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May 27, 2003

Because....

TalkLeft writes about why it's important not to get bogged down in Republican-induced depression:

As criminal defense lawyers, we toil every day in the trenches known as courtrooms. We can't give up. We remember to stand erect (male lawyers would say "we puff up our chests,") and we repeat to ourselves, "I am proud to be a criminal defense lawyer," and we go in there and fight the good fight. We lose more than we win, but we know the scales of justice function like a pendulum, and someday, the scales again will tilt in our favor. Until then, staying silent is not an option.

Every person we fight for, no matter how heinous their alleged crime, is a human being. A human being with the right to dignity and with a past and a present, a person who can claim at least one person who loves him or her unconditionally, even if it's only their mother. We stay in the trenches and we fight for that client's ounce of dignity and spark of humanity.

The message here: Get out of bed. We don't have the luxury of being depressed. There is too much work to do. We have battles to fight and wars to win. We need you, Kevin, and those feeling the same way, to recognize there is power in numbers, and if you all go to sleep instead of hanging in here to fight the good fight with us, then all of us have lost.

May 20, 2003

Today's Quote

In this world of sin and sorrow there is always something to be thankful for; as for me, I rejoice that I am not a Republican.
--Henry Louis Mencken (1880-1956)

Class Wars

In the Washington Post, Warren Buffet says:

When you listen to tax-cut rhetoric, remember that giving one class of taxpayer a "break" requires -- now or down the line -- that an equivalent burden be imposed on other parties. In other words, if I get a break, someone else pays. Government can't deliver a free lunch to the country as a whole. It can, however, determine who pays for lunch. And last week the Senate handed the bill to the wrong party.

I have been saying this for awhile (well, not the part where he says he will make millions of dollars a year, but the other), but I figure maybe more people will listen when Warren Buffet says it.

I am here

...more or less.

I've been out of town and busy with other things and simply not in a posting mood (which means not finding things that strike me as postable, not focused enough for essays, not quite present enough to put out anything interesting enough to blog--yeah, think how boring that is!)

I'm teaching a new tracking class. The weather the first two weeks was very, very bad. This past Sunday we tracked at a local park where several teams were having softball practice and I think we confused them deeply. The dogs are doing well; the people want things to go much faster than they do. Eventually, they will come to know that the best things do not come in a hurry. :-)

May 12, 2003

Monkeys do not equal Shakespeare

According to this BBC article, six monkeys, one typewriter and one month's 'writing' time were not enough to produce the monkey-equivalent of 'Romeo and Juliet' (Okay, they didn't actually even produce a word--but I think they weren't clear on the assignment).

Now, if they had each had their own typewriter....

May 05, 2003

Currently Reading

Detective Inspector Huss by Helene Tursten
(translated from Swedish by Steven T. Murray)

Savage Beauty -- The Life of Edna St. Vincent Millay by Nancy Milford

Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Philosophy edited by James B. South

Final Secrets

I finally finished Secrets: A Memoir of Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers by Daniel Ellsberg. It's very good and I highly recommend it.

Here are a few last quotes on diverse topics to leave you with:

Referring to a letter Ellsberg and other Rand analysts wrote protesting Nixon's Vietnam war policy:

At one point Konrad Kellen relayed to me a conversation he had just had with an unnamed "High Rand official" (a vice president, it turned out). "He said that if one Rand secretary lost her job because of this letter [through a budget cut], we didn’t have a right to send it." Ironically, the only Rand employees who were going out of their way to congratulate me on the letter were secretaries, all women. They didn’t write memos, but unlike the men who had started cutting me in the hallways or frowning angrily when they saw me, the secretaries would nod warmly or stop me to shake hands in the hall, whispering, "Godo job! Great letter!" More than one said, "It makes me proud to be at Rand." One of the two or three memos that defended both our right and our decision to send the letter was by one of the few women professionals at Rand, Kathy Archibald.

In response to a student who asked him what he thought about the burning of an ROTC building:

I said that I had been trained in the Marine Corps to do violence and that I had seen a lot of it in Vietnam. Its effectiveness, which was ultimately its justification, wasn't just a hypothetical question for me. I had had a good deal of experience on which to judge that, and I was no longer so impressed with it, and I knew much more about how it could go wrong than when I had been a marine. I very well understood, and shared, the frustration of the students at their inability to stop the war. But it seemed to have a lot in common with the frustration of the troops in Vietnam, who were the same age as the students in this audience, at their inability to win the war. And the response I had seen in Vietnam was very similar....I told them of the soldiers in Rach Kien, burning down every hut they came to, for no real reason than to leave some mark that they had passed that way, that they were not just plowing the sea....

It was very American, I said, to think that to be willing to use violence was to show seriousness and to be effective, but that was not what I'd learned in Vietnam. I said I could see that many people in the audience felt proud of what had just happened on their campus but that I couldn't tell them I believed that burning down ROTC buildings would be any more productive for ending the war than burning down villages in Vietnam. It would take commitment, courage, and tenacity to end this war, but not an imitation of the government’s own destructive tactics.

During an interview with Walter Cronkite after the Pentagon Papers were released:

Cronkite: Isn't this correcxting of this problem of public information more in the character of the leaders of Washington than it is in anything that can be legislated?

Ellsberg: I would disagree with that. It seems to me that the "leaders"--by whom, I think, you're referring to the executive officials, the Executive Branch of government--have fostered an impression that I think the rest of us have been too willing to accept over the last generation, and that is that the Executive Branch is the government, and that indeed they are leaders in a sense that may not be entirely healthy, if we're to still think of ourselves as a democracy. I was struck, in fact, by President Johnson's reaction to these revelations as "close to treason," because it refected to me this sense that what was damaging to the reputation of a particular administration, a particular individual, was in effect treason, which is very close to saying, "I am the state." And I think that quite sincerely, many Presidents, not only Lundon Johnson, have come to feel that. What these studies tell me is we must remember this is a self-governing country. We are the government. And in terms of institutions, the Constitution provides for the separation of powers, for Congress, for the courts, informally for the press, protected by the First Amendment....I think we cannot let the officials of the Executive Branch determine for us what it is that the public needs to know about how well and how they are discharging their functions....