February 10, 2014

On The Unjust, Illiberal, Innumerate, And Darn Near Illiterate Case For Socialized Law
— Gabriel Malor

Last week, Noam Scheiber wrote at the New Republic a column advocating for the socialization of law so as to prevent the wealthy from "buying justice." His column was explicitly founded in the claim that "the 99 percent" had a right to the same quality of legal representation as the wealthy. Recognizing that it would be impossible to provide expensive legal aid to every litigant, Scheiber proposed the obvious, but atrocious alternative: if we can't give top tier legal representation to the 99 percent, we should simply deprive the 1 percent of top tier legal representation.

Scheiber employed the rhetoric of rights to suggest that depriving the wealthy of legal representation somehow makes everyone more of a citizen. This was semantic gobbledygook, envy simply re-dressed in the language of liberty. This strikes me as deeply wrong, as I explained over at the Federalist this morning.

A taste:

“Too long, didn’t read” is an entirely reasonable response to such rubbish, relying, as it does, on a sketchy recitation of history, a steaming pile of class resentment, a fundamental misapprehension of the purpose for and effect of a legal system—not to mention the constitutional distinction between civil and criminal proceedings—and a shamelessly flippant redefinition of the word “liberalism.”

However, having thought it over for a few days more, I have to confess I was wrong. ScheiberÂ’s article can be quite succinctly summarized: Scheiber doesnÂ’t care a damn thing about justice in this country at all.

Throughout the ages, most religions have rightly condemned envy as a terribly destructive motivator, harmful both to the individual and to the community. The Bible warns of it repeatedly and the thinkers of the Middle Ages elevated (lowered?) it to be one of the Seven Deadly Sins. And yet the modern leftists' embrace of class resentment is nothing more than envy dressed up in the language of virtue.

Posted by: Gabriel Malor at 09:54 AM | Comments (345)
Post contains 337 words, total size 2 kb.

Instructor Blows Away His Students With His Committment To The Profession of Teaching And An Accidental Suicide Bombing, But Mainly The Accidental Suicide Bombing.
— Open Blogger

As Slublog calls it, the feel good story of the day.

A group of Sunni militants attending a suicide bombing training class at a camp north of Baghdad were killed on Monday when their commander unwittingly conducted a demonstration with a belt that was packed with explosives, army and police officials said.

The militants belonged to a group known as the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, or ISIS, which is fighting the Shiite-dominated army of the Iraqi government, mostly in Anbar Province. But they are also linked to bomb attacks elsewhere and other fighting that has thrown Iraq deeper into sectarian violence.

Twenty-two ISIS members were killed, and 15 were wounded, in the explosion at the camp, which is in a farming area in the northeastern province of Samara, according to the police and army officials. Stores of other explosive devices and heavy weapons were also kept there, the officials said.

Posted by: Open Blogger at 08:24 AM | Comments (515)
Post contains 199 words, total size 1 kb.

Gov.Jindal Explains the Failures of Obamacare's Medicaid Expansion
— Gabriel Malor

Gov. Jindal had an excellent piece in Politico Magazine about Obamacare's failures. There's a lot in there (read the whole thing), but the one that sticks out is his observation that the President's signature healthcare law prioritizes health coverage for able-bodied adults over seniors and those with disabilities.

According to the Kaiser Family Foundation, in 2012 more than half a million seniors and people with disabilities on state Medicaid lists were awaiting access to home and community-based services. Prompt access to these services could keep individuals with disabilities out of institutions, which are often more costly.

Yet Obamacare provides states with a much greater federal Medicaid match — 100 percent for the first three years, phasing down to 90 percent over time — to cover previously ineligible low-income individuals. According to the Urban Institute, nearly five in six adults to be covered under the Medicaid expansion are adults without children, most in their prime working years.

In other words, rather than start with the neediest and cover them first, Obamacare's Medicaid expansion goes to other groups. Coincidentally (Gov. Jindal is too nice to say it in his piece, but I will), those are groups that Democrats are most interested in luring to the voting booth.

Posted by: Gabriel Malor at 07:20 AM | Comments (179)
Post contains 222 words, total size 2 kb.

Top Headline Comments 2-10-14
— Gabriel Malor

Happy Monday.

Rep. Bachmann joins other conservatives on a clean debt ceiling bill. "YouÂ’ve got to know when to hold them and when to fold them. My assessment is that most of us donÂ’t think itÂ’s the time to fight." Reps. Labrador and Amash shared similar sentiments last week.

Only Washington, D.C. had a positive "economic confidence index" last year—that is, Gallup's composite of a economic conditions in the U.S. combined with residents' perceptions of those conditions. Gallup notes that political sentiment appears to play a role in economic perception.

Washington Free Beacon's Alana Goodman investigates "the Hillary Papers," unpublished documents contained in the archive of one of Clinton's best friends and advisers. It is must-read.

Geeks with significant others, I've got a a Valentine's Day possibility for you.

NYTimes' Opinionator blog has an excellent column on single motherhood from Kay Hymowitz.

RCP's Scott Conroy dug deep into Gov. Christie's college years. Good stuff.

Toyota announced it will shut down its Australian manufacturing by 2017. Quite simply, it's cheaper to manufacture elsewhere (especially here in the U.S.) and ship to Australia. The company had been trying to reduce its labor costs by amending contracts, but that got nixed by the country's court system. Toyota was the last of the automakers to announce that it is leaving Australia. Once it pulls out, Australia will have no consumer carmaker.

Ya'll be good to each other today.

Posted by: Gabriel Malor at 02:46 AM | Comments (270)
Post contains 242 words, total size 2 kb.

February 09, 2014

Overnight Open Thread (2-9-2014)
— Maetenloch

Got home late so you get the 20 minute hurry-up ONT with a solid 16 minutes of quality effort.

Welcome to Sochi!

Voila_Capture1139

How USA Olympic bobsledder Johnny Quinn Escaped From His Bathroom

doorsochi23 

An Elevator in Sochi

Maybe cars cost extra.

elevatorsochi2

 

And the 'Wall of Steel' police presence.

sochiopiolce

And then you have the toilets. Now they've had toilets and bathrooms in Russia for a while so what the hell were they thinking?

sochitoilet-3.jpg

Oops - Sochi Games' Biathlon Track 130 Feet Too Short

more...

Posted by: Maetenloch at 06:48 PM | Comments (431)
Post contains 1555 words, total size 18 kb.

Open Thread
— CAC

For all of of your non-astronomy needs. more...

Posted by: CAC at 04:51 PM | Comments (316)
Post contains 11 words, total size 1 kb.

February 10, 2014

February 09, 2014

Spaced-Out Challenge: Mars & Venus in a Valentine's Dawn
— CAC

[We Politely Request That All Off-Topic or Political Comments Be Directed to the Open Thread down page, Which Will Serve Officially as the Current "Active Conversation" Thread for All Discussions Not Related To This Topic. Enjoy!]


HeartNebula.jpg

IC 1805, The Heart Nebula, by Matthew T Russell

Welcome again to the Spaced-Out Challenge! Whether you have a question about equipment, a new astronomical discovery you want to expand on, or just want to kick back and enjoy the cosmos above, come one come all on our weekly astronomical journey.

With the moon full, we'll stay mostly within our own solar system and enjoy two favorites: Mars, the planet of war, and Venus, the planet of love, which both grace our pre-dawn skies this week. Plus, you'll find a beautiful double star target in the Big Dog, we'll review an interesting technique for seeing color in the Orion Nebula, and we'll open the mail bag and share some moron astrophotography. So, step outside, turn off the lights, and let me guide you through space and time.
more...

Posted by: CAC at 04:55 PM | Comments (23)
Post contains 1292 words, total size 10 kb.

Open Thread
— DrewM

There would be content here but like NBC's Olympic coverage, it's being tape delayed and won't show up for hours.

Posted by: DrewM at 11:06 AM | Comments (77)
Post contains 24 words, total size 1 kb.

Civil (and Uncivil) War Thread [Y-not]
— Open Blogger

This thread is for you to get your hate on... or just discuss politics.

Some thread-fodder below:
more...

Posted by: Open Blogger at 01:45 PM | Comments (365)
Post contains 387 words, total size 3 kb.

<< Page 122 >>
82kb generated in CPU 0.0685, elapsed 0.2375 seconds.
41 queries taking 0.2208 seconds, 148 records returned.
Powered by Minx 1.1.6c-pink.