Saturday, April 28, 2012

Althouse

Althouse: "ant-bullying. Is that something done with a magnifying glass?"

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The Best Way to Be a Socialist | Cato @ Liberty

The Best Way to Be a Socialist | Cato @ Liberty: "Asked by Howard Stern if she supports President Obama, supermodel Elle MacPherson says:

Yeah, I’m living in London and I’m socialist. What do you expect?

No doubt it’s easier to be a socialist if you’re worth $120 million. And easier to support Obama if you live in London."

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Althouse: PJ Media's stupid effort to attack Obama through Derrick Bell's book "Afrolantica Legacies."

Althouse: PJ Media's stupid effort to attack Obama through Derrick Bell's book "Afrolantica Legacies.": " The American people have always been anxious to know what they shall do with us… . I have had but one answer from the beginning. Do nothing with us! Your doing with us has already played the mischief with us. Do nothing with us! If the apples will not remain on the tree of their own strength, if they are worm-eaten at the core, if they are early ripe and disposed to fall, let them fall! … And if the negro cannot stand on his own legs, let him fall also."

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Friday, April 20, 2012

Just ‘jump’ over debt—Frank J. Fleming - NYPOST.com

Just ‘jump’ over debt—Frank J. Fleming - NYPOST.com: "America is in a debt crisis because of overspending and a huge deficit, like a car racing toward a cliff.

So what do we do?

The tired conservative solution is to stop the car and turn around. That’s what conservatives always want: to make us go backward. Because what’s in the other direction from the cliff of debt? Limited government.

No, there’s another, bolder way to deal with the cliff ahead: Floor it and try to jump it like Evel Knievel."

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Cafe Hayek — where orders emerge

Cafe Hayek — where orders emerge: "Jobs does not come across as a monster. He comes across as a self-centered insensitive visionary whose self-centeredness, but not cruelty, hurts others. His self-centeredness is that of a child who never quite grew up. But he is a self-centered insensitive visionary that a lot of people want to be around. I have known many people like that–people who give little to others but they are so charismatic or successful, that people put up with their personal flaws."

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Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Steve Sailer's iSteve Blog

Steve Sailer's iSteve Blog: "As Orwell, liked to say, who controls the past controls the future. My in-laws were nice white liberals who tried to make integration work, not fleeing the West Side of Chicago until their children had been mugged three times. By trying, they wound up losing half their net worth and my late father-in-law ended up with a 126 mile commute to his job in the orchestra at the Chicago Opera House. But that kind of history is unappreciated, to say the least. "

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Monday, April 16, 2012

Man Finally Put In Charge Of Struggling Feminist Movement | The Onion - America's Finest News Source

Man Finally Put In Charge Of Struggling Feminist Movement | The Onion - America's Finest News Source: "McGowan claimed that one of the main reasons the movement enjoyed so little success in the past was that the previous management was often too timid and passive and should have been much more results-focused.

"You can't waste time pussyfooting around with protests and getting all emotional about a bunch of irrelevant details," McGowan said. "If you want to enjoy equal rights, you have to have a real man-to-man chat with the people in charge until you can hammer out some more equitable custody laws.""

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EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty

EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty: "I could be wrong, but I actually think that conservatism has an easier time handling dissent than liberalism. If your view is that there is a social good and that "we" know how to achieve it, at some point your willingness to put up with people who do not share your views becomes limited. For example, if someone wants to do without so-called health insurance, it is hard to be open-minded about it if you think their choice contributes to market failure."

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Friday, April 13, 2012

Derb and Discourse - By John O'Sullivan - The Corner - National Review Online

Derb and Discourse - By John O'Sullivan - The Corner - National Review Online: "To the best of my knowledge, however, no psychologist denies that I.Q. and other qualities (e.g., sexual orientation) are heritable and innate to some degree. It is a question of how much and therefore a matter of debate. And while that remains true — until the science is settled, so to speak — Derb’s position cannot be fairly characterized as racist even if it is a minority one and even if most of us hope it isn’t true. When it comes to scientific truth, hope has no standing in court."

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Derb and Discourse - By John O'Sullivan - The Corner - National Review Online

Derb and Discourse - By John O'Sullivan - The Corner - National Review Online: "Yet again, something worse is therefore needed to convict him. My colleague Jason Steorts thinks he has found it in his “readiness to assume that statistical differences between races — e.g., between their incarceration rates or average scores on IQ tests — are due to innate psychological and cognitive differences” and in his lack of interest in other explanations. This readiness strikes Jason as redolent of racism in itself but also perhaps a sign of a wider animus toward black Americans. Now, John certainly holds the view quoted by Jason. It is one of the main line-items in the indictment against him. Far from assuming it, however, he has argued it at length over a number of years.

But is such an opinion racist in itself? Surely that depends on whether it is true or not. And despite much Internet blustering about “discredited” theories and “pseudoscience,” lively scholarly disputes continue about the respective contributions to I.Q. and behavior of nature, nurture, and culture."

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Derb and Discourse - By John O'Sullivan - The Corner - National Review Online

Derb and Discourse - By John O'Sullivan - The Corner - National Review Online: "Lord, Lord, they cry, we thank thee that we are not as John Derbyshire. We are not racists. We burn daily sacrifices to the God of Diversity. But though they know that racism is an unforgivably evil sin, they can reach no agreement on what it actually is."

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Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Roger’s Rules » Thoughts on Things You Cannot Say

Roger’s Rules » Thoughts on Things You Cannot Say: "That’s not the whole answer, though. “There is nothing more painful to me … than to walk down the street and hear footsteps and start thinking about robbery, then look around and see somebody white and feel relieved.” That was Jesse Jackson. What John wrote was an elaboration of that observation. I do not happen to agree with many of his conclusions in that column, but what I find curious is the nature of his tort."

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Monday, April 9, 2012

Would I Take Resveratrol? Would You?. In the Pipeline:

Would I Take Resveratrol? Would You?. In the Pipeline:: "First off, we can dispose of the "it's in food already, and it's natural, so why worry?" line of thinking. Strychnine is all-natural too, as are any number of other hideous molecules that are capable of terrible effects, so that's no defense at all - it never is. And as for being exposed to it already, that's true - but the dose makes the poison, and the dose makes the drug."

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Sunday, April 8, 2012

PJ Media » Round Three in the Trial of Lars Hedegaard

PJ Media » Round Three in the Trial of Lars Hedegaard: "I should have the right to prove my case. I could have called witnesses. I could have quoted holy books and statements, and I could have referred to facts.  But you cannot do that in a court of law in Denmark if you are accused under this infamous Article 266(b). Whether or not what you are saying is true is immaterial.  If somebody feels offended or if the prosecutor thinks that somebody has a reason to feel offended, whether or not you speak the truth has no bearing on the case. That is what is surprising about Danish jurisprudence. "

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The Corner - National Review Online

The Corner - National Review Online: "Let no one lament persistent failings, for forgiveness has risen from the grave.

Let no one fear death, for the death of our Saviour has set us free.

The Lord has destroyed death by enduring it. The Lord vanquished Hell when he descended into it. The Lord put Hell in turmoil even as it tasted of his flesh."

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Friday, April 6, 2012

Ryan Gosling | Laurie Penny | Taxi | The Daily Caller

Ryan Gosling | Laurie Penny | Taxi | The Daily Caller: "Even oft-insufferable New York Magazine columnist Jonathan Chait writes that Penny is “one of those leftie-types so sanctimonious they make you want to vote Republican out of sheer spite.” "

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Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Procreation vs. Overpopulation : The New Yorker

Procreation vs. Overpopulation : The New Yorker: "Barring infertility or other complications—and despite the best efforts of Rush Limbaugh and Senate Republicans—couples today, at least in the U.S. and the rest of the developed world, can determine how many children they will have—five, four, three, two, one, or zero."

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Completely made up.

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Professors Amar ’84 and Levinson To Debate: Does the Text of the Constitution Matter? | Yale Law School

Professors Amar ’84 and Levinson To Debate: Does the Text of the Constitution Matter? | Yale Law School: "Yale Law Professor Akhil Reed Amar ’84 and Visiting Professor Sanford V. Levinson will debate “Orthodoxy or Orthopraxy: Does the Text of the Constitution Matter?” on Tuesday, Dec. 6, from 12:10 p.m. to 1:45 p.m. in Room 120. The debate is free and open to the public, with lunch provided. It is part of the monthly “Debating Law & Religion” series.

In their debate, they will consider American constitutionalism, asking: Is it an orthodoxy based on the text of a document drafted in 1787, or is it defined by our constitutional practices where the text merely sustains constitutional discourse but does not define it? "

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Monday, April 2, 2012

I'm now fairly confident the ACA will be struck down as unconstitutional. What do I buy or what do I short to make money on this information?

Sunday, April 1, 2012

The Volokh Conspiracy

The Volokh Conspiracy: " do students who receive large admissions preferences “catch up” with their peers over their college years? This ties into an important premise of many preference programs – i.e., that the rich resources of an elite university will help to phase out prior preparation gaps between students of different races. Aggregate data at Duke suggested that the GPA gap across racial groups was, indeed, narrowing as college progressed, from over half-a-point black/white GPA gap in the first semester, to less than three-tenths of a point by the eighth semester.

Using data gathered by the university, Arcidiacono et al found that this narrowing was illusory. Courses taken by juniors and seniors were graded very leniently, and, more importantly, students who had bad grades in their freshmen year migrated in large numbers from STEM fields and economics to other majors, which generally had easier grading. When one adjusted for these effects, the relative achievement level of different groups was unchanged over the course of college. Thus, there was no silver lining to offset the science mismatch effect."

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The Volokh Conspiracy

The Volokh Conspiracy: "On Friday I discussed a body of research – all of it uncontroverted – that documents a serious flaw in affirmative action programs pursued by elite colleges. Students who receive large preferences and arrive on campus hoping to major in STEM fields (e.g., Science, Technology, Engineering and Math) tend to migrate out of those fields at very high rates, or, if they remain in those fields, often either fail to graduate or graduate with very low GPAs."

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Sunday Reflection: Don't blame Verrilli: Hard to defend the indefensible | Washington Examiner

Sunday Reflection: Don't blame Verrilli: Hard to defend the indefensible | Washington Examiner: "In Lopez, the government wanted to argue that possession of a firearm near a school could be regulated as interstate commerce, because guns in school might lead to violence, which would lead to worse education, which would lead to dumber graduates, which would lead to a less productive national economy, which would mean less interstate commerce."

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Sunday Reflection: Don't blame Verrilli: Hard to defend the indefensible | Washington Examiner

Sunday Reflection: Don't blame Verrilli: Hard to defend the indefensible | Washington Examiner: "As P.J. O'Rourke famously said, when buying and selling are controlled by legislation, the first things to be bought and sold will be legislators."

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Not-So-Smooth Operator - WSJ.com

Not-So-Smooth Operator - WSJ.com: "The constitutional law professor from the University of Chicago didn't notice the centerpiece of his agenda was not constitutional? How did that happen?"

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