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Politics : Politics for Pros- moderated -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: JohnM who wrote (44886)5/17/2004 2:50:55 PM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 793804
 
And Austin in early May is one of the more spectacular places to be. Wonderful weather.

Ahh, so that's where you are! Back in that "rock ribbed Republican" state. I have to put up with one day after another of "high 82, low 72."

I coincidentally just read some great lines about your former profession by H L Mencken. He would have made a great blogger. I now have 116 blogs on RSS feed.

Mencken on Economists
By Don Boudreaux on Weblogs

Of all Americans ever to put quill to parchment, or fingers to a keyboard, the one who surely possessed the greatest talent to blog is, alas, a man who likely never set his eyes on a computer: H.L. Mencken.
.....
Here's Mencken on the economics profession:

Its dismalness is largely a delusion, due to the fact that its chief ornaments, at least in our own day, are university professors. The professor must be an obscurantist or he is nothing; he has a special and unmatchable talent for dullness; his central aim is not to expose the truth clearly, but to exhibit his profundity, his esotericity -- in brief, to stagger sophomores and other professors.

Later in the same essay ("The Dismal Science") Mencken laments "the mental timorousness and conformity which go inevitably with school-teaching."

cafehayek.typepad.com



To: JohnM who wrote (44886)5/17/2004 2:55:48 PM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793804
 
Another one you will enjoy.

Twelve top reasons why God can't get tenure

1. He's authored only one paper

2. That paper was in Hebrew

3. His work appeared in an obscure, unimportant publication

4. He never references other authors

5. Workers in the field can't replicate His results.

6. He failed to apply to the ethics committee before starting His experiments on humans.

7. He tried to cover an experiment's unsatisfatory results by drowning the subjects.

8. When subjects behavior proved his theory wrong he had them removed from the sample.

9. He hardly ever shows up for any lectures. He merely assigns His Book again and again.

10. His office is at the top of a mountain, and He doesn't keep office hours anyway.

11. When He learned that His first two students sought wisdom, He had them expelled.

12. His exams consist of only ten assigments which most students fail.



To: JohnM who wrote (44886)5/17/2004 2:57:14 PM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793804
 
MRC Study: NBC Devoted Ten Times More Airtime to U.S. Humiliations Than Saddam’s Mass Murders

Prison Abuse Trumps Saddam’s Mass Graves?

The national media pride themselves on their ability to make fine distinctions and appreciate subtle nuances. But their incessant repetition on the Abu Ghraib prison-abuse story, accompanied by the same rotating set of photographs, lacked context — until the story emerged Tuesday of the savage beheading of American citizen Nick Berg in Iraq.

Before that, <font size=4>network reporters tried to compare prison-abuse photos with Vietnam-era images of point-blank assassinations and the massacre at My Lai. But none of the networks could show the grotesque snuff-film footage of Berg’s murder<font size=3>, although CBS came closest, showing Berg as he was pushed to the ground and holding the still frame as they played the audio of his last screams.
<font size=4>
There is a vast difference between sexual humiliation and brutal murder. But to the national media, there is also much greater outrage for U.S. prisoner abuse than there is for the enemy’s murders. Viewers received a false picture of moral equivalence, with only American offenses amplified.<font size=3>

To illustrate a fraction of the bias problem, we counted the number of prisoner-abuse stories on NBC’s evening and morning news programs (NBC Nightly News and Today) from April 29, when the story emerged, through May 11. There were 58 morning and evening stories. Using the Nexis news-data retrieval system, we counted the number of stories on mass graves found in Iraq from the reign of Saddam Hussein in 2003 and 2004. The number of evening and morning news stories on those grim discoveries? Five.

On the May 6, 2003 Nightly News, Jim Maceda reported a very pointed story, suggesting as many as 300,000 may be buried in groups around the country. Tom Brokaw’s show also had a report on May 14, and two more on the weekend of June 7 and 8, when a mass grave was uncovered at Salman Pak. Then, NBC aired nothing until December 16, when reporter Pete Williams mentioned mass graves in a story on an impending trial for Saddam Hussein. NBC has aired no stories on mass graves since then. Today never aired a story in 2003 or 2004 on mass graves in Iraq.
<font size=4>
Today has used the Abu Ghraib pictures to insist on political damage to the Bush administration. NBC was in a rush to punish. Co-host Katie Couric opened last Wednesday’s show in full scandal mode, demanding: “What did administration officials know and when did they know it?” <font size=3>

Couric and co-host Matt Lauer have asked repeatedly about whether Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld should resign. On Tuesday morning, Pentagon reporter Jim Miklaszewski insisted “there's a steadily growing political and public opinion drumbeat calling for Rumsfeld's resignation,” even though the latest Gallup poll numbers disagree, 64 to 31 percent.

If Americans didn't want Rumsfeld ousted, how about the world? On Monday night, NBC's Fred Francis suggested: “In the Arab street and much of the world, outrage has produced a consensus: Rumsfeld must go.” Francis quoted what he called a “moderate journalist” from Egypt saying Rumsfeld “is reminding me of a sort of neo-Nazi character.” Francis also relayed an unnamed “Arab businessman” commenting on the omnipresent prison pictures: “That is not Jeffersonian democracy. It's more like a lesson from Hitler's book, Mein Kampf.”

Aren’t the NBC-selected Hitler comparisons a bit misplaced when the Baathists are the mass murderers?

mediaresearch.org