Sep 18 2009

Newsflash: Mass murderer weeps when confronted with own mortality

Published by Andy under news

tania

The Daily Beast has a short excerpt from Ann Louise Bardach’s Without Fidel: A Death Foretold in Miami, Havana, and Washington. I enjoyed reading Cuba Confidential, and I will probably pick this up once I’m done with the juggling act of Moneyball and The Ascent of Money. Though I didn’t find anything new in the excerpt. Well, except for that whole Fidel-Castro-crying-after-his-surgery part:

After a life-saving colostomy was performed, Castro was deeply distraught. “Fidel was crying,” said a source who was present in the hospital. “He cried several times that first day. He was devastated.” Castro may well have been put on dialysis, as kidney failure is not uncommon in such surgical mishaps.

I honestly couldn’t care less about that. I’d much rather Castro face death stoically like Saddam Hussein and just die already, than get all weepy but continue to haunt the Cuban people.

Having said that, it is kind of funny to imagine that dirty beard with tears all over.

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Jun 16 2009

Everything is political

Published by Andy under news

My favorite argument used by judges has to be the claim that they personally think a law they’re reviewing for its constitutionality is absurd, but that it’s outside their power to overturn it. An excellent example is Justice Stewart referring to the law in Griswold banning contraceptives as an “uncommonly silly law,” but then refusing to overturn the law because he didn’t share the majority’s view that the Constitution created some degree of privacy protection. I think either Scalia or Thomas, or both, used the device in the sodomy case, Lawrence v. Texas, as well as in several other cases.

This is a very useful tool for judges because they can seemingly uphold very stupid laws and build up their liberalism street cred in the process. And in that, it is extremely self serving. What’s more emblematic of the liberal judge than someone who can cooly put aside his political preferences, especially when they’re in direct opposition to his legal instincts? Or as Duncan Kennedy puts it,

The essence of individualism is the making of a sharp distinction between one’s interests and those of others, combined with the belief that a preference in conduct for one’s own interests is legitimate, but that one should be willing to respect the rules that make it possible to coexist with others similarly self-interested.

The judge, as the agent of the state, must be able to not only respect “the rules that make it possible to coexist with other similarly self-interested,” and tolerate views that are jurisprudentially opposed to his, he must also neglect his or her individualism and have no preference at all.

But we know that this is an unattainable goal. To perceive is to judge, and no judge is really unbiased. We know that everything is subjective, including judges’ “objectivity.”

(For the most part, modern journalism worships a similar false idol, often by sacrificing quality for the sake of “objectivity“.)

Even though liberalism sees itself as having no orthodoxy, except the freedom of each person to choose his/her version of the good life, that in itself is an orthodoxy. The claim that liberalism makes no distinction is simply false because liberalism prefers liberalism, and that is a substantive judgment.

This is I suppose my–admittedly late–response to those who seek to seek to gain politically by highlighting Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor’s biases. Of course, Sonia Sotomayor is no more biased than any other judge.

However, the claim that everything is political doesn’t get us very far. When the Critical Legal Studies devotees say “everything is political” they mean “everything is political.” So what follows from this? “The ultimate goal is to break down the sense that legal argument is autonomous from moral, economic, and political discourse in general,” says Kennedy. But this is merely a descriptive goal—a call to some degree of awareness—even if some CLS academics would not agree. Critical Legal Studies basic disdain for current institutions has not been followed up with any normative proposals.

The awareness is an important one, especially because it immediately makes us suspicious of societies or enterprises that proclaim themselves to be above politics. I say societies specifically because the story that sent me on this whole rant was the response of the Cuban national assembly to the U.S. Supreme Court’s refusal to review the case of five Cuban spies convicted in Federal Court. (Ever since the spies were captured and tried, Cuba has used them in an aggressive anti-American political campaign, and refers to the them as the “five heroes.”)

Reacting to the Supreme Court denying review of the spies’ case, the Cuban Assembly said, “The judges did what the Obama administration asked them to do.” The Cuban national assembly knows that the president of the United States has no influence over the cert process, just like the Justices above knew those laws were stupid. But the Cubans are playing a different game–politics.

The official line of the Cuban government is that Cuba is a society above politics, above the bickering, and the culture wars. But of course it isn’t. If anything, the Cuban government is more political than most governments, and certainly more political than democratic governments. It thrives on conflict and enmity. The difference between Cuba and societies with overt political attitudes is a healthy system of critical review, where generally only those with fringe followers, like the Glenn Becks and the Rush Limbaughs say stuff so outside the norm.

So, don’t believe it when they tell you politics shouldn’t factor into an enterprise because, really, everything is political. And whoever tells you otherwise is probably just playing politics.

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Mar 22 2009

“This was a factory, now it’s all mountains and rivers”

Published by Guest under analysis, commentary, news

“We caught a rattlesnake, now we got something for dinner.”

Well, happy Sunday afternoon to all of you out there with nothing better to do. I’ve spent all of Sunday working–so consider this a break.

The issue de jour seems to be the Marlins being closer than ever to getting a stadium. I’m a supporter of the stadium, even if the deal is flawed. But my biggest concern with it has more to do with the lack of corresponding commitment to either include a mass transit connection to the stadium in the deal or even at a later time. But at least it’ll include some bicycle certification. I’m a huge cyclist, but I have to admit I rarely ride as a form of transportation.

But Eye on Miami would rather the city spent more money on urban gardens. I generally agree politically with Eye on Miami, but I really don’t like this idea. I want nothing to do with farming–urban or otherwise. The kibbutz life is not for me. And having been born in Cuba, I automatically distrust anybody trying to sell me an agrarian society as progress.

Oh yeah, Glenn Garvin doesn’t like that Fidel and Raul Castro didn’t make it on some Worst Dictators list, then blames it on the media elites.

That’s not necessarily true for most average Americans, who mostly mind their own business and wish everybody else would do the same. The United States was founded, after all, in a fit of libertarian resistance to the arbitrary whims of a king.

But the chattering classes bred by a society increasingly built around mass communications — intellectuals, social engineers, policy wonks and the journalists who flit about their margins — are a different matter.

Damn you effete media elites. Damn you to hell!

Let’s see what else we got here.

Oh yeah, Miami Herald Publisher David Landsberg assures advertisers: Ignore everything you’re reading on the interwebs. The Miami Herald isn’t headed for bankruptcy. It’s just a minor economic adjustment–nothing to do with a flawed and outdated business plan.

It’s true we are living in difficult economic times. While we work to manage these challenges, The Miami Herald’s commitment to you will not change. You can count on it.

Oh yeah, he signed it, too. That tells the world he’s not fucking around.

And finally, I’m listening to the new Neko Case album now, and it’s great, but not as good as Fox Confessor Brings the Flood. Go and buy it–NOW.

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Mar 03 2009

The Times reports on “old man” taking a walk

Published by Adrian under news

The New York times has picked up the story of Castro’s recent strolling. Rumors have been going around about el Comandante’s renewed vigor, but apparently the first one to notice was Hugo Chávez:

President Hugo Chávez of Venezuela, a close friend of Mr. Castro, first disclosed in a speech last week that the former Cuban leader had emerged from the hospital and had begun walks through Havana. “Fidel went out and they saw him, Fidel walking in the streets in Havana,” Mr. Chávez said. “A miracle. The people cried.”

You know, I believe him when he says that.

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Feb 19 2008

Castro retires

Published by Guest under commentary, news

Yeah, I know the title to this post sounds casual, but that’s exactly what happened today. After being at the helm one of the most destructive and insidious dictatorships in the Western Hemisphere for nearly 50 years, Castro bid adieu in a letter to the editor, and secured a transition of power–a victory of sorts in a continent and an era when rulers like Castro generally met less illustrious ends.

There is strong evidence that the new Cuban junta will need to implement some changes, and gradually modernize the country’s government. The new de facto leader, Castro’s brother Raul, has almost conceded the need to reform large parts of the economy. Beyond that, it is practically inconceivable that the new junta–devoid of Castro’s impelling charisma–will be able to continue to rule so effectively without making concession.

Today’s announcement is another reminder of the abject policy failure that is the U.S. embargo against Cuba. As long as Castro ruled, the United States provided a convenient windmill for him to turn into monsters. The embargo never weakened Castro’s government, in fact, it became a rallying cry for misguided, self-destructive leftists in Cuba and the rest of Latin America, and it metastasized Castro’s hold on power.

(I can imagine that today some of the more fanatical proponents of the embargo on Cuba will try to frame today as a victory for their cause, but the assertion would only make sense if you’re willing to believe an economic embargo can cause an intestinal illness.)

Today is a bittersweet experience for Cubans–yeah, I know that’s a cliché. It marks the beginning of the end of 50 years of dictatorship. But it also means that the man who engineered so much suffering–in Cuba, Latin America, and even Africa and Asia–will never see trial.

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Mar 19 2007

La Revolución y Errol Flynn

Published by Guest under news

I found this video on the CBC website while looking around for a special on Cuba I heard on the radio today. In 1959, Errol Flynn went to Cuba to experience The Revolution first hand. It appears that it was big news at the time–Flynn in Cuba, that is–because on Jan. 13, the day of this broadcast, one of the panelists immediately mentions it. I’d never heard anything about it.

During the interview, Errol Flynn says that Fidel Castro, who he considered a friend, would go on to “rank in history as one of the greats.” Well, he was right about the first part. I was also amazed by how in 13 short days, the world already knew Castro was a criminal. One of the panelists asks Flynn about summary executions in Cuba. Flynn denies Castro authorized or had any knowledge of them.

Oh Errol, you can’t swing out of this one on a chandelier.

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