Archive for April, 2008

Because they are ours

Sunday, April 20th, 2008

I think that Obama’s recent statements about poor people clinging to guns and God are being blown out of proportion. Certainly there’s a sense in which oppressed people of any sort tend to fall back on tradition; firearms and religion are our traditions. But it’s not that I think Obama is, on the whole, correct; it’s just that he isn’t out of line with the elite opinion of his class: the politicians. It’s unfair to criticize him for speaking an opinion all his adversaries hold.

But it’s not unfair to criticize him for having a contemptible, elite opinion that looks down on popular sovereignty, and John Médaille does an excellent job. Though I’m not Catholic or a member of any organized religion, I think those paths to God are certainly valid - they’re not themselves good or bad (they are, however, human institutions which must be approached with the same discretion and self-knowledge that any important activity requires). And even if they weren’t, I’d still defend the freedom of people to follow them.

But he absolutely nails the gun issue:

As for guns, we cling to them for another reason, a reason that his little to do with the arguments about the second amendment, arguments which few of us really understand, least of all myself. No, we cling to them precisely because the know-it-alls tell us not to. We live in an age when “experts” give us no end of good advice on subjects that are none of their business, and when each new day brings new headlines about what we should or should not be doing. Be it cholesterol or sex, God or guns, children or politics, there are endless experts to tell us what we are doing wrong. These professional naggers really have our best interests at heart, and the more so the more removed they are from us.

The real reason we cling to guns is that they are ours. And even more, they were our fathers. Ownership of guns is something that distinguished the New World from the Old. In the decadent aristocracies of Europe, guns were largely for the landowners, and “poaching” was punishable by flogging or worse. In the New World, every frontiersman had a gun, and it was an essential part of feeding his family and declaring his liberty. We no longer need to feed our families by hunting, but we still need to assert our liberty, and especially our liberty from the army of experts who claim to know what is best for us.

I hope he’ll forgive the selective quote; the whole post is enlightened, but this was just such a great statement on an issue I hold dear. As for whether or not we’re “bitter”, come on: it’s not just the white rural poor.

Morning Links

Friday, April 18th, 2008
  • The GOP is blocking an investigation into possible corruption involving an earmark secured by Alaska Rep. Don Young. Unbelievable. Forget ethics and morality. How many times does this party have to get its ass kicked at the polls before they’ll learn?
  • Politicians in the state of Minnesota can’t keep their budget in order. So they’re turning to banks and financial institutions to do their police work for them, and help catch tax cheats. The reader who sent me this asks, “What happened to the Fourth Amendment?” I assume he was joking.
  • Pretty cool use of imaging technology to figure out what was really going on a few weeks ago with that reflection in Dick Cheney’s glasses.
  • Wrong door raid in Britain. Welcome to the drug war, American style!
  • Very cool photos of a native tree-dwelling tribe in Indonesia.

    Correction: At the first link, I misstated what’s going on. Most of the Senate, several GOP leaders, and Democratic Sen. Barbara Boxer want the matter referred to the Justice Department. Pelosi and maverick GOP Sen. Tom Coburn want Young’s case referred to the Ethics Committee. I’m not sure I’d trust either to do a proper investigation. The Ethics Committee is notoriously soft on the members it investigates. And this Justice Department is overtly political, especially on matters of public corruption. But I apologize for misstating what actually happened.

  • Why invoke martial law?

    Thursday, April 17th, 2008

    Martial law just gets us into a whole constitutional debate that none of us want to have. Far easier to simply give your law enforcement personnel military vehicles, military outfits, military weapons, and a military mandate. After all, if they scare, rough up, or hurt the population a bit, it’s a small price to pay for officer safety. You can have the benefits of an occupation force with none of the pesky insurgent resistance.</p

    The only price is our way of life. Oh, I know that’s what we’ve spent the last century and a half fighting wars and sacrificing countless lives to protect. But, really, wouldn’t you rather your own government occupy you militarily than some other government? I think the choice is clear.

    The photo is from the raid on the Texas polygamist sect. Hat tip to Radley Balko.

    Morning Links

    Thursday, April 17th, 2008
  • The Wall Street Journal is apparently sending marketing people out to buy up copies of a parody newspaper that came out this week. Link includes horrifying NSFW rendering of a topless Ann Coulter.
  • The state of Oregon claims it’s public laws are protected by copyright.
  • Major commercial airline travel had zero fatalities last year.
  • The state of Texas’ decision to raid that polygamist compound is looking more suspect by the day.
  • France looks to ban “promotion of extreme thinness.”
  • The sad story of a man stuck in an elevator for 42 hours. I think it’s a bit strange that commenters at the linked site are criticizing the man for suing. He very well could have died in there. I’d have sured, too. Link includes pretty terrifying surveillance video.
  • Professional courtesy

    Wednesday, April 16th, 2008

    (Boing Boing 2008-04-07, via Roderick Long 2008-04-08.)

    It’s 1:45 p.m. on a Wednesday in February and a Toyota Camry is driving west on the 91 Express Lanes, for free, for the 470th time.

    The electronic transponder on the dashboard – used to bill tollway users – is inactive. The Camry’s owners, airport traffic officer Rudolph Duplessis and his wife, Loretta, have never had a toll road account, officials say.

    They’ve never received a violation notice in the mail, either. Their car is registered as part of a state program which hides their home address on Department of Motor Vehicles records. The agency that operates the tollway does not have legal access to their address.

    Their Toyota is one of 996,716 vehicles registered to motorists who are affiliated with 1,800 state and local agencies and who are allowed to shield their addresses under the Confidential Records Program.

    An Orange County Register investigation has found that the program, designed 30 years ago to protect police from criminals, has been expanded to cover hundreds of thousands of public employees — from police dispatchers to museum guards — who face little threat from the public. Their spouses and children can get the plates, too.

    This has happened despite warnings from state officials that the safeguard is no longer needed because updated laws have made all DMV information confidential to the public.

    The Register found that the confidential plate program shields these motorists in ways most of us can only dream about:

    • Vehicles with protected license plates can run through dozens of intersections controlled by red light cameras and breeze along the 91 toll lanes with impunity.

    • Parking citations issued to vehicles with protected plates are often dismissed because the process necessary to pierce the shield is too cumbersome.

    • Some patrol officers let drivers with protected plates off with a warning because the plates signal that the drivers are one of their own or related to someone who is.

    Exactly how many people are taking advantage of their protected plates is impossible to calculate. Like the Orange County Transportation Authority, which operates the tollway, many agencies have automated processes and have never focused on what happens to confidential plate holders. Sometimes police take note of the plate and don’t write a ticket at all.

    I would highly doubt that anybody is registering their vehicles on a confidential basis to do anything but protect themselves, Garden Grove Police Capt. Mike Handfield said. I just don’t think people are thinking they’re getting away with anything…. Is the value of having a confidential plate and protecting the law enforcement community from people who might hurt them, is that worth that risk? I believe it is.

    The Register asked the DMV for a list of the number of motorists participating in the program and the agencies they claim as an employer. But the DMV refused to provide those records unless The Register paid $8,442, which officials said was the cost of extracting the list from its database.

    Some police officers confess that when they pull over someone with a confidential license plate they’re more likely to let them off with a warning. In most cases, one said, if an officer realizes a motorist has a confidential plate, the car won’t be pulled over at all.

    It’s an unwritten rule that we would extend professional courtesy, said Ron Smith, a retired Los Angeles Police Department officer who worked patrol for 23 years. Nine out of 10 times I would.

    California Highway Patrol officer Jennifer Hink put it a little differently. It’s officer discretion … (But) just because you have confidential plates doesn’t mean you’re going to get out of a citation.

    Many police departments that run red light camera programs systematically dismiss citations issued to confidential plates.

    It’s a courtesy, law enforcement to law enforcement, San Francisco Police Sgt. Tom Lee said. We let it go.

    Jennifer Muir, Orange County Register (2008-04-04): Special license plates shield officials from traffic tickets

    The term professional courtesy comes from the traditions of medicine: many doctors will not charge money when they treat another doctor’s immediate family. When doctors talk about professional courtesy they are talking about a very old system of mutual aid in which one doctor agrees to do a favor for another, at her own expense, for the sake of collegiality, out of concern for professional ethics (to offer doctors an alternative to having their own family as patients), and because she can count on getting similar services in return should she ever need them.

    But when the Gangsters in Blue start talking about professional courtesy, they’re talking about something quite different: a favor done for a fellow gang member at no personal expense, with the bill sent to unwilling taxpayers who must pick up the tab for the roads and parking; and a favor done in order insulate the gangsters and their immediate family from any kind of ethical accountability to the unwilling victims that they sanctimoniously insist on serving and protecting. Professional courtesy in medicine means reciprocity in co-operative mutual aid in healing sick people; professional courtesy in government policing means reciprocity in a conspiracy to make sure that any cop can do just about anything she wants by way of free-riding, disruptive, dangerous or criminal treatment of innocent third parties, with complete impunity, and the rest of us will get the bill for it and a fuck you, civilian if we don’t like it.

    To be sure, letting a traffic ticket slide is, in the grand scheme of things, a pretty small thing. But it’s a small thing that is intimately connected with bigger things—with a pervasive, institutionalized system with consequences that are as terrible as they are inevitable and predictable.

    America. Fuck Yeah.

    Tuesday, April 15th, 2008

    Our gift to the world: paramilitary police teams. You go, America.

    Time has a photo essay.

    Sorta’ related: A question during my speech tonight at the University of the South reminded me this YouTube video. I’ve posted it before. It looks like some overdone, overly sensationalized take on SWAT teams from someone not fond of them. Then I plugged around a bit, and discovered that the guy who made the video was actually on the SWAT team.

    Anyway, I just checked the guy’s My Space page again, and it now looks like he’s the police chief in the town. This was the guy who said his love of SWAT raids stemmed form his fondness of “buyin’ dope and kickin’ down doors.”

    Yes. Let’s put that guy in charge. I can’t see what could possibly go wrong.

    Naomi Wolf on America’s Slide into Fascism

    Monday, April 14th, 2008

    A very well presented summary of the ways in which the U.S. government is taking the steps other totalitarian governments have throughout history.

    What is happening right now is a corporate state conspiracy, pure and simple. Whatever that means to you, be prepared to respond to it when it crosses whatever threshold of human dignity you’ve decided upon.

    Another Isolated Incident

    Saturday, April 12th, 2008

    ATF agents raid the wrong home.

    There appears to have been one in Alabama, too, but I don’t have a subscription to the Clarke County Democrat.

    My Fox column…

    Tuesday, April 8th, 2008

    …this week is on the unfortunate resurrection of the Byrne Grant, the anti-drug piece of federal pork responsible for Tulia, unaccountable drug task forces, and all sorts of other drug war mayhem.

    This time, it’s the Democrats who are stirring up bad criminal justice policy.

    SWAT Officers Bring Children on Drug Raid

    Sunday, April 6th, 2008

    What could possibly go wrong?