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A blog about political change, among other things

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The wheels of justice: Dupree freed

The New Neo Posted on January 5, 2011 by neoJanuary 5, 2011

The wheels of justice grind slow, but they grind exceedingly fine:

A Texas man declared innocent Tuesday after 30 years in prison had at least two chances to make parole and be set free ”” if only he would admit he was a sex offender. But Cornelius Dupree Jr. refused to do so, doggedly maintaining his innocence in a 1979 rape and robbery, in the process serving more time for a crime he didn’t commit than any other Texas inmate exonerated by DNA evidence.

“Whatever your truth is, you have to stick with it,” Dupree, 51, said Tuesday, minutes after a Dallas judge overturned his conviction.

Dupree might have gotten out in 2004 if he had just agreed to submit to a re-education program for sex offenders that required the “4 R’s:” recognition, remorse, restitution and resolution. He couldn’t do it; couldn’t recognize or show remorse for a crime he did not commit. Now the DNA evidence has exonerated him.

Like so many others who have been wrongly convicted, Dupree’s verdict rested almost entirely on eyewitness testimony. Eyewitnesses sound good and are often quite sincere, but unfortunately their testimony is not anywhere near as reliable as people tend to think it is. In Dupree’s case, only one eyewitness fingered him; the other did not. And yet he served thirty years.

It is always upsetting to hear something like that. But it is always good to know that an innocent person has finally been freed. And it helps that the state of Texas will be paying Dupree over two million dollars, tax-free, for his pain, although it will never be able to give him those thirty years back.

Posted in Law | 27 Replies

If Michele Bachmann runs…

The New Neo Posted on January 5, 2011 by neoJanuary 5, 2011

…for the Republican presidential nomination in 2012, will she split some of the Palin-hatred and deflect it onto herself? Or will she magnify it?

I’ve noticed that, although Bachmann has a smaller public profile than Palin, she taps into some of the same virulence as Palin, for somewhat similar (although also somewhat different) reasons. Like Palin, she’s not afraid to speak her mind, and is very conservative. Like Palin, she’s a Tea Party favorite. Like Palin, she’s got five children.

And like Palin, she’s a very attractive woman, a brunette with long hair, a style that used to be a no-no for politicians but is now not uncommon. But unlike Palin, she has a law degree, which makes her more immune–although hardly completely resistant—to the charges of “dummy.”

Posted in Uncategorized | 37 Replies

We won’t have Robert Gibbs to kick around any more

The New Neo Posted on January 5, 2011 by neoJanuary 5, 2011

Except that we will; Gibbs is leaving the White House press secretary post only to become a political adviser to the president and his re-election campaign.

It will still be very pleasant not to have Gibbs as Obama’s public face and mouthpiece. It is no surprise that he will stay on as a trusted adviser, because he’s had that role in addition to the press role for quite some time. The only meaningful change in Obama’s Gang of Four so far appears to have been the departure of Rahm Emanuel, who was the member least close to Obama to begin with (Axelrod, like Gibbs, changed venues but remains as a trusted confidant and helper).

Gibbs’ departure is probably part of Obama’s shift to a kinder, gentler facade of compromise and moderation. It will be interesting to see his replacement, but my guess is that it will be someone less offensive and less combative. Of course, that’s pretty easy to accomplish; it would be hard to find someone more offensive and more combative. But make no mistake about it; Gibbs will remain very influential behind the scenes.

Posted in Obama, Press | 6 Replies

Bedbugs and the Buckeye State

The New Neo Posted on January 4, 2011 by neoJanuary 4, 2011

Ohio may be losing jobs and losing people. But there’s a counterbalance: the state is gaining bedbugs, and nobody knows why.

Posted in Uncategorized | 29 Replies

The bleak, baroque, berserk “Black Swan”

The New Neo Posted on January 4, 2011 by neoFebruary 6, 2011

“Black Swan” was one of those movies I just had to see. After all, it’s described as a psychological thriller about ballet. So, what’s not to like?

Well, just about everything. I didn’t merely dislike this film, I loathed it.

“Black Swan” is suspenseful, all right. But the non-stop suspense involves one thing and one thing only: exactly when will the next flesh-rending Grand Guignol moment occur? It’s difficult to make viewers feel simultaneously horrified, exhausted, and bored, but the film’s relentless one-note assault manages to accomplish that mean feat.

The characters consist of cliché after cliché after cliché: the sexually predatory ballet company director; the shy, bulimic, repressed underling dancer who finally gets her Big Chance; the pretend friend and rival who just might be an enemy in disguise; the jealous older dancer who’s all washed up; the enmeshed and controlling ballet mother who sacrificed her career to…well, you get the idea.

And the sex—let’s not forget the sex. The movie certainly doesn’t. Every sexual encounter between two people (although the movie’s specialty is actually sex for one) is decidedly unpleasant. The obligatory lesbian sex scene is probably the only one of its kind in which viewers are justifiably afraid that one of the actresses is literally going to eat the other—as in “sink teeth into, draw blood, and devour.”

If that doesn’t strike your fancy, there’s the dancing. After all, this is a dance movie, right? All dance films must face the question of whether to cast dancers in the leading roles and sacrifice the acting, or cast actors in the leading roles and sacrifice the dancing. “The Red Shoes” and “The Turning Point (see this for a personal note) resolved the dilemma in favor of dancers who could act somewhat. In “Black Swan,” it’s actresses who can dance somewhat.

Natalie Portman and Mila Kunis do a pretty good job—good but not great, since it’s an impossible task to fake artistry and/or professional technique. The camera obsessively follows the movements of Portman’s slender, flexible upper body in claustrophobic closeups which make her seem convincing as a dancer, although a relatively uninteresting one. She can rise on her toes and perform simple movements respectably, as well. But when bravura technique is required, it’s a long shot and a body double to the rescue.

But in fact, none of the dancing in the film is of interest as dance per se, and there really isn’t that much of it anyway. But dance is not what this movie is about—it’s “Rosemary’s Baby” crossed with “Repulsion,” sur les pointes. If that seems like a mixed metaphor—well, it is.

[NOTE: In the life-imitates-art department, star Portman is now pregnant and engaged to the NYC Ballet dancer who plays the brief role of the Prince in the film, handsome Benjamin Millepied. Until the filming began, Millepied had a live-in girlfriend, American Ballet Theatre dancer Isabella Boylston. This would make Portman the Other Woman, just like Odile, the Black Swan is in “Swan Lake.” Does that make Boylston Odette, the White Swan?]

Posted in Best of neo-neocon, Dance, Movies | 51 Replies

Huck loses the n-word

The New Neo Posted on January 4, 2011 by neoJanuary 4, 2011

It was only a matter of time, I guess. A new edition of Twain’s classic Huckleberry Finn will be coming out minus the offending n-word, which will be replaced by the term “slave.”

In related news, the same edition will eliminate the word “Injun.” I can’t find a report of what term will replace it; perhaps nothing.

Alan Gribben, a Twain scholar who is behind the new Bowdlerized version, believes he had to change Huck in order to save him from oblivion; the PC police have spearheaded multiple and successful drives to ban the book, all because of the n-word. The publisher of the new version calls the revised terminology “less hurtful, less controversial,” but it’s certainly controversial among Twain literature lovers.

It’s funny, isn’t it, how at this point children’s minds are deemed too sensitive to withstand the barrage of the n-word in a classic book, even when the thrust of the book is to show the innate humanity and worthiness of the person in question. But at the same time their ears are not deemed too delicate to be exposed to a steady diet of the n-word in rap music. And most of this latter-day use of the word is by black people themselves, in songs that are often offensive in many other ways as well. It’s enough to make your head spin.

Posted in Education, Literature and writing, Race and racism | 49 Replies

Being mega-old

The New Neo Posted on January 3, 2011 by neoJanuary 3, 2011

Susan Jacoby has a lot of relatives who lived to be old. Mega-old, in fact. And, from what she’s seen of the debilities of extreme old age, she doesn’t much like the prospect of getting there herself.

Oh, it’s okay if mental and physical health are intact. Most of us like to think that, were we to live well into our 90s, we’d also be living well. But most of us like to think a lot of things that aren’t all that likely.

On the bright side, it’s not impossible to make it to the 100-year mark with a fair amount of vigor, and faculties largely intact or at least functioning. In fact, half of centenarians are not significantly disabled by dementia or physical illness; the other half are.

With a mother who’s pushing 97, I’ve witnessed a lot of the 90-plus segment of the population. There’s no question that some are living active, happy lives, although I can’t seem to conjure up any statistics just now on what percentage of the whole they might represent. I do know that the conditions of extreme old age vary enormously from person to person, with some living a life that in their younger days they would have begged to be released from, and some hale and hearty and going strong.

My mother, fortunately (knock wood) is somewhere in that huge area in-between, but fairly functional and fairly happy, and seemingly well-cared-for in assisted living. She sometimes expresses surprise at still being alive, but also says she’s quite content to be so. But I’ve seen her lose almost every friend she ever had (and she had plenty) and most of her acquaintances, too, and that’s hard.

My mother once told me that her own grandfather, born in the early 1870s and fairly healthy till he died at 93, used to remark wistfully, “It’s hard to be the last leaf on the tree.” I think she may obliquely be saying the same thing. But, thankfully, she’s nevertheless glad she’s still sticking around.

And so are we.

Posted in Getting philosophical: life, love, the universe, Health, Me, myself, and I | 21 Replies

The new Congress has plans

The New Neo Posted on January 3, 2011 by neoJanuary 3, 2011

The House will take up the issue of repeal of HCR.

It’s an act of theater, because Obama has veto power and would almost undoubtedly use it. And repeal is doomed in the Senate, anyway. But it’s nevertheless a good idea to try, because a vote would force members to lay their cards on the table. It will be especially interesting to see what House Democrats from purplish districts will do.

Another task for the new session: investigations by the oversight committee, including Fannie Mae, Wikileaks, corruption in Afghanistan, and FDA recalls.

And then there’s the filibuster and what’s known as “reform.” I don’t even know which article to link to on that topic, there are so very many calls (now that the Democrats have only a slim majority) for changes. The goal is to make it easier to pass legislation in the Senate by simple majority, through making it harder for the minority to block such votes.

This could come back to bite the Dems in two ways. The first is obvious: if they lose that majority in the next election, the rule change will come to favor the Republicans. The second way is perhaps a little less obvious: a few of the Democrats in the Senate are so-called moderates who might be persuaded to vote with Republicans if they see it as benefiting their own re-election chances in 2012 (see this list of those up for re-election in 2012). If the Republicans are united in their votes, and even just a few Democrats join them, then the Democrat leadership might come to regret those reforms.

Posted in Politics | 14 Replies

The Egyptian Copt Church attack: whodunit?

The New Neo Posted on January 3, 2011 by neoJanuary 3, 2011

The Iranian English-language PressTV says the Mossad did it, because of course no Muslim ever would.

Lebanon Shiite Muslim leader Sheikh Abdel Amir Kabalan blames the Zionists.

But to Andrew Sullivan, it’s Bush’s fault.

Posted in Terrorism and terrorists | 5 Replies

Buh-bye, Rep. Grayson

The New Neo Posted on January 3, 2011 by neoJanuary 3, 2011

And don’t let the door hit you on the way out.

Posted in Uncategorized | 11 Replies

Ezra Klein says a stupid thing…

The New Neo Posted on January 1, 2011 by neoJanuary 1, 2011

…but it’s not the stupid thing that some on the right have accused him of saying.

First, watch the video:

Now, what he didn’t say. He didn’t say the Constitution has no binding power. His statement was in answer to a question about reading the Constitution aloud in Congress; the act of reading has no binding power, according to Klein, and is merely a gimmick—although that does sound rather deprecating, and he probably wishes now he’d kept his mouth shut.

Nor did he say that interpreting the Constitution is “impossible.”

But Klein did say the following stupid thing:

The issue of the Constitution is that the text is confusing because it was written more than 100 years ago.

Ezra Klein is young. Very young, as I’ve written about at some length here. Why he has been hired by many of the supposed heavy hitters of the MSM as a major political commentator, I’ll never know. His errors are often those of youth, and this case is no exception.

The Constitution is not confusing because it is old. If you don’t believe me, Ezra, ask members of the current Congress to devise a clearer one and see what they’ll come up with in the new 20,000-plus page document that would undoubtedly result.

Legal documents of any length must nearly always be interpreted when they are applied in the real world; that’s one of the main functions of our court system. Longer and more specific is not necessarily better, and older documents at least have accrued a host of common law cases on which to rely when interpretation is necessary.

Klein also implies that interpretation is arbitrary, and each side is merely seeing in the Constitution what it wishes to see. But the Constitution is not merely a blank slate onto which people can project their own wishes. There is a host of evidence of the intent of the original authors, for example. Those who want to expand the reach of the Constitution beyond that are doing something qualitatively different than those who consider themselves contructionists.

It’s not just a difference about what people “want to get done.” It’s usually about wanting to expand the reach of government versus wanting to restrict it. There are powers enumerated to the federal government in the Constitution, and one might say that the disagreement is about extending and expanding those powers because people on the left want to “get things done,” and keeping limits on those powers because people on the right believe that’s just the sort of tyranny the founders wisely wanted to prevent by writing the Constitution and limiting those powers in the first place.

Posted in Law, Press | 37 Replies

Still a Diva

The New Neo Posted on January 1, 2011 by neoJanuary 1, 2011

The results of the Grande Conservative Blogress Diva Contest have been announced, and they’re not too shabby after all. Due to complexities too complex to describe here, Robin of Berkeley is Diva and there were two regents named this year, myself and Clarice Feldman. So I retain my title.

Couldn’t have done it without you. Thanks!

And Happy New Year! Have you kept your resolutions?

Posted in Blogging and bloggers | 13 Replies

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