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Playground Edition
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oh boy. here we go.
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All the internet anarchists and the lawyers/government are going to have a lot of interesting clashes the next decade in the courts about lots of new legal issues that are unique to the internet. Most of the laws dealing with the internet are pretty murky.
Lawrence Lessig has some good lectures on laws to keep internet culture free. http://lessig.blip.tv/#1447109 |
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wow - bazelon punts on everything and althouse seems way off form. weird how this format is so dependent on chemistry - unless two lawyers talking is inevitably fated to be internet chloroform.
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I'm not normally a big pedantic nerd but I noticed Bazelon misused the phrase 'begs the question' in the same way in her Slate column as she does here. Begging the question doesn't mean the same thing as raising the question. It simply means making a circular argument, so it doesn't really make sense to talk about what question it begs. Arguing "God must be infallible because the Bible says so, and the Bible's claim must be true because the Bible is the word of God" is an example of begging the question.
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The motto "In God We Trust" predates the Pledge to the Flag, the original version of the Pledge of Allegiance, authored in 1892.
See http://www.homeofheroes.com/hallofhe...fc_pledge.html for a detailed history of the pledge and it's modifications. IN GOD WE TRUST first appeared on the 1864 two-cent coin. The Act of May 18, 1908, made it mandatory on all coins upon which it had previously appeared. IN GOD WE TRUST was not mandatory on the one-cent coin and five-cent coin. It could be placed on them by the Secretary or the Mint Director with the Secretary's approval. The motto has been in continuous use on the one-cent coin since 1909, and on the ten-cent coin since 1916. It also has appeared on all gold coins and silver dollar coins, half-dollar coins, and quarter-dollar coins struck since July 1, 1908. from http://www.treas.gov/education/fact-...we-trust.shtml |
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Pledge of Allegiance
I have an intense dislike of the Pledge Allegiance - and the "under god" just made it worse. I have no allegiance to the flag. I honor and respect it as a symbol of this nation but I have no allegiance to it. My allegiance is to the United States and the Constitution - not to a symbol. In the pledge, the country is an afterthought - "I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America and to the republic for which it stands." Even if you were going to express some allegiance to the flag, I think the order is backward. The nation should come first. And where is any mention of the constitution?
What seems to be important in the presidential oath of office (straight from Article II, Section I of the U.S. Constitution) - Quote:
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How about the oath of citizenship (it has the "under god" crap too) - Quote:
I never will pledge allegiance to the flag. As for god, all those with an imaginary friend can talk to him whenever they want. |
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thprop:
Have you heard about Kentucky? I didn't used to care so much about the "under God"s and "so help me God"s, and I thought people who made a big deal out of them should find something more important to kvetch about. But it's become clear to me that sooner or later you have to stand up to the theocrats, because they will never stop pushing. |
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Thanks for that info, Jon.
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proof that Ann Althouse has never dined chez nikkibong:
http://bloggingheads.tv/diavlogs/162...2:37&out=22:41 |
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Hey, Ann has spotted your comment! :-)
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Theocratic Boosterism
Now I tend to expect such abysmal and appalling ignorance about the World's major religions from Ann, but I am a little surprised that Emily, too, would be so defective in her understanding of those traditions that she would fail to realize this fact:
Not all of the now-flourishing world (or U.S.) religions are theistic. When one forces "under God" onto little children, one does not merely disrespect atheists (who have nothing but disdain for spiritual beliefs in any case) but one also engages in government-sponsored warping of the minds of innocent Buddhist children as well. Buddhists, although deeply religious and ethical, completely reject the notion that the mind, the World, and the beings in it were either created by any god or are somehow now under the control or influence of any god. (They do teach that there are various levels of celestial rebirth in which one will indeed find the various gods of the theistic religions, both the angry ones and the benevolent ones, but those celestial rebirths are all seen as merely temporary, not associable with genuine spiritual perfection, and hence [like a Club Med vacation] are really not worth striving for.) Sorry to see both DV participants being so dim on such basic components of a liberal arts education, so dim that they just default into justifying the current theocratic power-mongering of the Sarah Palin contingent. I'd suggest both Emily and Ann should burn their undergraduate degrees as obviously undeserved false documents. I'm not really proposing that it's very strategic for the Left to get involved in this topic as it's politically radioactive. Far better would be if the wusses in the Supreme Court would simply do their duty and take on what they weaseled out of dealing with recently. If they took on the issue, "under god" would be dropped and the Pledge would be restored to its earlier form. (And the constitutionality of that document and forcing it on children every day is itself a big question, but for another day.) EW |
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Great post EW! Very well said. The whole thing reminds me of the "loyalty oaths" from Catch-22.
God bless you ;-) (from a Bu-curious, atheist) |
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Glad you weren't offended by my overly-sweeping surmise about atheists. Actually, I find that a fair number of them abide in a deeply-mystical frame of mind, just one in which they refuse to subscribe to the "chairman of the board in the sky" model so rabidly promoted by theistic traditions (which, btw, seem historically to be the sources of most of the world's violence.) I'm aghast that these two DV participants, both well-educated in the law, so blithely float along in this styrofoam analysis where they find exactly zero problem not only in endorsing the establishment of state-sponsored religion, but specifically in endorsing the establishment of one particular type of state-sponsored religion as dominant over and suppressive of other long-established religious traditions. So, no, I don't think their law degrees are worth anything, either. EW |
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...I'm not normally a big pedantic nerd but I noticed Bazelon misused the phrase 'begs the question' in the same way in her Slate column as she does here. Begging the question doesn't mean the same thing as raising the question. It simply means making a circular argument, so it doesn't really make sense to talk about what question it begs. Arguing "God must be infallible because the Bible says so, and the Bible's claim must be true because the Bible is the word of God" is an example of begging the question...
I can't resist this *pedantry*. You are right and wrong, imho. You are right that "begging the question" is misused when it conveys "we need another question answered" as opposed to assuming what you are arguing. But Ms Bazelon is correct here. When she says, once we have "Indian and Pilgrim dress up" on Thanksgiving we beg the question of their relationship, she is saying "by that dress up we already assuming the nature of the relationship, closing the circle on it so to speak, assuming the very thing that should be questioned--the nature of that relationship". After thought: "begging the question" for all its conventional meaning--it is a kind of quasi term of art--is not a bad metaphoric phrase for conveying the notion that "what you are saying demands (begs, cries out for, etc.) the answering of another related question". So this may be an instance when figuratively and semantically correct general use in the culture is overtaking a specific meaning enshrined in traditional use. Itzik Basman |
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On top of the religious issue, why does it have to be recited every day? Does the pledge lapse if not repeated? Maybe it should have the phrase "for the next 24 hours" inserted after "I pledge". Surely the very act of this repetition makes it a temporary allegiance. So I don't find the ritual very helpful and if it inculcates anything it is probably a profound understanding of hypocrisy, which might be a good thing wrt religion but might be more of a problem wrt the country. |
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Now, shall we take up the issue of whether you ought to have included a space in "After thought?" ;^) |
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I used to feel the same way about things like the Apostles' Creed, back in my churchgoing days. Not only does it seem ludicrous to have to reaffirm so frequently, but it also causes meaning to be lost. |
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boy, that worked out well. |
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I think it was my CCD demanding that I memorize the "Apollo Creed" at the age of 12 that, more than anything, pushed me towards the devout Atheism that I "practice" today.
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That just made me laugh out. Thanks.
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Also, now that I think about it: CCD -> OCD? |
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To the point of "juries gone wild", I am not a criminal, nor an American, lawyer, but if the accused had been anyone else besides O.J. Simpson--first conviction for a serious crime, robbery,committed kind of comically by the gang that couldn't shoot straight--he or she would not have gotten anywhere near, I am surmising, 33 years. To the extent that this was "payback" for his first acquittal, it is wrong, wrong, wrong. And that a judge sentenced him, not a jury, makes it even wronger. He should have, I would think, a good appeal, as to sentence.
It may be karma, but it's not justice. Itzik Basman |
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[Added] But see me reply to self. |
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I also think you're probably not right about the 33 years. That's the theoretical maximum. The article I linked to and others I have seen suggest it's more like 15, with parole possible after nine. One of Simpson's attorneys, from the same article, said it could have been a lot worse -- he could have gotten life. See here, for a breakdown of the sentencing. |
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Whenever famous people are involved things get screwy, and overzealous and perhaps vindictive prosecution is an issue here. But even in routine cases, prosecutors will often slap 10 absurd felony charges, where one will do, in order to plea bargain the case down to something the defendant can live with (as opposed to risking life in prison at trial). In this case, either they wouldn't plea bargain because they wanted to nail OJ, or he wouldn't take a plea because he's a bit of a lunatic. I'm inclined to think it's the former because his attorneys are not lunatics. Some of the charges are inclusive and suggest double jeopardy. For example, he was charged with robbery and assault. That's like charging a man who strangles his wife with murder and battery. Also, it was an all-white jury. I think the prosecutors probably covered their asses in jury selection, but it might raise a flag on appeal. The sentencing judge acted within the guidelines, although if you think of OJ a sixty-year-old man with ZERO prior convictions, the crime doesn't really seem to merit 15-33 yrs. There is a mandatory gun "enhancement" in Nevada, but again these "enhancements" are party favors for prosecutors and one of the reasons why we lead the world in incarcerations. |
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The prosecution of the case and its sentencing result illustrates a problem with electing judges and prosecutors. We don't have that in Canada, and by this judges and the prosecution are more immune from political considerations--no one is totally immune--and may be nearly entirely immune from political calculation, a more invidious thing in the administration of justice.
Itzik Basman |
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You're definitely right about the colloquial sense though. I just thought it was jarring seeing it in her print piece, like if she had written 'irregardless'. |
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And there I am content to leave it. Itzik Basman |
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As for patting yourself on the back about the supposed superiority of the Canadian way in general, though, let's just say, I wouldn't. I kid. I kid. |
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As for my patting myself on the back about the superiority of the Canadian system in general, even though you kid, you kid, I am doing no such thing of course--especially these days, as you note--and if I were to engage that question--which overall system is better-- which I don't think I could or would, I would be hard put to know where to start--perhaps the system which is more amenable to coups. Itzik Basman |
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In the ideal, we would not elect people to any position where particular expertise is paramount, be they judges, sheriffs, prosecutors, or whatever. I'd be interested to hear what sort of checks and balances you have in Canada to help keep appointments (relatively) free from problems like patronage. |
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Extract from a report:
1. In Canada, the Governor in Council appoints the judges of the Supreme Court of Canada and the Federal Court of Canada by letters patent under the Great Seal. 2. In Canada, the Parliament save the Prime Minister, who is the head of the executive branch, is not involved in the process of appointment of judges of the Supreme Court and the Federal Court. The Parliament has no power either to recommend candidates for such appointments or to review appointments once they are made. 3. The Prime Minister is responsible for making recommendations to the Cabinet of the appointment of the Chief Justice and judges of the Supreme Court and the Chief Justice of the Federal Court. Candidates are selected by the Prime Minister on the basis of investigations and consultations made by the Minister of Justice. 4. The Minister of Justice is responsible for making recommendations to the Cabinet according to the appointment of judges of the Federal Court. Qualified lawyers must apply in writing to the Commissioner for Federal Judicial Affairs for an appointment of judgeship of the Federal Court. Members of the legal community and all other interested persons can nominate eligible person for an appointment of judgeship of the Federal Court. 5. An Advisory Committee on Judicial Appointments is established in each province and territory to assess the qualified lawyer. Each committee consists of seven members of the bench, the bar and the general public. The Committees are asked to assess candidates on the basis of three categories - "recommended", "highly recommended" or "unable to recommend" for appointment. All Committees consultations and proceedings take place on a confidential basis. And a CBA paper if you wish to glance at it: http://www.cba.org/CBA/submissions/pdf/04-10-03-eng.pdf Itzik Basman |
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[Added] Where's an org chart when I need one? ;^) [Added] Found one. |
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