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Wednesday, November 8th, 2006

NOTE ON MACHINE VOTING


“I don’t care who does the electing, so long as I get to do the nominating.”

– William Marcy “Boss” Tweed

Boy, they really are an oddly designed piece of crap – though the machines used in Illinois, a least in my precinct, print an official paper ballot. While I voted in about a minute, the voters older than, say, 45, appeared bewildered by the computer format and took inordinately long to cast their ballot. I was bewildered by the bizarre hand-crank wheel user interface – who thought adding a feature from a Ford Model T to a voting booth was a good engineering choice ?

It would also seem that the ID code you need to enter coupled with the tear-off tab from the voters registration file pretty much would eliminate the secret ballot, if anyone cared to correlate the information. Maybe Dave can explain that feature to me ?

Tuesday, November 7th, 2006

READING ACROSS THE BLOGOSPHERIC SPECTRUM

Cheryl “CKR” Rofer had a kind word for me in a lively discussion in the comments section at American Footprints ( much appreciated Cheryl !) in a post by Blake Hounshell entitled “Who Reads the Right?”. It is a short post that sets up an intriguing dialogue, so here it is:

“A short post of mine yesterday on Tapped — asking “why read conservative blogs?” — spawned a pretty good discussion, with thoughtful contributions from Ben Adler and Sam Rosenfeld. Even K-Lo noticed that Sam labeled the Corner “the Conservative Id.” Ben and Sam agree that the Corner is a particularly good place to check the conservative “pulse”–a microcosm, if you will, of a movement gone off the rails. There seems to be consensus among Tapped readers that the thoughtful conservative blogs are those that have spit up the Kool-Aid and broken with the Bush administration. I read a few of these, such as Greg Djerejian, who has morphed from a tepid advocate to a must-read critic of Bush and his team (especially Rumsfeld). I don’t read the American Scene too often, also recommended by readers, but I was pleased to see that Ross Douthat had recently dealt with what he calls “the Conservative Cocoon.” So, do our readers here still check up on what they’re saying on that side of the ‘sphere? I know Eric does, but perhaps only when he’s looking for hanging curveballs?”

Some of the commenters were quick to recognize the danger of cocooning, a phenomenon that is as prevalent among bloggers as it is deleterious. It’s dangerous to read things that make you feel too comfortable – even if you are largely correct on some issue, it dulls your wits not to expose yourself to a different perspective. By ” perspective”, I mean political, philosophical, methodological, cultural and so on.

Most “big name” blogs, Right or Left, I read off of Memeorandum. My current favorite “liberal” or ” progressive” sites, BTW, include Whirledview, Prometheus6, Progressive Historians and Kevin Drum -most of Kevin’s commenters these days are parrots and trolls, but Kevin lost control of the mob a long time ago, so I don’t hold it against him. The price of popularity is an increase in the nut factor. Better discussions occur at smaller blogs.

Even diversifying the spectrum of political blogs you read still leaves you stuck in a “political” frame of mind, so I like to peruse blogs or sites dealing with the sciences, information technology, psychology, area studies, futurism and business. I particularly favor anything brain or network theory related and I sometimes cruise over to Gene Expression , NuSapiens and -increasingly –tdaxp for genetic/Ev psych commentary. After enough of this esoterica or equally abstruse miltheory 5GW discussions, I’m ready to return to my roots and read some undiluted historical writing.

If I had more online time, I’d make an effort to vary the domains I explore even more widely, but, alas, there are only so many hours in a day.

Monday, November 6th, 2006

GAMING THE ELECTION OUTCOME

Frankly, I have had difficulty mustering up the interest for this post.

Partly, this is due to my irritation with the Bush administration bungling Iraq and partly because I simply cannot discern which way the trends are actually going, beyond a general Democratic lead. With the media having overestimated the actual Democratic performance in 1994, 2000, 2002 and 2004, they have lost all credibility with me. Honest error swings in more than one direction, in terms of probability.

On the other hand, the Republican leadership has been so depressingly mediocre that they deserve to lose. If the GOP squeaks by short of total disaster it will have little to do with them and more to do with gerrymandering and the refusal of Democrats to offer anything new to the voters.

So, my guess, and I claim it is nothing more than that, is that come Wednesday it is a narrowly Democratic House ( 4-8 votes) and a deadlocked Senate – with control hinging on several bitterly contested elections where charges of voter fraud will be hurled and recounts ordered.

But I could be wrong.

Monday, November 6th, 2006

SUPEREMPOWERED GET-TOGETHER

I had the pleasure of lunch today with Lexington Green and Dave Schuler.

While Dave and I had gotten together on a prior occasion, Lex was kind enough to play host and it was a treat meeting him and his lovely family. It was very pleasant to while away a Sunday afternoon, discussing books, geopolitics, society and of course, blogging, over a few beers with two such interesting interlocutors. Each are easily as articulate and well-read F2F as their online personas might lead you to believe.

As we left, Dave and I joked that it might be good sometime to put together an informal Chicago area blog con. Given the nothing but positive experience I’ve had interacting with other bloggers, online or off, it’s something to think about.

UPDATE:

I see we’re not the only bloggers getting together. :O)

Sunday, November 5th, 2006

THE SENTENCE IS DEATH

Good.

In actuality, justice probably would have been rendered more effectively by a professional military tribunal. One that would have sentenced all of Saddam’s cohorts to hang as well but the American elite, even under the Bush administration, lacks the self-confidence it once possessed to bring monsters to justice ourselves. So we delegated that task to those for whom doing trying Saddam involved considerable risk.

But in the end, a better outcome than the interminable Milosevic trial but not a swift enough lesson serve as a historical example for others.

UPDATE:

The EU reacts with it’s usual ideological immaturity and moral blindness.


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