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Granberry's Parlor

tomierna's Avatar Picture tomierna (Admin) – December 07, 2007 09:46PM Reply Quote
Politics. Don Granberry on the old Spork Boards was quite fond of talking about them, and here we continue on in that fine tradition.

ddt – June 06, 2012 01:18PM Reply Quote
Out of curiosity, what constituted his "asking nicely"? I think all candidates -- or most -- would like to think they're being nice when soliciting funding. (Obviously, "my opponent is a child-abusing communist" direct mailings don't fall into that category.) And yeah, I like Russ, too.

And yes, there's Montana. It's hard to say from the data -- and _this_ is where I get on my high horse and insist that this is a great proof that data-driven journalism has to be a subset, not a replacement, for "actual" journalism. It could be that many Montana companies are actually incorporated out of state (see: Delaware) and so show up as out-of-state, or local committees are registered out-of-state, or people who live 90% of the time in Montana have as their home address a hotel suite in Dallas (as the Bushes did for a long time, so they could "live" in a no-income-tax state). This stuff is nearly impossible to tease out from aggregated data, but needs 1) people to dig up all these "maybe..." situations and 2) go check, often having to dig where there's no open/raw data to scrape. But this data is a great starting point for asking these questions, and I pitched this project to the judges as a tool for journalists to see where to start digging.

ddt

Tony Leggett (Moderator) – June 18, 2012 03:21PM Reply Quote
Yes, I want my seats on the board of the newspaper and no, I don't give a damn about the charter of editorial independence, I want my pro-mining industry gazette!

Quote

FAIRFAX Media will axe 1900 jobs, close printing presses in Melbourne and Sydney and convert its two largest broadsheets, The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald, into tabloid format under radical changes designed to cut costs as readers and advertising move online.

After an 85 per cent collapse in the company's share price in the past five years and the transfer of the ''rivers of gold'' classified market in jobs, homes and cars from print newspapers to online, chief executive Greg Hywood announced the ''historic'' overhaul of the company's business model.

The announcement coincides with a battle for control of the Fairfax boardroom, with Australia's richest woman and Fairfax's largest investor, Gina Rinehart, now believed to want to be appointed deputy chairman of the company, and have two other board positions for her representatives, which would include Hungry Jack's founder Jack Cowin.

She or her representatives are also believed to have told the Fairfax board that as a major shareholder she and her representatives should not be restricted when it comes to editorial matters - including the hiring and firing of editors.

Her demands are in conflict with Fairfax board protocol that directors not interfere with the editorial direction of the media group and a charter of editorial independence that has been honoured by the board since the early 1990s.

It'll be sad to see the newspapers & other media implode under this turn of events.

Guess I'll get my news from BBC, ABC, & reuters instead.



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 06/18/2012 03:24PM by Tony Leggett.

Tony Leggett (Moderator) – June 21, 2012 04:00PM Reply Quote

El Jeffe – June 21, 2012 04:24PM Reply Quote
What a journey.
the 'dude' in me says CLICK THAT LINK..
the germ-o-phobe says HELL NO!

John Willoughby – June 22, 2012 07:31AM Reply Quote
Homo Sapiens Sedentarius
Oh, crap. Turkey is a NATO member...

John Willoughby – June 22, 2012 12:06PM Reply Quote
Homo Sapiens Sedentarius
The judge in Apple's case against Motorola is trying to avoid blocking sales of devices, and to force a resolution through cross-licensing the disputed patents. Setting aside the complete clusterfuck which is the nature of software patents, how is this permissable?

Apple may have patented its inventions not with an eye towards profit through licensing, but with the idea of preventing competitors from launching rival products with these features.

So, I can force a company to license its patents to me by shipping a product using them and then litigating? That's not how I thought the patent system worked.

The situation is a little different for Motorola, because they committed their patent to a standard, and undertook to offer "fair and reasonable" licensing and are now attempting to re-define "fair" and "reasonable."

Anyway, why can a judge compel a company to offer a license? (Compel in essence, anyway, since her ruling will likely be harsh if the parties defy her.)

John Willoughby – June 25, 2012 05:10PM Reply Quote
Homo Sapiens Sedentarius

Cloudscout – June 25, 2012 07:20PM Reply Quote
˙pɹɐoqʎǝʞ ʎɯ ɥʇıʍ ƃuoɹʍ ƃuıɥʇǝɯos sı ǝɹǝɥʇ ʞuıɥʇ ı ?ɹǝʇndɯoɔ ʎɯ ɥʇıʍ ǝɯ dlǝɥ ǝuoǝɯos uɐɔ
I'm not saying it's right or wrong but I will say that it's effing brilliant.

El Jeffe – June 26, 2012 12:31AM Reply Quote
What a journey.
Those heartless bahsturds!

ddt – June 28, 2012 01:21PM Reply Quote
Today's news, seen through the Zork filter.

ddt

John Willoughby – July 12, 2012 07:06AM Reply Quote
Homo Sapiens Sedentarius
Freedom of Speech, "refined."

In performing these functions [providing the transmission of speech], broadband providers possess "editorial discretion."
Just as a newspaper is entitled to decide which content to publish and where, broadband providers may feature some content over others.


http://news.cnet.com/8301-13510_3-57470566-21/verizon-wireless-wants-to-edit-your-internet-access/

Tony Leggett (Moderator) – July 12, 2012 10:28PM Reply Quote
Bet they won't refine freedom of speech for any SuperPACs...

John Willoughby – July 20, 2012 04:43PM Reply Quote
Homo Sapiens Sedentarius
This seems ridiculous, on the face of it. Because consumers like the way that Apple does things, those things become a de facto standard, and must be licensed under FRAND terms.

Tony Leggett (Moderator) – July 27, 2012 03:56AM Reply Quote
Kudos to Jeff Bezos and his 2.5 mil donation. That's a huge donation from someone not directly affected by the issue ...

John Willoughby – July 27, 2012 08:45AM Reply Quote
Homo Sapiens Sedentarius

Tony Leggett (Moderator) – July 28, 2012 02:50PM Reply Quote
Hmmm...

Interesting article about the influence of the NRA. Perhaps some politicians are more scared of them than need be...

Quote

But maybe the NRA is a paper tiger. In campaign wars that now cost hundreds of millions, its resources barely constitute petty cash. Obama and Romney can pull more in a single fund-raiser event than the NRA spent in the entire 2010 mid-term campaign - a puny $7.2 million.

Obama is living proof of the NRA's toothlessness. In the last presidential poll he won in 11 of the 13 states in which the NRA ran attack ads against him. Similarly, the Colorado Democrat, Senator Michael Bennet, survived, despite NRA hostility in 2010.

In an authoritative four-part series for The American Prospect magazine, author Paul Waldman concluded that it's almost impossible to see a substantive impact from NRA spending and endorsements in the past four Senate elections.

With the average House of Representatives contest now costing north of $1 million, he found the typical NRA contribution to be paltry - about $2500.

And in Senate races, the NRA offering of $5000 was even smaller as a portion of a candidate's typical campaign costs. More importantly, in the last Senate campaigns, the NRA's preferred candidates won just 10 times compared with losing in 12 contests.

Personally, I think Obama needs to "energise the base" - he could win more votes than he'd lose with some modest gun reforms (after all, the average NRA member probably ain't voting for him anyhow)

John Willoughby – July 28, 2012 09:41PM Reply Quote
Homo Sapiens Sedentarius
I'm not in the NRA, largely because of their political activities. 40% of American households have at least one gun. This is a demographic that might not like being told that they can't be trusted with them. Political livewire, even without the NRA.

Tony Leggett (Moderator) – July 29, 2012 06:33PM Reply Quote
Quote
John Willoughby
This is a demographic that might not like being told that they can't be trusted with them. Political livewire, even without the NRA.

I don't think most of those households have high capacity automatic assault rifles. A well nuanced message would make it clear that no-one is going to take away the handguns or hunting rifles but that maybe - *just maybe* - it might be a good idea to restrict access to the AK-47s etc just a tad? After all, you may be sane, but what about the tweakers in the meth-lab down the road who're (most likely legally) also packing heat?

But maybe I'm overestimating the common sense of these folks and that any restriction of gun supply is of course a direct assault on the American way of life.

This is what I don't get about the logic of the gun lobby - anything less than unfettered access to any and all weapons equates to Government oppression (and enforced Obamacare, mandatory abortion and gay marriage).

In which case (and GWBush jokes aside) until 2004 - when the assault rifle ban lapsed - I assume the US was essentially an oppressive dictatorship without a free press, free speech and free elections?

I mean, how did all you guys cope in the 90s with all that terrible oppression? Thank God that socialist nightmare is over...

(PS Above rant not aimed at you personally, JW)



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 07/29/2012 06:37PM by Tony Leggett.

porruka (Admin) – July 29, 2012 07:25PM Reply Quote
Hey! Here's an opening I don't get that often: to legitimately point out something about the gun control issue in the US that *isn't* beaten to death yet (AFAIK).

Tony,

There is no such thing as a nuanced and effective conversation about guns here. It escalates to hyperbole immediately no matter what. And you know what's really sad about it? It escalates to the wrong conclusion, IMO. Not Guns good, guns bad. No, regardless of whether you take the individual or collective right interpretation of the 2nd Amendment, it *is* pretty easy to argue the intent was indeed to prevent government tyranny by having available armed resistance.

On that point, the wingnuts aren't completely so, however, NO ONE seems to have grasped the concept that short of standing private armies financed by corporations, there is not a chance in hell of violently overthrowing (or even repelling) an assault from the US Gov't using arms available for general (or even restricted) purchase. The best you can do now is delay the inevitable and immolate yourself and your followers when the Feds are done playing.

The balance of power through sheer destructiveness is so lopsided that what could legitimately be considered the Framers' intent has been completely lost. Even during the times of the Civil War, many arms came from private citizens to start. A 2nd Civil War would be far different... particularly if it turned out to involve secession.

Powers not explicitly given to the Gov't reside in the States and in the People (10th Amendment) is enforceable only through limited means. There still has to be a respect for the courts (and the courts for the process). I actually believe that the Framers considered it a last resort, but a resort nonetheless, to allow the people of the US to be able to defend themselves against an unjust government. (Defining "unjust" in this case, like so many, is an exercise perilously left to the reader.)

So, even if you take the ultimate wingnut argument at face value, it has no meaning. The most vocal in the fight against gun control ("2nd amendment 'remedies'") clearly don't realize they've already lost.

And just so you know where I'm coming from, I'm firmly left, but not completely. I think many of the gun control laws and attempts are as much security theater as the TSA (airport security). The pretense of doing something because it looks like it without measurably improving the condition stated. I think some measure of access control is warranted (keep the *known* crazies away from them) but on the whole, guns, like drugs, alcohol, and drivers' licenses, should pretty much be out there and available for those who want them. I don't personally own any guns though I have in the past. I have no desire to take anything away from anyone unless they've shown a relevant reason to consider the person dangerous to others. I'm not even sure I'd use "danger to themselves" as a reason (unless out of stupidity or legitimate impairment) because if it is an issue of intentional self-harm, there are lots of non-firearm ways to go about it.

John Willoughby – July 29, 2012 09:28PM Reply Quote
Homo Sapiens Sedentarius
Quote
Tony Leggett

I don't think most of those households have high capacity automatic assault rifles. A well nuanced message would make it clear that no-one is going to take away the handguns or hunting rifles but that maybe - *just maybe* - it might be a good idea to restrict access to the AK-47s etc just a tad? After all, you may be sane, but what about the tweakers in the meth-lab down the road who're (most likely legally) also packing heat?

You ARE aware that the killer in Aurora didn't have an automatic assault rifle, right? That would have been illegal without a Class III license, that is very hard to get. Well, outside of Nevada and I think Montana. To the best of my knowledge, he had a semi-automatic rifle, for which he had purchased a high capacity magazine, which jammed. (Which is why the military doesn't use 100-round magazines.) You are fighting a strawman that the gun control advocates pull out at every shooting: they call semi-automatic weapons "full automatic assault weapons." Full automatic weapons are almost never used criminally in the US. The word "assault" is a misnomer when applied to a semi-automatic weapon, referring largely to its development history and physical appearance rather than its capabilities. They fire powerful bullets, one per trigger pull. One could achieve much the same effect with a .308 hunting rifle. I would say the only true distinguishing feature is the ability to take a larger capacity magazine. The difference between 3 ten round magazines and one 30 round magazine is not as major a differentiating factor as is being portrayed.

I also believe that Porruka's point about the intent of our founding fathers was to provide a deterrent to tyranny is correct, and not as outmoded as he states.

Quote
Tony Leggett
But maybe I'm overestimating the common sense of these folks and that any restriction of gun supply is of course a direct assault on the American way of life.

Our Constitution, yes. The foundation of our nation.

Quote
Tony Leggett
This is what I don't get about the logic of the gun lobby - anything less than unfettered access to any and all weapons equates to Government oppression (and enforced Obamacare, mandatory abortion and gay marriage).

Access is not unfettered. Very hard to get automatic weapons, grenades, artillery. This is not just me making a joke. The point is that we do make private ownership of some kinds of weapons very difficult; you can't maintain that there is unfettered access to "any and all weapons."

Quote
Tony Leggett
In which case (and GWBush jokes aside) until 2004 - when the assault rifle ban lapsed - I assume the US was essentially an oppressive dictatorship without a free press, free speech and free elections?

Note that crime didn't rocket when it lapsed. The ban was ridiculous, banning weapons by cosmetic features ("pistol grip", "bayonet mount") and by name. Manufacturers renamed these newly labelled "assault weapons," ran plastic strips connecting pistol grips to gunstocks and, voila, almost identical guns were street legal. High capacity magazines were still legal to purchase (but not manufacture) and they remained available throughout the ban. Prices didn't even go up that much. My suspicion was that magazines were made abroad and imported illegally. I had a lot of Israeli 30 round magazines for my "Colt Sportster" which would have been called an AR-15 before the ban.

Quote
Tony Leggett
(PS Above rant not aimed at you personally, JW)

I'm not taking it personally, but since I don't feel like anybody else is likely to carry the ball on this issue, I feel obligated.

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