“If I were a Democrat, I’d be very worried about 2016.”
If this is the best she has to offer, they should be. Because she imagines the traditional smoke and mirrors will work in the 21st century.
“If I were a Democrat, I’d be very worried about 2016.”
If this is the best she has to offer, they should be. Because she imagines the traditional smoke and mirrors will work in the 21st century.
…is very Heinleinian.
Many people may find this disappointing. Indeed, punishing those who engage in offensive expression is perennially popular because it gives the impression that we’re “doing something” about the problem of racism, sexism and bigotry. In France, for instance, Holocaust denial has long been illegal, and just this year the country arrested more than 70 people for praising the Charlie Hebdo terrorist attack. France has put real teeth into laws that punish offensive speech.
Yet according to the Anti-Defamation League, 37% of the French harbor anti-Semitic opinions. In the U.S. — which, thanks to the First Amendment, has never banned Holocaust denial or hateful speech — that number is 9%, among the lowest in the world. While this comparison can’t capture all the differences between the two nations, it strongly suggests that punishing expression is no real cure for bigotry, and refusing to punish hateful speech does not lead inevitably to its spread.
Censorship isn’t necessary for those who are confident in the truth of their views. It’s a signal of insecurity and displays a fear that if an idea is allowed to be expressed, people will find that idea too attractive to resist. Somehow, college administrators are convinced that if they don’t officially punish racism, their students will be drawn to it like moths to a flame. But there’s simply no reason to expect that. Given the history of campus activism in our nation from the civil rights movement onward, there are myriad reasons to expect the opposite.
The solution to bad speech is more speech. And, as Instapundit notes, it’s not surprising that a Democrat doesn’t understand (or care about) the Constitution.
Asche Schow has eighteen questions.
They all seem pretty reasonable to me, assuming that she’s a presidential candidate.
Ron Fournier, on the other hand, only three questions (like the three rules of real estate, though with some others): “What are you hiding? What are you hiding? What are you hiding?”
Maybe, after all these decades of criminality and corruption, the media is finally turning on her.
[Update a few minutes later]
Voters have Hillary concerns.
As well they should.
[Update a couple minutes later]
The press conference threatens to be a media fiasco.
That’s probably the intent.
[Update after the big event]
— Sean Davis (@seanmdav) March 10, 2015
That didn't take long: https://t.co/BrKRKgxA6u
— Rand Simberg (@Rand_Simberg) March 10, 2015
[Update a few minutes later]
Here’s a pretty good live blog of the trainwreck.
An analysis from Richard Epstein.
Why wasn’t this astonishing, large error of basic astrophysical calculations caught billions of dollars ago, and how much has this error affected the results of all modeling studies in the past?
The paper adds to hundreds of others demonstrating major errors of basic physics inherent in the so-called ‘state of the art’ climate models, including violations of the second law of thermodynamics. In addition, even if the “parameterizations” (a fancy word for fudge factors) in the models were correct (and they are not), the grid size resolution of the models would have to be 1mm or less to properly simulate turbulent interactions and climate (the IPCC uses grid sizes of 50-100 kilometers, 6 orders of magnitude larger). As Dr. Chris Essex points out, a supercomputer would require longer than the age of the universe to run a single 10 year climate simulation at the required 1mm grid scale necessary to properly model the physics of climate.
But let’s get a carbon tax, right now!
This is breathtaking, in a way. And this is what they want to teach our kids.
So just which one was it she cracked, again?
But she flew hundreds of thousands of miles!
One of the Israeli political parties isn’t quite clear on the concept.
I don’t know whether to laugh or cry.
I’m sure you’ll be as shocked, shocked as I am to learn that there are huge temporal gaps in them. Because, you know, “most transparent administration in history.” Just like with the IRS.
Hey, it’s not like it’s eighteen minutes, like Nixon.