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Friday, July 30, 2004     
  
Triumph of the Trivial
    

Misty sent me this op-ed piece from The New York Times.  I thought it pointed out some interesting bits, so I pass it on to my readers:


Triumph of the Trivial
By Paul Krugman

Under the headline "Voters Want Specifics From Kerry," The Washington Post recently quoted a voter demanding that John Kerry and John Edwards talk about "what they plan on doing about health care for middle-income or lower-income people. I have to face the fact that I will never be able to have health insurance, the way things are now. And these millionaires don't seem to address that."

Mr. Kerry proposes spending $650 billion extending health insurance to lower- and middle-income families. Whether you approve or not, you can't say he hasn't addressed the issue. Why hasn't this voter heard about it?

Well, I've been reading 60 days' worth of transcripts from the places four out of five Americans cite as where they usually get their news: the major cable and broadcast TV networks. Never mind the details - I couldn't even find a clear statement that Mr. Kerry wants to roll back recent high-income tax cuts and use the money to cover most of the uninsured. When reports mentioned the Kerry plan at all, it was usually horse race analysis - how it's playing, not what's in it.

On the other hand, everyone knows that Teresa Heinz Kerry told someone to "shove it," though even there, the context was missing. Except for a brief reference on MSNBC, none of the transcripts I've read mention that the target of her ire works for Richard Mellon Scaife, a billionaire who financed smear campaigns against the Clintons - including accusations of murder. (CNN did mention Mr. Scaife on its Web site, but described him only as a donor to "conservative causes.") And viewers learned nothing about Mr. Scaife's long vendetta against Mrs. Heinz Kerry herself.

There are two issues here, trivialization and bias, but they're related.

Somewhere along the line, TV news stopped reporting on candidates' policies, and turned instead to trivia that supposedly reveal their personalities. We hear about Mr. Kerry's haircuts, not his health care proposals. We hear about George Bush's brush-cutting, not his environmental policies.

Even on its own terms, such reporting often gets it wrong, because journalists aren't especially good at judging character. ("He is, above all, a moralist," wrote George Will about Jack Ryan, the Illinois Senate candidate who dropped out after embarrassing sex-club questions.) And the character issues that dominate today's reporting have historically had no bearing on leadership qualities. While planning D-Day, Dwight Eisenhower had a close, though possibly platonic, relationship with his female driver. Should that have barred him from the White House?

And since campaign coverage as celebrity profiling has no rules, it offers ample scope for biased reporting.

Notice the voter's reference to "these millionaires." A Columbia Journalism Review Web site called campaigndesk.org, says its analysis "reveals a press prone to needlessly introduce Senators Kerry and Edwards and Kerry's wife, Teresa Heinz Kerry, as millionaires or billionaires, without similar labels for President Bush or Vice President Cheney."

As the site points out, the Bush campaign has been "hammering away with talking points casting Kerry as out of the mainstream because of his wealth, hoping to influence press coverage." The campaign isn't claiming that Mr. Kerry's policies favor the rich - they manifestly don't, while Mr. Bush's manifestly do. Instead, we're supposed to dislike Mr. Kerry simply because he's wealthy (and not notice that his opponent is, too). Republicans, of all people, are practicing the politics of envy, and the media obediently go along.

In short, the triumph of the trivial is not a trivial matter. The failure of TV news to inform the public about the policy proposals of this year's presidential candidates is, in its own way, as serious a journalistic betrayal as the failure to raise questions about the rush to invade Iraq.

P.S.: Another story you may not see on TV: Jeb Bush insists that electronic voting machines are perfectly reliable, but The St. Petersburg Times says the Republican Party of Florida has sent out a flier urging supporters to use absentee ballots because the machines lack a paper trail and cannot "verify your vote."

P.P.S.: Three weeks ago, The New Republic reported that the Bush administration was pressuring Pakistan to announce a major terrorist capture during the Democratic convention. Hours before Mr. Kerry's acceptance speech, Pakistan announced, several days after the fact, that it had apprehended an important Al Qaeda operative.

   
Posted by Jason on 7/30/2004 at 7:30:50 PM #
Monday, July 19, 2004     
  
This Land...
    

OMG, Carrie pointed out this on her blog...  so funny, for either side of the fence...

http://www.jibjab.com/thisland.html

   
Posted by Jason on 7/19/2004 at 4:44:41 PM #
Tuesday, July 13, 2004     
  
The Politics of Fear Reaches a New Low
    

The following was posted by Tanner Brooks on Democracy for America's Blog for America:


According to a Homeland Security Department spokesman, U.S. officials are discussing the idea of postponing the November election in the event of a terrorist attack. American counterterrorism officials cited what they call "alarming" intelligence about a possible Al Qaeda strike inside the United States this fall.

Discussions about the postponement started with a recent letter to Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge from DeForest Soaries Jr., chairman of the U.S. Election Assistance Commission. Ridge has said he has "no specific or credible information about threats to the political conventions," but the November vote remains an open question.

Democrats are responding:

"I don't think there's an argument that can be made, for the first time in our history, to delay an election," said Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California, a member of the Intelligence Committee.

"We hold elections in the middle of war, in the middle of earthquakes, in the middle of whatever it takes. The election is a statutory election. It should go ahead, on schedule, and we should not change it."

The gravity of this question should not be underestimated. As we saw during the mayoral primary scheduled for September 11, 2001, there can sometimes be no choice but to quickly reschedule a vote.

But many people are uneasy when the Bush administration talks about things like this. George Bush and his advisers are facing sinking poll numbers and the realization that just scaring people might not win them this election.

The administration that has done more to exploit fear for political gain than any other in recent memory is now talking about using that same fear to extend its term in office without an election.

George Bush and Karl Rove have a long record of using fear to pursue dubious policies from which they stand to gain. Time and again they have shown that they do not deserve the benefit of the doubt. Let us hope this isn't the beginning of something worse than we've yet seen.

   
Posted by Jason on 7/13/2004 at 9:38:00 AM #
Monday, July 12, 2004     
  
Spidey 2
     Kim and I caught the Saturday showing of Spider-Man 2 this weekend.  Great movie - like X-Men 2, it does a good job of accepting that the viewer has already bought into the "realism" of the character and instead expands upon their world and situation.
   
Posted by Jason on 7/12/2004 at 1:57:46 PM #
  
I Hate Wal-Mart's Self-Checkout
    

So the local Super Wal-Mart has decided to offer four self-checkout stands.  Today, while heading towards a checkout with the cashier standing there doing nothing, my hands full of laundry detergent, Diet Rite Tangering, and the like, the cashier supervisor requested I try the self-checkout myself.

Hate it.

For one thing, it's overly complicated.  Really.  Like the way you have to tell it when you have an item (like soda) that you're not bagging.  Or the way that it tries to tell you to not take a bag for other items that it deems crushable (like paper towels).  And then it very loudly declares how much your purchase cost - like it's the business of everyone in the checkout area.  Plus the whole process of bagging my own stuff gave me flashbacks to when I was a cashier at Target.

I can understand that they might be helpful if all the regular lines are busy and you are in a hurry with one or two items.  But yeesh, don't send people there when there are aisles open and they have a number of unwieldy items.

What's really scary is that I can see stores like Wal-Mart moving to a completely self-checkout system in the next decade.  What better way to cut payroll cost than not have cashiers?  Don't get me wrong, I like automation in some ways - but if I wanted to bag my own stuff, I'd go to Aldi.

   
Posted by Jason on 7/12/2004 at 1:51:09 PM #
Friday, July 9, 2004     
  
Sign of the Apocalypse
     Yes, Virginia...there will be a Police Academy 9...
   
Posted by Jason on 7/9/2004 at 11:18:26 AM #
Tuesday, July 6, 2004     
  
Update Shmupdate
    

Wow, it's been nearly a month since my last update.  I should rename the site The Dusty Tome or something like that.  So I figured a quick update on the current State of the Jason was in order.

  • Fourth of July:  I spent the Fourth with Kim's family - her dad (David), Mom (Cindy), Sister (Kristin), Sister's Boyfriend (Jeff) and Grandmother (Kim's Grandma).  On Saturday we went to a movie (more below on that), ate dinner at Crimmin's Cattle Co, then us "kids" drove to Altoona to watch the fireworks at Adventureland.  Sunday morning featured drinks in the hot tub followed by a delicious breakfast of eggbake and cinnamon rolls, after which we watched part of Band of Brothers and relaxed all day before brats for dinner and sparkler fun.  All in all a very relaxing and enjoyable holiday.

  • Saved!:  We went to the movie Saved! on Saturday at the Fleur Cinema.  From the previews, it looks like a satire on kids in Christian High School, but there was actually a surprising amount of substance to the movie with an ultimately good message of tolerance with and without religion.  And it is rather funny.  Here's a pretty good review by Ebert, and here's one by Christianity Today which is pretty interesting.

  • Fahrenheit 9/11:  Admit it...it's no surprise I went to see the new Michael Moore film.  Very good - I highly recommend those from either side of the aisle see it, if for no other reason than to be able to answer the question of "Did you even SEE the movie?" with an affirmative.  Not a whole lot more info than was in his most recent book, except for the Iraq stuff, which was fairly disturbing yet necessary to see the truth of war.  In fact, everyone who says that Saving Private Ryan is so good for showing the truth of war combat should see this movie.  I do agree with the film having an R rating, though, now that I've seen it. 

    Speaking of which...there has been a recent bit online lately about an anti-Moore site posting links to pirated copies of F911 due to Moore's past claims of being anti-American-copyright-laws.  I love his response:  “I do well enough already and I made this film because I want the world, to change. The more people who see it the better, so I’m happy this is happening.”

  • Home Theater and WMVHD:  Finally got the Home Theater PC set up completed, the projector mounted to the ceiling (thanks to Rex), and the equipment on an A/V shelf.  So I've been buying these DVDs that come with a second disc containing the movie in the Windows Media Hi-Def format.  Mostly Imax movies (Coral Reef Adventure, Stormchasers, etc), but also Terminator 2.  Pretty, clear picture.

  • Joey:  And thanks to BitTorrent, I have managed to see the pilot to Joey.  The never-will-air pilot, actually, as it had Ashley Scott in it, who has since been re-cast as the character is reworked.  While I thought Joey was funny enough as part of an ensemble on Friends, I don't really feel he works nearly as well as the main focus.  Yes, the pilot has some funny moments, but for the most part it's humor that I think would get very old quickly.  Too bad about firing Scott though - she's very cute.

  • Boglin:  And I bought a Boglin off of Ebay.  So we'll soon know the answer to the question posed in my last batch of blog entries...

  • WindDancer:  A WindDancer is a sort of airfoil-kite, kind of like a parachute but without the strapping-to-your-back-and-jumping-out-of-a-plane aspect.  Approximately 9x2 feet in size, it's designed to swoop and spin on its two strings controlled by the flier.  So far, it's taken some learning (such as how to make a set of lines and tie them correctly), and the wind hasn't cooperated (fairly uneven on the good days), but it's pretty cool.  I can't wait for a windy day to fly it - and it should be perfect to take to the balloon field for nights when flight is in question due to high winds!

  • Kerry/Edwards:  Yes, I think it's a good choice.  Edwards should inject some much-needed energy into the campaign.

  • And I bought some Grapples but have yet to try them.  Smell good, though.

So there you have it.  More whenever!

   
Posted by Jason on 7/6/2004 at 10:47:05 PM #


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Fear the wrath of Sparky!