Month: March 2009

Obama on blogs

The following is from the very end of the article that Helene Cooper and Sheryl Gay Stolberg at The New York Times wrote after a 35-minute interview with President Obama:

Mr. Obama rode to the White House partly on his savvy use of new technology, and he has a staff-written blog on his presidential Web site. Even so, he said he did not find blogs to be reliable, citing the economy as one example.

“Part of the reason we don’t spend a lot of time looking at blogs,” he said, “is because if you haven’t looked at it very carefully, then you may be under the impression that somehow there’s a clean answer one way or another — well, you just nationalize all the banks, or you just leave them alone and they’ll be fine.”

Coming from someone who focused so much of his political platform on the notion that he was not a “Washington insider” this seems to be quite odd. The way that Obama dismisses blogs in general as not having looked at issues carefully is just plain irresponsible in my eyes. This same type of claim could (and in some circles was) made against Obama during his candidacy: he was the fresh, inexperienced candidate who just didn’t have familiarity with the important issues.

Furthermore, while I’m sure there are plenty of blogs out there that are espousing their financial suggestions and “knowledge” that doesn’t mean that one should just write off the potential of blogs in general. Simply because a writer doesn’t have intimate knowledge of a subject does not mean that his or her ideas are not as valid as an expert’s.

Disagree with me if you want, but I think that it’s important sometimes to read and listen to the opinions of those whom you would otherwise write off as ignorant. Sometimes, not most of the time, but sometimes at least they might have something worthwhile to say.

The Real Thing

The Real Thing, originally uploaded by Pensiero.

Here’s my favourite find from browsing around Flickr today. The colours and designs are just great. Out of all photography I think looking at (but not shooting) street art photography is my favourite. Enjoy.

Politics and rationality

Matthew Yglesias posted this the other day concerning the idea that Obama’s tax proposals were simply too rational. The reason for this in Yglesias’s eyes is that Congress if full of “Senate moderates” who he describes as “someone who takes his party’s proposals, objects to them, waters them down a bit, and then congratulates himself on a job well done. Which is great if his party’s proposals are unduly immoderate. But it’s big-time trouble if his party puts a reasonable, moderate agenda on the table.”

With this in mind the solution for Obama would have been to propose a ridiculous tax law, Yglesias gives the example of a top marginal tax increase of 43 percent, so that the “Senate moderates” then object and “negotiate” the proposal down to what Obama wanted to actually accomplish in the first place.

Seems to me a pretty fair characterization of how much of Congress works. Far too frequently do I hear Senators and Representatives raising objections over what are really quite rational proposals.

Sidenote: While reading Hanna Pitkin’s “The Concept of Representation” for a politics class on Democratic Theory I came across this line

Politics abounds with issues on which men are committed in a way that is not easily accessible to rational argument, that shapes the perception of arguments, that may be unchanged throughout a lifetime. It is a field where rationality is no guarantee of agreement.

Seems that this idea of irrational politics has had some traction for some time. I wonder why no one takes it into account when making policy.

Poverty in Fresno

This was originally posted by Daniel Bachhuber over Twitter although by now I’ve lost the post. It’s a narration of a photo essay concerning the increasingly high rates of poverty in Fresno, CA. As someone who lives just an hour outside of Fresno it’s a fascinating look at the side of the city that you don’t really see if you’re just going down to see a movie or to go shopping.

To see the video check out Roxbury News, the organization responsible for its production.

AIG as a fraudulent enterprise

Matthew Yglesias posted this tonight concerning the problematic nature of the government providing billions of dollars to pay back AIG’s debt. He writes that:

The whole idea of the insurance industry is that if I buy insurance from you, you pay off the claims. Absent ability to pay claims, there’s no business there at all. It’s just fraud. Whether or not it meets the legal standard for fraud, I couldn’t say. But in ordinary language sense, it’s a fraud—you’re selling a service you have no capacity to deliver.

Like him I have no idea if this actually constitutes fraud, my hunch is not, but it definitely should. Furthermore, I know that the financial risks of AIG going under are tremendous, but does that really mean that we have to bail out a company that so utterly failed at doing what they are in business for: managing risk?

Link via Matthew Yglesias » Getting Some of Our Money Back From AIG Executives .

Evan Williams on the unexpected uses of Twitter

Evan Williams, one of the founders of Twitter, discusses how much of what is driving Twitter’s growth over the past year is unexpected uses. The talk was given last month at the TED talks. Very interesting, and be sure to watch all the way through to the end for what I think is one of the biggest selling points of using Twitter.

The Pioneer gets “Best in Show”

One of our Editors-in-Chief as well as our Director of Writing and our News Editor for the Whitman Pioneer attended the ACP Conference in San Diego over the weekend. The Pioneer entered our new website into the competition as well as our relatively new radio show podcasts. Today the winners were announced and our website (which launched a little less than a month ago) took Best in Show.

We placed higher than the sites of much larger schools (Berkeley, the University of Miami, and UCLA to name a few) and much larger newspapers. For a site that just recently got remodeled (and a Web Manger who just recently started working) it’s incredibly humbling to receive such an award, especially when some of those other schools have such incredible sites. Congrats to everyone who participated in the conference over the weekend, it sounds like it was great experience.

I’ve only been working for the Pioneer since December and so much of what I’ve learned and done with the site has been greatly helped by our designer Phil Thompson as well as all the CoPress and CollegeJourn people. Through the discussions I’ve had I’ve learned more about college journalism and news in general in the past few months than I would have thought possible. Let’s hope these great conversations (like tonight’s CollegeJourn) continue so that everyone can keep pushing their content forward.