posted by
eftychia at 06:27pm on 2003-06-06
Starting with some grumbly items this time, but there's some sweet/nifty/funny stuff along with the politics.
-
Reverse Robin Hood, by Bob Herbert (thanks to
vvalkyri
for bringing it to my attention) describes how a provision the
Senate had added to Bush's tax bill to extend the bill's
increased child tax credit to low-income families was deleted
in House/Senate negotiations, for apparently no good reason.
The article does mention that the tax changes will already be
considerably more expensive than advertised, but says this
provision would amount to a small fraction of the rest (about
1%), and, more damningly: "to really get a sense of the
scandalous nature of this G.O.P. tax-cut scam, consider that
the House and Senate negotiators also got rid of a number of
measures in the Senate bill that would have saved billions of
dollars by closing abusive corporate tax structures."
Something's wrong with this picture.
angiej pointed out an
article about a study of teacher pay in Education Next,
"a school-reform journal published by the Hoover Institution, a
conservative-leaning think tank at Stanford University." The study's
author is quoted as saying, "the typical school district is paying too
much to elementary teachers and not enough to teachers in high-need
areas," because, according to the hourly rate he calculated, teachers
are paid more than computer programmers, accountants, and nurses.
This is based on teachers' "shorter workdays" and long summer break.
Excuse me, but don't most schoolteachers wind up with a fair amount
of work to do outside of the classroom that's not being counted in
that "shorter workday"? We're facing teacher shortages and the
answer is to cut teachers' pay? Go read
angiej's
quite justified
rant on the subject and the followup comments to it.-
Microsoft granted US patent for "interactive entertainment"
(Embedded-Watch.com) Or as Fred and
speaker2animals
put it, "All your TV are belong to Microsoft". " Indeed,
judging by the summary description included in the patent filing,
it looks like Microsoft may have locked up rights to any system
which offers up time-shifted movies or television programs over
cable, broadband, or satellite systems."
ysabel posted a pointer (with
commentary) to an
article by Lynn Conway about a dangerous new textbook.
"This guy's transphobic, homophobic and sexist drivel is
probably going to be used, starting this fall, as a textbook
in undergraduate psychology courses. This is a bad thing,
and Lynn explains why. Bailey essentially puts forward a
thesis based on a very limited set of purely anecdotal data,
and then asserts that anyone who presents counterexamples is
lying." What makes this scary, rather than just hateful,
is Ms. Conway's explanation that "The reason for our
greatest concern about this book is not that is was published,
but that it was published by the National Academy. If the
publisher had been any other, we would not have raised this
alert. Instead it would have been business as usual, we would
have complained within the trans community, and the book would
have languished as a sorry piece of pop-psychology as other
such academic caricatures of trans women have done in the past.
However, as we'll see, the influence of the Academies spread
far and wide across the academic and intellectual elite of the
nation. It's imprimatur gives the appearance of a stamp of
approval on its pubiclations, with far reaching implications -
including being widely read and taken seriously within the
Academy, i.e., within the elite elected intelligentsia of the
nation."- Interrobang posted a list of ironic [fictional] organizations, such as the John Ashcroft "Right to Privacy" Foundation and the Donald Rumseld Fund for the Preservation of Mesopotamian Culture. Of course, much of the fun is in the followup comments.
- This is related to something I posted before, but I don't think I've included this particular article here yet: Taking a New Look at Pain (Newsweek, 19 May; MSNBC) "Thanks to advances in brain science and medical technology, the research is exploding. Harnessing high-tech imaging equipment and stunning advances in genomics, scientists are detangling the pain system at its molecular level. Researchers are isolating genes associated with pain and uncovering the influences of emotion and gender. Specialists are devising more targeted treatments. And engineers are creating more efficient drug-delivery systems."
- An oldie but goodie: Celestial Grammar, by Celeste of alt.sex.stories fame, is a grammar primer for ... well, I was going to say, "would be porn authors," but really for anyone who needs a refresher and is not offended by her examples. As a bonus, you get parenthetical comments such as, "This is grammatically correct, but it may constitute a social faux pas." (Not quite as amusing as the erotic story I ran across a while back which explained proper use of quotes and reader-friendly formatting all within the dialogue of the story -- I'll have to go find that one again.) Celeste comments, "Believe it or not, there is at least one college instructor in the United States who uses my grammar notes with his class. He says it's the best way he's ever found to make grammar interesting." I can believe that. I'd have been surprised if there were not at least one professor using it.
- Interrobang's version of link-sausage, posted 29 April (sorry, I got a bit behind) contains a whole bunch of interesting stuff that I've looked at and a whole bunch of interesting-looking stuff that I haven't gotten to yet. Some of those links will eventually show up here, but you may find different items interesting than I do.
- This item is here 'cause a few particular people will get a special kick out of it, but I don't expect it to be everyone's cup of tea. "The Rescue" is collaborative Buffy fanfic, deliberately on the silly (actually, surreal or absurdist or both, technically) side. Thing is, a member of The Homespun Ceilidh Band makes a cameo appearance in "part IV continued". (Just a single mention in a stage direction, but he's in there.) As the band member in question summarized the story in email: "The basis for the fan fic is that someone realized that Joss and crew badly misused the scoobies, causing them untold pain and suffering whenever anyone fell in love with them. So they realized that Joss wanted them for himself and that he did horrible things to those who dared love them, such as Tara, etc. So they started a movement, MOLOJ, to rescue the scoobies from the clutches of Joss and crew." My personal favourite line was, "He could be keeping the entire 'Firefly' cast."
- Sweet story about gay penguins (not really related to the rest of the post it's <lj-cut> in).
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