Monthly Archives: August 2006

A Parsimonious Theory

I had to link to this for the headline, even more than the content, Is Dick Cheney a Sith Lord?

Posted in Politics: US | Comments Off on A Parsimonious Theory

That’s a Defense?

Senator George Allen has a notoriously dubious history, one that pretty strongly suggests that he’s some kind of racist. Given that history, what is one to make of his explanation for yesterday’s antics?

You can see the film of Sen. Allen making at least a xenophobic if not racist comment about an aide to Democratic challenger Jim Webb — the clip is embedded in the Washington Post’s description of the gaffe, Allen Quip Provokes Outrage, Apology. S.R. Sidarth, a volunteer with the Webb campaign, was dogging the Allen campaign when Sen. Allen called the him a “macaca” — presumably a derogatory reference to either his dark skin or his Indian ancestry.

OK. That’s pretty dumb. On camera. But what really caught my eye was how the Allen campaign reacted to reporters’ questions.

Step one: “Allen’s campaign manager dismissed the issue with an expletive and insisted the senator has “nothing to apologize for.”

Step two: when it becomes clear this isn’t going away. Issue a statement described as an apology:

“Not many people in southwest Virginia would think it is derogatory,” Griffith said. “I didn’t have a clue what it meant, and I doubt Allen did, either.”

That’s right — one of the names often mentioned as a leading right-wing presidential candidate is explaining away his offensive remarks by saying he goes around giving public speeches saying stuff he doesn’t “have a clue what it meant.” (The other part, suggesting that people in a part of the state not noted for progressive racial views wouldn’t have a problem isn’t exactly an apology either.)

George Allen not only admits he doesn’t have a clue, he admits he says stuff he doesn’t understand.

Nah. Looks to me that the George Allen of old — the guy who used to affect a racist redneck persona, the guy who kept not just a Confederate flag but a noose in his office — got down to southern Va. and let down his hair. He relaxed among the good ol’ boys — Mr. Sidarth was the only dark face in the crowd — and let it rip.

Posted in Politics: US: 2006 Election | 4 Comments

Grant McCracken on How to Have a Good Holiday

I didn’t really have the greatest summer ever. It sounds as if Grant McCraken, on the other hand, did.

This Blog Sits at the: Your next vacation: I have an idea for your next vacation.

Phone Saida at Saros Research in London and set up ethnographic interviews with 10 people in London.

It sounds strange, I’m sure. Who wants to play anthropologist on their holidays?

Well, if the object is to penetrate the barrier that stands between every tourist and country/culture, ethnographic interviews are really very usful.

Russell Davies and I (with the help of people attending Russell’s Account Planning School of the Web) were recently wrestling with the idea of cruise ships, those suburbs of the sea, and it occured to me that almost all touristic experience has the quality of cruise ship containment. We may get off the ship from time to time, but the closest we are getting to the host country is a shop filled with touristic chakahs that play out stereotypes and help extinquish the possibility of cross culture contact.

I do these interviews for a living. But I am suggesting that you do them for the sheer fun of it. On a recent trip, I found Londoners fascinating on several topics, including how dinner parties are changing in London, the difference between lager andstout, what is the deal with Manchester United, anyway, when and how to use one’s best “telephone voice,” gardening the Tony Blair way, and how English audiences received The Da Vinci Code (in some cases, with audible and enthusiastic scorn, apparently).

You will have to pay these people about 100 pounds each to sit for the interview. But it’s bargain, I’m telling you.

And we both went to London….

Posted in Blogs | Comments Off on Grant McCracken on How to Have a Good Holiday

TSA Policy Change: Connect the Dots

Is it just possible that there is a connection between today’s report that TSA Screeners Will Replace Contractors at U.S. Airports for ID inspections and the campaign by Ed Hasbrouck to find out the legal authority under which non-TSA workers demand ID?

Posted in Law: Right to Travel | 3 Comments

I Need to Get More Cynical

When my spouse suggested a similar theory over breakfast the other day — noting the odd coincidence between the Lamont victory and the news that Terrorism Is Back — I was skeptical, noting that the investigation had, after all, been going on for a year.

I have got to get more cynical in time for the next election.

Source: U.S., U.K. at odds over timing of arrests. NBC News has learned that U.S. and British authorities had a significant disagreement over when to move in on the suspects in the alleged plot to bring down trans-Atlantic airliners bound for the United States.

A senior British official knowledgeable about the case said British police were planning to continue to run surveillance for at least another week to try to obtain more evidence, while American officials pressured them to arrest the suspects sooner. The official spoke on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the case.

In contrast to previous reports, the official suggested an attack was not imminent, saying the suspects had not yet purchased any airline tickets. In fact, some did not even have passports.

… At the White House, a top aide to President Bush denied the account. … Another U.S. official, however, acknowledges there was disagreement over timing.

Posted in 9/11 & Aftermath | 4 Comments

Failing our Neighbors in St. Bernard Parish

The National Journal’s Jonathan Rauch has some compelling reporting about what’s doing in St. Bernard Parish, right next door to New Orleans — and the answer in Struggling To Survive is “not nearly enough”.

After that has thoroughly depressed you, visit the sidebar in which Jon argues that the root problem is largely bureaucratic:

Is St. Bernard Parish’s bureaucracy fatigue incurable, treatable with smarter bureaucracy, or susceptible only to fundamental reform? The answer is yes — partially — to all of the above.

So is this the administration’s fault? I’d say even if Jon is right that the statutory climate is unhelpful, there’s a lot more that could be done if the line officials were more empowered to get results — and felt that they would get in more trouble for doing nothing than for doing th wrong thing. And that would come only if they got the right sort of direction from the top.

But who remembers New Orleans nowadays?

Posted in Unspeakably Awful (Katrina) | Comments Off on Failing our Neighbors in St. Bernard Parish