- Pirouette Silhouette
Is the dancer spinning clockwise or counter-clockwise? An optical illusion linked to left- and right- brainedness.
- A (Conservative) People's History of New York City
"In 1857 A.D., Central Park was built in an effort to encourage public homosexuality. In 1952 A.D., in an attempt to cripple the U.S. military, the United Nations settled on Manhattan's East Side, increasing the already cacophonous din of guttural non-American speech sounds on the streets of the new Babel."
- zOMG iPHONE!!1!
- "They couldn't hit an elephant at this distance." — Union civil-war General John Sedgwick
- Against the Day - New Thomas Pynchon book!
- Blind kid uses Echolocation to "see"
Ben Underwood listens to the echos of clicking sounds he makes with his mouth to navigate the world.
- Stream of new Of Montreal album
It took me a while to come around, but I love this album
- World RPS Society - How to beat anyone at Rock Paper Scissors
- Ted Haggard Bashing Gays - from JESUS CAMP the Movie
Sweet schadenfreude
- Humiliated frat boys sue Borat
Interesting to learn that the scene wasn't staged
- One bank
- UC Berkeley on iTunes U
Get an education through iTunes!Post a comment | 12 Nov 2006 @ 08:05 PM | education itunes podcasts berkeley courses university internet
- Calvin and Hobbes claymation parody
Post a comment | 12 Nov 2006 @ 08:03 PM | animation calvinandhobbes claymation cartoons comics humor parody satire videos
- How to talk to a climate skeptic
It should be noted that I am actually a climate skeptic, though I think something akin to "Pascal's wager" might be in order.
First they came for the resident aliens, but I was not a resident alien...
I'm writing this post to bring attention to something that most likely won't get much press and that I feel is a great threat to American ideals of justice and liberty. I'm talking about S. 3930. It's all pretty awful, redefining torture and enemy combatants to be sufficiently vague as to be meaningless (but hey, natural-born citizens aren't effected, so most people won't care I suppose). Of particular importance are sections 6 and 7, which not only effectively override the Geneva Convention, but weakens the writ of habeas corpus (a fundamental judicial right which has been central to all democracies since the Magna Carta in 1215). Let's first deal with the Geneva Convention. Note this from Article VI of the constitution:
This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which shall be made in Pursuance thereof; and all Treaties made, or which shall be made, under the Authority of the United States, shall be the supreme Law of the Land; and the Judges in every State shall be bound thereby, any Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding.The Senators and Representatives before mentioned, and the Members of the several State Legislatures, and all executive and judicial Officers, both of the United States and of the several States, shall be bound by Oath or Affirmation, to support this Constitution; ...
Unambiguously the constitution says that not only the constitution itself but also all treaties the US has made are the "the supreme law of the land."
Now, regarding the second aspect, the writ of habeas corpus. For those who aren't familiar, the writ of habeas corpus is a judicial mandate that provides those who are being imprisoned (or detained, the current newspeak euphemism) that requests that their case be reviewed by a judicial body. In practice, the writ of habeas corpus prevents abuses of the executive power, such as, say, indefinitely imprisoning a person without actually bringing any charges on the person. Section 9 of Article I of the constitution states:
The privilege of the Writ of Habeas Corpus shall not be suspended, unless when in Cases of Rebellion or Invasion the public Safety may require it.No Bill of Attainder or ex post facto Law shall be passed.
Now, some might argue that the current threat of terrorism constitutions a sufficient "invasion of the public safety" to have it suspended in specific cases. However, the issue came up after 9/11 during the discussions about the PATRIOT act, and it was universally agreed that removing or restricting this right was not demanded from the circumstances. What has changed in the five years since that has changed this? Well, I'll get to that. Oh, and on a side note, changing the rules about evidence derived from torture being inadmissible, that's ex post facto, and unconstitutional even under the limited version that's been established through jurisprudence in Calder v Bull (3 US 386 [1798]) (cliff's notes version).
The democrats (though it was a bipartisan bill, onlyfour people voted against party lines) tried to amend this awful bill with the Specter-Leahy-Dodd Amendment To Strike Section 7 (I can't find the text for the amendment at the moment, it doesn't seem to be uploaded anywhere on any senate cites). Unfortunately, the GOP voting block prevented any such thing.
Now, I'm sure some of you might be saying "well it doesn't matter, clearly this bill is unconstitutional, the Supreme Court, as conservative as it is, would certainly strike it down" - and in principle, you are right, it most certainly would... if it ever got there in the first place.
But in order to have a case seen before the Supreme Court, it has to be a case, a specific instance of the bill being used, which goes through the judicial system and eventually gets appealed up to the highest court in the land. And therein lies the problem. By the very nature of this bill, those who would be malaffected by it have absolutely no access to the judicial system. It is inherently impossible for such a case to reach the supreme court, since it will never reach any court in the first place. It's a catch-22.
To illustrate, let's take a likely example. A law-abiding resident alien from an Islamic country is involved in their local mosque. They raise money, selectively, for various humanitarian causes. Well, it turns out that one of those non-profits was channeling money to terrorists. And to make things worse, this person is two or three degrees of seperation away from a person who has been affiliated with a terrorist organization. This person can be held, against their will, indefinitely, without any recourse or charges brought against them. It doesn't matter if the evidence is circumstantial, or the person just happens to share a name with a suspected terrorist, or if there is in fact no evidence at all, since there is no oversight. Whatsoever. Sen. Patrick Leahy made a well-spoken plea on the senate floor which has many of the same arguments as I'm presenting, though for republicans it pretty much fell on deaf ears.
So returning to why, five years after the September 11th attacks, congress has changed its collective (read: republican) mind about habeas corpus suspension? Well, it's quite simple. Bush and his administration caught a few terrorists, and as enemy combatants, under the PATRIOT act, he was within his rights to detain these people in a manner which differs from that of a nationalized citizen, for example. However, most of the evidence was obtained through torture. In US courts, this evidence is inadmissible, and wouldn't it be awfully bad press if a bunch of terrorists got off due to a "legal technicality." Hence the retroactive admissibility of evidence obtained through coercion in S. 3930 (note: a law that changes the rules of trial and evidence is considered an unconstitutional ex post facto law, by current legal interpretations), the kangaroo courts set up by the law - all for political reasons. The unprecedented cost to the United States' standing as a free and just nation, as well as our perception in the world of opinion, will no doubt be disgraceful, and it will mark a magnificent victory for terrorism. The bill has yet to be voted on, but based on the votes for the amendment, I have little hope that the Senate will reject the bill. Still, if you live in a red state, please call your senator and let them know your opinion.
Sorry for the lengthy post, but this is something about which I feel strongly.
Update 28 Sept. 2006, 11:45 PM: The results for the vote are in. Both NJ senators Lautenberg and Menendez voted in favor of the bill, which depresses me greatly. Of course, those who voted against it (and there was no chance that it would be shot down) are probably going to get painted in the press as wanting to let the terrorists get off on a "legal technicality." So it's hard to blame them, especially since the electorate doesn't really care about these issues. "I don't care if they tap my phone lines, I'm not a criminal, I've got nothing to hide" (sorry I'm bitter).
- I want to poop back and forth
From the move Me, You, and Everyone We Know
- Jebus: The Musical
- Angry German Kid (with subtitles)
Somebody get this kid some Xanax!
- Video: Weird Al's "White and Nerdy"
Best song since Amish Paradise?
- Bookstores: the natural laxative? | Ask MetaFilter
Hit and runned-over, well almost
Yesterday I packed up, and around 6:30 pm I made my teary-eyed departure from Washington, DC. I will miss Ashley a lot, as well as the rest of the Grant house crew.
Fast-forward two and a half hours I'm about 10 miles from the Delaware Memorial Bridge. Above me I see a lit-up banner that reads "IN CRISIS? CALL 1-800-273-TALK." I'd noticed this sign before. In fact, you encounter it twice in Delaware when you drive northbound on I-95, four and one mile(s) from the bridge, respectively. I always thought these signs to be odd. For one, unless you have a hands-free device, you can't make cell-phone calls in a car. Secondly, I wonder what kind of crises could be occurring in a car near the Delaware Memorial Bridge that wouldn't instead warrant a call to 911. Perhaps, I mused half-seriously, it was for people who are afraid of bridges.
So I start to head over the bridge and lose interest in the crisis hotline. At around the apex of the bridge, I am in the far right lane, and a tractor-trailer to the left of me starts veering into my lane... until it reaches the point where it is actually scraping against the side of my car. I panic, and shortly thereafter it becomes clear my car is going to lose control. In the split second I had I turned my steering wheel to the right and slam on the breaks, so as to have the side of the bridge save me. Luckily, there were no cars behind me or the trailer, so coming to a complete stop on the bridge was still a safe option. The trailer simply drove off, having almost killed me. The optimist in me believes that he was too high on the amphetamines which he took for his Atlantic-coast shipment to even notice what had happened.
As you can imagine I was a bit startled. After all, the situation involved both bridges and automobile accidents, two things of which people are terrified. I was well familiar with this formula, after having seen a movie involving snakes + planes the previous weekend. After catching my breath, I realized my car seemed capable of driving. I called 911 as I drove down the bridge so that I could get onto some kind of shoulder.
In the end, I didn't catch the tags, or even see what the trailer looked like, and since I don't have full-insurance, it wasn't in my best interest to file an accident report. I drove the rest of the way home, and the only thing that seems to have been damaged was the side of my car, where there are some gray scrapes. I was very lucky.
On an off-topic note, I am working on an entry called "Dynamics vs. Dialectics." It even has flash animations to illustrate the points. How much fun!
- Rules of polite Washington discourse
From Judge Taylor's opinion: "That would mean that the president could be guilty of no fewer than 30 felonies in office."
- Count Chocula - Wikipedia
Sometimes wikipedia vandalism is worth-while.
- Bizarre animal that looks like an alien
- Cultural diversity caused by brain parasites?
- I/O Brush - The Coolest Thing Since the Invention of Photoshop
- A flash visualization of what's playing on the radio across the US in real time
- One of the best pans of M. Night Shyamalan's Lady in the Water
- Van Gogh's Starry Night done in Lego
- Cute Overload
No explanation needed.
- Kittenwar
- Imagining the Tenth Dimension [via]
A very insightful visualization and conceptualization of higher dimensions
- SlickDeals.net
I just got $10 off an external hard drive thanks to this site, no strings attached.
- Syd Barrett dead at 60
- Awesome color visualization thingy
hint: move your mouse inside the box
- The Gay Animal Kingdom
The effeminate sheep & other problems with Darwinian sexual selection.
- World Cup torrents
In case you missed the games, with bonus british commentary
- In-Brain 3D
Cross two videos one frame apart and it appears in 3d
- YouTube - Pac Man: The Movie
- Streaming ASCII rendering of World Cup 2006 games
- Statistics: Oral health - Loss of natural teeth by state
West Virginia tops the lists
- Book titles + band names
- Beluga Whale learns to blow bubble rings
via google video
- Pitchfork Feature: 100 Awesome Music Videos
complete with Youtube embedded videosPost a comment | 22 Jun 2006 @ 02:15 PM | pitchfork videos music lists toplists bestof musicvideos youtube
- The G*d d***ed history of f***ing typographical bleeping
- The secret to Michael Jackson's "Smooth Criminal" 45 degree lean
includes video and patent
- Uncomfortable Restrooms
- GROTRIAN Pianos
weird piano music thingy
- Stephen Colbert and Congressman: "What are the ten commandments?"
- Against School - John Taylor Gatto
A question for the readers
Please read through this post, I'd like some feedback.
Next year at school, for at least one semester, I'm going to be doing a study relating to the history of thought. It's based on the premise that the way people think and frame debates has changed over time, different techniques have developed, and new concepts have been "invented." I'm going to limit my study to a specific time period; three of the options I'm currently considering are the baroque (in music, philosophy, and architecture), the legalist tradition (Rousseau, Locke; revolving around the capitalist concept of the contract), and the rise and fall of structuralism in Europe.
My question is: does anyone who reads this weblog want to hear my progress once-in-a-while (over the summer and the school year) as I flesh out my thoughts on the topic? I promise to make my posts relatively easy to understand for someone without a philosophical background.
If I get three or more affirmative responses, I'll start doing it. Otherwise, I'll keep it to myself.
- A Sixth Sense for a Wired World: Magnet Implants
amazing article about people implanting magnets in their fingers to create a sixth-sense.
- The Piratebay is Down: Raided by the Swedish Police
- USSR posters - a photoset on Flickr
really impressive artPost a comment | 01 Jun 2006 @ 12:27 PM | advertisements art flickr history propaganda russia sovietunion ussr posters
- SmackBook (swf video)
- SNL: If Al Gore were president
- 10 Things I Hate About Commandments (swf video)
- Four Second Fury - addictive minigames
Like Wario ware, except for flash
- Stephen Colbert at the White House Correspondents Dinner
Absolute must-see. Hilarious.Post a comment | 01 May 2006 @ 09:59 AM | youtube videos humor politics bush cspan stephencolbert dailyshow
- YouTube - C For Cookie
What happens in a futuristic society where cookies are controlled by the government?Post a comment | 19 Apr 2006 @ 02:12 PM | sesamestreet parody movies humor videos cookies vforvendetta bestof
