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Report from campus

Matt Welch solicited some academic friends as to the nature of campuses these days. The stories he got back surprised him. The nadir came when a secretary sent around one…

Matt Welch solicited some academic friends as to the nature of campuses these days. The stories he got back surprised him.

The nadir came when a secretary sent around one of those “please put a flag in your window” messages, kitschy to be sure but entirely harmless. She was then publicly accused of sending a threatening email. The accusation, made by the chair of the English dept, can only be described as hysterical. “Fly the flag or what?,” she asked, “Have my windows broken? Be lynched? As a person of color…etc.” It sickened me: these tenured, faux champions of the working class leveling absurd personal attacks against staff members for the crime of sentimental patriotism. I sent around a response that was as calm as I could manage, and made some friends and a few enemies. I’m afraid that the enemies will have a longer memory.
Send your kids to college and they’ll be indoctrinated into an ideology. Of course, it won’t all stick. And some of it is good old-fashioned liberal tolerance (it’s OK to be gay, date rape is bad, it’s valuable to study non-Western cultures). But some of it is intellectually and morally corrupt. I mean hell, I was a teen-age Maoist once, and on the whole it was good for my intellectual development. But the ideal of diversity on campus is, frankly, a joke. Diversity is a euphemism; there’s little interest or support for diversity of opinion.

When I was in college, apathy was the rule of thumb. For most folks, classes, beer, and (in my circles, at least) gaming were the topics of conversation. Politics were generally innocuous, usually liberal, and we had both Reagan and Anderson give speeches at our campus, with a minimum of picketing.

This sort of thing worries me. A lot.

Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell, Don’t Bomb

Inscribing taunting messages on bombs that imply that the targets are homosexual is not allowed. Kicking homosexuals out of the military, though, is still okay. Though we won’t do it…

Inscribing taunting messages on bombs that imply that the targets are homosexual is not allowed.

Kicking homosexuals out of the military, though, is still okay. Though we won’t do it during war time, because that would inconvenience us.

Oddness.

(Link via Xkot)

This is (sadly) True

Randy Cunningham publishes This is True. It goes out as a free newsletter, a subscription newsletter, books, and a syndicated column. Usually these items are of a “Boy, was that…

Randy Cunningham publishes This is True. It goes out as a free newsletter, a subscription newsletter, books, and a syndicated column.

Usually these items are of a “Boy, was that crook stupid,” or “Golly, what a whacky thing to do.” Occasionally, the column gets on a soap box, usually justified. One of Cunningham’s bugaboos is “zero tolerance” laws and regs in schools. A most recent example is given here.

I’d disagree with his characterization of such laws as “terrorism” (let’s not overuse the word into meaninglessness), but I’d agree that they are over-the-top group-think mind-control of the sort that terrorist groups usually seem to promote.

That’s a joke, son

Religion as a fit subject for comedy Rowan Atkinson (Mr. Bean, Blackadder) writes to the Times of London on the subject of proposed legislation to outlaw “incitement to religious hatred.”…

Religion as a fit subject for comedy

Rowan Atkinson (Mr. Bean, Blackadder) writes to the Times of London on the subject of proposed legislation to outlaw “incitement to religious hatred.”

“For telling a good and incisive religious joke, you should be praised. For telling a bad one, you should be ridiculed and reviled. The idea that you could be prosecuted for the telling of either is quite fantastic.”

That’s one for the quote list.

(Link via Quiddity)

PC or not PC, that is the question

One of the most popular attractions at either Magic Kingdom in the States is Splash Mountain. (My company actually did engineering work on the one in Anaheim. Could I tell…

One of the most popular attractions at either Magic Kingdom in the States is Splash Mountain. (My company actually did engineering work on the one in Anaheim. Could I tell you some wild stories. But I digress.)

Anyway, while Splash Mountain is popular because it’s a fun flume ride, the window dressing on the ride is the tale of Br’er Rabbit (though somewhere in the translation to the Disneyverse the apostrophe was dropped).

The Disney connection there is with the Disney film you will never see on VHS, let alone on DVD. Song of the South was an early (1946) Disney foray into mixing live action and animation, based on the book by Joel Chandler Harris with the tales of Uncle Remus. It also has, so I am led to believe, some portrayals of blacks and race relations that are quite un-PC. Not in a mean way or a violent way — this is Disney, after all — but condescending, paternalistic, insulting to modern sensibilities.

I don’t know for sure, because I’ve never seen it. And likely never will in this country. Though evidently the tape is available in the UK and Germany.

So standing I line for the ride Sunday, I see one kid asking his mom what “brer” means. She doesn’t know. I also hear a couple discussing how it’s all based on, uh, the Oz books.

Disney has a valuable property here, and they can’t do anything with it. Heck, they couldn’t even re-edit and PCize the movie, because half the vocal populace would yell at them for knuckling under, the other half for not going far enough.

It is a puzzlement. It is a shame. And it is a fun (bowdlerized) ride, too.

Name That Tune

A note from a friend regarding the Clear Channel (informal) no-play list: “I guess we can all be thankful that none of the planes that crashed were loaded with illegal…

A note from a friend regarding the Clear Channel (informal) no-play list:

“I guess we can all be thankful that none of the planes that crashed were loaded with illegal drugs piloted by porn stars or we wouldn’t have any songs left to play on the radio at all.”

“Back in time”

“Back in time” Spacecheese.com reports on the screwball editing of Back to the Future on TV. Puh-leaze, people….

“Back in time”

Spacecheese.com reports on the screwball editing of Back to the Future on TV.

Puh-leaze, people.

I get angry

Yup. Yet another angry political post thing. You’ve been warned. Reading the Denver Post op-ed pages (you remember, the ones Margie doesn’t like me reading because of my blood pressure?),…

Yup. Yet another angry political post thing. You’ve been warned.

Reading the Denver Post op-ed pages (you remember, the ones Margie doesn’t like me reading because of my blood pressure?), I ran across the following inane remarks from a columnist whose name I will not mention:

“It makes me wonder whether this newfound patriotism will move Democrats to now support legislation to protect Old Glory from being dishonored by some of their addled constituents.”

Well, that answers the question I raised a few days ago about Flag Burning. Aside from the insult that it’s Democrats burning the flag, or that the folks doing it are automatically to be considered addled, the question is meaningless because the flag is a symbol, not the values it symbolizes. Seeing a flag burned torques me off. But I’d rather be torqued off than tell people they cannot make that sort of political statement, any more than I’d tell the columnist in question that he cannot write such tripe.

“I feel certain we will hear from the anti-war movement again. We may even see our cities awash once more in armies of angry young men and women unwilling to shed a drop of blood to defend the United States of America, land of their birth.”

By equating those who oppose war, or specific wars, or even specific acts of war, with moral cowardice and an unwillingness to sacrifice for this country and its people, the columnist engages in just the sort of knee-jerk reactionary dialog that makes anti-war protests necessary, even where I don’t agree with them.

“I’m concerned that when casualties do roll in, the appeasers and partisan politicians who are determined to undermine the president will make moves to confirm to our enemies that America is indeed a decadent nation.”

I am sometimes concerned that we are still so casualty-shy from Viet Nam that we’ve let those fears warp and weaken our foreign and military policy of the last decades, that we’ve taken the easy course of bombing and missile attacks, with their collateral damage and relative ineffectiveness, so that we don’t have to face the horror of American soldiers dying “on foreign soil,” lest it call into question what we’re doing in the first place.

That having been said, to call those who are concerned over whether such sacrifice of life is necessary “appeasers,” and to chalk up the rest of it to “partisan politics” and people who are just out to “undermine the president” is a maddening case of black-or-white thinking. It is possible to oppose the President’s policies without being a weakling, without beint a traitor, without wanting to give in to terror. I do think that we are called upon, to some degree, to stand together as a nation in a time of crisis. But that can only take us so far. We do not, as ancient Rome did, elect a dictator during national emergencies so that policy can be made unimpeded by the voices of dissent and debate. We remain a democracy, and a land of values, freedoms, and diversity.

Will there be those who use these perilous times as a means of gaining political or social or financial advantage? Certainly, but they’ll pop up on both sides of the fence, without a doubt. It’s already happening. Using national anger and a desire to Do Something, Dammit, as a tool to silence debate is unworthy of the ideals, of the “freedom,” that some of the most jingoistic sound-biters are yammering about.

And which, by the by, the flag stands for.

Okay, enough ranting for the day. Time to flee to mindless entertainment.

Music, maestro?

There’s a report at Launch.com about songs that the Clear Channel Network (the largest owner of FM stations in the US) decided were, in the aftermath of Red Tuesday, “lyrically…

There’s a report at Launch.com about songs that the Clear Channel Network (the largest owner of FM stations in the US) decided were, in the aftermath of Red Tuesday, “lyrically inappropriate” to be played.

They include some presumably obvious ones like Peter Gabriel’s “You Dropped a Bomb On Me,” James Taylor’s “Fire and Rain,” and pretty much anything with “New York” in the title.

They also include some oddities like the Bangles’ “Walk Like an Egyptian,” Louis Armstrong’s “What a Wonderful World,” and the Beatles’ “Obla-di, Obla-da.”

We have met the Enemy, and He is Large Corporations Making Goofy Decisions.

Further coverage is available from the NY Times.

Via Moriarty, who had a few other interesting things to say.

Flags

Driving home tonight, I spotted a flag fluttering about the roadway along C-470. In the brief glimpse, it was clearly one of those cheap, plastic things that folks fit into…

Driving home tonight, I spotted a flag fluttering about the roadway along C-470. In the brief glimpse, it was clearly one of those cheap, plastic things that folks fit into their car door windows. It had come loose, and was now being run over by various cars.

I’m enough of a traditionalist to cringe at such a thing, and a quick dozen plans flashed through my head, all equally rejected. No way, even if I were pulled by the side of the road, that I could run out there and grab it without causing a major accident, myself being a ground zero of same.

Nuts.

But it occured to me — it’s still just a piece of plastic. It symbolizes so much more, but it’s still just a symbol. Not worth, in context, a life.

Which made me wonder — will the current crisis make passage of a Anti-Flag Burning Amendment more or less likely? Will all the flag-waving and patriotic hoo-hah make people more willing to sacrifice political expression for the sake of a piece of cloth? Or will the tragedy of last week make people put things in perspective, and realize that life and liberty are a lot more precious for all of that?

Words

I choose my words carefully. We’ve been over that before. In recent articles on the upcoming television season, one place where network shows are looking to push the envelope is…

I choose my words carefully. We’ve been over that before.

In recent articles on the upcoming television season, one place where network shows are looking to push the envelope is with language, i.e., adding more “swear words,” “cuss words,” etc. This is meant to add a more adult tone, and, of course, to win back folks who have fled to cable (where such language is more common).

One threshold proposed is to allow characters to use the term “God damn!”

Now, frankly, such language doesn’t bother me. I figure God has more important things to worry about than such gaffes. However, it does upset others. So I try to watch the occasions when I do it, but it does, on occasion, slip out. And it bothers some people very much when I do let it slip, which makes me feel bad, since I don’t go about intending to bother people, usually (and if I did it would not be that way).

So why put it onto night time television? Well, arguably, it’s real life. Some people (like me) do talk that way, on occasion or regularly. So to never have anyone talk that way is unrealistic.

Fine. I can buy that. Artistic integrity. That’s important.

So what about other sorts of invective? We’ll hear people saying “shit,” but when will we hear people called “fags” on Prime Time? Heck, when will we hear characters of color referred to as “niggers”? Sure, it bothers some people to hear those words. But there are people out there who use those terms, and other terms of racial and ethnic hatred. To pretend they don’t exist is unrealistic. Doesn’t artistic integrity demand it, when necessary?

I mean, imagine it. A Law & Order episode focusing on racial hatred. You’d expect to hear someone using various perjoritive terms for African-Americans, right? I mean, using such words is part of the story, part of showing that hatred. It’s real. Artistic integrity demands it.

I don’t expect to see it happen any time soon. Which points out to me an unfortunate double standard — that offending some people with words is more acceptible than offending some others with words.

Which doesn’t strike me as being any sort of integrity.

I don’t like to see people offended. But if we’re going to offend some people in pursuit of realism, of art, of the message we want to convey, we should be willing to offend anyone. And if not — then let’s not wrap ourselves in the cloaks of realism and art.

[It occurs to me that some people might not be able to load this page because of some of the words I’ve used above. You can guess which ones. You can also probably guess which ones would not be grounds for blocking. Interesting, isn’t it?]

Making the World Safe for Animatronic Hippos!

Disney’s “Jungle Ride” operators at Disneyland will no longer carry blank-firing pistols, as the “script” has been changed to no longer fire at the animatronic hippos “attacking” the boat. PETA…

Disney’s “Jungle Ride” operators at Disneyland will no longer carry blank-firing pistols, as the “script” has been changed to no longer fire at the animatronic hippos “attacking” the boat.

PETA spokeswoman, Debbie Leahy, applauded the move, telling the LA Times, “If it was a fantasy baby or fantasy toddler, I don’t think somebody would find it funny. Clearly we should not be accepting it for a hippo.”

Doubtless other Politically Correct changes to the ride (which features African headhunters, native guides, and many other threatening animals, not to mention traditionally some of the best operator dialog at the park) will soon be coming.

(via Studio Briefing)

A note from the installation instructions …

… for the ceiling fan: NOTE: The important safety precuations and instructions appearing in the manual are not meant to cover all possible cnditions and situations that may occur. It…

… for the ceiling fan:

NOTE: The important safety precuations and instructions appearing in the manual are not meant to cover all possible cnditions and situations that may occur. It must be understood that common sense and caution are necessary factors in the installation and operation of this fan. [Emphasis mine.]

Praise the Lord, and Thank the Great Maker that someone realizes that “common sense and caution” should be part of any installation (and operation) instructions for pretty much anything. And shame on the American public for requiring such instructions.

Comedy

At least one way of measuring the freedom of any society is the amount of comedy that is permitted, and clearly a healthy society permits more satirical comment than a…

At least one way of measuring the freedom of any society is the amount of comedy that is permitted, and clearly a healthy society permits more satirical comment than a repressive, so that if comedy is to function in some way as a safety release then it must obviously deal with these taboo areas. This is part of the responsibility we accord our licensed jesters, that nothing be excused the searching light of comedy. If anything can survive the probe of humour it is clearly of value, and conversely all groups who claim immunity from laughter are claiming special privileges which should not be granted.

— Eric Idle (b. 1943)

Coffee Clutch

The McDonald’s Scalding Coffee Case So we’ve all heard about ridiculous lawsuits and how our country is being ground into the dust by folks refusing to take responsibility for their…

The McDonald’s Scalding Coffee Case

So we’ve all heard about ridiculous lawsuits and how our country is being ground into the dust by folks refusing to take responsibility for their own dimwitted actions and instead suing folks with deep pockets.

Heck, I’ve chanted that same refrain myself.

The example folks most give of this is the infamous McDonald’s Scalding Coffee Case, where (as the legend goes) some idiot woman is drinking her take-out coffee, spills it, gets a little burn, and sues the snot out of McDonald’s.

Well, check out the link above. Based on the actual case, it paints a very different picture, both of the extent of the injuries, the negligence of the defendent, and the damages awarded.

Sure, it’s the Trial Lawyer Assoc. posting this, but the facts are the facts. Just remember that the next time someone starts bitching on this subject (and that the whole reason why punitive damages were originally allowed was to punish folks/firms for whom compensatory damages were being just written off as a cost of doing business).