Today’s links to interesting news and analysis. If you find this useful, pass it to a friend or colleague.
- A look at one of the flaws in our dysfunctional Congress: “‘Holds’ in the Senate” Walter J. Oleszek, Congressional Research Service, 19 May 2008
- “The ‘Devastating’ Decision“, Ronald Dworkin (Prof of Law at NYU) , blog of the New York Review of Books, 26 January 2010 — “This the decision will further weaken the quality and fairness of our politics.”
- NASA”s new website opens with false propaganda: “NOAA’s new website climate.gov – a first day sin of omission“, Anthony Watts, Watts Up with That, 8 February 2010
- “Does Mating Competition Drive China’s High Savings Rate?”, Patrick Chovanec, 8 February 2010
- “Apostles of Nihilism“, Eliot Spitzer, Slate, 8 February 2010 — “Republicans are winning the war of political rhetoric. Here’s how the president needs to fight back.”
- “The Tea Partiers: Fraudulent Fiscal Conservatives“, Andrew Sullivan, blog of The Atlantic, 8 February 2010
- “If Marc Thiessen Doesn’t Want to be Compared to the He Should Stop Advocating Torture Techniques Used in the Spanish Inquisition“, Matthew Yglesias, ThinkProgress, 8 February 2010
- A bit of background for the above article: “No One Expects The Spanish Inquisition“, Matthew Yglesias, ThinkProgress, 8 February 2010 — Good news! We’re not as bad as the the S.I.
- Republicans love populist anger against banks, but oppose meaningful bank reform: “The Republican Party’s Requited Love for Large Banks“, Matthew Yglesias, ThinkProgress, 8 February 2010
- “Sarah Palin’s Storm at the Tea Party“, Fred Kaplan, Slate, 8 february 2010 — “Why haven’t responsible Republicans spoken out against her?”
Today’s features:
(A) About our Queen for a Day, Sarah Palin
(B) Dumbest thing I read today (crude fiction category)
(C) Quote of the Day: America is not yet lost
(D) Today’s Climate Science bulletin
(A) About our Queen for a Day, Sarah Palin
I find sad — even pitiful — that neither left nor right sees how they act in similar fashion, painting their hopes on empty suits. In return Obama and Palin act out the dreams of the audiences. Perhaps this is how our great nation dies, in delusion and folly. It would not be the first time in history.
(B) Dumbest thing I read today (crude fiction category)
“Obama is Succeeding“, Matthew Yglesias, ThinkProgress, 8 February 2010 — Does he expect anyone to believe this hyperbole? Excerpt:
“The Obama administration has also spearheaded a little-noticed but rather dramatic reform of K-12 education through its Race to the Top programme. … The result of this has been a tide of reform sweeping state legislatures all across the land, with restrictions on test-based assessment of teacher quality and arbitrary caps on charter schools falling by the wayside.”
(C) Quote of the Day
From: “America Is Not Yet Lost“, Paul Krugman, op-ed in the New York Times, 7 February 2010:
Today, by contrast, the Republican leaders refuse to offer any specific proposals. They inveigh against the deficit — and last month their senators voted in lockstep against any increase in the federal debt limit, a move that would have precipitated another government shutdown if Democrats hadn’t had 60 votes. But they also denounce anything that might actually reduce the deficit, including, ironically, any effort to spend Medicare funds more wisely.
And with the national G.O.P. having abdicated any responsibility for making things work, it’s only natural that individual senators should feel free to take the nation hostage until they get their pet projects funded.
The truth is that given the state of American politics, the way the Senate works is no longer consistent with a functioning government.
For more on this see: What comes after the Constitution? Can we see the outline of a “Mark 3″ version of the United States?, 10 November 2008
(D) Today’s Climate Science bulletin
This is not a question about which theory is correct, but rather about misrepresenting the climate science debate. “The science is settled” is a lie designed to stiffle public debate and blind us to actual research. Much has been made about articles suggesting a link between rising temperatures and droughts. As usual, contrary articles are ignored. Such as this…
“On the recent warming in the Murray-Darling Basin: Land surface interactions misunderstood“, Natalie Lockart et al, Geophysical Research Letters, 25 December 2009 — Abstract:
Previous studies of the recent drought in the Murray-Darling Basin (MDB) have noted that low rainfall totals have been accompanied by anomalously high air temperatures. Subsequent studies have interpreted an identified trend in the residual timeseries of non-rainfall related temperature variability as a signal of anthropogenic change, further speculating that increased air temperature has exacerbated the drought through increasing evapotranspiration rates. In this study, we explore an alternative explanation of the recent increases in air temperature. This study demonstrates that significant misunderstanding of known processes of land surface – atmosphere interactions has led to the incorrect attribution of the causes of the anomalous temperatures, as well as significant misunderstanding of their impact on evaporation within the Murray-Darling Basin.
Afterword
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