Accidental Blogger

A general interest blog

  • October 2nd is Mahatma Gandhi's birthday. Check out today's Google logo commemorating the anniversary.

  • Florida Congressman Alan Grayson is my kind of Democrat. He knows how to turn the tables on the Republican death squad in the health care debate.  See here and here.

    Update: Nick Anderson illustrates Grayson's point.

    Nick Anderson - Republican Health Care Plan

  • Right wingers have always been very good at vilifying any organization whose politics don't match theirs, especially if those groups are advocates of the poor, minorities, women, immigrants or homosexuals. At one time or the other, groups like the NEA, ACLU, Planned Parenthood and even government welfare programs like Medicaid and Food Stamps have been objects of anger and derision. A favorite (and effective) tactic is to pick a grain of truth, an isolated incident, a statistically insignificant trend and occasionally, fabricated myths about these services and publicize them as true and widespread practices. Soon enough, with enough people repeating the highly exaggerated accounts of missteps and mismanagement, the organizations become tarred and feathered as un-American, wasteful, wanton and even immoral. The newest target of right wing ire is the community organization, ACORN, some of whose inept officials have been caught saying outrageous things on tape while being led on by conservative actors posing as pimps, prostitutes and other miscreants. (see this WSJ report dripping with gotcha sarcasm but not a word about entrapment) So, is ACORN really a group devoted to shady housing transactions, tax evasion, prostitution, voter fraud and even murder?  Are its employees quasi criminals masquerading as social workers out to defraud the system? Not quite so. Harold Meyerson of the Washington Post explains the background of Acorn.

    The embattled community organizing group is much in the news these days, thanks to the idiocies of a handful of now-suspended staffers having been filmed and YouTubed by a right-wing sting squad. Most of the stories present ACORN as, at best, a shady organization up to no good in America's inner cities, not to mention the nation's primary source of voting fraud.

    What's been obscured amid all the polemics, or the polemics passing as news reports, is what ACORN is and does. Founded in Little Rock in 1970 as an organization agitating for free school lunches, Vietnam veterans' rights and more hospital emergency rooms, ACORN has grown in the past four decades into the nation's largest community organizing group. Based in low-income neighborhoods, it has nearly 500,000 dues-paying members, recruited by door-to-door canvassers, with chapters in 110 cities in 40 states. Nationwide, it has more than 1,000 staffers.

    What are the projects on which all these staffers and members work? Raising the minimum wage, for one. ACORN conceived and led the successful initiative campaign to raise the wage in Florida in 2004 and in four more states in 2006. In the past four years, it successfully pressured seven legislatures in other states to raise their minimum wage as well.

    Another major campaign has been to limit the interest and fees that banks charge homeowners. In the 1990s, ACORN spearheaded a number of legal actions, often joined by states' attorneys general, that compelled such lenders as Citigroup to change many of their practices. The group has led successful drives to outlaw the most egregious predatory lending in nine states. It also counsels thousands of inner-city homeowners and home buyers. (More here)

    Now, I have no problem with incompetent and corrupt officials belonging to organizations that are beneficiaries of public money, being fired. If a crime is committed they should also be prosecuted whether they serve liberal or conservative causes. ACORN is currently being investigated and the federal grants it receives are under review. Well and good. However, another organization that has been implicated in murder, prostitution, financial irregularities and even torture, is operating with impunity. But it happens to be a Christian, conservative operation. The private security firm of Blackwater (aka XE) which the Bush administration engaged for supplying mercenaries for the Iraq war has never faced any criticism of its unsavory business practices from right wing commentators or elected officials. What is even more ironic is that the Obama administration continues to utilize Blackwater's services while squirming to distance itself from ACORN!

    In April 2002, the CIA paid Blackwater more than $5 million to deploy a small team of men inside Afghanistan during the early stages of US operations in the country. A month later, Erik Prince, the company's owner and a former Navy SEAL, flew to Afghanistan as part of the original twenty-man Blackwater contingent. Blackwater worked for the CIA at its station in Kabul as well as in Shkin, along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border, where they operated out of a mud fortress known as the Alamo. It was the beginning of a long relationship between Blackwater, Prince and the CIA.

    Now the New York Times is reportingthat in 2004 the CIA hired Blackwater "as part of a secret program to locate and assassinate top operatives of Al Qaeda." According to the Times, "it is unclear whether the CIA had planned to use the contractors to capture or kill Qaeda operatives, or just to help with training and surveillance."

    The Timesreports that "the CIA did not have a formal contract with Blackwater for this program but instead had individual agreements with top company officials, including the founder, Erik D. Prince, a politically connected former member of the Navy Seals and the heir to a family fortune." A retired intelligence officer "intimately familiar with the assassination program" told the Washington Post, "Outsourcing gave the agency more protection in case something went wrong." The Postreported that Blackwater "was given operational responsibility for targeting terrorist commanders and was awarded millions of dollars for training and weaponry, but the program was canceled before any missions were conducted."

    Jeremy Scahill's report in the Nation here and a video of Scahill in conversation with Bill Maher here.

  • Bob Mankoff, the cartoon editor of the New Yorker was interviewed at Big Think about various aspects of humor – its roots, triggers, social utility and form. In the following videos, Mankoff answers some questions:

    1. How do men and women use humor in a social situation?
    2. When does humor, which almost always originates in bad taste, work effectively?
    3. What is the future of humor and why do liberals tend to be more humorous than conservatives?

    (Thanks to Andrew Seidler of Big Think for sending in the links)

    Bob_Mankoff

  • While we are on the subject of You Tube videos:

    Somehow, it is still hard for me to believe that this guy was my representative in the US Congress for many miserable years. Beginning around 1:30 the video becomes ridiculously scary. I didn't know whether to laugh, cry or throw up! How will all this booty shaking affect the money laundering charges? (link: Sanjukta)

  • More US troops have died this year in Afghanistan than in Iraq, the first year starting 2003 that's been true. Obviously that fact reflects both that the US Iraq toll has been coming down since 2007 (for reasons of surge or Anbar Awakening or whatever) and that Afghanistan seems to get more horrible each year. I suspect each of those things is going to give a certain Mr. McCain renewed clout in the coming weeks/months as these calls for increased troop deployment in Afghanistan play out. Even last year Obama and the Democrats basically conceded the rhetorical battle over the surge to the Republicans, to the point that I think McCain managed to hold Obama to a virtual tie at least on the Iraq war.

  • Superstition ridden medieval Europe condemned cats as witchs' agents and slaughtered them. Nature's pay back for that brutal and dastardly act came in the form of the Black Plague when the rat population proliferated in the absence of a natural feline pest control. A similar but less deadly fate may be in store for Egypt whose president Hosni Mubarak, in a heartless, mindless and misguided moment of inspiration, ordered all pigs killed in order to protect the nation from swine flu. The streets of Cairo are now awash in stinking garbage. The pigs used to consume organic trash in large quantities and helped keep the city  partially clean. Now they are all gone due to the stupid step taken by ignorant, cowardly politicians and the rubbish is piling up. So, Egyptians are protected from swine flu (they wish!) but are sure to suffer from other more easy to spread infectious diseases that the putrid waste will help breed. And they had been warned of the consequences of the idiotic measure. The story in the New York Times.   

  • One of the top scientists handling India’s 1998 nuclear tests has acknowledged that the tests weren’t quite the unqualified successes they were officially hailed as. Specifically, it seems the thermonuclear (fusion) test was a dud. People outside India have said such things before, as have Indians off the public record, but it is potentially quite significant / uncomfortable that an important Indian scientist has publicly done the same:

    His view was that India should not sign the CTBT and that it needed to conduct more thermonuclear tests.

    “There is no country in the world,” he emphasised, “which managed to get its thermonuclear weapon right in just one test.” He said that he had also pointed to the fact that western seismic experts had doubted India’s claim that the three simultaneous tests on May 11 had a combined explosives yield of 60 kt.

    The Santhanam revelation could have major reverberations in the country’s security policy. The Indo-US nuclear deal, for instance, rests upon the assumption that India will not test again.

    It is also likely to make it difficult for the Manmohan Singh government to sign the CTBT, an issue that has gained considerable salience in the Obama administration’s non-proliferation policy.

    […]

    Karnad, a professor at the Centre for Policy Research, felt that the Indian need to test again “is less a matter of opinion than of fact.”
    In his view, Santhanam’s “extremely courageous stand” had struck a fatal blow at the foundation of the Indo-US nuclear deal “predicated on India’s never testing again and at any accommodationist policies the Manmohan Singh regime may be considering vis-a-vis the CTBT and the Fissile Material Cutoff Treaty”.

  • Golconda The taxi winds around the narrow maze of roads leading up to the fort.
    It's a very democratic cross-section of the population that lines up to
    enter the grounds: at Rs.10 per ticket, this is a poor man's park, not
    just the haunt of the well-heeled. The lawns near the entrance are
    surprisingly green, well-watered even as an extended dry spell has been
    hovering over the city and suburbs. But further inside, the parterres
    look parched and dusty red.

    (The photo above is by A.Gopalratnam)

    As
    we climb the steps, we dip off to the side, under the erstwhile
    stables/bodyguard barracks. At the far end, a couple of cauldrons are
    cooking and a largish group of picnickers are seated in a row,
    partaking of the feast. (Is that the famed Hyderabadi biryani that I
    smell?)
    We pass on, further up the steps to the main fort. A couple
    are marked with what I suspect to be red and yellow paint- it's too
    bright to be kumkum and turmeric. I wonder why, until a few steps later
    we are treated to the unexpected spectacle of a man cutting the head
    off a white rooster in front of a small make-shift altar at the step.
    Maybe a sacrifice to the goddess Jagadamba, who has a temple, even in
    this fort which was last controlled by the Muslim Qutb Shahi dynasty.
    My
    kids and friends are shocked by the blood spilling out onto the step,
    and walk gingerly around the altar and rooster head, bemoaning the
    barbarianism. The man carefully washes the blood from the steps, and
    walks quickly away, clutching the rooster's body, that likely will be
    cooked as part of the Bonalu festival.
    We stop the walk to the top
    of the hill, and retrace our steps towards another area where a Light
    and Sound show will be held. This is for the bonafide wealthier
    tourists, cost Rs.100 for an ordinary ticket and double that for the
    VIP Executive class ticket, which comes with free soft drinks. The path
    to the seats is fraught with the perils of Bat-smell and Bat-droppings,
    echoes from the cliff-swallows swooping around the cavernous ceilings,
    as we wait in line for the security queue. A uniformed policewoman
    diligently peeks into our handbags before nodding us in.
    As we
    swelter in the last rays of the setting sun, batting mosquitoes and
    ticks away in vain, a couple of scrawny cats rush towards the nearby
    garbage can, disappearing almost entirely inside as they rummage for
    leftovers.
    A squeal from the loudspeakers, and then a booming voice
    announces the start of the show. It is a well-written and re-enacted
    history of the occupants of the fort, starting with the Kakatiya kings
    who built it, to the Qutb Shahi rulers who maintained the longest
    control over it, tales of kings and singers and lovers and saints, all
    wiped away in the final blast of war for control of the fabled fort.
    The Golconda is impregnable to all onslaughts but that of treachery.
    The lighting is wonderfully synced with the stirring narration and
    dialogues.
    The audience is alternately captivated by the narration,
    or nodding off when the too-long musical interludes commence.(I'm sure
    they must have paid the singers handsomely for their efforts, but that
    doesn't necessarily mean that the whole songs be played in their 6
    -or-8-stanza entirety!)
    We escape during the final soulful paean to
    the glories of the Telugu people, just minutes before the remaining
    mass of the audience tries to ooze through the narrow pathway back,
    through the Bat-zone.
    Walking outside the fort towards the taxi,
    squeals of horror from the kids punctuate our path: We have just
    managed to step on masses of teeming cockroaches that are out for the
    evening's dinner, congregating in the manholes.
    The verdict from the
    kids: Unmitigated disaster of an excursion, since they didn't like the
    sacrificial rooster, or the bat-smells or the cockroaches.
    My
    verdict: A reminder that beyond all the tourist trappings, there is
    still an underlying India that is worth seeing in all its glory and
    squalor.
    ———————————————
    Cross-posted from Fluff 'n' Stuff

  • Food – Deliciousness in Portland, Maine.  I'm intrigued by "ravioli are stuffed with sweet local shrimp and haddock" – shrimp in ravioli isn't uncommon or remarkable, but haddock? 

    Happiness – Is happiness catching?  Maybe, but not like the global pig flu pandemic.

    Work Out, Become Smart – Mice on treadmills smarter than mice not on treadmills.  Weightlifting and stretching are good for your physical health, but they won't make you smarter.  Aerobic exercise will, although it must be fairly intense, at least if you're a mouse.

    Knowledge and Thinking – If they don't drop out, what should we teach them?  You need a knowledge base.  Well, yes.  But critical thinking ability is way more important than collection of random trivia, in my opinion.  Of course, this is like the nature-nurture debate: meaningless as an abstract discussion.  The op-ed is light on facts, so it's not clear to me exactly what they're doing in the Massachusetts schools, and I'm skeptical of anything called "cooperative learning" or "skills training," but that's not remotely the same thing as "critical thinking."  Even the author's suggestion that "critical thinking" pushes aside subjects like literature strikes me as absurd.  For example, I took a Milton class in college, and the valuable part of that is that it made me a better thinker-reader-writer, not that I can talk about metapoetry or talk about how Satan fits within the epic tradition.

  • Norman Borlaug died of cancer last Saturday. Despite being the recipient of numerous national and international honors, the Nobel Prize, Presidential Medal of Freedom and the Congressional Gold Medal among them, through his long and productive life Borlaug remained quiet, unassuming and mostly unknown to the public.  But the impact of his life's mission on the world is extraordinary. A tireless crusader against world hunger, he was better known in some developing countries whose agricultural methods he helped revolutionize, than in his own homeland. An excerpt from an obituary - a brief account of Borlaug's life, his achievements and the Green Revolution:

    Norman Borlaug Norman Borlaug has, in the opinion of many experts, saved more human lives than any other individual in history. He was the grandfather of the “Green Revolution” in which, between 1961 and 1980, wheat crop yields doubled, tripled and sometimes quadrupled around the world. His experiments with hybrid wheat strains and nitrogenous fertiliser created strains of the staple food impervious to pests, bad weather and poor soil, enabling the world to support a far greater human population than many thought possible after the Second World War. Yet his methods and message fell out of favour, to the detriment of millions — especially in Africa.

    In the mid-1950s Malthusian doomsayers saw the contrary trajectories of population growth and food production in South-East Asia and the Indian sub-continent and predicted catastrophic worldwide starvation, the denudation of forests and seas followed by an inevitable population crash. The reversal in the Third World’s agronomic fortunes was so sudden and so miraculous that many have since forgotten the holocaust forestalled — especially, in Borlaug’s view, the trendier sections of the green lobby which seek to impose organic food and “natural” production methods on the world’s poorest countries.

    Norman Borlaug was born in 1914, the grandson of Norwegian immigrants, in Saude, near Cresco, Iowa. He worked on the family farm until 19, when he signed up for the National Youth Administration, one of Franklin Roosevelt’s “alphabet agencies” set up to combat poverty and despair during the Great Depression. His commitment secured him a place at the University of Minnesota in 1933, but he ran out of money. He transferred to the College of Agriculture’s forestry service and then joined the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) and the US Forestry Service. As a group leader with the CCC he was in charge of many recruits who were emaciated and starving; refugees from the great Dust Bowl that had laid waste to the plains of America from Texas to South Dakota. He said: “I saw how food changed them, and this left scars on me.” 

    ….

    In April 2002 Borlaug signed a declaration with several environmental experts, including Patrick Moore, the co-founder of Greenpeace, in favour of “high-yield conservation”. The movement against trendy agricultural primitivism has since gained pace, yet the lack of respect paid to Borlaug’s teachings in recent years is astonishing in relation to his impact on human society. Many of those who rubbished his acheivements as a “brown revolution”, he said, were Utopians and elitists who had “never experienced the physical sensation of hunger”.

    He won many international awards, but his own country was slow to give him credit. In July 2007 he was awarded the Congressional Gold Medal, although the wording of the law by which it was awarded sought political mileage from his acheivements: “Dr Borlaug has saved more lives than any other person who has ever lived,” it stated. “And likely has saved more lives in the Islamic world than any other human being in history.”  

    Here is the long list of honors and awards bestowed upon Norman Borlaug from all around the world. 

    (Blogger's note: The posting here has been infrequent of late.  I have some ideas brewing but haven't had the time to flesh them out in blog posts due to travel and other pressing tasks. I have another trip coming up next week. Will try to get something out before that. Hopefully, other authors will find the time to write also in the midst of their busy schedules. Thanks for your patience.)