March 30, 2005

Hey!

Why isn't someone de-linking me? I'm an amoral anti-feedtube unfeeling pro-death party to murder, too!

I'm kind of hurt, if you want to know the truth.

If you want to make a statement about the worth of Terri's life, at least do it with a little panache, like McGehee did when he posted his living will. Because beyond the Anglo-Saxon flourishes, he actually makes some good points other than "I don't want people to visit sites I disagree with."

UPDATE: The Chadster decides to "kill 'em all, and let God sort them out." Good man.

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March 29, 2005

Johnnie Cochran's Dead

So long, Johnnie.

And, fuck you, too: you set race relations back by at least a couple of decades, setting white and black women, in particular, at each other's throats and getting a brutal killer off the hook for a vicious crime.

Wait. Did I say fuck you?


Via Protein Wisdom.

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I'm Still Here

. . . but working a lot of hours right now. Real posts will resume soon (with any luck, tonight). In the meantime, check out the fine people on my blogroll.

Or send me money, to encourage me to give up this "work" madness.

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March 26, 2005

My Last Terri Schiavo Post

Insty:

Trampling the Constitution in an earnest desire to do good in high-profile cases has been a hallmark of a certain sort of liberalism, and it's the sort of thing that I thought conservatives eschewed. If I were in charge of making the decision, I might well put the tube back and turn Terri Schiavo over to her family. But I'm not, and the Florida courts are, and they seem to have done a conscientious job. Maybe they came to the right decision, and maybe they didn't. But respecting their role in the system, and not rushing to overturn all the rules because we don't like the outcome, seems to me to be part of being a member of civilized society rather than a mob. As I say, I thought conservatives knew this.

I thought so, too.

Donald Sensing:

It's obvious that arguments about Terri Schiavo fall into two main camps.

• On the one hand are people who believe that the removal of Terri's feeding tube has been railroaded through the courts by hostile, adulterous husband Michael, who deperately wants Terri dead so he can make off with untold riches in newly-unhindered settlement money and life insurance. Michael, of course, actually injured Terri himself in the first place. Furthermore, Terri's condition is actually much better than a dozen or so doctors have testified under oath; their diagnosis that Terri is in a permanent vegetative state is simply wrong and the Florida courts have willfully ignored or rejected all evidence to the contrary. Likewise, the courts' rulings - that Terri herself had stated more than once, before her injury, that she would not want to be kept alive in such a condition - are unjust, flawed and based on bogus testimony by Michael and the two other persons who testified that they had heard Terri say so.

Hence, Terri is about to be murdered in a moral, if not technically legal, sense. Therefore, any measure is justified in restoring her feeding tube, including federal intervention or, as Gov. Jeb Bush was considering yesterday, taking Terri into state custody.

• On the other hand are people who trust that the PVS diagnosis is valid, having been confirmed multiple times, that the Florida courts followed both the letter and intent of Florida law governing such cases, including ruling that the burden of proof was met in showing that Terri had uttered statements that she would not want to be kept alive in her condition. People on this side may agree that Michael Schiavo is no paragon of virtue, but also acknowledge that allegations regarding his actions and motives were exhaustively explored by investigators and the courts and that no facts were found sufficient either to implicate him as a cause of Terri's condition or to impeach his testimony about Terri's pre-injury statements or the testimony of the other five persons who so testified.

This group believes that the Florida courts have handled this case properly, if not perfectly, and that there is no justification for federal intervention or unilateral executive intervention by Gov. Bush.

Not everyone in either camp cleaves to every point of the descriptions I make, but most substantially do as far as I can tell. We need to acknowledge that these two camps cannot be reconciled.

This business of "I don't like the outcome, can't we re-write the rules retroactively?" reminds me of the 2000 Election. Only now, people whose opinions I normally respect are the ones who want to change the rules so they can get the result they desire.

To tell you the truth, I feel a little betrayed, and it makes me crabby when I post. I'm actually not "anti-feed tube" so much as I am "pro-rule of law," and getting bitchier by the moment as I see my erstwhile allies spin—in my mind—further and further out of control.

Attila the Hub: But there is a cultural substrain out there that views human life as only worthwhile according to what the person can contribute; there's a utilitarianism that leads to situations like what we see in the Netherlands.

Attila Girl: It's out there. But I don't think it's driving this case.

(I then proceeded to win the argument, but I don't want to go into how I did that because it would be bragging.)

Pray for Terri. And then, please pray for our system of government and our way of life.

UPDATE: Please read the Terri Schiavo FAQ at Football Fans for Truth being linked by Instapundit, Protein Wisdom, and Gosh-Knows-Who-Else-By-Now. There's a lot of information there that one doesn't hear every day: for instance, I didn't know that an MRI scan would require brain surgery on Terri to remove implants in her head; I thought it would be a relatively simple procedure.

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March 24, 2005

Kyrgyzstan Next?

The President of Kyrgyzstan, President Askar Akayev, has just resigned, according to James Joyner. Holy shit.


This democratic-leanings thing: it's like bobbing skirts in the 20s. All the rage. And authoritarian rulers are those ugly girls in the long skirts that no one wants to kiss.

Happy Easter.

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And, By the Way

My name is Joy McCann. If I ever become brain-damaged or severely injured, I'd like my husband to make all decisions regarding my care.

Even if he's had kids with another woman. Especially if he's had kids with another woman: I think that would make him a little bit more objective than the 'rents. Ya know?

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William F. Buckley Sez

There was never a more industrious inquiry, than in the Schiavo case, into the matter of rights formal and inchoate. It is simply wrong, whatever is felt about the eventual abandonment of her by her husband, to use the killing language. She was kept alive for fifteen years, underwent a hundred medical ministrations, all of them in service of an abstraction, which was that she wanted to stay alive. There are laws against force-feeding, and no one will know whether, if she had had the means to convey her will in the matter, she too would have said, Enough.

That's right. We'll never know for sure one way or the other. In theory, we should err on the side of life. But after a decade and a half, it begins to look like we as a society are trying to prove something: that no matter how ridiculous it might seem, we will not give up hope. We will leave no stone unturned. We will leave nothing undone. We are good people. We are a good nation.

Is God testing us? Are we afraid we will have failed that test if this one woman is allowed to die in peace?

And how much are we willing to give up to get there? What if the price tag is States' rights? The Republican Party? The next election? Another attack on American soil?

How far are you willing to take this? I want to know—and I don't.


Via Beautiful Atrocities.

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Goldstein and Ardolino

. . . survived their first day on the radio. I can't seem to get the replays over at Rightalk to work, but I guess I've got through the weekend to figure it out.

Congratulations to Protein Wisdom and In DC Journal: you guys have guts.

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The FEC Gonna Get Yo' Mama

Cassandra would like us all to take a valium, do our yoga—basically, to calm down with respect to the Federal Election Commission, and the possibility that it will try to regulate speech on the internet:

It does begin to seem that the B-sphere may be getting their collective knickers in a twist for naught. Because while there are aspects of blogging that legitimately fall under the purview of McCain-Feingold, they are narrow in scope and don't apply to the vast majority of independent bloggers. I continue to believe the FEC would be insane (and indeed has no authority) to regulate independent bloggers absent some financial involvement with political campaigns. It's that simple: keep your nose clean and your powder dry, and you've nothing to worry about.

She points out that several of the Commissioners are on record as saying electronic speech should be protected for individual bloggers, as long as large amounts of money are not changing hands.

Maybe. Nonetheless, I'm not against reminding the government exactly where its powers come from, and just how interesting life will be if it gets both the Leftosphere and the Rightosphere (along with the Libertarianosphere and the Greenosphere, for that matter) united against it.

And I don't care if the FEC thinks I'm a kook, so long as it acknowledges that the Constitution gives me the right to yammer on to my heart's content about politics.

These people don't know what trouble looks like. They really don't. But I hope they sense it on some level.


From the "have you noticed?" file: Cassandra lives up to her name . . . well, about as well as I live up to mine. She is, quite simply, the best, and we differ here more on strategic issues than philosophy.


Via Pirate's Cove.

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The Audience

. . . is listening.


Via The Daou Report at Salon.

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Jeff Sums Up

the story of the heroic Italian journalist in terms a child could understand.

If you want to know the truth, he seems a little acerbic about the whole thing.

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March 23, 2005

Victory in Yemen!

Jane at Armies of Liberation has been successful in her campaign to free Al-Khaiwani from jail. You'll recall that President Saleh (who heads up the freaking judiciary there, presumably due to budget cuts) had him imprisoned because he criticized the government in his newspaper. After 600+ citizens (many of them associated with online journalism) signed Jane's petition requesting that Al-Khaiwani be released, President Saleh relented, rather than stay in the spotlight.

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It should be noted here that Jane is a "real" journalist, and has her work published all over the world. She specifically threatened to highlight this situation in the Wall Street Journal if Saleh didn't come around. The Yemeni government was up against both traditional and online journalism, and it's a potent combination.

I want to be just like Jane when I grow up. (Uh-oh: I think that's "if.")

Seriously, thank you to everyone who signed the petition. It blows my mind that we made a difference in this way.

Go to Jane's site every day.

UPDATE: Those of us who supported Jane in her efforts are listed here, and that's where most of the pro-liberation high fives are taking place (in the comments section).

UPDATE THURSDAY: El Capitan discusses what a long shot this was from the beginning, and whether he was a cynic for thinking so.

I really don't: if dictators were so susceptible to public pressure, sanctions would have worked against Saddam Hussein. The thing is, when we can shame authoritarian rulers into doing the right thing, we should: it's much worse to have to accomplish this sort of thing by force. And it's not like our green berets are going to go into another country just to fetch a journalist.

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Not That You Wanted to Hear This . . .

James sums up the facts in the Terry Schiavo case. Obviously, we need to get a little more organized around this issue as a society. We need more living wills. But it's very hard to paint Michael Schiavo as some kind of monster.

P.S. "We're the party of small government. We're here to help you."

Via Say Anything.

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March 22, 2005

Eggagog

. . . is going on a trip. Business, or pleasure, I wonder.

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March 21, 2005

When Kofi Met Yassir

Laurence is bad. Bad Laurence!

UPDATE: It's turned into a series. And it's pretty freaking funny.

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Oh, Fuck.

Another fucking school shooting.

Just fuck.

(No. This is not a family blog when kids are dead. Try me next week.)


Maybe we can make lemons into lemonade, though, by trashing the Constitution over this! Anyone want to time it out?—I figure the first calls for gun control will hit the media by tomorrow, noon Eastern.

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Like Everyone Else

I wonder why the mainstream media never ask actual Iraqis how they feel about the war.

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Jihad, the Musical

Beautiful Atrocities has done it again; run, don't walk.

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March 20, 2005

Camille Paglia

. . . writes about poetry as if it still matters. What a sexy idea. I used to write poetry before I concluded that 1) 100% of the people who read modern poetry also write modern poetry, and 2) I don't like modern poetry very much.

So then I turned to blogging, because only 95% of the people who read blogs also write blog entries themselves.


(h/t Oakland Jeff)

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So, What Did I Do on Saturday?

Wonderful things.

Brunch in Marina del Rey with some of the Bear Flag Leaguers. Lawyer to non-lawyer ratio: 1-3, including the kids. (Check out the pix: the two babies are especially adorable, and Breaker took the fabulous picture of Baldilocks [Juliette] that I've always wanted to see. She's such a beautiful woman, and few pictures really capture that.)

Coffee with a dear friend.

And then I saw a rather brilliant scary movie with my cuddly hyperintelligent spouse.

I'm a pretty happy camper right now, I must admit.

Still, even a girl with the handsomest/brightest husband in the world (that would be me) has to have someone's picture on the inside of her locker door. Not a real person; you understand (and that's why I don't have blog-crushes). Just an actor or something like that, so as to stay in touch with her inner 14-year-old.

In that regard, I'm thinking of trading Adrien Brody in for Joaquin Phoenix, because of those amazing eyes. But it's a tough decision. The girls and bois should help me out, here.

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Don't tell me I'm being shallow, people. I might take it as a challenge. Believe me: you haven't seen shallow here. Not yet.

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