Archive for the ‘Politics’ Category
That was quick
Friday, June 27th, 2008Looks like suits are already in progress to overturn other handgun bans around the country. Case in point: ChicagoGunCase.com
(via View from the Porch)
Heller Affirmed
Thursday, June 26th, 2008D.C vs. Heller is in. It’s 5-4 in favor of the 2nd Amendment being an actual right (as opposed to some sort of mythical “collective right” whatever the hell that might mean). Narrower than I was hoping and in more tepid language. Money quote from the opinion:
“The Second Amendment protects an individual right to possess a firearm unconnected with service in a militia, and to use that arm for traditionally lawful purposes, such as self-defense within the home.”
So we won, though narrowly. Within the next 21 days, the people of DC will be able to register a handgun and keep it in their home for protection. No provisions, of course, for carry or anything like that, but as Robb Allen says:
Now is not the time to relax. Enjoy your day, hit the range, buy some ammo or a new gun, but get ready for the upcoming battles. The(sic) will be small, but numerous.
This isn’t the end it’s the beginning. This opens the door for folks to strike down some of the more odious local anti-gun laws in the country, but it’s a victory which just allows us to fight more legal battles down the road.
Special thanks to Alan Gura who, in my totally-not-a-lawyer opinion, did a fantastic job arguing our side of it. I would congratulate my one very dear D.C. friend on getting some of her liberty back, but I have the sneaking suspicion that she doesn’t see it that way.
…
Aw, what the hell: Congrats, Heather! If you ever want to learn how to shoot, the offer I made you lo those many years ago to take you to the range is still open.
And More Politics
Monday, June 9th, 2008Sorry for the double-post on politics, but it looks like I have yet another reason to not vote for McCain:
Now, I have nothing against McCain being a Christian. All of the finest Presidents that this nation has had have been Christians. The fact of someone being a Christian or not says nothing about their ability to perform well or poorly in the role of President of the USA. Which is exactly my point. America is was not born or conceived as a “Christian Nation” (cf., for the most succinct statement of this, The Treaty of Tripoli).
For McCain to infer that he’s a good leader because he’s Christian or that America is, in any sense other than a demographic one, a “Christian Nation” is, to put it simply, asinine.
Race Forecast: Uninspiring
Saturday, June 7th, 2008Well, the Ds have spoken and it now looks like this year’s dog-and-pony show will be a run off between Mr. Hopey Changey and Ol’ Coots McGeezer. Oh, and then there’s Mr. Neo-Conservative Libertarian.
Well damn. What’s worse, they’re all applying for a job for which none of them have read the job description. They’re all telling us what they’re going to do about the economy, health care, immigration, etc. None of which is actually, you know, what the president is supposed to do.
Oh well. Those are the candidates and, as the grammatically atrocious saying goes “them’s the breaks.”
But which to vote for? It feels a bit like being asked which lumberjack I want as my dentist. Well, none. I’d really actually like someone who will do the job they’re being hired to do. I mean, I’m sure all the candidates are fantastic lumberjacks, but we don’t need anyone who’s good with a cross-cut saw at the moment.
*Sigh* Oh well. I am going to vote (no matter how tempting is seems not to at times), but I really dislike the idea that no matter who I vote for, I’ll probably spend the next 4 years wishing I hadn’t.
Not learning from recent history
Thursday, April 10th, 2008Looks like McCain’s gonna get Nadered.
Funny, now we’ll get to hear the same whining from the Republicans (”We woulda won if it weren’t for that evil Bob Barr and his vote stealing ways!) as we did from the Democrats a few years ago. Admittedly, I think the Democrats had a better reason to whine. Nader actually DID get a good portion of the vote (more than I think anyone expected a 3rd party candidate to get) in some contentious states. I can’t imagine Barr doing that well.
(Hat tip: The Bitch Girls)
Random reason to be glad I don’t live in Chicago
Wednesday, April 9th, 2008Perhaps I’m a bit touchy, but as an atheist (not to mention a big believer in the First Amendment and that whole crazy notion of Church-State separation) this pissed me off:
“Rep. Monique Davis (D-Chicago) interrupted atheist activist Rob Sherman during his testimony Wednesday afternoon before the House State Government Administration Committee in Springfield and told him, ‘What you have to spew and spread is extremely dangerous . . . it’s dangerous for our children to even know that your philosophy exists!
‘This is the Land of Lincoln where people believe in God,’ Davis said. ‘Get out of that seat . . . You have no right to be here! We believe in something. You believe in destroying! You believe in destroying what this state was built upon.’”
She’s not my representative, she represents constituents thousands of miles away from me, but for a civil servant and an employee of the public to behave in such a way is disgraceful. If Ms. Davis really feels so vehemently opposed to Atheism, perhaps she ought to step down. Aside from the whole “separation of Church and State” thing we traditionally have going here in the US, if she can’t work with her non-Christian colleagues and constituents, then perhaps she’s not fit for the job.
A more complete transcript is here.
(Hat tip to Thirdpower from Days of Our Trailers and Eric Zorn of Change of Subject.)
Political posts will be a rarity around here, I swear
Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008I’ve been thinking about the sad fact that politicians are more often considered our rulers than our employees these days and it’s occurred to me that the dog-and-pony show elections we seem so fond of in this country are, in fact, trumped up job interviews. So why have I not seen some kind of CV for these potential employees?
Proposal: before running for office, a potential candidate must be required (as part of the qualification process for their office) to send to every would-be constituent a current resume or curriculum vitae. For higher offices a complete legislative voting record might also be desirable.
Not only would it help us actually know our candidates, but it’d be a nice metaphorical gesture as well. It would help remind us and them that we’re electing them as our public servants, not our rulers or masters.
How to Get My Vote
Monday, March 31st, 2008*Sigh* Politics. Seriously. Why is it SO hard to find good political candidates these days? I mean, I’m really not a hard voter to please. In fact, I’ll put with a lot. Want to pursue the War in Iraq? Honestly, at this point, I’m kind of fine with that. I think that it was treasonous (real, proper treasonous, the kind that involves a trial, two witnesses, and a possible hanging in the end) to get into it, but we’re there. And once we’re there the only viable option is to conduct the war the best way we can. I have every faith that the US Military is doing just that. (Say what you will about them, as organizations they are consummate professionals.)
Similarly Net Neutrality (which isn’t REALLY much of an issue anymore, but I’m enough of a geek that I care about it). Sure, I’m against preferential bandwidth and extortionary business practices, but if there’s one thing that recent history has shown time and again it’s that you really can’t stop the signal. Seriously. The RIAA and MPAA have tried, see how well that worked out for them? Business wonks who eye their users with mistrust and greed in their shriveled little hearts should know that said users are smarter than they are. At least when it comes to technology. Pithy and glib as the saying is, “the internet treats censorship as damage and routes around it.” Even censorship light, like holding websites hostage for service or bandwidth. No politics needed.
The issues I do care about are few and far between, but the two biggest ones are two that are routinely ignored by major candidates. Namely, science policy and civil liberties. Science, in the modern world, is key to economic and social prosperity. Yes, there are other important factors, but science is the one I know best and it’s the one I’m personally most passionate about. Science helps us understand the world around us and effect positive change in it. It is, in my opinion, among the most important activities we, as a species, as a nation, and as individuals can participate in.
So why the hell don’t my candidates care about it? Why is their involvement in science limited to campaign-trail platitudes and empty vagueries? How is it that we, as one of the most advanced nations on the globe, have national-level politicians who believe the earth is 6,000 years old or who will pay lip service to those who believe the same? Why, in one of the most contentious presidential elections in recent history, can we have endless debate about the War in Iraq, the Subprime Mortgage Crisis, one candidate’s skin pigment and another’s vagina and yet no debate on science or science policy. None. At all. Whatsoever.
Now I don’t expect my candidates to be PhD-holding particle physicists or to be able to do groundbreaking research, but I would love to see one who even acknowledged that it was important. Or that government has an important role in it. The closest we come to politicians involved in science are Bush’s (both, actually) empty promises to fund missions to Mars or shallow platitudes about solving the “Energy Crisis”.
As much as many of us in the science-loving camp would like to believe otherwise, government is hugely involved in all stages of science. From funding (through a huge number of government agencies and programs) to science-related legal matters (e.g. the tiff over stem-cell research and the ongoing debate about AGW) to something as simple as enacting scientifically sound legislation. So to just leave science out of national political discourse is absolutely stunning. And what’s worse, it shows no signs of changing. Political candidates fail not just to have a good science policy plank in their platform but, indeed, any at all.
(I have to give props in passing to the well-intentioned, but ultimately less-than-successful campaign to have a national science debate amongst the presidential candidates. I also highly recommend Chris Mooney’s article Dr. President, which appeared a few months ago in Seed Magazine, which spearheaded campaign for a national science debate.)
The other issue about which I am passionate is the issue of Civil Rights. I am in the unfortunate position (given our current political landscape) of meaning ALL Civil Rights. For everyone. Any candidate who would do anything to weaken our rights not only won’t be getting my vote but can, in this blogger’s humble opinion, fuck right off. The Constitution is, to my mind, best seen not as bestowing rights upon us, but recognizing rights that, absent of interference, already have. Furthermore it promises that our government (who, it bears mentioning, are our employees) will not try to take those rights away from us or dictate the ways in which we can exercise them. (Standard boilerplate applies about restricting those rights where they interfere with the rights of others, etc.)
So politicians, please get your grubby mitts off of my liberties. Those amendments are suggestions or are they subject arbitrary revision or radical reinterpretation. There is no exegesis of the constitution. If you want to engage in radical hermeneutics, get yourself a bible. For all this talk of “interpreting the constitution” and all these attempts at divining what the framers really meant, the amendments (at least the ones under fire) all seem pretty straight forward to me.
Don’t tell people what they can or can’t say, can or can’t believe, can print, etc.
Don’t tell people they can’t defend themselves in the most effective way possible.
Don’t search people’s persons, abodes, or effects without their permission or reasonable suspicion of a crime.
And don’t give me any bullshit about “times being different”. 9/11 was a tragedy, not an excuse for a power grab. Nor is modern man appreciably different from that of previous eras and we still, occasionally need to protect ourselves from each other. Times change, the constitution aimed to make it so that certain rights do not.
Politicians: the people are your employer and, if you treat them right, your ally. They can also, if mistreated badly enough, become your worst enemy. Personally, I wish that their tolerance for abuse was a lot lower, but perhaps that’s just me. So stick up for their interests. That means supporting their rights. It means that people like the ACLU and GOA are both your allies. Listen to what they are saying. You don’t have to do it all (I wouldn’t blame any politician for wanting to shy away from supporting NAMBLA’s right to free speech or from the Aryan Nation’s right to own machine guns) but they are making the kinds of arguments necessary to ensure that liberties remain uneroded. Freedom of Speech means everyone and every idea or sentiment. The Right to Bear Arms means all law-abiding citizens and all kinds of personal weapons. The Right to Only Lawful Search and Seizure means everyone, even people accused of terrorism, even if they look foreign.
And yet. And yet. Every politician I see gets these things, at best, halfway. Or they show that they may understand, but then shy at the last gate and fail to put it into action. And so at best we get platitudes and inaction. At worst we get utterly shameless assaults on the future ourselves and our nation.
There are all these candidates out there who are desperately whoring for votes. They always say how they’re honest and hard-working. They wear patriotic colors and tell us how awesome they think America is. I’m a citizen. I vote. You want to get my vote, you only need to be two things: Pro-Science and Pro-Rights. It won’t land you every vote, but it’ll certainly get mine. And maybe I’m optimistic, but I think any candidate which openly, clearly, and forcefully supports science and civil liberties will get a hell of a lot more votes than just mine.
