Monthly Archives: January 2004

Comment Spam

As the blog gets more popular (yay!) I'm getting increasing amounts of comment spam (boo!). I installed the Mt-blacklist plugin, but I don't update the list religiously and as far as I can tell it doesn't update itself. And the things that got through today (e.g. http://www.drugsexperts.com/ and http://hair-loss.hair-loss-cure.net/) were not on my five-day-old list. Is there some way — even a chron job? — to pull down a master list somewhere Out There and automagically merge it with my existing one?

Posted in Discourse.net | Comments Off on Comment Spam

David Abraham on the US Guest Worker Proposal

My erudite colleague David Abraham, himself a guest worker at Princeton this semester, has a great column at the top of the New York Times op-ed page today, American Jobs but Not the American Dream.

In it, he persuasively describes the Bush proposal as “a classic guest worker program on the European model” and then sets out all the ills that flow from adopting guest worker programs — “drawbacks [that] far outweigh their advantages.”

Among the problems — large foreign low-wage populations tend to create ghettos; once people set down roots, they don't want to go home; making residence depend on employment tends to create opportunities for exploitation by the employer; the US's lack of strong labor unions makes this problem likely to be even worse here than it was in European countries such as Germany that tried the guest worker concept.

And, as David so eloquently put it,

President Bush has clearly expressed his intention to put employers in charge: guest workers will be selected by employers and will be able to remain in the United States only so long as they stay with the employer who brought them. This is a sure recipe not only for the exploitation of these “guests” but also for the depression of American wages generally, especially among those who can least afford it — many of them immigrants.

The United States has always been a “welcoming country,” as the president said, “open to the talents and dreams of the world.” But this plan is an abandonment of America's ideals, not an expression of them. It values immigrants' talents over their dreams. Instead of hope, it offers them simply a job.

Posted in Law: Everything Else | 1 Comment

Paranoia Strikes Deep in the Heartland

The Register: “A mother's enquiry about buying Microsoft Flight Simulator for her ten-year-old son prompted a night-time visit to her home from a state trooper.”

No comment necessary.

Posted in Civil Liberties | 6 Comments

HarrisForSenate

So it seems Katherine Harris may run for Senate — she's certainly being coy like a candidate although CNN is dubious.

We can only hope. In which connection it's amusing to see Whois records on HarrisForSenate domains.

Continue reading

Posted in Internet | Comments Off on HarrisForSenate

Top Reason I’d Seriously Consider Moving Elsewhere for a New Job

EdWeek—Florida K-12 schools get a D+ for adequacy

Found via FlaBlog who notes mordantly,

Average annual rate of change in expenditures per pupil, adjusted for inflation (1991-2001) — Minus 0.4%

Posted in Florida | Comments Off on Top Reason I’d Seriously Consider Moving Elsewhere for a New Job

Some Utterly Tactical Tax Policy Advice for Dr. Dean

The Dean campaign now faces its moment of truth as to whether to continue on the path that it began, or shift into a traditional campaign. Oddly the tax issue seems to be the possible Rubicon. Here's a four-point plan to regain the initiative on the issue.

Note: what follows is a purely tactical analysis. I make no claim in what follows as to the substantive validity of the tax policies discussed.

Almost every 'insurgent' political campaign that has hit it big in the past 50 years has gotten cold feet and gotten so cautious and mainstream that it alienated part of its base without getting much traction with swing voters. This certainly happened to the John Anderson campaign and the McCain campaign. It famously didn't happen to Goldwater or McGovern, which is why it keeps happening since then.

Personally, I think that while shifts to the center are ok, obvious pandering ones are not. Thus, any move has to be stage managed very carefully, or it ends up costing you more than you get.

The justly praised New Yorker profile of Dr. Dean suggested that Joe Trippi at least understands (understood?) this:

Last summer, Joe Trippi told U.S. News & World Report that he had given Dean a curious piece of advice: “I tell him the only way he can win is to believe in his heart he cannot win. We’ve got to act like we have nothing to lose.” That, as they say, was then. When I asked Dean, in mid-October, whether he still subscribed to the Trippi wisdom, he replied, “In part. I think the problem with the Democratic Party in general is that they’ve been so afraid to lose they’re willing to say whatever it takes it to win. And once you’re willing to say whatever it takes to win, you lose—because the American people are much smarter than folks in Washington think they are. Do I still believe it? I think you have to be ready to move forward and not just try to hold on to what you’ve got. I truly believe that if you’re not moving forward you’re moving backwards in life. There’s no such thing as neutral.”

But compare that line to the distilled conventional wisdom chatter in today's The Note [unstable link!]:

The Boston Globe's Glen Johnson and Michael Kranish elucidate the apparently evolving nature of Dean's thoughts on tax cuts. LINK

“Rival campaigns seized on the statements by Dean and his aides as evidence that he is 'flip-flopping' on his tax plans. They also said it is inconsistent with his relentless criticism of them for wanting to retain the middle-class elements of the Bush administration tax cuts. But Dean aides defended the evolving policy.”

“The governor has always said that he is going to offer a tax plan that is fair and simple for working families. He's never ruled out a middle-class tax cut. The plan is not complete yet,' Dean campaign spokesman Douglass Thornell said as Dean and his entourage flew back to Vermont from Iowa.”

Los Angeles Times' Matea Gold reports that the potential shift (or alleged shift) comes “as he has fielded criticism from some of his rivals for wanting to roll back the entire $1.7-trillion Bush tax cut package, a move opponents say would burden working people.” LINK

In a story about Dems and tax cuts, The New York Times ' Robin Toner Notes Dean's “sudden scrambling” on the issue. LINK

That doesn't sound so good.

So, here's my four-point plan as to what to do and how to spin it.

Continue reading

Posted in Politics: US | 4 Comments