms, movies, reality shows. But they influence enormous numbers of Americans in ways both subtle and extreme. The battle for public opinion often begins there, and works on the public year after year after year until critical mass is reached. This is neither right nor wrong; it’s just a fact, one the right needs to think about and counter if it ever wants to reach the public, too.

That’s why reality shows such as Duck Dynasty and the Duggars are not only important, but important targets for the left. If Josh Duggar’s childhood sex offenses hadn’t existed, the forces arrayed against the Duggars would have found—and exposed—something else. People like the Robertson family or the Duggars, whose reality shows reach millions and offer an alternative (and Christian) point of view, must be discredited.

That’s why Lena Dunham’s and Josh Duggar’s childhood behavior were treated so very differently by the left. Dunham’s show furthers the narrative, the Duggars’ counters the narrative, so the first is okay and the second not okay.

[NOTE: By the way, my point of view about Lena Dunham and Josh Duggar’s sexual activities as youngsters is the same for both, expressed here and here.]

Posted in Men and women; marriage and divorce and sex, Religion, Theater and TV | 45 Replies

“Is Obama trying to sway the Supreme Court?”…

The New Neo Posted on June 10, 2015 by neoJune 10, 2015

…asks Atlantic writer Russell Berman:

…[Obama’s] decision to champion his signature achievement in such pointed terms just weeks before the high court’s ruling is due raised the question of whether Obama was trying to jawbone the justices at the 11th hour.

…“It seems so cynical,” he said, “to want to take coverage away from millions of people; to take care away from people who need it the most; to punish millions with higher costs of care and unravel what’s now been woven into the fabric of America.”…

The speech came a day after the president, in response to a reporter’s question, commented directly on the case before the justices…”Under well-established precedent, there is no reason why the existing exchanges should be overturned through a court case,” Obama said. “This should be an easy case. Frankly, it probably shouldn’t even have been taken up,” he added…

[In 2012, Obama had] sharply warned the Court not to rule against his healthcare law the first time around. “I’m confident that the Supreme Court will not take what would be an unprecedented, extraordinary step of overturning a law that was passed by a strong majority of a democratically elected Congress,” Obama said then.

So of course he’s trying to influence the Supreme Court; the question itself is rather absurd, because the answer is clear, despite Harvard law professor Charles Fried’s statement to the contrary, “I can’t imagine it’ll make any difference, and I can’t imagine he thinks it’ll make any difference.” Fried has a particularly impoverished imagination if he can’t imagine the latter, because Obama has made it crystal clear from the very first days of his presidency that he thinks his powers of persuasion (coupled, although unmentioned by him, with powers of arm-twisting and/or threats) are extraordinary. What’s more, it’s fairly clear from the way the opinions were written in Sebelius that something had persuaded Justice Roberts to change his mind at the last minute, whether it was mere persuasion, pressure, or (as some theorize) blackmail.

But persuading the justices (or one justice, which is what I think it boils down to) is only one motive for Obama’s words. Another motive is to undermine the public’s regard and respect for the Supreme Court—particularly when it disagrees with Obama, or when it takes away an entitlement of any sort that has been “woven into the fabric of America.” He’s not talking about the law there or an interpretation of the law, he’s saying that nothing once given can be taken away, and that the liberal/left agenda for America should be unstoppable no matter what the law says.

There’s more, too. When Obama speaks about SCOTUS he’s also donning the mantle of his “constitutional scholar” background, harking back to when he taught Con Law at the University of Chicago long ago. He has discussed that history enough that he assumes the listener will remember that he’s not just speaking as president but as someone who is supposed to be an expert on the matter. Of course, that doesn’t ever stop him from misstating the law, because in fact the “well-established precedent” about the interpretation of the wording of statutes (which is what King v. Burwell involves) tends to fall on the side of invalidating the federal subsidies, although there’s plenty of room for argument (there always is, with lawyers). But pretending that the law is obviously in favor of the Obama position is just that, pretense.

[NOTE: See this, this, and this, for examples of the legal arguments against Obama’s position.]

Posted in Health care reform, Law, Obama | 18 Replies

Racist police: the media shapes the message

The New Neo Posted on June 9, 2015 by neoJune 9, 2015

Commenter “Ray” writes:

Black lives matter, except when they don’t. I live outside Washington DC and last weekend 10 people were shot and 10 knifed. What did the Washington Post have on the front page? A story and pictures of the white cop manhandling the black teen age girl at the pool party in the town outside Dallas. Another evil racist white cop victimizing blacks. The slaughter in DC didn’t matter because those people were shot and knifed by other blacks. The murder rate in Baltimore has reached unprecedented levels and nobody cares because it’s all black on black.

Anyone who thinks the MSM is passé isn’t paying attention. There is an influential loop whereby the MSM and liberal cable news stations feed into each other. Social media either starts the meme or picks up on it and follows it, amplifying and spreading the message. These groups decide what is important and what is not, and the masses (an appropriate word in this case because it’s a leftist word) generally follow.

Remember back in the summer of 2001 when the news was all about shark attacks? It was the vogue in what was a slow news season—pretty much the last slow news season we’ve seen since September of 2001. But did it reflect any actual increase in shark attacks? No (from John Stoessel):

Instead of putting risks in proportion, we [reporters] hype interesting ones. Tom Brokaw, Katie Couric, and countless others called 2001 the “summer of the shark.” […] In truth, there wasn’t a remarkable surge in shark attacks in 2001. There were about as many in 1995 and 2000, but 1995 was the year of the O.J. Simpson trial, and 2000 was an election year. The summer of 2001 was a little dull, so reporters focused on sharks.

What’s going on now with the “racist white cops” meme is very, very different, because it’s not a result of a dull news season. Although we may be weary of some of the news (Obama and just about everything he says, danger from terrorists, Hillary’s corruption) it’s not that things are either slow or unimportant, it’s that they’re discouraging, disheartening, and repetitive. But although the racist cop meme almost certainly shares with the shark bites the fact that there is probably no increase in such incidents despite increased coverage, focus on them (unlike the sharks) is orchestrated towards a political goal: furthering the cause of the left.

It’s not that such incidents are made up. It would be very odd indeed if all cops were perfect, or perfectly wonderful, or non-racist. The question is how many or few of them behave this way, and what significance that has in the lives of black people compared to the violence that black Americans both perpetrate and encounter as victims—after all, most black criminals prey on those in their own community, and black parents wanting to raise successful and law-abiding children in the inner city ghettos have a tough road ahead of them with many obstacles along the way.

But it serves the purposes of both the Obama administration and the left to emphasize the negative, to make it seem as though racism runs rampant in police forces (even those with a large number of minority officers; it’s the “culture of racism” that somehow taints them, too), and to ultimately take control of those police forces after doing a study that shows racism based on the suspect theory of disparate impact. It serves their purposes to encourage black people to feel like perpetual victims, to make them even angrier about it, to convince them that big government is their only salvation—and to keep them voting for liberal Democrats.

[NOTE: This book by Heather MacDonald (which I’ve not read) sounds interesting. It’s called Are Cops Racist?, and it was written in 2010.]

Posted in Law, Press, Race and racism | 39 Replies

This post is not about Hillary Clinton

The New Neo Posted on June 9, 2015 by neoJune 9, 2015

It’s about collars.

The other day, Ann Althouse asked a question about this collar, which happens to have been worn by Hillary Clinton:

collar

Can anybody explain Hillary’s giant-gaping-collar costume?

It’s like an old-fashioned satin blouse for a person with an insanely giant neck… perhaps the Incredible Hulk on a day when he’s feeling girly and is tired of the color green.

There were so many answers that a new thread was started to accommodate them. From Emil Jannings in “The Blue Angel” to Alan Shepard to Star Trek, they’re pretty funny.

The collar is rather unfortunate on Hillary, to be sure. But I think it’s a style that would be very hard to wear no matter who you are—unless you happen to be Jackie Kennedy or Audrey Hepburn, whom I think it really is meaning to hark back to.

Jackie K. and Audrey H. were not Everywoman, nor were they “of a certain age.” They could pull it off because they were slender and beautiful (I almost wrote “petite,” but that was wrong; both women were rather tall, Jackie 5′ 7″ and Audrey the same but even thinner). Both women had what was called “impeccable style”; they knew what looked good on them. And although just about anything looked good on them, they opted for a classic, timeless, elegant simplicity.

This is what I remember:

jackiecollar

audreycollar

The largeness of the collar emphasizes the slender and feminine beauty of the whole. Don’t try it unless you’ve got similar characteristics.

[ADDENDUM: Ann Althouse comments on my theory, and a commenter there points out that Marilyn Monroe had her own version of the big-collar look:

collarmonroe

A bit more frou-frou.]

Posted in Fashion and beauty | 24 Replies

Hillary Clinton supports the fight

The New Neo Posted on June 9, 2015 by neoJune 9, 2015

Glad you cleared that up, Hillary [hat tip: Ace]:

Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton’s vague statements on minimum wage confused MSNBC’s Morning Joe host Mika Brzezinski on Monday morning.

“Hillary Clinton did not say she specifically supports $15 an hour minimum wage,” said co-host Willie Geist. “She supports those workers’ fight to get the fifteen dollars.”

“What? I don’t get it,” Brzezinski said.

I cannot help but be reminded of one of my favorite Monty Python bits, from “Life of Brian”:

“Here, I’ve got an idea: Suppose you agree that he can’t actually have babies without having a womb (which is nobody’s fault, not even the Romans’), but that he can have the right to have babies.”

“Good idea, Judith—we shall fight the oppressors for your right to have babies, brother (sister)!”

Posted in Finance and economics, Hillary Clinton, Movies | 9 Replies

Turkey deals Erdogan a setback, Kurds gain

The New Neo Posted on June 8, 2015 by neoJune 8, 2015

I can’t say I have my finger on the pulse of Turkish politics, but it appears to me that this could be good news:

Turkey’s president, Recep Tayyip ErdoÄŸan, has suffered his biggest setback in 13 years of amassing power as voters denied his ruling party a parliamentary majority for the first time since 2002 and gave the country’s large Kurdish minority its biggest voice ever in national politics.

The election result on Sunday, with almost all votes counted, appeared to wreck ErdoÄŸan’s ambition of rewriting the constitution to establish himself as an all-powerful executive president. ErdoÄŸan’s governing Justice and Development party, or AKP, won the election comfortably for the fourth time in a row, with around 41% of the vote, but that represented a steep fall in support from 49% in 2011, throwing the government of the country into great uncertainty.

Sounds as though Erdogan was going to take the next step towards solidifying his control, and the voters pulled back (while they were still able to). However, his party is still the strongest one in the country.

…[The results] meant it was unlikely that the AKP [Erdogan’s party] would be able to form a majority government, forcing it to negotiate a coalition, probably with extreme nationalists, or to call a fresh election if no parliamentary majority can be secured within six weeks.

The new party, the HDP or Peoples’ Democratic party, largely representing the Kurds but also encompassing leftwing liberals, surpassed the steep 10% threshold for entering parliament to take more than 12% of the vote and around 80 seats in the 550-strong chamber.

Since I had no idea what “leftwing liberals” means in the Turkish political climate, I looked it up to get a general picture. It certainly appears to be more “leftwing” than “liberal”—which some of you may think is a distinction without a difference, but my point is that in Turkey right now we appear to be seeing the old dichotomy of religious fundamentalist statists vs. anti-capitalist socialist statists:

The HDP is a democratic socialist party that adheres to anti-capitalism and aspires to end religious, gender and racial discrimination. The party has a 50% quota for women and a 10% quota for the LGBT community when fielding candidates. The party is also environmentalist, opposing the introduction of nuclear power in Turkey and also speaking out strongly in favour of the Gezi Park protests in 2013 that began as an environmentalist demonstration. It is said to resonate with liberal, middle-class Turks. Despite their anti-nationalist stance, the party has been perceived by some to be a Kurdish nationalist party due to their affiliation with the Democratic Regions Party and their support for minority rights…

The HDP was described by its founding chairpersons as a party that aims to eliminate the exploitation of labour and to fundamentally re-establish a democracy in which honourable and humanitarian individuals can live together as equal citizens. It was further described as a party aiming to bring about fundamental change to the existing Capitalist system though uniting a wide range of left-wing opposition movements…

Concerns were raised that the inclusion of the Kurdish nationalist HDK member Peace and Democracy Party in the HDP would raise allegations that the HDP was also a mainly Kurdish orientated party. However, é–nen claimed that the HDP’s key goal was to establish a different perspective of viewing the Turkish political scene and moving away from the existing ‘Kurdish versus Turkish’ dichotomy that had become institutionally entrenched within Turkish political perceptions.

It sounds as though it’s not time to break out the champagne.

Posted in Middle East, Politics | 13 Replies

Jailbreak: cherchez la femme

The New Neo Posted on June 8, 2015 by neoJune 8, 2015

Why, what a surprise:

A female prison worker was interrogated Sunday as a possible accomplice in the Hollywood-style escape of two killers from an upstate penitentiary, sources told The Post.

“It’s an employee being questioned,’’ a high-level source said, adding that the worker, who is not a guard, had already been yanked from her post.

Sources said the worker may have been wooed by one of the escaped cons, Richard Matt, 48, an infamous lady killer.

“He has a way with the ladies,” the source said…

Authorities said Matt and David Sweat, 34, escaped late Friday or early Saturday, by using power tools from one of several construction sites at the Clinton Correctional Facility in Dannemora, 20 miles from the Canadian border.

This fits a certain pattern of recent jailbreaks, although at least in this case it wasn’t a guard alleged to have helped. Here’s an earlier incident of a female guard helping a prisoner escape, and here’s another one.

I wrote a lengthy piece two years ago about prison guards of the opposite sex ([particularly women in men’s prisons, since they are more common) and why the practice makes for some vulnerabilities. The inmates are often con artists as well as cons, and you know what con artists can do. In a previous case, a convict by the name of Murphy had quite a little racket going:

Documents detailing the state investigation into Murphy’s liaisons show he persuaded at least five Montana female prison employees to break the rules over several years. He even convinced his therapist to have sex with him, and was able to arrange one-on-one meetings with her even though prison officials knew of his past history with female workers”¦

Read the whole thing. You may find that the solution isn’t quite as simple as you might hope.

Posted in Law, Men and women; marriage and divorce and sex | 11 Replies

Liberals to SCOTUS: don’t you dare gut Obamacare

The New Neo Posted on June 8, 2015 by neoJune 8, 2015

The public won’t like it.

And the Republicans can’t come up with anything better.

So don’t do it; you hear? Forget about the legal arguments; these are the ones we want you to listen to.

Posted in Health care reform, Law | 8 Replies

Beauteous Acadia

The New Neo Posted on June 8, 2015 by neoJune 8, 2015

I was there this weekend:

Acadia2015 011

Acadia2015 019

Unfortunately, when I came home last night I suddenly realized I am coming down with a cold.

I hate, hate, hate colds.

Posted in Nature | 12 Replies

Michael Slager indicted for the killing of Walter Scott

The New Neo Posted on June 8, 2015 by neoJune 8, 2015

This was the case that virtually no one was defending: that of a policeman who killed a fleeing suspect by shooting him in the back. Now the South Carolina policeman (who is no longer with the force), Michael Slager, has been indicted by a grand jury for murder.

This is one of the cases in which a trial is probably the right way to go. Although Slager has a defense argument, the killing appeared egregious and unnecessary:

The 33-year-old Slager, who has been jailed since his arrest, faces 30 years to life in prison if convicted. Wilson said the death penalty does not seem to apply because there were no aggravating circumstances such as robbery or kidnapping as required under state law…

Slager told authorities he initially tried to stun Scott with his Taser, but it didn’t work, and that as both men scuffled over the stun gun, he fired his handgun at Scott in self-defense. The video shows the men briefly scuffling over what appears to be a Taser before Scott runs away and the officer begins firing at Scott’s back.

Another video, from the officer’s dashboard camera, shows Scott bolting from his car after Slager pulled him over and checked his identification. Slager then chased him down.

Family members have speculated that Scott may have tried to flee because he was fearful of returning to jail over about $18,000 he owed in late child-support payments.

Why didn’t Slager chase him down again? After all, he’d successfully done so once. Was he tired? What made him think this was worth shooting a suspect in the back? Yes, there was a chance that Scott might have been a dangerous criminal, but police can’t be shooting all fleeing suspects on the off chance that they are extremely dangerous.

Fleeing is always stupid (unless you are facing the death penalty for some other crime, in which case I suppose it makes sense to risk it), as is trying to wrest a taser away from an officer. But it is certainly not an infallible indication of extreme dangerousness, nor does it appear that Slager ever felt threatened physically by Scott in anything like the manner that Darren Wilson did when attacked by Michael Brown.

There’s also no indication that this case had anything to do with race, although of course it will be made to be about race and has been made to be about race. As far as I can see, it’s actually about whether there was an aggressive over-reaction by a cop. The video shows that a good case can be made that the answer is “yes.”

Posted in Law, Violence | 4 Replies

This guy is not just a hero…

The New Neo Posted on June 8, 2015 by neoJune 8, 2015

…but a smart hero as well.

Posted in Uncategorized | 8 Replies

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