Posted on October 8, 2009 by Steven Mather
{The first essay in this series introduced a model I created to explain the cycle of corruption that plagues US politics. This essay looks into the roots of this corruption. It takes a long time to get to the payoff. Further, the conclusion is somewhat ex nihilo if you have not read [...]
Filed under: Democracy as a form of liberal goverment, Economy, Financial Meltdown of 2008, General, Health Care Reform, Liberalism, Politics, Recession/Depression 2008, collective action, culture, financial bailout | Tagged: citizenship, civic virtue, corporate interests, corruption, cyclops, Declaration of Independence, Democracy, Depression, Euripides, John Adams, political corruption, Polyphemos, recession, satyr plays, Silenus | 35 Comments »
Posted on September 30, 2009 by Steven Mather
America isn’t easy
Building and sustaining a diverse community is not easy.
What should we celebrate?
Celebrate: to perform (a sacrament or ceremony) publicly and with appropriate rites; to honor by solemn ceremonies and refraining from ordinary business; to hold up or play for public notice.
What should we tolerate?
Tolerate: to endure or resist the [...]
Filed under: Democracy as a form of liberal goverment, General, Human Rights, Politics, culture | Tagged: blogophere, citizenship, civics, ethics, free speech, Politics, rights and responsibilities | 95 Comments »
Posted on September 21, 2009 by Steven Mather
Gay-Lussac
The pressure of a fixed mass and fixed volume of a gas is directly proportional to the gas’s temperature.
This relationship is known as the Gay-Lussac’s Law and a pressure cooker is an example of the law in practice. Cooking under pressure creates the possibility of cooking with high temperature liquids because the boiling point of [...]
Filed under: Bad Bank, Barack Obama, Blogosphere, Campaign Finance Reform, Clinton Derangement Syndrome, Cost of Sexism, Democracy as a form of liberal goverment, Economy, FISA, Financial Meltdown of 2008, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Gender Equity, General, Health Care Reform, Human Rights, Justice, LGBT rights, Liberalism, Politics, Recession/Depression 2008, Single Payer, Social Media, astroturf, big pharma, broken promises, choice, collective action, corruption, culture, feminism, financial bailout, foreign policy, government, racism | Tagged: bailout, civic virtue, civil liberties, civility, ethics, Health Care Reform, moral hazard, morality, Politics, recession, Single Payer, TARP | 18 Comments »
Posted on September 19, 2009 by Steven Mather
O’Keefe and Giles, in their portrayal of pimp and prostitute, reek of puerile classism. Were it not for the overwhelmingly noxious fumes emanating from the handful of ACORN employees who were apparently willing to enable a child prostitution ring exploiting illegal immigrants, the stink of the ill-informed moral superiority of O’Keefe and Giles would [...]
Filed under: Cost of Sexism, Gender Equity, General, Human Rights, Media, Politics, culture, domestic violence, feminism, sexism and misogyny | Tagged: ACORN, Big Government, child prostitution, Cotton Mather, Democratic Party, documentary, Fox News, Hannah Giles, illegal immigration, James O'Keefe, Obama, prostitution, Puritan, Puritanism, Republican Party, sting, US Congress, US Senate | 183 Comments »
Posted on September 16, 2009 by Steven Mather
(With apologies to Taylor Swift)
Kanye West may save Obama’s presidency. When President Obama said “He’s a jackass.”, the President confirmed a simple truth about civic virtue that transcended most political boundaries.
Importantly, he did so authentically. His statement was not the product of intense focus group distillation.
The comment leaked (hmm) and it [...]
Filed under: 2012 Election, Barack Obama, General, Politics, Presidential election 2012, broken promises, culture | Tagged: Barack Obama, Politics, Media, post-racial, race, power, civility, Kanye West, Taylor Swift, honesty, civics, promises, jackass, VMAS, awards, 2012, POTUS, being presidential, Jonathan Swift | 111 Comments »
Posted on September 15, 2009 by Steven Mather
Is it beyond our ken to maintain a noble purpose as we guide our battered ships of state through the dark shadows of this mild squall of an economic crisis? Whom of us will risk life and limb to keep the ships afloat? Who will cast away possessions for the same purpose? [...]
Filed under: Economy, Financial Meltdown of 2008, Health Care Reform, Human Rights, Hurricane Katrina, Justice, Liberalism, culture, going forward, government | Tagged: absurdity, Cap and Trade, carbon emissions, civic virtue, clean air act, climate change, CO2, cultural dynamics, energy, environmental collapse, environmental degradation, environmental responsiblity, EPA, ethics, extinction, food crisis, global warming, gorilla poaching, greenhouse gases, honeybees, intersex fish, mafia, morality, nuclear waste, Politics, sacred cow, sacrifice, starvation, world development report | 103 Comments »
Posted on September 11, 2009 by Steven Mather
You can fool some of the people all of the time, and all of the people some of the time, but you can not fool all of the people all of the time. – Abraham Lincoln
There’s a sucker born every minute. – P.T. Barnum
We, the People, are born every minute. The last ten [...]
Filed under: American Society in Flux, Barack Obama, Democracy as a form of liberal goverment, Economy, General, Health Care Reform, Human Rights, Politics, Single Payer, big pharma, choice, corruption, government, healthcare | Tagged: anti-liberty, Barack Obama, big brother, Big Insurance, big pharma, conservatives, founding fathers, Frater Magnus, Glenn Beck, Glenn Greenwald, GOP, health care, Health Care Reform, HMOs, liberty, neo-feudalism, Politics, private healthcare, Single Payer, tea parties, U.S. Constitution, Washington | 46 Comments »
Posted on September 3, 2009 by Steven Mather
Dear Riverdaughter,
There is an interesting parallel between the situation of anti-Obama Democrats and that of the members of the resistance in post-WWII France. Given these parallels, I think it unlikely that we will receive an apology from the dark minions of the Kool-Aid Kingdom, generally-speaking. I think it more likely that they will continue to [...]
Filed under: Barack Obama, Blogosphere, Financial Meltdown of 2008, General, Hillary Clinton, Media, Politics, Presidential Election 2008 | Tagged: Barack Obama, buyer remorse, DNC, Donna Brazile, Hillary Clinton, Howard Dean, John Edwards, Keith Olbermann, Media, MSNBC, Nancy Pelosi, NO WE WON'T, Politics, PUMA, scorched Earth policy | 91 Comments »
Posted on August 27, 2009 by Steven Mather
The curmudgeon with whom I share office space looked at me quizzically and asked, “Would you call someone who gave you a coffee a coffer?” I pondered for a moment and replied, “No, Ian. I would call the person who gave the coffee a coffeeor and me a coffeeee.“
Scrabble-minded, Ian’s eyes lit [...]
Filed under: General | Tagged: word play | 46 Comments »
Posted on August 25, 2009 by Steven Mather
In “Peak Oil” is a Waste of Energy,” Michael Lynch, knocks down a strawman made to stand for the Peak Oil (PO) theory. He wants to do so because he believes concerns over PO could cause us to engage in “hare-brained,” “money wasting” and “unnecessary” alternative energy ventures. Given the danger of PO theory, [...]
Filed under: General | Tagged: New York Times, environment, Op Ed, Economics, Peak Oil, Michael Lynch, thermodynamics, diminishing returns, net yield, alternative energy, MIT, Malthus, D'Alembert | 26 Comments »