Monthly Archives: March 2006

Creative Commons License Enforceable in the Netherlands

Via GROKLAW, the news that a Dutch court has become one of the first to rule on the validity of a Creative Commons License — and it held it was valid and enforceable.

This isn’t surprising, but it is a significant milestone for Creative Commons.

Posted in Law: Copyright and DMCA | 1 Comment

A Great Speech in an Odd Place

Over at Crooks and Liars they have a clip from a TV law drama, Boston Legal, in which one of the lawyers makes a nearly pitch-perfect speech about the ways in which this adminsitration has lied, screwed up, and trampled on dissent.

Alan Shore (James Spader) from Boston Legal gives one of those great monologues that we all wished would be said by somebody other than a great actor. … Video-WMP Video– QT longer version 5 min  (video appears to be a little choppy)  Audio–MP3

This clip raises so many questions:

  • Who knew they let you say this stuff on TV?
  • If it’s going to be on TV why in fiction?
  • And why not on, say, a Sunday talk show? (Oh, that’s why?)
  • If the writers of this show are going to make a dramatic political point, why have it be in service of so dubious (and unrealistic) a cause — trying to get jury nullification for a (strangely photogenic) tax protestor?
  • If stuff like this becomes a staple of TV shows, does that mean the Rove show has jumped the shark?
Posted in The Media | 1 Comment

Back From the Beyond

Something brought down my shared server today, and it had to be rebooted. Apologies for the downtime. What happened is completely opaque to both me and the tech support; the only mildly suspicious item in my recent logs is 627 recent access requests from 200.189.80.121, a Brazilian ISP. I don’t have that many readers in Brazil, as far as I know.

But that alone really shouldn’t have been enough to bring everything to a screeching halt.

Of course, it could have been something done by one of the people with whom I share the machine.

Posted in Discourse.net | 2 Comments

It’s Got Me Mystified

It’s clear there’s a lot I need to learn about how people feel about religion — especially other people’s religions.

Personally, other people’s religious beliefs don’t threaten me except for the ones that incite people to violence or to unconstitutional legislation. (And, please, let’s not get into historical debates about precisely which religious sects that might be…). Thus, for example, I got myself into a little trouble last week by suggesting that during the stike UM classes might meet in near-by local religious establishments, including a local Catholic church. It seems that, contrary to my expectations, a small but appreciable minority of our students would be troubled by this, although I don’t know if it’s because, being church goers, they object to the profanation of the church’s common room (it’s not the main sanctuary, but I don’t know if that was clear at the time), or if they belong to a different tradition and would find entering a Catholic church in some way uncomfortable. Incidentally, since this same space is our local precinct’s polling station, and I and everyone in this neighborhood have been voting there for years, if it’s true that there’s something off-putting about the space we have a bigger problem than where to hold classes…

Which brings me to my complete mystification about this post at TalkLeft: Jerry Falwell: Jews and Muslims Can’t Go to Heaven:

Jerry Falwell gets further and further out there. His latest knucklehead theory is that Jews and Muslims can’t go to heaven.

While I am a strong supporter of the State of Israel and dearly love the Jewish people and believe them to be the chosen people of God, I continue to stand on the foundational biblical principle that all people — Baptists, Methodists, Pentecostals, Jews, Muslims, etc. — must believe in the Lord Jesus Christ in order to enter heaven. -Jerry Falwell

Blogger Jason Weisberger at Just Plain Bother has co-opted Falwell’s comments and urges you to click here and demand Falwell apologize.

Eh? “Knucklehead theory”? “Apologize”?

First off, this is hardly some new theory of Falwell’s: as I understand it, it’s pretty much routine, main-stream, evangelical Protestantism. And it’s not limited to Jews and Moslems: many evangelicals, including I’d suspect Jerry Falwell, believe that because only those ‘born again’ can go to Heaven, it follows that Catholics, not being ‘true Christians’, are excluded too (or damned, if you prefer). And many undoubtedly would say the same about members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Unitarians, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Hindus, Buddhists, Sikhs, and Scientologists.

Second, Falwell is surely entitled to believe whatever he wants about what it takes to get to Heaven. And to preach it. So long as he isn’t threatening anyone with violence in this life, nor asking the state to impose any disabilities on them, nor seeking for special government cash or legal status for his own church and faithful, why on earth should he have to apologize for professing his faith, even if might offend Jews, Moslems, Catholics, Mormons, Quakers, Buddhists and many others?

And anyway, why should people of other faiths be offended? Or even care? If some people believe something about an afterlife which happens to differ from my beliefs, what difference is it to me — so long as they neither try to speed me towards the afterlife nor try to limit me in the enjoyment (or even propagation) of my own views in this one? Not being part of his flock, Falwell’s views on the afterlife simply have no relevance to me. Isn’t letting him preach them the essence of the First Amendment bargain?

But evidently this is not as widely shared a view as I would have expected and hoped.

Posted in Law: Free Speech | 8 Comments

Spies in Our Midst

American Civil Liberties Union Releases First Concrete Evidence of FBI Spying Based Solely on Groups’ Anti-War Views.

Posted in Civil Liberties | Comments Off on Spies in Our Midst

Bush Bird Flu Plan: Tuna Under the Bed

The Bush administration unveiled its bird flu plan for the US this weekend. And you can’t make this stuff up,

ABC News: Ready or Not, Bird Flu Is Coming to America: In a remarkable speech over the weekend, Secretary of Health and Human Services Michael Leavitt recommended that Americans start storing canned tuna and powdered milk under their beds as the prospect of a dealy bird flu outbreak approaches the United States.

See, if everything breaks down and the government isn’t ready, there aren’t enough ventilators, it was your own fault for not listening to their warnings.

Yesterday New Orleans, tomorrow the nation.

Posted in Science/Medicine | 8 Comments