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The Order of the Universe has been restored

The Red Sox are blowing another season. I feel like I’m 28 years old again.

Willard back on top?

According to Talking Points Memo, Willard is on the rise:

Mitt Romney is on the rebound in Republican primary polls. And there’s increasing polling evidence that he’s by far the stronger candidate against President Obama.

Looks like there’s a pattern developing. The new guy or gal comes in and wins their hearts, but he or she always has issues, so the Republicans go back to Willard. I’d say he’s more or less inevitable, unless someone else who is somewhat sane enters the race. That, of course, leaves room for one of the crazies to sneak in. Two high profile sane candidates (sorry Huntsman, Obama neutralized you years ago) might just split the rational (relatively) vote. Those voters may still be a majority in the Republican party, but if so, they’re a slim majority. Split them, and Rick or Michelle might still slip in. Or Sarah, in whom I still have hope.

Elizabeth Warren speaks

Send this lady some money.

If I were Scott Brown, and I thank my good fortune I’m not, I would be very scared of this lady. I would also avoid a debate.

The big question was what kind of a campaigner she would be. Just watching this, I think those concerns can be set aside. She’s way too smart to win in Texas, but she ought to do swimmingly in Massachusetts.

Who would have thunk?

Every once in a while you see something that is not only pretty neat in its own right, but just makes you feel good about your fellow man. For some reason this story, which I guess is making the rounds, gave me a real good feeling when I read it:

As fanciful as it may sound at first, gamers on Foldit, a crowdsourced, online protein folding simulator from the University of Washington, actually managed to solve a longstanding problem in AIDS research that has vexed scientists for more than a decade. And they did so in about 10 days.

Three players in particular were able to build upon each other to establish the most accurate model to date of an elusive protease enzyme in the AIDS-like Mason-Pfizer monkey virus.

“People have spatial reasoning skills, something computers are not yet good at,” said Seth Cooper, co-creator of Foldit and a researcher at UW Department of Computing Science and Engineering, in a statement. “Games provide a framework for bringing together the strengths of computers and humans.”

The article brought this cartoon to mind. Maybe these parents were right after all.

Count the Stupid

The following letter actually appeared in this morning’s New London Day, and no, I don’t think it was intended as parody:

Is The Day becoming socialist?

Even though I buy The Day every day, I enjoy reading it on the Internet early each morning. Now I can only read 10 articles The Day considers premium articles before being forced to subscribe.

I’d like to know who in their right mind came up with this idea of telling people what they can and can’t read on the Internet.

It’s no wonder your readership is going down the tubes. I’ll be damned if I’m going to pay twice for less.

Robert Jones Groton

If you are counting the stupid, you need to know that unlimited access to the Day’s site is included with a subscription to the paper.

It looks like the only things we don’t call socialism in this country are the few things that are somewhat socialistic: Social Security and Medicare.

UPDATE: Wow! My wife just saw an article about some tea party guy who called John Boehner a Socialist. I guess it’s become an all purpose, content free term of derision.

Obama’s education agenda

This is something that was under my radar, so I pass it along in case it’s escaped notice generally. In the current New York Review of Books Diane Ravitch reviews two books, one of which is Class Warfare, by Steve Brill, in which Brill argues that union busting and charter schools, among other right wing wet dreams, are the answer to all that ails the American educational system. Income disparities, etc., have nothing to do with it you see. The evidence all points the other way, of course, but since when has that stopped any American political movement designed to benefit the elites? This kind of elitist thinking is par for the course, so it comes as no surprise. What did come as a surprise, to me, at least, was the fact that Obama is so heavily invested in advancing this elitist agenda.

Ravitch relates that a number of our Wall Street overlords have adopted education as their pet cause, presumably aiming to do to it what they have done to the economy. Part of the strategy is to complete a hostile takeover of the Democratic party, since they already own the Republican party:

In 2005, the financiers formed an organization called Democrats for Education Reform (DFER) to promote ideas such as choice and accountability that were traditionally associated with the Republican Party. They set out to change Democratic Party policy, which in the past, as they saw it, was in thrall to the teachers’ unions and was committed to programs that funneled federal money by formula to the poorest children. DFER used its bountiful resources to underwrite a different agenda, one that was not beholden to the unions and that relied on competition, not equity.

While it was easy for the Wall Street tycoons to finance charter schools like KIPP and entrepreneurial ventures like Teach for America, what really excited them was using their money to alter the politics of education. The best way to leverage their investments, Brill tells us, was to identify and fund key Democrats who would share their agenda. One of them was a new senator from Illinois named Barack Obama, who helped launch DFER at its opening event on June 3, 2005. The evening began with a small dinner at the elegant Café Gray in the Time Warner Center in New York City, then moved to Curry’s nearby apartment on Central Park South, where an overflow crowd of 150 had gathered.

DFER also befriended Congressman George Miller from California, the powerful leader of the Democrats on the House Education and Labor Committee. DFER supported Cory Booker, who eventually became mayor of Newark. A DFER fund-raiser produced $45,000 for Congressman James Clyburn, “the most influential member of the Congressional Black Caucus,” who returned home to South Carolina to champion tuition tax credits and charter schools. Brill writes that DFER sent a memo to the Obama team immediately after the presidential election, naming its choice for each position. At the top of its list, for secretary of education, was Arne Duncan.

As Ravitch points out, none of the elitist solutions have worked, including the so called “No Child Left Behind Act”, which should more properly have been titled the “No Public School Left Standing Act”. The act, which legislated perfection but failed to even try to give schools the tools or funding to achieve it, mandates the destruction of failing schools, the numbers of which are rising as the time for achieving perfection draws near. The Obama administration’s solution is about as right wing and contrary to reason (am I being redundant there?) as they come:

The Obama administration has offered to grant waivers from the onerous sanctions of NCLB, but only to states willing to adopt its preferred remedies: privately managed charter schools, evaluations of teachers on the basis of their students’ test scores, acceptance of a recently developed set of national standards in reading and mathematics, and agreement to fire the staff and close the schools that have persistently low scores. None of the Obama administration’s favored reforms—remarkably similar to those of the Bush administration—is supported by experience or evidence.

Perhaps this explains Obama’s tepid response to the teacher union busting going on in Wisconsin and Ohio, among other places. It’s hard to tell, because his response to all manner of right wing outrages has been pretty tepid, but it’s certainly lines up with what appears to be his agenda.

Friday Night Music

This was like a gift from heaven. It’s getting harder and harder to come up with bands or acts I haven’t had on this feature, so I was glad to have this one dropped on me, so to speak. I was listening to my favorite internet radio station, Absolute Classic Rock out of London. As an aside, I highly recommend it, particularly the Ronnie Wood (yes, that Ronnie Wood) show. Anyway, this was not the Ronnie Wood show, but the disk jockey had former Dire Straits keyboardist Alan Clark on, and it struck me that Dire Straits has, to the best of my ever fading recollection, never made an appearance hereabouts. Clark, by the way, has formed a band called Straits, which includes many former members of the band, except the central figure, Mark Knopfler. He spent most of the interview having to restrain himself from venting about Knopfler’s refusal to join the reunion circuit, but let us let that pass.

Now, I actually wanted to break one of my rules for this one, and play the original MTV video, which seemed only appropriate, but if it’s on youtube at all it doesn’t make it to the first page of search results, so being a lazy guy, I decided to go with this version, which features a guest appearance from Sting, whining for his MTV. Personally, I think this is one of the cleverest songs ever written.

Hold on, I found it, the original video that played so heavily on MTV back when they actually played music videos. At least I’m pretty sure this is it. It’s only been about 30 years since I’ve last seen it.

Who would have believed that Michelle Bachmann really was that crazy?

Apparently there are Bachmann supporters that are totally surprised that she is completely nuts:

People close to the campaign … spoke of their frustration that Mrs. Bachmann, who entered the race with a reputation for making unsupportable statements on cable television, has not found the discipline to win credibility with major Republican donors and influential referees in the conservative news media.

Did they think she just played a clown on television? Has it not dawned on these types that they have now spawned a class of politicians that actually believe the garbage that the Republican establishment has been cynically feeding the base for the past 35 years?

It’s hard to believe sometimes, but even with our corporate controlled, predominately right wing media there are limits. It actually looks like the Bachmanns of the world are finding those limits, which is an astounding feat, considering that for years no Republican lie went challenged.

The Republican Health Plan: Die Quickly

This just came to my attention yesterday, though it happened in July. It becomes salient now considering Ron Paul’s recent response to a question that Wolf Blitzer, of all people, asked Paul at the most recent debate among the clowns that are seeking the Republican nomination for president. Blitzer asked what was to be done about a young person who failed to get medical insurance who developed an illness, or sustained an injury, that required intensive and expensive medical care. Paul tapdanced, until Blitzer finally asked if the young person should be allowed to die, at which the audience applauded. Paul did not explicitly endorse that solution, though he might have well have done so implicitly, as he beat the drum for personal responsibility and allowed for the possibility that a church might pay the bills, though why a church should do so in lieu of the community as a whole was not made clear.

The story involves Paul’s former fundraiser, a young man himself, who recently died, uninsured, after a long illness during which he racked up about $400,000.00 in medical bills, which he presumably knew he was in no position to pay.

The story to which I’ve linked lays stress on the fact that the young man was gay, but I don’t think that’s particularly relevant, at least to the moral that I draw from all this. Putting the best face on his remarks, Paul was insisting that voluntary acts by the community might be appropriate responses to such dilemmas, though, of course, that inevitably means that the despised of the earth will fall through the cracks. But Paul himself doesn’t seem impelled to volunteer, since he didn’t bother to provide health insurance for the guy who raised $35 million dollars on his behalf.

But Paul was primarily pushing the doctrine of personal responsibility, so the thrust of his response was to agree with the barbarians in the audience: if you made the choice (or more commonly had the choice thrust upon you) to buy no health insurance, and you get grieviously ill, you should accept the consequences of that choice, forced or otherwise, and die. (Where have you gone, Alan Grayson, a nation owes an apology to you) More than likely Paul’s dedicated fundraiser would have endorsed Paul’s view-before he got sick. Something must have changed his mind, but I can’t imagine what.

What I find mystifying about this point of view, if you can dignify it in that way, is the crabbed sense of community that it embraces. The young man’s friends are seeking contributions from his friends in the Paul campaign to pay his bills, but why, given their philosophy, should they choose to give? He made his choice, did he not? Paul himself thinks it’s legitimate for a religious community to give, ignoring the fact that in most such communities that choice is made on behalf of the group by one or a few individuals, meaning that for most congregants the choice is as imposed as it would be if the state were to pay. More fundamentally, why is it praiseworthy for a church to step up, but blameworthy when the community as a whole does so? Why do these Jesus followers feel that it is a holy deed (Jesus required it by the way; it was’t optional) for the individual to heal the sick and a sin for the community as a whole to do so?

A primary in New London

Time for some local news, of the just desserts variety. New London held a primary yesterday. A fairly important primary. For years a local pol named Michael Buscetto has been campaigning to institute a strong mayor system in New London. It may come as no surprise that he considered himself the perfect, indeed the inevitable, candidate for the position. Buscetto has made a career out of alienating the black community in New London, persecuting the homeless, and undermining the most recently appointed police chief, who just happens (?) to be a woman. Nonetheless, he had every reason, given the power he has wielded in New London, to think he’d win walking away.

Buscetto’s opponent was a young guy who campaigned as a progressive. He’s more than a bit of a carpetbagger, having only recently moved to town.

When the dust had settled, Buscetto was the loser by a landslide. Classless and clueless to the end, he blamed his defeat on the fact that people voted:

In dissecting Tuesday’s vote, Buscetto said a lot of people sat out the primary, assuming they could vote for him in November. Some, he said, organized a campaign to vote against him. He criticized City Councilor John Russell, who he said registered homeless people and then drove them to the polls to vote for Finizio. “No to both,” Russell said Wednesday when asked about the allegation. “Even though there is nothing wrong with it, I didn’t do it.”

Buscetto also said Police Chief Margaret Ackley — with whom Buscetto has been sparring for about a month after she publicly accused him of unethical behavior and of meddling in police affairs — switched her party affiliation and voted against him, he said.

That accounts for maybe 10 of the votes against him, so he’s about one fortieth of the way toward accounting for his opponent’s margin of victory. Pity the guy. The job he created to give himself more power will deprive him of the power he’s had up until now. Yet more proof of the old adage that you should be careful of what you ask for, lest you get it.

New London dodged a bullet yesterday, but it’s not home safe by any means. The Democratic nominee, Daryl Finizio, is an unknown quantity, and he’ll be facing three petitioning candidates as well as the endorsed Republican. Anything can happen in a five way race. Who knows, petitioning (and now perennial) and ethically challenged candidate Andrew Lockwood ( I have a personal history with Andy, see here, here and here– I really don’t like the guy. ) might just sneak in.