“The Next Episode”, Nate Dogg dead at 41

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From my teen years through my 20’s Nate Dogg was supplying hooks for the biggest hip-hop hits and underground anthems. “The Next Episode” by Dr. Dre ft. Snoop Dogg, Kurupt, Nate Dogg, was a song that especially framed some great memories in my life including social times during my last year of university (1999-2000) and some great years after graduation. It also touched off the best most fun, perfect, ridiculous club nights I could have ever and did ever have almost a decade after it’s original release in 2000.

Hopefully if I’m ever old, and still have family and friends that’ll have me at a BBQ, and it’s spring or summer Holiday I plan to be a foolish old dude, turning up some G-Funk track with Nate Dogg and telling some young person who doesn’t care that they just can’t understand it like I do. Hope I’m wrong.

Nathaniel “Nate Dogg” Hale died of complications from two strokes and is survived by his children.

Arab League countries can drop bombs, too

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Sullivan runs down those in favor and against establishing a “No Fly Zone” (aka aligning US forces with rebel forces in the Libyan civil war by bombing Libyan military planes on the ground). Hitchens “pro” argument:

Hitchens is still itching for intervention:

The Arab League has now itself broken with decades of torpor, declared the Qaddafi regime illegitimate, and called for the imposition of a no-fly zone. This unprecedented resolution, which is not contradicted by any measurable pro-Qaddafi opinion in the legendary “Arab street,” seems to draw much of the sting from the realist concern about regional opinion.

via Who Supports War With Libya? – The Daily Dish | By Andrew Sullivan.

If this is so important to the Arab League, let the Royal Saudi Air Force and their Arab League peers scramble the jets we sold them and begin to secure the anti-Qaddafi “No Fly Zone”.

Evan Bayh being Evan Bayh

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Ezra Klein is dismayed by Evan Bayh’s life after the US Senate:

But Bayh did not return to Indiana to teach. He did not, as he said he was thinking of doing, join a foundation. Rather, he went to the massive law firm McGuire Woods. And who does McGuire Woods work for? “Principal clients served from our Washington office include national energy companies, foreign countries, international manufacturing companies, trade associations and local and national businesses,” reads the company’s Web site. He followed that up by signing on as a senior adviser to Apollo Management Group, a giant public-equity firm. And, finally, this week, he joined Fox News as a contributor. It’s as if he’s systematically ticking off every poison he identified in the body politic and rushing to dump more of it into the water supply.

via The sad, hypocritical retirement of Evan Bayh – Ezra Klein – The Washington Post.

Although hypocritical, It’s not sad if you held Evan Bayh in low esteem prior to his retirement from the senate.

Props when due

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As Atrios does, I agree with Ross: Iraq Then, Libya Now.

I would also like to add: just because a guy is an awful, miserable dictator and really disliked by our country and our allies (Gaddifi is all of those) doesn’t mean that it’s a good idea for us to throw our country’s resources behind an armed uprising against his government. That includes no fly zones, Navy ships off the shore of Libya, and arms shipments to rebel leaders and troops on the ground.

#CountryPassion by Newt: It’ll make you leave your sick wife. Twice.

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This is like when they ask you a job applicant about their weaknesses in an interview and they answer: I work too hard sometimes.

“There’s no question at times of my life, partially driven by how passionately I felt about this country, that I worked far too hard and things happened in my life that were not appropriate,” said Gingrich

[…]

“What I can tell you is that when I did things that were wrong, I wasn’t trapped in situation ethics, I was doing things that were wrong, and yet, I was doing them,”

via 44 – Newt Gingrich: ‘Passion for the country’ led to personal indiscretions (video).

Christie’s tall tales: budget w/no new taxes

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Some overstatements have worked their way into the governor’s routine public comments, like a claim that he balanced the budget last year without raising taxes; in truth, he cut deeply into tax credits for the elderly and the poor. But inaccuracies also crop up when he is challenged, and his instinct seems to be to turn it into an attack on someone else instead of giving an answer.

[…]

Mr. Christie fired Bret D. Schundler, his education commissioner at the time, accusing him of lying about the hearing. But Mr. Schundler said he had warned the governor before the news conference that what he was about to tell reporters was false.

“His entire point was he likes to be on offense rather than defense,” Mr. Schundlersaid days later. “He wanted to make this all about the Obama administration’s picayune rules rather than our error.”

via Governor Christie’s Talk Is Not Always Straight – NYTimes.com.

Christie’s strategy: Don’t get it right. Get it out first and be bully about it.

Judge Megyn Kelly presides…

Fox News host Megyn Kelly
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Fox News host Megyn Kelly

In Kelly's Court, you are innocent until proven mouthy. or out of your place. or a gold digger.

Maddow and Gawker rightfully mock Fox News host Megyn Kelly imaginary TV Court for this twitter docket item:

Megyn Kelly has a question: “A man beats a 100 pound woman into a coma over a parking space. He claims she deserves it. Could he be right? In Kelly’s Court!”

via Fox News Reporter: Did Woman Beaten Into Coma ‘Deserve It’?.

Judge Megyn Kelly and her sharp minded producers, when considering whether a grown man should beat a woman (or any person) in civil society into a coma over a parking spot depends on whether or not she called dibs, hit him first or mouthed off…or something?

Right.

After the willingness of some people to “blame the victim” in the media furies surrounding Chris Brown’s attack of Rihanna (West Indian women be so crazy, tho!) and Charlie Sheen’s attack of multiple women (she’s just lying! or they just want his money) I am dismayed but not surprised that domestic violence incidents could get this kind of “Who is responsible?” treatment.

War is the biggest budget item

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Apparently, the cascade of uprising in the Middle East was completely unexpected by our intelligence apparatus.

I wonder where all the resources went? Oh …right:

Mr. BAER: Well, let me put it this way, Egyptian Arabic is peculiar, a peculiar accent, and it’s difficult to learn especially, you know, the familiar Arabic. And it would take an officer two years of studying Arabic, three years on the ground mastering Arabic, and about 10 years to get a grasp of a society like Egypt. That’s ideally what happens. You know, it’s very difficult for someone to devote a career of 20 years on a single country like Egypt, especially when you’ve got two wars going on in Iraq and Afghanistan, which has just sucked resources and people and – mainly in support of the military and these two countries. So the CIA is truly – the bench strength is very, very thin. And you can see what’s happened that this expertise – it’s just been drawn away by these two wars and, you know, how you get it back, it’ll take years.

via A Covert Affair: When CIA Agents Fall In Love : NPR.

 

Sheen and TV Money

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TNC posts about the latest Charlie Sheen blowup and I think he gets it wrong regarding money and Charlie Sheen.

I will not claim causation, but I will say that there is a strong and avid correlation between bigotry and stupid. Two And A Half Men is the show that no one I know watches–which is to say a hell of a lot of people. It guaranteed, for Sheen, a perpetual payday on a major network. Sheen is known for his racist rants, but even getting coked-up and randomly shouting “nigger!” in a high-end restaurant wasn’t enough to jeopardize his career. So I guess he had to take it up a notch.

It’s amazing how little money and fame change people. You are who you are and money only multiplies it. Cash will only make you smarter, if you were interested in being smarter in the first place. I give it five years before we see this dude mud-wrestling with NeNe on Celebrity Weight-Loss Challenge.

via Especially the Blacks and the Jews – Culture – The Atlantic

It’s not really that amazing. What was Sheen being paid for?

Through “Two and a Half Men”, CBS, Warner Bros. and Creator Chuck Lorre rewarded Sheen for his off set behavior from the show’s inception. The character he plays, a sexist, drug abusing, carousing, alcoholic, prostitute hiring ne’er do well bachelor was “built around” Sheen. Around, because Sheen, unlike his character, also was accused of domestic abuse (physical and verbal) by girlfriends, ex-wives and porn actress/escorts.

After the all types of incidents, an unhealthy Sheen prone to sexist and racist rants, was given a healthy raise. What about that says: stop doing what you are doing, it’s screwing up your life? CBS and Lorre were happy to have a train wreck inside their studios as long as they could syndicate a milquetoast version of the carnage.

The folks at CBS and Warner Bros. aren’t the only ones who, until recently, had no problem with Charlie Sheen being Charlie Sheen. Because of millions of viewers every week, “Two and a Half Men” was a top show on prime time TV and is the top rated show in syndication. This guarantees Sheen a payday through 2021. I don’t even think this includes international broadcasting where in some countries, the show is named what translates to “My Uncle Charlie” or “My Cool Uncle Charlie”. People watch it, even if none of them knows Coates. It’s not just the viewing public either, talent and staff associated with the show have been nominated and won awards sponsored by their fans, peers and critics for work in front of and behind the camera.

Lorre, CBS and Warner Bros. reacted to Sheen’s personal and professional attacks against them, but they accommodated Sheen’s often illegal behavior elsewhere. Lorre’s petty and childish use of his trademark vanity cards to belittle Sheen make him seem like someone who naively expected to enjoy Charlie Harper without ever suffering Charlie Sheen.

The Mobile Handshake & Libya

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Jay Rosen cast everyone that wrote a “twitter can’t topple dictators” article as not serious. Above The Law lists some serious people’s “cyber pragmatists”.

He must not have read Evgeny Morozov’s new book Net Delusion, whose very first chapter names the fools, links to the content, and reframes the big question as not whether social media matters but rather which side it ultimately benefits in the balance of power between citizens and authoritarian states.

Aaron Bady has a much more nuanced set of thoughts. TechPresident’s Nancy Scola has some additional words of wisdom on how to evaluate social media’s role in the latest wave of democratization

via Idle Twatter : Lawyers, Guns & Money.

I wrote one. I named a few people who made foolish statements. Maybe I can make my point more “serious”. Cheers to the people in Northern Africa and the Middle East that have used social media to promote and facilitate action.

Not all dictators will be so clumsy, lost or timid in the face of centralized, hardware network dependent social media (Iran, Zimbabwe). The networks that protesters used to disseminate information are dependent upon regime controlled infrastructure.

It’s great that Facebook and Twitter did so much for us. But the despots will figure out how to work around them both technically and politically. They’re too easy to disrupt. Facebook could go down on its own

[…]

There’s all kinds of crazy stuff you can do at a firewall to make one site appear to be having technical problems. Real technical problems (but fake ones nonetheless). There are consultants calling on generals all over the world, right now, selling them wonderful Internet dashboards that selectively and randomly make sites appear to have problems of their own, not caused by the government.

via Scripting News: A fractional horsepower news network.

Printing presses were decentralized. Newspapers are centralized distribution channels. The black churches, labor veterans and student organizations, not TV, newspapers or telephone, were the decentralized communication system that allowed the Civil Rights activists to organize and sustain. Mass media got white people to notice, it magnified efforts for an against the Civil Rights movement. Luckily, mostly for the civil rights movement. Telephones were tapped. TV Reports, news articles and the like often laced events with skepticism and bias reflective of the biases of reporters, editors and publishers that created them. See Fox News.
Decentralized, low cost, activist controlled links for communication and organizing are what matters most in this discussion. If oppressive regimes can avoid spectacle for portrayal in mass media while meting out authoritarian rule TV, newspapers and radio can actually be used to slow movements for universal rights.

The Albany police chief, Laurie Pritchett, carefully studied the movement’s strategy and developed a strategy he hoped could subvert it. He used mass arrests but avoided the kind of dramatic, violent incidents that might backfire by attracting national publicity. Pritchett arranged to disperse the prisoners to county jails all over southwest Georgia to prevent his jail from filling up. The Birmingham Post-Herald stated that “The manner in which Albany’s chief of police has enforced the law and maintained order has won the admiration of… thousands.”

via Albany Movement – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

And that is one way you contain a movement with mass media intact. No children or elderly were sprayed by fire hoses or attacked by police dogs All the “rabble rousing” protesters were contained as neatly as possible and all the people with TV sets and a newspaper on their doorsteps just ignored it. The protest still continued and TV told a story that didn’t help the civil rights movement.
The more oppressive the regime (using censorship, subversion, infiltration and monetary coercion), the more secure the activist’s decentralized network has to be. Sullivan references Time’s Abigail Hauslohner to smugly prove that Facebook was central to the revolution in Libya. What Hauslohner Time article actually describes is a Libyan tech savvy Pony Express along the Mediterranean that replaced a blocked Facebook (bold is from me):

“Generally, in Libya before this, there was no media,” explains Shallouf*. “So if Tobruk made a revolution, [the government] would spend three to five days killing us and finish the revolution. Nobody in [larger nearby communities and cities] al-Baida or Darna or Benghazi would have heard about it. But now with al-Jazeera and Facebook and the media, all of Libya hears about the revolution and is with the revolution. They know about it. They think, ‘I am Libyan, this is my family, so I will go to the street to fight for them.’ ”

He and fellow Libyans had followed the Tunisian and Egyptian uprisings on al-Jazeera and satellite Arabic-language news channels. He did his best, along with other Libyan activists, to internally circulate the videos he saw so that other Libyans could get a glimpse of what was happening on either side of their closed-off country. “After I got videos from the Internet, we sent them from Bluetooth to Bluetooth. Mostly videos of fighting in Egypt. I felt two things when I saw these videos: I felt sad. And then I wanted to make a revolution!”

With the Internet shut down, Libyans crossed the border for access. Says Tawfik al-Shohiby, a chemical-engineering professor at the University of Tobruk: “We sent my brother and his friend to Marsa Matruh [in Egypt] to use the Internet. I went to Egypt every day to give him a flash disk full of media from Tobruk, al-Baida, Benghazi. They were videos from mobiles. Not just mine. We made copies, went to the Egyptian border at Salloum and gave it to someone there — my cousin’s son — and he went to Matruh, where my brother was. That was the first media center of the Libyan revolution. My brother [a 31-year-old computer engineer] had this idea. On the 16th of February, he printed flyers for the protest and spread them in the streets from his car.”
*[Gamal Shallouf a marine biologist interviewed by Hauslohner]
So these guys grabbed the media from Facebook and AlJazeera.net of the foreign uprisings and posted them from wall to wall. Libya ignited on the 15th and then on the 18th Gaddafi’s regime turned and restricted certain sites. Then Libyans established decentralized, ad hoc networks based on mobile device handshakes. Bluetooth, flash drives and road trips. In fact, in a country of 6.5m people with 5m mobile users vs. 300K internet users and an oppresive regime, (Note: These usage numbers may suggest that more info sharing may have been more “mobile to mobile”).
In Libya mobile hardware disconnected from any social network with video capability, and cheap flash storage and handshake transmission of disconnected media (aka off the grid) allowed information to be sent to and from Libya. The serious question becomes: what are mobile technology restrictions that could break the offline social network that was created by the Libyans? Some answers:
  • “Locked” mobile devices
  • Insecure GSM (GSM mobile can be traced with a simple hack)
  • DRM format restricted devices
  • Non-replaceable batteries
  • Application/Utility installation restrictions
  • Devices that can be remotely wiped without user consent (prior or real time)
  • Devices without removable memory or directly accessible file systems

These restrictions are common in mobile devices, but governments are already demanding even higher barriers to free use from carriers and manufacturers and that is a serious problem.

Use your Inside Voice

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Dave Pell on Nir Rosen’s ugly “she was asking for it” comments and weird defense of them:

Rosen’s offending tweets were in response to the reports that CBS’ Lara Logan had been sexually assualted near Tahrir Square on the day Hosni Mubarak stepped down. Here is a sampling of his handiwork.

“Lara Logan had to outdo Anderson [Cooper]. Where was her buddy McCrystal.”

via Breaking News: Man Tweets Without Really Thinking About It First : All Tech Considered : NPR.

Slate’s David Plotz finds fault with “new media”

And the problem with a lot of new media is that it erodes the barriers between what it is we are allowed — as our private selves — to think and feel because we are human (and thus flawed) , and what it is that’s appropriate and fine to say in public.…Slate editor David Plotz, during last week’s Slate Political Gabfest podcast

via Change of Subject: The blurt locker.

My talk under my breath, or in Vegas, or while playing Rugby, or watching sports with fans of a rival team is not the same talk at meetings or the family dinner table. I get Plotz’s point. It simply doesn’t apply here. I just don’t see where twitter eroded that barrier for Rosen. Yes, we all have ugly private thoughts. The “problem” is Rosen didn’t think his thoughts were ugly. He consciously posted them and stood by them, and then was shamed into giving a half ass apology.

If a person can ever be ashamed of an idea, it shouldn’t become a tweet, blog or status update. They are all a form free autographed billboard that are automatically archived to preserve your stupidity.

Dinner, Wine & a Puff Piece for Dessert

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TNC is sick of the celebrity profile that begins with a super-fit beautiful actress eating a nice big meal perfect for a “Real Murkin”:

On the journalism of this, first. The scene where the reporter and star eat together should be banished from all of magazines. I’m sure I’ve done it before, and it’s not wrong if it serves some higher purpose, or if something interesting truly get says. But usually the point is to prove the star’s accessibility, that they’re–in fact–just like you. Which they are not.

via I’ll Just Have a Salad – Ta-Nehisi Coates – Culture – The Atlantic.

The point for the star’s PR team is to prove “their accessibility”. I would guess the point for some journalists could be the perk of text-ing their closest friends: “I am eating brunch with the sexiest woman alive!” or they could have shown up at the interview and the actress requested they start the interview over a meal. The point for the actress may be that she has an eating disorder or image issues she wants to mask or she actually does want to bust a grub. Either way, I am not going to say what the point “usually” is, because I haven’t been around enough A-List actresses to even take a guess.

Mitch Daniels & the Chronic

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Andrew Sullivan is measuring Daniels for a Brooks Bros. Boys suit to wear to his 2012 inauguration as as POTUS and David Brooks names him the care bear of the GOP. Meanwhile, in a world of where people may still want to learn more about Gov. Daniels, Paul Waldman finds an account of Princeton undergrad Mitch Daniels being caught with a boat load of drugs.

[…]enough marijuana in his room to fill two size 12 shoe boxes, reports of the incident say. He and the other inhabitants of the room were also charged with possession of LSD and prescription drugs without a prescription.

[…]

The comically mild penalty he received — a $350 fine, no jail time, no probation — was a salutary wake-up call that allowed him to go on to a productive career. And he presents this as evidence in favor of laws that would absolutely destroythe career of anybody caught in 1989 (or today) doing what Daniels was caught doing. A couple of hundred thousand students have lost their financial aid, in many cases meaning they had to drop out of college, because of a conviction for possession or sale of drugs. If Daniels was in college today, and thus had actually served time as a convicted drug dealer, not only would he have no political future, he wouldn’t have much of a future at all.

via Mitch Daniels On Drugs.

Contrast that with what Mitch Doggy Dogg prescribes for a kid at Indiana University caught with a joint:

In calling for enforcement of drug laws against even casual users — publicizing the names of arrestees, at least minimal fines or jail time for those convicted and requiring no-use policies from colleges and other beneficiaries of government funds and so on — William Bennett is exactly right

Mitch wants Indiana to have Rockefeller Laws that helped create million dollar blocks. Or the same type of draconian laws passed in the 1980s that help fill California jails so much that the 45,000 member Correctional Officers Union is the most powerful union in that state.

It’s like social security hawk Paul Ryan’s crusade to gut Social Security because Americans desire so much to depend on SSI and use it as a hammock” while he had his own hammock after his father’s tragic death: their boot straps are too good for us to use when we’re in need.

Faces to the WI Protest

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Yesterday, I wrote that Scott Walker is ginning up the Democratic base in 2011 and 2012. In the video below, it also seems that in his quest to bust the unions he is also turning Wisconsin independents into full on Democrats.

We Are Wisconsin from Finn Ryan on Vimeo.

We stand together to support workers and families of Wisconsin. We are teachers, firefighters, fathers, daughters, brothers, sisters, young, and old. We are Wisconsin.

Share your story: finnryan@gmail.com

Produced by Finn Ryan and David Nevala

Video and editing – David Nevala

Images – Narayan Mahon, Finn Ryan

Music – Cougar

© 2011 Finn Ryan and David Nevala