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  <title>thinkuming</title>
  <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.literatepackrat.com/blogs/thinkuming/" />
  <modified>2005-03-21T17:41:10Z</modified>
  <tagline>soapbox musings of a literate packrat</tagline>
  <id>tag:www.literatepackrat.com,2005:/blogs/thinkuming//2</id>
  <generator url="http://www.movabletype.org/" version="2.661">Movable Type</generator>
  <copyright>Copyright (c) 2005, thinkum</copyright>
  <entry>
    <title>Excerpt from minnow1212&apos;s blog</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.literatepackrat.com/blogs/thinkuming/archives/000753.html" />
    <modified>2005-03-21T17:41:10Z</modified>
    <issued>2005-03-21T12:41:10-05:00</issued>
    <id>tag:www.literatepackrat.com,2005:/blogs/thinkuming//2.753</id>
    <created>2005-03-21T17:41:10Z</created>
    <summary type="text/plain">I remember reading a review of My Big Fat Greek Wedding once, where the author talked about how in a marriage between people from two different cultures, both cultures have...</summary>
    <author>
      <name>thinkum</name>
      
      <email>thinkum@snurcher.com</email>
    </author>
    <dc:subject>Social Order</dc:subject>
    <content type="text/html" mode="escaped" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.literatepackrat.com/blogs/thinkuming/">
      <![CDATA[<p>I remember reading a review of <i>My Big Fat Greek Wedding</i> once, where the author talked about how in a marriage between people from two different cultures, both cultures have traditions to bring to the table. And yet in many fictional representations--I forget whether the author said Greek Wedding did this well or badly; nor have I seen the movie--there's this conception that it's the side perceived as more ethnic that carries all the traditions, that the more mainstream culture is beige and blah, a blank slate to be written over. Which ends up being sort of patronizing to both sides, really, ignoring any richness in the more mainstream culture and making the more ethnic culture seem quaint and cute.</p>

<p>[<a href="http://www.livejournal.com/users/minnow1212/190871.html" target=new>original article</a>]</p>]]>
      
    </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>internal passports are next</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.literatepackrat.com/blogs/thinkuming/archives/000653.html" />
    <modified>2004-09-22T17:33:21Z</modified>
    <issued>2004-09-22T13:33:21-05:00</issued>
    <id>tag:www.literatepackrat.com,2004:/blogs/thinkuming//2.653</id>
    <created>2004-09-22T17:33:21Z</created>
    <summary type="text/plain">I don&apos;t know whether I&apos;m more frightened, or angry, about this latest attack from Big Brother....</summary>
    <author>
      <name>thinkum</name>
      
      <email>thinkum@snurcher.com</email>
    </author>
    <dc:subject>Social Order</dc:subject>
    <content type="text/html" mode="escaped" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.literatepackrat.com/blogs/thinkuming/">
      <![CDATA[<p>I don't know whether I'm more frightened, or angry, about this latest attack from Big Brother.</p>]]>
      <![CDATA[<p>Airlines Told to Turn Over Passenger Data</p>

<p>Government Ordering Airlines to Turn Over Passenger Data to Test Terrorist Screening System</p>

<p>The Associated Press</p>

<p>	<br />
WASHINGTON Sept. 22, 2004 - Information on passengers who took a commercial flight within the United States in June will be turned over to the government so it can test a new system for identifying potential terrorists. </p>

<p>People will have a chance to tell the government what they think about the plan during a 30-day comment period, federal officials said on Tuesday.</p>

<p>A previous plan was met with an overwhelmingly negative response. The proposed system, which cost $103 million, would have assigned a risk level to all airline passengers based on comparisons of their names with commercial databases. That plan was scrapped because of privacy concerns and technological issues.</p>

<p>Now, the Transportation Security Administration hopes to learn from its experience. The agency is pledging to protect passengers' privacy and taking steps to make sure the system is technologically feasible.</p>

<p>Privacy advocates and the airlines are skeptical.</p>

<p>"There are many people who are still going to find themselves in no-fly hell," said Barry Steinhardt, director of the technology and liberty program at the American Civil Liberties Union.</p>

<p>The TSA plans to order air carriers to turn over the information in November. Passenger names will be checked against watch lists maintained by the Terrorist Screening Center, which is administered by the FBI, as part of a new screening system called "Secure Flight."</p>

<p>Those lists include names of people to be selected for additional screening, known or suspected terrorists, and people prohibited from flying because they pose a direct threat to aviation.</p>

<p>Airlines currently check passenger names against watch lists. Because intelligence information is classified, however, airlines don't have access to names of all known or suspected terrorists. The Sept. 11 commission, in its July report, urged the government to take over the task of checking the lists.</p>

<p>Justin Oberman, who heads the TSA office that's developing Secure Flight, said he hopes the program can be implemented by spring.</p>

<p>Air Transport Association spokesman Doug Wills said airlines are reviewing the plan and will comment formally later.</p>

<p>Air carriers, he said, support the Secure Flight concept as a "smarter way to separate the good guys from the bad guys."</p>

<p>They still have the same problems that they had with the previous plan about privacy and mechanics of the plan, said Wills, whose group represents major airlines.</p>

<p>The airlines will have 30 days to comment on the proposed order, which Congress gave the TSA authority to issue in post-Sept. 11, 2001, laws. Air carriers will then have 10 days to turn over data called "passenger name records."</p>

<p>The amount of data in passenger name records varies by airline, but it typically includes name, flight origin, flight destination, flight time, duration of flight, seat location, travel agent and form of payment. It can also include credit card numbers, travel itinerary, address, telephone number and meal requests.</p>

<p>The ACLU's Steinhardt said the system is too intrusive.</p>

<p>"Why is it necessary for the TSA to know that you've ordered a kosher meal, or who you're sleeping with in your hotel room?" he said.</p>

<p>Steinhardt said the system still will allow people to be misidentified as potential terrorists, as some are now.</p>

<p>For example, Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., and Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., were stopped at airports because people with their names appeared on watch lists. Kennedy said it took him three weeks and several calls to federal officials to clear up the confusion.</p>

<p>The TSA plans to set up procedures by which passengers can correct misinformation and by which civil liberties and personal data can be protected.</p>

<p>Privacy advocate Marcia Hofmann said that's something that should have been done already.</p>

<p>"Many of these privacy measures that the TSA talks about are purely discretionary," said Hofmann, staff counsel for the Electronic Privacy Information Center. "The agency can provide them at the agency's will."</p>

<p>The TSA also will conduct a limited test in which they'll compare passenger names with information from commercial databases to see if they can be used to detect fraud or identity theft.</p>

<p><br />
[<a href="http://abcnews.go.com/wire/Politics/ap20040922_286.html" target=new>original article</a>]</p>]]>
    </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Book Rec: Peter F Hamilton</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.literatepackrat.com/blogs/thinkuming/archives/000599.html" />
    <modified>2004-08-31T14:01:51Z</modified>
    <issued>2004-08-31T10:01:51-05:00</issued>
    <id>tag:www.literatepackrat.com,2004:/blogs/thinkuming//2.599</id>
    <created>2004-08-31T14:01:51Z</created>
    <summary type="text/plain">Subject: Re: Morrison watch in effect From: &quot;Steve Brooks&quot; Newsgroups: alt.tv.farscape &gt;&gt; [1] A Quantum Murder by Peter F Hamilton. The least good of the Greg &gt;&gt; Mandel books IMO...</summary>
    <author>
      <name>thinkum</name>
      
      <email>thinkum@snurcher.com</email>
    </author>
    <dc:subject>Words</dc:subject>
    <content type="text/html" mode="escaped" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.literatepackrat.com/blogs/thinkuming/">
      <![CDATA[<p>Subject: Re: Morrison watch in effect<br />
From: "Steve Brooks" <steveb@postmaster.invalid><br />
Newsgroups: alt.tv.farscape</p>

<p>>> [1] A Quantum Murder by Peter F Hamilton. The least good of the Greg<br />
>> Mandel books IMO - But still pretty entertaining.<br />
><br />
> Haven't come across any of those - should I add him to my "new<br />
> authors to try someday" list?  Is there a particular title you'd<br />
> recommend as the first to read?</p>

<p>I'm not sure really. It depends what you like. With Hamilton you're probably<br />
better to start at the beginning since his ideas have grown over the years.</p>

<p>There's a bibliography at</p>

<p>http://www-users.cs.york.ac.uk/~susan/sf/books/h/hamilton.htm</p>

<p>I've read the Greg Mandel books, the Night's Dawn books and 'Fallen Dragon'.<br />
And I do like them. But -</p>

<p>They are - IMO - a bit mannish. The technical ideas are excellent and<br />
intriguing.  The plots are mostly good. The Greg Mandel books are excellent<br />
SF thrillers. Night's Dawn is rather more ambitious and works more often<br />
than it doesn't. The prose is above average - but not by a huge amount. The<br />
characterisation is less impressive. A lot of the time I don't really<br />
believe in his characters. And I certainly don't like most of them.</p>

<p>But he is definitely growing as an author. Give him another decade and he<br />
might just do something exceptional.</p>]]>
      
    </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Infected In Record Time</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.literatepackrat.com/blogs/thinkuming/archives/000562.html" />
    <modified>2004-08-19T20:59:56Z</modified>
    <issued>2004-08-19T16:59:56-05:00</issued>
    <id>tag:www.literatepackrat.com,2004:/blogs/thinkuming//2.562</id>
    <created>2004-08-19T20:59:56Z</created>
    <summary type="text/plain">So when was the last time your Mac actually contracted a virus?...</summary>
    <author>
      <name>thinkum</name>
      
      <email>thinkum@snurcher.com</email>
    </author>
    
    <content type="text/html" mode="escaped" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.literatepackrat.com/blogs/thinkuming/">
      <![CDATA[<p>So when was the last time your Mac actually contracted a virus?</p>]]>
      <![CDATA[<p>If you've only been a member of Macville for a few years, the odds are pretty good you just said "never"; if you've been around long enough to have used, say, System 7 extensively, maybe you caught one or two over the years.  We're not counting Microsoft Office macro viruses, of course, which technically aren't Mac viruses, since they infect Microsoft's cross-platform macro engine and anyone who's used Mac Office in a Windows-type environment probably got hammered with six or eight of those infections a day.  But those aside, actual Mac virus infections are almost ridiculously rare, and that's something to keep in mind for the next time people are making you say what you're thankful for before they'll let you at the turkey and stuffing.</p>

<p>After all, consider how bad things are for the "standard platform"; if you pulled a brand new Windows XP system out of its boxes, set it up, and plugged it into the Internet, how long do you think it'd survive before it got infected with something or other?  Well, faithful viewer Ulmanor forwarded us a CNET article in which researchers at the Internet Storm Center claim that "an unpatched Windows PC connected to the Internet will last for only about 20 minutes before it's compromised by malware."  And while that will only surprise you if you've had your head stuck in a bucket of concrete for the past couple of years, you still might find the sheer absurdity a little tough to come to terms with.  After all, this is a pristine Wintel PC, fresh out of the box, connected to the Internet and then left to do nothing-- no surfing to dubious porn sites, no running illicit peer-to-peer software, no other just-asking-for-it sort of behavior.  Nothing.  Could it really be compromised in twenty minutes, just by sitting there?</p>

<p>According to the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, the answer is a big fat "Yuh-huh."  Perhaps skeptical of the twenty-minute infection claim, the school decided to try the experiment for itself; it put two unpatched Windows systems on the 'net, and voilà-- "both were compromised within 20 minutes."  So apparently this is a real metric and not just some sensationalistic scare tactic.  (Not that there's anything wrong with that; some of our best friends are sensationalistic scare tactics.)</p>

<p>Note that just last year, the average infection time for a 'Net-enabled, unpatched Wintel system was apparently forty minutes, which doesn't bode well for 2005; if we're looking at a linear progression, here, next year an unpatched Wintel will become infected as soon as that network cable is plugged in and the link light goes green.  By 2006, Wintels will contract viruses twenty minutes before they're connected.  And by the end of the decade, the very act of purchasing a Wintel PC will result in the buyer himself coming down with cholera, syphilis, and the plague before he can get the thing into the trunk of his car.  Yeah, yeah, "Service Pack 2," "Longhorn"-- whatever.  Mark our words, people will be dissolving into goo in the aisles of Best Buy before the decade's out...</p>

<p></p>

<p>[<a href="http://www.appleturns.com/episode/?date=08/18/2004" target=new>original article</a>]</p>]]>
    </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Women docs &apos;weakening&apos; medicine</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.literatepackrat.com/blogs/thinkuming/archives/000519.html" />
    <modified>2004-08-02T20:06:42Z</modified>
    <issued>2004-08-02T16:06:42-05:00</issued>
    <id>tag:www.literatepackrat.com,2004:/blogs/thinkuming//2.519</id>
    <created>2004-08-02T20:06:42Z</created>
    <summary type="text/plain">I don&apos;t know which aspect of this angers me more - the concept of women &quot;weakening&quot; a profession, or the snobbish assertion that medicine, as a profession, is entitled to...</summary>
    <author>
      <name>thinkum</name>
      
      <email>thinkum@snurcher.com</email>
    </author>
    <dc:subject>Social Order</dc:subject>
    <content type="text/html" mode="escaped" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.literatepackrat.com/blogs/thinkuming/">
      <![CDATA[<p>I don't know which aspect of this angers me more - the concept of women "weakening" a profession, or the snobbish assertion that medicine, as a profession, is entitled to maintain some above-average level of sociopolitical influence.</p>]]>
      <![CDATA[<p><b>From the BBC</b>:</p>

<p>A top female doctor has warned the medical profession's influence could be damaged by the number of women choosing to be medics. </p>

<p>Women doctors are expected to outnumber men within a decade. </p>

<p>But Professor Carol Black, president of the Royal College of Physicians, told the Independent that could affect how the medical profession was seen. </p>

<p>She said she believed female-dominated professions such as teaching no longer saw themselves as "powerful". </p>

<p>She added: "We are feminising medicine. It has been a profession dominated by white males. What are we going to have to do to ensure it retains its influence? </p>

<p>"Years ago, teaching was a male-dominated profession - and look what happened to teaching. I don't think they feel they are a powerful profession any more. Look at nursing, too." </p>

<p>Professor Black added: "In Russia, medicine is an almost entirely female profession. </p>

<p>"They are paid less and they are almost ignored by government. They have lost influence as a body that had competency, skills and a professional ethic. </p>

<p>"They have become just another part of the workforce. It is a case of downgrading professionalism." </p>

<p>Professor Black added: "What worries me is who is going to be the professor of cardiology in the future? Where are we going to find the leaders of British medicine in 20 years' time?" </p>

<p>She added women were unlikely to take top jobs, such as the dean of a medical school, because of the difficulties combining them with family life. </p>

<p>Professor Black warned many women avoided more "demanding" areas such as cardiology. </p>

<p>She said medicine had to face up to the problem and find ways of helping women doctors balance work and family. </p>

<p>Professor Black told BBC News Online: "I think it's a good thing that women are choosing the medical profession, but the problem is how to make it possible for them to be really effective. </p>

<p>"At the moment, women aren't going into specialties that are the more demanding. So we need to look at how those specialties are practised." </p>

<p>Professor Black warned that, in order for the medical profession's to retain its status, senior doctors needed to serve on government committees and regulatory bodies. </p>

<p>She said such as late night meetings would simply not be possible for women with children, unless they were given extra support with childcare and flexible hours. </p>

<p>"I think most women, although not all, want the opportunity to have a family. </p>

<p>"That may mean they won't perhaps be able to be as flexible as men who don't in a post." </p>

<p>She said she was pleased she was able to highlight the problem because of her position. "It's something that's very difficult for a man to say." </p>

<p>Dr Maureen Baker, honorary secretary of the Royal College of GPs, said it was "perfectly reasonable" to expect the status of any profession to be upheld by its workforce. </p>

<p>"Furthermore, if a higher ratio of men or women working within a profession is deemed to be reducing its status then there is a problem with the very way society views the abilities of the sexes," she said. </p>

<p>A spokeswoman for the British Medical Association said: "We would not want to see a return to the old quota system of admitting women to medical school - the BMA believes in equality of access and opportunity. </p>

<p>"However we agree with Professor Black that there is an under-representation of women at the most senior levels of medicine and medico-politics and we would like to see this changed." </p>

<p>And John Bangs of the National Union of Teachers said: "I would by no means agree that teaching views itself as a less powerful profession, and I find that a very concerning view." </p>

<p>He added: "If you have an all female profession, whether it be medicine or teaching, it means that the pool from which you're selecting those people is smaller than it should be."</p>

<p><br />
[<a href="http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/3527184.stm" target=new>original article</a>]</p>]]>
    </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Another reason to love firefighters.</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.literatepackrat.com/blogs/thinkuming/archives/000486.html" />
    <modified>2004-07-14T18:37:31Z</modified>
    <issued>2004-07-14T14:37:31-05:00</issued>
    <id>tag:www.literatepackrat.com,2004:/blogs/thinkuming//2.486</id>
    <created>2004-07-14T18:37:31Z</created>
    <summary type="text/plain">You would think that after all these centuries, people living in a First World country would have evolved past the point of superstitious stupidity. But no, there are still idiots...</summary>
    <author>
      <name>thinkum</name>
      
      <email>thinkum@snurcher.com</email>
    </author>
    <dc:subject>Social Order</dc:subject>
    <content type="text/html" mode="escaped" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.literatepackrat.com/blogs/thinkuming/">
      <![CDATA[<p>You would think that after all these centuries, people living in a First World country would have evolved past the point of superstitious stupidity.  But no, there are still idiots in Iowa (and other states, I have no doubt) who think that book burning is righteous act and a moral duty.  In all likelihood, these are the same brain-atrophied individuals who rant and rave about religious fanatics and zealots in the MiddleEast, steadfastly refusing to recognize their own faces in the mirror.</p>

<p>I support their right to burn books.  I can't believe in the democratic process, free speech, and general tolerance if I don't.  But that won't change the fact that they're small-minded religious bigots, nor that I find it enormously funny that the fire codes, of all things, have proven such a stumbling block (see original article, attached to continuation of this entry).</p>]]>
      <![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.cnn.com/2004/US/Midwest/07/12/no.book.burning.ap/" target=new>CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (AP)</a> -- A church's plan for an old-fashioned book-burning has been thwarted by city and county fire codes.</p>

<p>Preachers and congregations throughout American history have built bonfires and tossed in books and other materials they believed offended God. </p>

<p>The Rev. Scott Breedlove, pastor of The Jesus Church, wanted to rekindle that tradition in a July 28 ceremony where books, CDs, videos and clothing would have been thrown into the flames.</p>

<p>Not so fast, city officials said.</p>

<p>"We don't want a situation where people are burning rubbish as a recreational fire," said Brad Brenneman, the fire department's district chief.</p>

<p>Linn County won't go for a fire outside city limits, either. </p>

<p>Officials said the county's air quality division prohibits the transporting of materials from the city to the county for burning.</p>

<p>Breedlove said a city fire inspector suggested shredding the offending material, but Breedlove said that wouldn't seem biblical.</p>

<p>"I joked with the guy that St. Paul never had to worry about fire codes," Breedlove said.</p>

<p>The new plan calls for members of the church to throw materials into garbage cans and then light candles to symbolically "burn" the material.</p>]]>
    </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Go &apos;way</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.literatepackrat.com/blogs/thinkuming/archives/000479.html" />
    <modified>2004-07-09T13:22:05Z</modified>
    <issued>2004-07-09T09:22:05-05:00</issued>
    <id>tag:www.literatepackrat.com,2004:/blogs/thinkuming//2.479</id>
    <created>2004-07-09T13:22:05Z</created>
    <summary type="text/plain">Attn: Free Staters: thanks, but no thanks. Supporting freedom means not imposing your views, ethics, or politics on the existing population. We like our towns, and our state, just fine...</summary>
    <author>
      <name>thinkum</name>
      
      <email>thinkum@snurcher.com</email>
    </author>
    <dc:subject>Social Order</dc:subject>
    <content type="text/html" mode="escaped" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.literatepackrat.com/blogs/thinkuming/">
      <![CDATA[<p>Attn: Free Staters: thanks, but no thanks.  Supporting freedom means not imposing your views, ethics, or politics on the existing population.  We like our towns, and our state, just fine the way they are.  Kindly go away.  I'm sure they'd love you in Wyoming; there's plenty of room out there for you to move in and set up shop without pissing off the locals.</p>

<p>[The <a href="" target=new>inciting article is here</a>, or click the "Continue reading" link below for the article's text.]</p>]]>
      <![CDATA[<p>Free State Porcupine Festival draws mixed crowd to Lancaster</p>

<p>BEVERLEY WANG<br />
Associated Press</p>

<p>LANCASTER, N.H. - They mill around the campsite dressed in shorts, T-shirts, socks and sandals, talking about freedom, how much they love New Hampshire and when they plan to move here.</p>

<p>"New Hampshire if you'd have me, I'd love to call you home, You have everything I need to rest my mind and bones," sings John Connell as he strums his guitar at a campfire.</p>

<p>Connell, 46, is visiting New Hampshire's mountainous north country for the Porcupine Freedom Festival, which is expected to be the largest-ever gathering of Free State Project members. Campground owner Crosby Peck said Free Staters booked 40 campsites and 26 motel rooms. Many other Free Staters came as day visiters.</p>

<p>"I'm probably the luckiest Free Stater because I'm close to the job," said Connell, who moved from Salem, Mass., to Salem, N.H., in March. The move was so short, he was able to keep his job at a chemical factory. "I'm not an anarchist. I do believe there are functions of government."</p>

<p>Wyoming was the runner-up in the free-state voting.</p>

<p>Between talks on gun laws and the future of the their movement, Free Staters bond over hikes and campfires. A dance is planned for Saturday night.</p>

<p>Cynthia Grossen, 28, drove from Lansing, Mich., to attend the Porcupine Festival. "I consider myself pretty normal" said Grossen, a computer programmer. She said she may move to New Hampshire if the Free State Project reaches its membership target. "All I have to offer is I'm a young person, hard working. I want to have a good life."</p>

<p>Are these the gun-toting, marijuana-smoking, prostitution-loving libertarians planning to take over New Hampshire?</p>

<p>Attracted to New Hampshire's low crime, low taxes and "Live Free or Die" slogan, Free State Project members last year chose New Hampshire as the best place to create a society with fewer laws and smaller government. They have been welcomed by Craig Benson, the state's Republican governor. Benson was the keynote speaker at a New Hampshire Liberty Alliance banquet Friday, which many Free Staters attended.</p>

<p>But others have not greeted them so warmly.</p>

<p>Critics of the Free State Project have highlighted what they believe are inappropriately close ties between Benson and libertarians. Two libertarians hold advisory positions in state government.</p>

<p>They also are alarmed by some of the project's goals, such as the decriminalization of marijuana and other "victimless crimes," as well statements about slashing government and social programs.</p>

<p>"One of the goals they have set forth is to cut state government by two-thirds," said Paul Johnson, a member of the citizens group, Democracy for N.H. "They have an incredibly narrow perspective of government that rules out anything that has to do with the greater good."</p>

<p>But Free State founder Jason Sorens, a Yale University political scientist, said the movement has nothing to do with control.</p>

<p>The Free State Project "invites us to imagine what could happen if people worked together to translate their hopes and dreams into reality," Sorens said in a speech Saturday. Allowing people "the freedom to pursue their projects means more freedom to me."</p>

<p>"This isn't the kind of thing where everybody gets marching orders," he said.</p>

<p>Free State Project members say they are simply a society of loners, united by twin desires to protect their Constitutional rights and to keep government out of their lives.</p>

<p>"We see here in New Hampshire a lot of things that we like," said Bill Walker, 34, a research chemist from Richmond, Va. "We want to come here because we want to be left alone," said Walker, who keeps a military pistol strapped to his belt.</p>

<p>"Enthusiastic people can be scary sometimes," said Wil Aygarn, 44, of Norfolk, Va. "What attracts us to the state is the fact that it does have a freedom oriented culture."</p>

<p>Aygarn was giving out free videos with titles like "Total Enslavement," "Matrix of Evil" and "The Master of Terror."</p>

<p>The Free State Project recently grabbed headlines when a member of a splinter group, the Free Town Project, published an "enemies list" that named several Grafton town officials. The member has since been expelled, but Free Staters have learned their lesson. They are urging members to tread lightly when they move to New Hampshire.</p>

<p>"When we move into New Hampshire, we're the new kids on the block," said Tim Condon, a Free State leader. "The people that I've met in New Hampshire do not want to be told how to live their lives."</p>

<p>At a meeting Friday, several Free Staters stood up to say why they joined the movement.</p>

<p>"I have a tremendous dislike of Socialism," said Patrick Houlmiere, 51.</p>

<p>"I'm here because this can work. I've never seen an idea this good," said Nixi Chesnavich.</p>

<p>"I'm tired of living in fear because the government will take my children away because they don't like what I'm doing," said Anne Keckler, 38.</p>

<p>Free Staters pledged to move to New Hampshire once their membership reaches 20,000. So far, 6,000 have signed up and only a handful have moved. Sorens told Free Staters to emphasize New Hampshire's high quality of life and relative economic freedom in its recruitment drive.</p>

<p>Even if they meet their membership goal, Free Staters will not be able to change the state the way their critics fear, one pollster said.</p>

<p>"If you look at the number of people who move into New Hampshire every year, 20,000 ... is a small percentage of people who will move in over the next several years," said Andrew Smith, director of the University of New Hampshire survey center. "I don't think they could influence any statewide elections with that number."</p>

<p>Asked if he thought the project would succeed, even Sorens expressed doubt. "It's not guaranteed by any means. We still have to emphasize recruitment."</p>]]>
    </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>the point of rebellion</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.literatepackrat.com/blogs/thinkuming/archives/000430.html" />
    <modified>2004-06-23T21:36:15Z</modified>
    <issued>2004-06-23T17:36:15-05:00</issued>
    <id>tag:www.literatepackrat.com,2004:/blogs/thinkuming//2.430</id>
    <created>2004-06-23T21:36:15Z</created>
    <summary type="text/plain">A quote from, of all people, Madonna: &quot;The stance of a rebel is, &apos;I don&apos;t care what you think.&apos; But if it&apos;s just for the sake of upsetting the apple...</summary>
    <author>
      <name>thinkum</name>
      
      <email>thinkum@snurcher.com</email>
    </author>
    
    <content type="text/html" mode="escaped" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.literatepackrat.com/blogs/thinkuming/">
      <![CDATA[<p>A quote from, of all people, Madonna:</p>

<p>"The stance of a rebel is, 'I don't care what you think.' But if it's just for the sake of upsetting the apple cart, you're not really helping people. You turn the apple cart over and then what? Then everyone's looking at an apple cart that's turned over and they're like, well, now what do I do?"</p>]]>
      
    </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Cell Phone Hell</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.literatepackrat.com/blogs/thinkuming/archives/000415.html" />
    <modified>2004-06-22T18:56:56Z</modified>
    <issued>2004-06-22T14:56:56-05:00</issued>
    <id>tag:www.literatepackrat.com,2004:/blogs/thinkuming//2.415</id>
    <created>2004-06-22T18:56:56Z</created>
    <summary type="text/plain">Please, please, oh PLEASE, can we install this technology in restaurants and movie theaters? School Foils Cheats by Blocking Phone Signals...</summary>
    <author>
      <name>thinkum</name>
      
      <email>thinkum@snurcher.com</email>
    </author>
    
    <content type="text/html" mode="escaped" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.literatepackrat.com/blogs/thinkuming/">
      <![CDATA[<p>Please, please, oh PLEASE, can we install this technology in restaurants and movie theaters?</p>

<p><a href="http://abcnews.go.com/wire/BackPage/reuters20040621_61.html" target=new>School Foils Cheats by Blocking Phone Signals</a></p>]]>
      <![CDATA[<p><i>Text of original article:</i></p>

<p>June 21, 2004 ? ROME (Reuters) - Mobile phone-savvy teenagers tempted to cheat their way through exams by sending text messages or scanning pictures of tests could be thwarted by a device that jams signals inside the school walls.</p>

<p>The Enrico Tosi Technical Institute school in northern Italy has found a way to foil the next generation of would-be tricksters with the help of military technology.	</p>

<p>"Most schools try and confiscate phones before exams, but this way we can be sure nobody slips through," said Benedetto Di Rienzo, the head of the school in Busto Arsizio which is testing the devices for the Education Ministry during exams this week.</p>

<p>The box-like units, called C-Guard, were developed by experts from the military and defense industries for Netline Communications Technologies. They jam signals in an 80-meter (262-foot) radius in enclosed spaces.</p>

<p>They could eventually be installed across Italy to prevent cheating during university exams.</p>

<p>Di Rienzo said they have been so successful that the school plans to start using them during regular classes -- a measure likely to ruffle feathers in mobile phone-obsessed Italy where not even the teachers like to be left incommunicado.</p>

<p>"We hope to keep complaints to a minimum by turning the instruments off during lunch breaks," he said.</p>]]>
    </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>What the freaking hell is wrong with people?</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.literatepackrat.com/blogs/thinkuming/archives/000392.html" />
    <modified>2004-06-07T16:28:12Z</modified>
    <issued>2004-06-07T12:28:12-05:00</issued>
    <id>tag:www.literatepackrat.com,2004:/blogs/thinkuming//2.392</id>
    <created>2004-06-07T16:28:12Z</created>
    <summary type="text/plain">So, the Beeb is reporting that Rummy and his sharks think the Shrub should be free to torture, maim, murder, and oppress anyone he thinks stands in the way of...</summary>
    <author>
      <name>thinkum</name>
      
      <email>thinkum@snurcher.com</email>
    </author>
    <dc:subject>Social Order</dc:subject>
    <content type="text/html" mode="escaped" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.literatepackrat.com/blogs/thinkuming/">
      <![CDATA[<p>So, the Beeb <a href="http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/3783869.stm" target=new>is reporting</a> that Rummy and his sharks think the Shrub should be free to torture, maim, murder, and oppress anyone he thinks stands in the way of the country's security.</p>

<p>He's sounding more and more like Stalin every day.</p>

<p>I cannot possibly articulate my fury, frustration, and disgust at the current state of the American government and the Shrub's administration thereof.</p>]]>
      <![CDATA[<p>(since articles online are ephemeral, here's the actual text for posterity)</p>

<p>-----------------------------------</p>

<p>US 'not bound by torture laws'</p>

<p>A Pentagon report last year argued that President George W Bush was not bound by laws banning the use of torture, according to the Wall Street Journal. </p>

<p>The document also argued that torturers acting under presidential orders could not be prosecuted, the paper said. </p>

<p>The report was written by military and civilian lawyers for US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld. </p>

<p>It came after staff at Guantanamo Bay complained normal interrogation tactics were not eliciting enough information. </p>

<p>The document outlined why restrictions on torture under US laws and international treaties might be overcome by considerations for national security or legal technicalities, the newspaper reported. </p>

<p>Vital intelligence </p>

<p>The draft argued that because nothing was more important than "obtaining intelligence vital to the protection of untold thousands of American citizens" normal strictures on torture might not apply, according to the Journal. </p>

<p>The report contended that the president, as commander-in-chief, has the authority to approve almost any physical or psychological actions during interrogation, including torture, the newspaper reported. </p>

<p>It said it had reviewed a draft dated 6 March, 2003, and had not seen the full final report. </p>

<p>But people familiar with the final text said there were few substantial changes from the draft version, the Wall Street Journal added. </p>

<p>It is not known whether President George W Bush has ever seen the report. </p>

<p>The Bush administration has said it supports the Geneva Conventions and humane treatment for detainees.</p>]]>
    </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>In Memoriam: Anna Lee</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.literatepackrat.com/blogs/thinkuming/archives/000364.html" />
    <modified>2004-05-17T17:00:44Z</modified>
    <issued>2004-05-17T13:00:44-05:00</issued>
    <id>tag:www.literatepackrat.com,2004:/blogs/thinkuming//2.364</id>
    <created>2004-05-17T17:00:44Z</created>
    <summary type="text/plain">There are few people left today in the public eye, who maintain any sense of old world grace and kindness. Anna Lee was one such person -- absolutely a class...</summary>
    <author>
      <name>thinkum</name>
      
      <email>thinkum@snurcher.com</email>
    </author>
    
    <content type="text/html" mode="escaped" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.literatepackrat.com/blogs/thinkuming/">
      <![CDATA[<p>There are few people left today in the public eye, who maintain any sense of old world grace and kindness.  Anna Lee was one such person -- absolutely a class act. </p>

<p><img alt="anna_lee.jpg" src="http://www.literatepackrat.com/blogs/thinkuming/archives/anna_lee.jpg" width="220" height="242" border="0" /></p>]]>
      <![CDATA[<p>From <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2004/SHOWBIZ/TV/05/17/obit.annalee.ap/index.html" target=new>CNN's website</a>:</p>

<p>Anna Lee, whose nearly 70-year acting career in movies and television spanned from her breakthrough role in "How Green Was My Valley" to an extended run on "General Hospital," died Friday of pneumonia, her son said. She was 91.</p>

<p>Lee had been ailing for the past several months and died at her home near Beverly Hills with son Jeffrey Byron, 48, by her side, Byron said Sunday.</p>

<p>Paralyzed from the waist down in a car accident just a year after she began playing Lila Quartermaine in ABC's "General Hospital," Lee acted in a wheelchair for more than two decades until she left the soap last year, Byron said.</p>

<p>Born in Kent, England, Lee studied acting in London and was known as "the British bombshell" when touring with the London Repertory Theatre, her son said.</p>

<p>In the early 1930s she moved to California to work in Hollywood, and appeared in more than 60 films including "The Sound of Music" (1965), "Fort Apache" (1948) and "King Solomon's Mines" (1937).</p>

<p>"She was beautiful," said actress Maureen O'Hara, who starred with Lee in 1941's "How Green Was My Valley." "She came to the United States and immediately everybody fell in love with her."</p>

<p>O'Hara said Lee was most effective as an actress in straightforward tales of love and family life. "She made you feel, looking at her, that you belonged to the same family as her," she said.</p>

<p>Nearing retirement age, Lee's stint on ABC's "General Hospital" rejuvenated her, Byron said. "That was really a great elixir for her. Without a doubt it gave her much more longevity later in life," he said.</p>

<p>In 1982, Lee received an MBE, or Member of the Order of the British Empire award. She is to be honored with a lifetime achievement award at Friday's Daytime Emmy Awards ceremony.</p>

<p>Lee was married three times, first to Robert Stevenson, the director of films including "The Love Bug" and "Mary Poppins." She was married to George Stafford for two decades and wed writer Robert Nathan in 1970. Nathan died in 1985.</p>

<p>Lee is survived by a sister, Ruth, two sons, two daughters, seven grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.</p>

<p>A memorial service will be held in Los Angeles in several weeks, Byron said.</p>]]>
    </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>The Misunderestimated Man</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.literatepackrat.com/blogs/thinkuming/archives/000303.html" />
    <modified>2004-05-10T16:08:16Z</modified>
    <issued>2004-05-10T12:08:16-05:00</issued>
    <id>tag:www.literatepackrat.com,2004:/blogs/thinkuming//2.303</id>
    <created>2004-05-10T16:08:16Z</created>
    <summary type="text/plain">How Bush chose stupidity. By Jacob Weisberg [This article pretty much speaks for itself. I take issue with a few points here and there, where I think bias is twisting...</summary>
    <author>
      <name>thinkum</name>
      
      <email>thinkum@snurcher.com</email>
    </author>
    <dc:subject>Social Order</dc:subject>
    <content type="text/html" mode="escaped" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.literatepackrat.com/blogs/thinkuming/">
      <![CDATA[<p>How Bush chose stupidity.<br />
By Jacob Weisberg</p>

<p>[This article pretty much speaks for itself.  I take issue with a few points here and there, where I think bias is twisting meanings, but by and large, this sums up my opinion of the Shrub. -- Th.]</p>]]>
      <![CDATA[<p>The question I am most frequently asked about Bushisms is, "Do you really think the president of the United States is dumb?"  </p>

<p>The short answer is yes.  </p>

<p>The long answer is yes and no.  </p>

<p>Quotations collected over the years in Slate may leave the impression that George W. Bush is a dimwit. Let's face it: A man who cannot talk about education without making a humiliating grammatical mistake ("The illiteracy level of our children are appalling"); who cannot keep straight the three branches of government ("It's the executive branch's job to interpret law"); who coins ridiculous words ("Hispanos," "arbolist," "subliminable," "resignate," "transformationed"); who habitually says the opposite of what he intends ("the death tax is good for people from all walks of life!") sounds like a grade-A imbecile.  </p>

<p>And if you don't care to pursue the matter any further, that view will suffice. George W. Bush has governed, for the most part, the way any airhead might, undermining the fiscal condition of the nation, squandering the goodwill of the world after Sept. 11, and allowing huge problems (global warming, entitlement spending, AIDS) to metastasize toward catastrophe through a combination of ideology, incomprehension, and indifference. If Bush isn't exactly the moron he sounds, his synaptic misfirings offer a plausible proxy for the idiocy of his presidency.  </p>

<p>In reality, however, there's more to it. Bush's assorted malapropisms, solecisms, gaffes, spoonerisms, and truisms tend to imply that his lack of fluency in English is tantamount to an absence of intelligence. But as we all know, the inarticulate can be shrewd, the fluent fatuous. In Bush's case, the symptoms point to a specific malady -- some kind of linguistic deficit akin to dyslexia -- that does not indicate a lack of mental capacity per se.  </p>

<p>Bush also compensates with his non-verbal acumen. As he notes, "Smart comes in all kinds of different ways." The president's way is an aptitude for connecting to people through banter and physicality. He has a powerful memory for names, details, and figures that truly matter to him, such as batting averages from the 1950s. Bush also has a keen political sense, sharpened under the tutelage of Karl Rove.  </p>

<p>What's more, calling the president a cretin absolves him of responsibility. Like Reagan, Bush avoids blame for all manner of contradictions, implausible assertions, and outright lies by appearing an amiable dunce. If he knows not what he does, blame goes to the three puppeteers, Cheney, Rove, and Rumsfeld. It also breeds sympathy. We wouldn't laugh at FDR because he couldn't walk. Is it less cruel to laugh at GWB because he can't talk? The soft bigotry of low expectations means Bush is seen to outperform by merely getting by. Finally, elitist condescension, however merited, helps cement Bush's bond to the masses.  <br />
But if "numskull" is an imprecise description of the president, it is not altogether inaccurate. Bush may not have been born stupid, but he has achieved stupidity, and now he wears it as a badge of honor. What makes mocking this president fair as well as funny is that Bush is, or at least once was, capable of learning, reading, and thinking. We know he has discipline and can work hard (at least when the goal is reducing his time for a three-mile run). Instead he chose to coast, for most of his life, on name, charm, good looks, and the easy access to capital afforded by family connections.  </p>

<p>The most obvious expression of Bush's choice of ignorance is that, at the age of 57, he knows nothing about policy or history. After years of working as his dad's spear-chucker in Washington, he didn't understand the difference between Medicare and Medicaid, the second- and third-largest federal programs. Well into his plans for invading Iraq, Bush still couldn't get down the distinction between Sunni and Shiite Muslims, the key religious divide in a country he was about to occupy. Though he sometimes carries books for show, he either does not read them or doesn't absorb anything from them. Bush's ignorance is so transparent that many of his intimates do not bother to dispute it even in public. Consider the testimony of several who know him well.  </p>

<p>Richard Perle, foreign policy adviser: "The first time I met Bush 43 ? two things became clear. One, he didn't know very much. The other was that he had the confidence to ask questions that revealed he didn't know very much."  </p>

<p>David Frum, former speechwriter: "Bush had a poor memory for facts and figures. ? Fire a question at him about the specifics of his administration's policies, and he often appeared uncertain. Nobody would ever enroll him in a quiz show."  </p>

<p>Laura Bush, spouse: "George is not an overly introspective person. He has good instincts, and he goes with them. He doesn't need to evaluate and reevaluate a decision. He doesn't try to overthink. He likes action."  </p>

<p>Paul O'Neill, former treasury secretary: "The only way I can describe it is that, well, the President is like a blind man in a roomful of deaf people. There is no discernible connection."  </p>

<p>A second, more damning aspect of Bush's mind-set is that he doesn't want to know anything in detail, however important. Since college, he has spilled with contempt for knowledge, equating learning with snobbery and making a joke of his own anti-intellectualism. ("[William F. Buckley] wrote a book at Yale; I read one," he quipped at a black-tie event.) By O'Neill's account, Bush could sit through an hourlong presentation about the state of the economy without asking a single question. ("I was bored as hell," the president shot back, ostensibly in jest.)  </p>

<p>Closely related to this aggressive ignorance is a third feature of Bush's mentality: laziness. Again, this is a lifelong trait. Bush's college grades were mostly Cs (including a 73 in Introduction to the American Political System). At the start of one term, the star of the Yale football team spotted him in the back row during the shopping period for courses. "Hey! George Bush is in this class!" Calvin Hill shouted to his teammates. "This is the one for us!" As governor of Texas, Bush would take a long break in the middle of his short workday for a run followed by a stretch of video golf or computer solitaire.  </p>

<p>A fourth and final quality of Bush's mind is that it does not think. The president can't tolerate debate about issues. Offered an option, he makes up his mind quickly and never reconsiders. At an elementary school, a child once asked him whether it was hard to make decisions as president. "Most of the decisions come pretty easily for me, to be frank with you." By leaping to conclusions based on what he "believes," Bush avoids contemplating even the most obvious basic contradictions: between his policy of tax cuts and reducing the deficit; between his call for a humble foreign policy based on alliances and his unilateral assertion of American power; between his support for in-vitro fertilization (which destroys embryos) and his opposition to fetal stem-cell research (because it destroys embryos).  </p>

<p>Why would someone capable of being smart choose to be stupid? To understand, you have to look at W.'s relationship with father. This filial bond involves more tension than meets the eye. Dad was away for much of his oldest son's childhood. Little George grew up closer to his acid-tongued mother and acted out against the absent parent -- through adolescent misbehavior, academic failure, dissipation, and basically not accomplishing anything at all until well into his 40s.  </p>

<p>Dubya's youthful screw-ups and smart-aleck attitude reflect some combination of protest, plea for attention, and flailing attempt to compete. Until a decade ago, his résumé read like a send-up of his dad's. Bush senior was a star student at Andover and Phi Beta Kappa at Yale, where he was also captain of the baseball team; Junior struggled through with gentleman's C's and, though he loved baseball, couldn't make the college lineup. Père was a bomber pilot in the Pacific; fils sat out 'Nam in the Texas Air National Guard, where he lost flying privileges by not showing up. Dad drove to Texas in 1947 to get rich in the oil business and actually did; Son tried the same in 1975 and drilled dry holes for a decade. Bush the elder got elected to Congress in 1966; Shrub ran in 1978, didn't know what he was talking about, and got clobbered.  </p>

<p>Through all this incompetent emulation runs an undercurrent of hostility. In an oft-told anecdote circa 1973, GWB -- after getting wasted at a party and driving over a neighbor's trash can in Houston -- challenged his dad. "I hear you're lookin' for me," W. told the chairman of the Republican National Committee. "You want to go mano a mano right here?" Some years later at a state dinner, he told the Queen of England he was being seated far away because he was the black sheep of the family.  </p>

<p>After half a lifetime of this kind of frustration, Bush decided to straighten up. Nursing a hangover at a 40th-birthday weekend, he gave up Wild Turkey, cold turkey. With the help of Billy Graham, he put himself in the hands of a higher power and began going to church. He became obsessed with punctuality and developed a rigid routine. Thus did Prince Hal molt into an evangelical King Henry. And it worked! Putting together a deal to buy the Texas Rangers, the ne'er-do-well finally tasted success. With success, he grew closer to his father, taking on the role of family avenger. This culminated in his 1994 challenge to Texas Gov. Ann Richards, who had twitted dad at the 1988 Democratic convention.  </p>

<p>[Paraphrase: "Poor George.  He can't help it.  He was born with a silver foot in his mouth." - Th.]</p>

<p>Curiously, this late arrival at adulthood did not involve Bush becoming in any way thoughtful. Having chosen stupidity as rebellion, he stuck with it out of conformity. The promise-keeper, reformed-alkie path he chose not only drastically curtailed personal choices he no longer wanted, it also supplied an all-encompassing order, offered guidance on policy, and prevented the need for much actual information. Bush's old answer to hard questions was, "I don't know and, who cares." His new answer was, "Wait a second while I check with Jesus."  </p>

<p>A remaining bit of poignancy was his unresolved struggle with his father. "All I ask," he implored a reporter while running for governor in 1994, "is that for once you guys stop seeing me as the son of George Bush." In his campaigns, W. has kept his dad offstage. (In an exceptional appearance on the eve of the 2000 New Hampshire primary, 41 came onstage and called his son "this boy.") While some describe the second Bush presidency as a restoration, it is in at least equal measure a repudiation. The son's harder-edged conservatism explicitly rejects the old man's approach to such issues as abortion, taxes, and relations with Israel.  </p>

<p>This Oedipally induced ignorance expresses itself most dangerously in Bush's handling of the war in Iraq. Dubya polished off his old man's greatest enemy, Saddam, but only by lampooning 41's accomplishment of coalition-building in the first Gulf War. Bush led the country to war on false pretenses and neglected to plan the occupation that would inevitably follow. A more knowledgeable and engaged president might have questioned the quality of the evidence about Iraq's supposed weapons programs. One who preferred to be intelligent might have asked about the possibility of an unfriendly reception. Instead, Bush rolled the dice. His budget-busting tax cuts exemplify a similar phenomenon, driven by an alternate set of ideologues.  </p>

<p>As the president says, we misunderestimate him. He was not born stupid. He chose stupidity. Bush may look like a well-meaning dolt. On consideration, he's something far more dangerous: a dedicated fool. </p>]]>
    </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>some days I hate being American</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.literatepackrat.com/blogs/thinkuming/archives/000267.html" />
    <modified>2004-05-02T02:39:06Z</modified>
    <issued>2004-05-01T22:39:06-05:00</issued>
    <id>tag:www.literatepackrat.com,2004:/blogs/thinkuming//2.267</id>
    <created>2004-05-02T02:39:06Z</created>
    <summary type="text/plain">CSPAN, even as I type, is broadcasting (live) the annual White House Correspondents Dinner. The President has already made his few remarks, and Jay Leno is now performing the keynote....</summary>
    <author>
      <name>thinkum</name>
      
      <email>thinkum@snurcher.com</email>
    </author>
    <dc:subject>Social Order</dc:subject>
    <content type="text/html" mode="escaped" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.literatepackrat.com/blogs/thinkuming/">
      <![CDATA[<p>CSPAN, even as I type, is broadcasting (live) the annual White House Correspondents Dinner.  The President has already made his few remarks, and Jay Leno is now performing the keynote.  (Traditionally, the keynote is delivered by a well-known comedian or other performer, as entertainment.)</p>

<p>As is the usual for this event, everyone, and everything, is fair game for ridicule.  There have been some humdingers, aimed at both sides of the aisle.  But what is getting me bent out of shape are the fake Iraq film clips - things like  Jay Leno checking Saddam's prostate, and photo booth images of Saddam and the cleric-de-jour making friendly.</p>

<p>If these had been targeted at any Westerner, I wouldn't have batted an eyelash.  I would probably have laughed.  But to so publically degrade Saddam and an apparently devout Muslim in a manner akin to the recent prison abuses (by US soldiers) in Iraq, and especially offensive to members of that culture, is humiliating - not merely to the subjects of the "joke", but to me as an American, trying to hold my head up under the world's gaze.</p>

<p>We don't need to kick someone who's already down.  The only ones injured in such an assault are ourselves.</p>]]>
      
    </content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Marriage Lite</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.literatepackrat.com/blogs/thinkuming/archives/000149.html" />
    <modified>2004-04-26T16:20:58Z</modified>
    <issued>2004-04-26T12:20:58-05:00</issued>
    <id>tag:www.literatepackrat.com,2004:/blogs/thinkuming//2.149</id>
    <created>2004-04-26T16:20:58Z</created>
    <summary type="text/plain">The brouhaha over gay marriage isn&apos;t limited to the U.S.; France is now wrestling with a prime example of the Law of Unintended Consequences: Straight Couples Use French Civil Unions...</summary>
    <author>
      <name>thinkum</name>
      
      <email>thinkum@snurcher.com</email>
    </author>
    <dc:subject>Social Order</dc:subject>
    <content type="text/html" mode="escaped" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.literatepackrat.com/blogs/thinkuming/">
      <![CDATA[<p>The brouhaha over gay marriage isn't limited to the U.S.; France is now wrestling with a prime example of the Law of Unintended Consequences: <a href="http://abcnews.go.com/sections/WNT/Relationships/france_civil_unions_040417-2.html" target=new>Straight Couples Use French Civil Unions Law Created For Homosexuals</a></p>

<p>There is at least some measure of equality in the situation.  What's sauce for the goose, is sauce for the gander.  But it sounds so science-fictiony, practical in many respects, yet empty in so many others.  And what about children?  They will be your children forever, civil contract or no.  What effect will it have on them?  Are there any protections for them, in the new law?</p>

<p>I suppose marriage as a concept means different things to different people.  My own family is tightly knit, with many examples of long, successful marriages - the lesson taught to me since childhood is when things get tough, you work harder, and you get through it.  It's not something to be cleanly set aside when you stop having fun.</p>

<p>And yet, one of my siblings is now in the process of ending a marriage.  The news came as a tremendous shockwave, leaving everyone stunned.  Despite twenty years, two kids, and extended counseling, the relationship is ending.  We seem to flutter about, helplessly, like trapped moths - there's nothing in our experience that has prepared us for this.  All we can do is keep loving her, one another, and everyone involved.  It's horrible.  But I can't imagine them exchanging the past twenty years of marriage for a simple civil union contract.</p>]]>
      <![CDATA[<p>-------</p>

<p><em>The full text</em>:</p>

<p><a href="http://abcnews.go.com/sections/WNT/Relationships/france_civil_unions_040417-2.html" target=new>Straight Couples Use French Civil Unions Law Created For Homosexuals</a></p>

<p>France resolved its debate over same-sex marriage several years ago by creating civil unions. But the law has had unexpected effects.</p>

<p>What began as a way to provide some legal protection for people in homosexual relationships has become a real alternative for heterosexual couples in France, thousands of whom come to municipal offices to sign "civil pacts of solidarity," or PACS, rather than get married.</p>

<p>Now We Have Rights</p>

<p>The ceremony itself takes just a few minutes. The couple goes to a court and assures the clerk they are not married to anyone else. After a few more basic questions, the papers are signed and the PACS is official.</p>

<p>"Now we have rights," a woman in a same-sex union says, "which we didn't have a few hours ago."</p>

<p>Under the civil pact, each partner is eligible for the other's work benefits. And after three years, they can get the same tax breaks as married couples. Ending the PACS can be as quick and easy as signing one.</p>

<p>"It is not necessary to divorce," says Daniel Borrillo, a legal specialist. "It is only necessary to inform the authorities that you decided to terminate the contract."</p>

<p>If there's a dispute, one party gives notice, and three months later, it's over. </p>

<p>The PACS law was hugely controversial when it was going through the French parliament in the late 1990s. Opponents of the law clashed with its supporters.</p>

<p>The law passed, but only after it was expanded to make heterosexuals eligible for civil unions as well. Otherwise, some argued, the law would be discriminatory.</p>

<p>It turned out to be a big change. </p>

<p>Marriage Attitudes</p>

<p>Some straight couples opting for the civil pact are older and have married before, but most are young couples. </p>

<p>In a country with a divorce rate of 38 percent, where some 40 percent of children are born out of wedlock, many consider marriage an obsolete institution.</p>

<p>"My parents got divorced," one woman says. "I don't regard marriage as sacred."</p>

<p>So, a law initially written for gay couples has evolved into a sort of marriage light for straight couples.</p>

<p>"It was the need of the gay community," says Pascal De Bodard of the Gay and Lesbian Center of Paris. "But at the end of the day, it was to the benefit of the whole French population."</p>]]>
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  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Big Brother Bouncer</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.literatepackrat.com/blogs/thinkuming/archives/000136.html" />
    <modified>2004-04-26T16:00:00Z</modified>
    <issued>2004-04-26T12:00:00-05:00</issued>
    <id>tag:www.literatepackrat.com,2004:/blogs/thinkuming//2.136</id>
    <created>2004-04-26T16:00:00Z</created>
    <summary type="text/plain">The &quot;cataloging&quot; of individuals seems to be increasing. I can understand the need on the part of the businesses in this article (Pubs, Clubs Use High-Tech ID System to Track...</summary>
    <author>
      <name>thinkum</name>
      
      <email>thinkum@snurcher.com</email>
    </author>
    <dc:subject>Social Order</dc:subject>
    <content type="text/html" mode="escaped" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.literatepackrat.com/blogs/thinkuming/">
      <![CDATA[<p>The "cataloging" of individuals seems to be increasing.  I can understand the need on the part of the businesses in this article (<a href="http://abcnews.go.com/sections/scitech/TechTV/hitech_pub_bouncer_techtv_040415.html" target=new>Pubs, Clubs Use High-Tech ID System to Track Troublemakers</a>), but I strongly object to their retaining personal identity information such as birthdays.  If the system works by identifying the face, then all it needs is the face.  If the bar is going to go as far as requiring personal information, they might as well issue membership cards of their own in order for patrons to gain admission.</p>

<p>I assume they collect the birthdate in order to validate that the customer is of legal drinking age.  But really, they don't need to retain that information.  An underage patron can be flagged as underaged, with no mention of the actual birthday.  When they reach legal age, they simply tell the doorman that they've had a birthday and show identification proving it; the system gets updated, and wha-la, they're granted entry to all businesses using it.</p>]]>
      <![CDATA[<p>-------</p>

<p><em>The full text to which I'm objecting</em>:</p>

<p><a href="http://abcnews.go.com/sections/scitech/TechTV/hitech_pub_bouncer_techtv_040415.html" target=new>Pubs, Clubs Use High-Tech ID System to Track Troublemakers</a></p>

<p>Soon you may be asked for more than your identification when you go into a bar or nightclub. In Vancouver, Canada, you could also be asked to smile for a camera. 	</p>

<p>The Vigilance ID check system was developed by Vancouver's TreoScope Technologies. It works by taking your picture as your ID is swiped through a card reader. Your name, birth date, and diver's license number are transferred from the magnetic strip on the back of your card to a computer database where that info, along with your photo, are stored.</p>

<p>"The idea behind it was to create a system that would protect patrons and establishments from people out to make the nightlife unsafe," TreoScope co-owner Owen Cameron says. "It's a 24-hour doorman that never forgets a name or a face."</p>

<p>If you cause trouble, not only can you get kicked out of the club, but bar owners can go through the photos, find you, and red flag you for future visits.</p>

<p>Cameron says those running the system in their establishments can also attach reports to your name and face ? a regular rap sheet for whatever you may have done wrong, from fighting and excessive drinking to drink-tampering.</p>

<p>Rowdy Bar-Hopper Stopper</p>

<p>But if you draw a red flag, don't think you can just go down the street to the next bar or even across town. Every bar that's hooked into the electronic system can find out if you've caused trouble someplace else. </p>

<p>Genesis Security (www.GenesisSecurity.com) is responsible for running the system day-to-day.</p>

<p>"You could have a troublemaker at one bar, send [his information] off to all bars on the system, and the bar would be aware of his history," Genesis' Dave Sukic says.</p>

<p>It's then up to each bar to decide whether to let the patron inside. </p>

<p>Tristan Vanin is the general manager of Vancouver hot spot the Plaza Club. Vanin says the club felt it needed to tighten security in the wake of increasing violence in the area.</p>

<p>"It all starts with the front door and who you are letting in," he says. "It only takes one gunshot or one act of violence, and it'll ruin your club night."</p>

<p>Another Slap in the Face of Privacy?</p>

<p>The Vigilance system, which can also identify fake IDs, was designed to keep patrons out of harm's way, according to the company. But the security network is raising eyebrows among privacy advocates. </p>

<p>Lee Tien, senior staff attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation in San Francisco, is concerned the information could be used for other purposes.</p>

<p>"Whenever you're collecting information and tying it to their identity, then you have all sorts of problems ... as in, what are the people who get that information going to do with it?" Tien asks.</p>

<p>Genesis Security insists the information will not be used for marketing or any other purposes. It says the information will be kept discrete.</p>

<p>"It's not being released to anybody," Dave Sukic insists. "That information is sent to us directly and will only be released for court purposes."</p>

<p>The information, he says, could be kept for up to two years for legal reasons.</p>]]>
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