A comprehensive round up from the invaluable Cathy Young.
Category Archives: Social Commentary
The Biggest Thing To Remember About Katrina
It was the criminally bad journalism throughout, in which shifting blame away from the failures of the local Democrats in Baton Rouge and New Orleans to the Bush White House, rather than factual reporting of what was actually happening, was the priority.
But don’t expect to see any retrospective in the media about that.
#TrumpBible
A lot of people, including Yours Truly, had fun on Twitter this week.
"Blessed are the rich in spirit. The poor are a bunch of losers and chumps." — #TrumpBible
— Rand Simberg (@Rand_Simberg) August 26, 2015
The Real Problem With SFF
It’s not the Puppies, it’s the monoculture.
Though I think another big problem is that it has one too many “F”s.
The Timothy Hunt Witch Hunt
I don’t think I’ve ever commented on this, but almost three months later, it’s pretty clear now what happened, and there’s a good description over at Commentary. His treatment was shameful:
Like most of the science journalists who covered Hunt’s solecism, Zadrozny and Ferguson were content to rely on a handful of tweets as the only evidence in an obviously controversial story. Sadly, the Hunt affair provides ample ammunition for those who believe Internet reporters are a tribe of third-raters with little or no ethical standards or training in Journalism 101.
But there’s another explanation for the fact that reporters such as Zadrozny and Ferguson felt no obligation to verify the facts of the case or do any old-fashioned reporting. In their cases, the temptation to cut journalistic corners may have been overwhelming. That’s because for anyone with an ax to grind about gender equality or sexism in science, this was one of those stories that the tabloids used to label (jestingly for the most part) “too good to check.”
Kudos to Louise Mensch on exposing this initially. I’d also note that my respect for Deborah Blum has plummeted.
[Update a few minutes later]
And then there’s this burn:
The most generous interpretation of Connie St. Louis’s bizarre behavior is that she was too intellectually limited to recognize irony that was somehow obvious to an audience composed mostly of people who spoke English as a second language. A leak of the unedited version of her “Stop Defending Tim Hunt” piece for the Guardian is so garbled and incoherent that this actually seems plausible, though it also makes you wonder how and why she came to be teaching journalism even at a third-rate institution like London’s City University.
The science journalism community has not covered themselves in glory here.
[Update a few minutes later]
Then there’s this:
One of the more depressing aspects of the affair has been the number of clever and influential people, not all of them women, who have stated that even if Hunt was joking, he still deserved to be punished. These people genuinely believe that jokes about alleged differences between the sexes are beyond the pale—the cause of anti-sexism, like that of anti-racism, being simply too important or too fragile to tolerate subversive humor.
This “even if they’re innocent they deserve to be punished attitude” is not a new one. Christina Hoff Sommers documented it in her book in the nineties, in which in 1991, Catherine Comins at Vassar (who, sadly, may be a childhood friend of mine, though I’ve never seen a bio) said: “Men who are unjustly accused of rape can sometimes gain from the experience.”
The Virginia Shootings
This is what I’ve been tweeting this morning.
There's never a good time to call for gun control because it's always a bad idea. https://t.co/qJitSn3J95
— Rand Simberg (@Rand_Simberg) August 26, 2015
FYI Legal gun ownership is up in Detroit, with the blessing of the new police chief. Murder/burglary rate is down. http://t.co/gSIgcs7OeL
— Rand Simberg (@Rand_Simberg) August 26, 2015
@TheEconomist The numbers are so small that any "trend" is statistically meaningless. https://t.co/fbG4f3sZxY
— Rand Simberg (@Rand_Simberg) August 26, 2015
@TheEconomist According to your stats, Americans had a one in a million chance of being involved in a mass shooting last year. What crisis?
— Rand Simberg (@Rand_Simberg) August 26, 2015
[Afternoon update]
As usual, the White House lies about “gun violence.”
Space Advocacy
This post is a few days old, but I didn’t link it at the time. I think that Keith is right. It’s largely been a failure, and will probably continue to be. We have to make it profitable.
Punching Back Twice As Hard On Campus
Instapundit has some good advice for a fraternity under siege:
(1) Immediately complain to the Department of Education and the Department of Justice that you’re being targeted because of your race and sex, and denied your First Amendment rights. No, nothing will come of this, but that’s not the point. The process is the punishment. (2) Sue on the same grounds. (3) The real killer: Go to the Virginia Legislature and tell them they should cut Old Dominion’s budget. Come prepared with figures on the number of administrators on campus now, versus 10 and 20 years ago. File freedom of information requests and get the travel expense figures for the folks in the administration. Look over them for suspicious and large expenditures. (You’ll find them!) Make a big stink about those.
Administrative bloat leads to large numbers of “student life” educrats without enough to do, so they’ve created a quasi-police-state to fill the time. State legislators are looking for things to cut anyway, and higher ed doesn’t have the clout it used to have. This will hurt them more than anything else you can do.
I would love to see that happen.
Income Inequality And Poverty
No, they’re not the same thing. And Glenn makes a good point: “Notice how little we hear about ‘wealth inequality.’ There’s a lot of untaxed wealth in foundations, university endowments, family trusts, etc. A populist who wanted to put Democrats on the spot might propose taxing that. You know, for the common good. Only working stiffs have more income than wealth.”
[Update a few minutes later]
The plan to further enrich the wealthy left at the expense of the middle class.
And yes, there probably is nothing more corrupt, both in the US and internationally, than the environmental movement.
The Heroes On The Train
Fear is contagious. So is courage.
Also, who should we trust: Officials, or ourselves?
And no, we shouldn’t extend TSA to trains. We should get rid of it on airplanes.