I usually argue in favor of school choice on the grounds that poor children should be forced to attend schools that abuse their monopoly power. But this article from the Philly Inquirer (via Power Line)
EX-VALEDICTORIAN AT 'TERROR HIGH' NAMED IN PLOT TO KILL BUSH
THE SCHOOL'S 1999 valedictorian has just been charged with having joined an al Qaeda chapter in Saudi Arabia four years ago and is now accused of plotting to kill President Bush, either with a car bomb or by shooting him.
[...]
And the school itself has been accused of teaching students to shun or dislike Christians and Jews, and once used an 11th-grade textbook that claimed trees will say on the Day of Judgment, "Here is a Jew hiding behind me. Come here and kill him."
You could call it Terror High - the Islamic Saudi Academy in suburban Alexandria, Va., near Washington - a more- than-1,000-student high school at the center of these high-profile incidents. The academy is funded by the Saudi government, a supposed ally of the United States in the fight against terrorism.
Daniel Pipes, director of the Philadelphia-based Middle East Forum and a well-known advocate of aggressive anti-terror policies, said the school is like "having a little piece of Saudi Arabia" in northern Virginia. He claimed the Islamic Saudi Academy is a classic case of pitting free speech against protection from future attacks.
"It's like the Nazis having little Hitler schools in America during the 1930s," Pipes said last night. Fifteen of the 19 Sept. 11 hijackers were Saudi, although the oil-rich nation is a close ally of the Bush administration.
I don't think the operation of such a school constitutes a clear and present danger. But in the same way that we have laws against child abuse and child negligence, there may be merit in laws that protect children from ...dangerous lessons? I don't know the answer here. Perhaps all that is needed here is transparency. Perhaps we just need to make it easy for others to know what schools are teaching, but I don't know that that is enough.
Perhaps we need to require that children be subject to propganda by the state on its own behalf to counteract stuff taught by parents. It sounds incredibly objectionable when phrased that way, but that is, in effect, what public schools actually do. And perhaps that is a valid social function. Certainly many American liberals don't object to forcing Christian children to be taught about evolution over the objections of their parents...
I've been working on an application server in Haskell on and off for a while. Here is the announcement I just posted to the Haskell mailing lists:
HAppS is a Haskell library for building Internet applications, featuring:
darcs get http://happs.org/HAppS
I periodically post about the idea of paying the Arabs to leave the West Bank and Gaza (also see here). Brian Gongol posted a fascinating analysis of the US Civil War showing that it would have been cheaper to buy out the South rather than it was to fight the war. He begs the question of how much the North expected the war to cost and whether it was rational for the south to fight it at all knowing that they were going to lose. But the math is interesting, nonetheless.
VOA reports that Sharon is facing increasing opposition to his plan to transfer the Jewish residents of Gaza out of the area. His rationalle for this plan is that the Israeli government expends too many resources protecting these people from a surrounding population of hostile Arabs and the presence of Israeli troops makes a peace with the local Arabs more difficult to achieve.
He believes it is possible to make peace with a people who demand their land be Judenrein. He further believes that it is okay to transfer Jews who are not demanding genocide but it is not okay to transfer Arabs who are.
My view: If Israel is going to being transfering anyone, it should be Arabs out of Gaza. If it is not going to be transfering anyone, it should be a basic premise of any peace agreement that the Jewish residents of the territories will be safe from harm. If the Arabs can't uphold such an agreement, they are really not prepared to make peace.
Josh in the comments section of a prior post insists on quoting the repeatedly discredited Juan Cole's claim that those who advocate going to war are hypocrites unless they are willing personally to go and fight.
As I said in the comments, I believe in fighting crime, but don't join the police. And I believe in fighting fired, but I don't join the fire department. Josh responded:
oh, and you don't think that imminent fires or rampant street crime is the greatest threat to the united states and freedom in general. that's why i'm not calling you a chickenshit for not joining the fucking FIRE DEPARTMENT.
Josh and his ilk do not think the US can or should be the world's police force. Perhaps they are right, but note the metaphor.
More recently, Josh posted a link to a site for sending whitefeathers to Jonah Goldberg. But, Jonah notes:
The reference is to WWI when women would give young men not in uniform feathers to shame them into enlisting. It’s a clever bit of web-bullying I suppose. But the analogy is stupid. Those women supported the war. The people reprising the role of WWI prim ladies on the homefront do not.
go to iraq. sign up right now. you're still young enough. i will support your actions utterly. i will help raise money so you have decent supplies and armor in your outfit. i'll put a 'support the troops' bumper sticker on my car, proudly, and i will sing the praises of the men in iraq because THEY ARE MY FRIENDS who CHOSE TO RISK THEIR LIVES FOR WHAT THEY BELIEVE IN.
I just learned that a junior high school classmate of mine who joined the Marines and fought in both Gulf wars is about to stand trial for the murder of two Iraqis he thought were about to attack him. If conviced he may be subject to the death penalty. His mother is raising money for his defense at DefendTheDefenders. The website is down because it has exceeded its bandwidth but you can find out more details here.
I've donated to the fund and so has my brother. I don't know whether Josh will or whether he is simply blathering. Anyone who wished to defend the defenders can Paypal funds to merriko AT aol.com.
Big Picture forecasts China overtaking the US in GDP in 20 years.
Resource competition for econmic growth will dominate relations over this time. I think China has a good story simply because of the size of their population. I am less optimistic because their one child policy means that 12% of their population will be over 65 in 20 years. On the other hand anti-aging technology may net them a win here in any case.
I'd be more interested in forecasts of China's per-capita productivity. I'd also be curious to know how easy it is to share productivity gains with others (e.g. the Internet).
However, Keller, who is himself of indeterminate politics but is probably more conservative than his fiery populist predecessor, Howell Raines, went on, "Conservatives feel estranged becuase they feel excluded. They do not always see themselves portrayed in the mainstream press as three-dimensional humans, and they don't see their ideas taken seriously or treated respectfully. This is something I've long felt we should correct, not to pander to red-state readers but because it's bad journalism to caricature anyone with reductionist portraits and crude shorthand. Portraying conservatives fairly does not mean equal time for creationism. But it does mean, for example, writing about abortion in a way that does justice to the deep moral qualms most Americans have about it. It means trying to understand the thinking of people who regard gay marriage as unacceptable, who worry that gun controls represent an encroachment on their civil liberties."And there you have it. In a nutshell, "We should really stop presenting conservatives as two-dimensional idiots. Instead we need to understand how homophobic, creationist, anti-abortion gun nuts think." And that's the problem. He just doesn't get conservatives. Most conservatives are just people who think socialism is the problem and freedom is the solution. Gay marriage is a very small sideshow in the big battles of government vs. markets, malpractice lawyers vs. patients, teachers unions vs. children, progressives vs. poor people, taxes, regulations, huge government programs, property rights, what have you. Conservatives believe that the reason that education, pensions, and health care in this country are expensive and low quality but clothing, food, and entertainment are cheap and high quality is that the government controls the former and markets control the latter.
The reason that the New York Times makes my blood boil is not that they can't understand why anyone would be against gay marriage, it's that they view the world through the filter of "is this good for George Bush?" and if it is, they ignore it, and if it isn't, they ram it down everyone's throat. Is the economy good or bad? Well, George Bush is in power, so it must be bad. Is the environment good or bad? Well, George Bush is in power, so it must be bad. Are things in Iraq going well or badly? Probably badly until a democrat gets elected. There doesn't seem to be much of an attempt to catalog the way the world really is and let people draw their own conclusions. Because if they did that in an unbiased way, everyone would conclude that the Democrats need to be turfed out for good, and that's not something they can stomach.
Someone on slashdot asked about the best way to get remote access to your home pc. Stinkydog answered:
I have my family connect their Windows machines directly to the Internet and to not bother with those pesky security updates. Within an hour, the internet installs all the remote access tools I need. Ftp servers, irc bots and keystroke loggers are just some of the handy tools that come through this way. I have to go, I just got an email about Snow White and I can't wait to check out the attachment.
The fundamental argument if favor of social security reform is that we might not have enough workers paying taxes to cover benefits for future retirees. So, lets only allow people to retire whose retirement we can afford within the social security budget. If the budget is consumed, and you are old and want to retire, you must wait until enough existing retirees kick the bucket to free up the funds to cover everyone up to your place in the queue. If you want a guaranteed retirement date, buy private insurance. Insurance companies know how to manage that sort of risk better than governments.
It would be nice if the government allowed deferred taxes on retirement savings but that is a non-sequitor to the question of whether social security is solvent. The earlier we make this reform, the better existing workers can plan for their retirement.
Verizon has introduced 300-500 kbps EvDO service in every city I plan to visit in the US except San Francisco.
They are selling that supports this standard is the AudioVox XV6600 PocketPC Phone. for $550-$590. It does CDMA, EVDO, Bluetooth, USB, SDIO, and has 128MB, but NO CAMERA and no 802.11
The 128Mb storage is enough because the wireless is fast enough to archive on a server. (There is a business providing hosting for this storage!).
CDMA means the voice won't work in Europe, but may in Israel, South Africa, and China.
EVDO data may also work in China, Israel, and South Africa. But again, not in Europe.
The lack of camera is sort of annoying, but you can get an 1.3 megapixel SDIO camera for $90 from Shop.com.
The phone functions as a bluetooth modem so if your laptop also supports bluetooth, you no longer need to pay for DSL or Cable.
For me that is a savings of ~$100/month if you include home wireless, starbucks/T-Mobile hotspots. OTOH, if you have a device like this then you don't really want a laptop. You want a separate 160GB USB harddrive for $139 and a device that is simply a 17" LCD screen for $300 and keyboard and a $100 battery So, if you add it all up, you should be able to get a great laptop for $1100 but no one is selling these yet.
The data plan is $40-$50/momth unlimited.
Note: If you have this device, you no longer need an IPod because you can run ShoutCast over the EvDO.
However, people may want to run their own music. In which case, again, data hosting might be valuable in combination with software to make it easy to play music from playlists -- think podcasting. If I get, I would also get a device lke this , to stream audio to my home stero.
Verizon charges $40-$50/month for voice, but it probably doesn't make sense to commit to a plan because.
Skype for PocketPC is free. Skype calls to and from other skype users are free and calls to the phone system are only $.02 per minute more anywhere in the world! SkypeIn inbound calling will be available some time between the end of winter and July. They have said nothing about how much SkypeIn would cost, but I would bet it will be less than $10 per month because Vonage charges $15 and they both supply a physical device and provide 500 minutes for that price.
You can run Vonage on PocketPC today for $35/month fo unlimited. But that is not sufficiently less to me compared to Verizon's voice when you factor in verizon's voice coverage is stellar and its EvDO coverage is still fairly limited.
Note: All of this assumes that the service is reliable and it could be ultra-flakey. When I visited the local verizon store, the device was not able to get online so, as usual, YMMV.
In the comments to my post gloating about Iraqi democracy, Josh copies a comment reiterating that we Americans can't gloat about Iraqi democracy because they did not vote to enable us to gloat. The key line of that comment was "You do not own their courage."
I would agree that we who favored liberating Iraq and attempting to create democracy there do not own their courage. But, you should also remember that you who opposed this action do not own the terrorism they and we faced. Whenever anti-war folks argue that we are provoking terrorism or whenever people like Michael Moore argue that the terrorists are freedom fighters, they should remember that they don't own the terrorism and that making such statements only encourages more.
I keep hearing variants of this argument I received in email recently
it is arrogant and Pollyanna to think that we can just go forcing it on countries that are not ready or do not want it. At some point the people have to stand up and take it for themselves without help.
Countries don't have preferences. People have preferences. The way you ascertain those preferences is via free speech and elections.
It is certainly arrogant for dictators to force their rule on subject populations too weak to resist them, but they do so nonetheless.
It is therefore morally appropriate for us to protect the weak from such oppression. It is also incredibly ironic for pro-welfare state people to make arguments such as the one I quoted. They respond very differently when people say that the poor should help themselves rather than rely on government handouts.
Josh and others argue that the cost of protecting the weak is too high in the case of Iraq. However, it is difficult to maintain this stand and simultaneously argue that we went into Iraq out of self interest rather than morality e.g. for the oil.
And, by the way, if morality and self-interest are aligned, so much the better.
Alex Tabarrok quotes Bloomberg reporting that Bill Gates and Warren Buffet are shorting the dollar out of concern for US budget and trade deficits.
Far be if for me to disagree with Warren Buffet on investment, but US government debt is not particularly high from a historical perspective, and it is hard to argue that current spending is particularly inefficient. Instead it represents a major investment in securing Iraq that may be risky but that has a large security payoff if successful. The dollar may be going down because much of the market is taking the other side of the bet, but that is the bet nonetheless.
The trade deficit argument is more interesting because it reflects the marginal willingness of foreigners to invest in dollar denominated assets. On the one hand, China and Japan have major trade surpluses with us. On the other, they appear to be proping up the dollar by using those funds to invest in US assets . This behavior is apparently mysterious (especially in the case of China) until one realizes that both China and Japan have major problems with aging populations. Via MinuteMan , I found this report from Brookings
In summary, a global perspective suggests that the problem of population aging is easier to manage than is implied by the common focus on closed economies. Drawing a comparison to the US - for a long time we thought that New England was getting old, and California was young, and then a deal was struck between them: New England invested in California. Why shouldn't we think that the same process would occur globally?
In any case, there is no obvious crisis scenario here. Instead we have other places getting relatively more competitive for investment purposes.