Bill Clinton: Do as I Say, Not As I Did

Wired quotes Bill Clinton in a recent speech saying,

Democratization is the only world view that can survive in this country. It’s very easy advice to give, but it’s very difficult to live that advice. We have to develop a way of thinking about the world that is more consistent with what we want the world to be.

Ah, so that’s what all of the aid to the Colombian military was for — to aid the process of democratization. I guess in order to get a little democracy you have to fund a few right wing death squads here and there.

I suppose when Clinton’s FDA was holding up approval of RU-486, that was helping to advance the cause of women, and when he and Al Gore proposed putting government back doors in all encryption products, that was his way of honoring American’s freedom. And, of course, when he pardoned FALN terrorists, that was his prescient effort to fight the war on terrorism.

Gee, how will we ever get along without the benevolent Clinton watching over us.

Taiwan Knows How to Do Sex Scandals

Bill Clinton and other American politicians look rather tame compared to an ongoing sex scandal in Taiwan. Leave it to an Asian country to distribute videotapes of politicians having sex on video CDs inserted in magazines. Lets hope that is one journalistic practice that does not become popular in the United States.

Africa and War

The London-Based International Institute for Strategic Studies released a report last October estimating that about 60,000 people were killed in the first six months of 2001 in various wars around the globe. Fully half of those killed were in sub-Saharan Africa.

Despite the fact that many countries in sub-Saharan Africa routinely have trouble feeding their citizens, the IISS reported that,

There has been a general increase in military spending by regional governments, which has been helped, at least among the oil-producing countries, by higher oil revenues, resulting mainly from increased production rather than rising prices.

Military spending in sub-Saharan Africa was $9.4 billion in 2000. An astounding amount of money for such a poor region.

Sources:

The Military Balance 2001/2002. International Institute for Strategic Studies, 2001.

Report highlights Africa war toll. The BBC, October 18, 2001.

Michael Bellesiles Can’t Stop Lying

Every time it seems like Michael Bellesiles is going to dig himself out of his academic fraud scandal, he just keeps making the situation worse. Bellesiles, of course, wrote Arming America which was praised when it was published for its bold thesis that the American gun culture was a product of post-Civil War America, and that prior to that time few Americans owned weapons.

This claim started to unravel thanks to efforts by gun rights activists as well as academics who were paying attention and decided to see whether or not there were serious problems with Bellesiles’ book.

One of the most contentious claims in this debate revolves around San Francisco probate records from the late 19th century. In his book, Bellesiles claimed that he reviewed probate records from this period and reports on his findings. The problem is that almost all of these records were lost in a fire in 1906.

Bellesiles recently claimed that he had, in fact, located the missing probate records. In a recent reply to his critics, Bellesiles wrote,

I was not hallucinating when I read the San Francisco probate files. They are housed in the California History Center. (Complicating matters is the fact that the center, where I read these files in 1993, moved last year, and it does not have a web site.)

. . .

I have sent photocopies (just the first few pages of three files, each of which contained dozens of pages) to several people, including a reporter for the Chronicle of Higher Education, who is working on an article, and the New York Times, the Boston Globe, and the Organization of American Historians newsletter. I also plan to scan a few pages onto my web site (www.emory.edu/HISTORY/BELLESILES/index.html).

The California History Center, like many other archives, is oriented toward genealogy. Most of the material is therefore organized alphabetically, making it difficult to locate records from specific years. Additionally, the staff appeared unaware that they had any probate materials in their collection, though they actually have a great deal. But then my contention, like that of every historian I know, is that one must actually go to the archives in order to properly discover and examine historical documents. Historical research cannot be conducted from an office easy chair via the telephone and web.

Unfortunately for him, almost everything in these three paragraphs appears to be yet more dissembling by Bellesiles.

First, there is no organization called the California History Center. What Bellesiles visited was, in fact, the Contra Costa Country Historical Society, and it most certainly does have a web site.

The CCCHS was surprised when it started fielding calls from reporters about the controversy, and even more surprised that Bellesiles was spinning a fairy tale involving their center.

The most damning part of the CCCHS rebuttal to Bellesiles is that the documents that he photocopied and faxed to journalists are not San Francisco probate files. According to the CCCHS,

1. Every identifiable estate in the 26 pages was a Contra Costa County estate, not a San Francisco County estate.

2. Every identifiable decedent in the 26 pages was a Contra Costa County resident, not a San Francisco County resident.

3. Every judge who signed orders in the 26 pages was a Contra Costa County judge, not a San Francisco County judge.

4. The only clerk who signed an order in the 26 pages signed as “Clerk” of the “Probate Court Contra Costa County.”

5. Bellesiles makes reference to 1872 tax assessment records and includes a copy of one in the 26 pages. Its heading is: “Assessment List, County of Contra Costa, 1872-73.” This is from a Contra Costa County taxpayer and taxing authority, not from San Francisco.

Examining the 26 pages of Bellesiles’ probate records that were supplied to us, it appears that Professor Bellesiles merely photocopied estate documents that contained the word “San Francisco” somewhere in them. For example, one of his documents was an affidavit from a San Francisco newspaper that ran an advertisement for a Contra Costa County estate sale: “Pursuant to an order of the Hon. the Probate Court of the county of Contra Costa . . . in the town of Martinez.” This affidavit, signed by a San Francisco notary public, states that it is a Contra Costa County estate. There was no newspaper in Contra Costa County until 1858, therefore it was common practice to publish legal notices in the San Francisco newspaper.

It is really difficult to imagine the thought process going on in Bellisles’ head. Certainly he had to know he would be called to the carpet for such shoddy research methods. Either he is intentionally deceitful or he’s one of the worst scholars working in academia.

Source:

Notes on Supposed San Francisco Records in the Contra Costa County Historical Society History Center. Contra Costa County Historical Society, January 2002.

Hunt Saboteurs in Great Britain Will Have to Find a New Lawyer

When animal rights activists in Great Britain were arrested for disrupting hunts or other events, they often called on lawyer Desmond Murphy who represented many defendants in such cases and apparently was himself very close to the animal rights movement.

Unfortunately, Murphy apparently started emulating his clients’ habit of crossing the line into illegal activities and, as a result, was recently banned from practicing law in Great Britain.

Murphy admitted at a disciplinary hearing that he had allowed a client to use a false name in court, and failed to produce financial details about his practice. The event which finally brought about Murphy’s downfall was a 1998 case that took place in Liverpool Crown Court. Murphy represented a man who had been charged with disrupting the Waterloo Cup — a hare coursing tournament.

That man used a false identity in court, and Murphy admitted that he knew several hours beforehand that the man was going to lie about his identity in court. Knowingly allowing false testimony in court is a serious breech of ethics.

Lawyer Geoff Hide, who often represented rural clients in cases against animal right activists, told The Daily Telegraph that he suspect Murphy became too caught up in his client’s cause. Murphy said, “He became far too caught up with the people he was representing, and at the end of the day he really couldn’t see the wood for the trees.”

Source:

Hunt saboteurs’ favorite lawyer is struck off. Guy Adams, The Daily Telegraph (London), January 29, 2002.

Maryland High Court Vacates Child Support Order for Man Who Was Not Biological Father

Maryland’s highest court this month overturned a lower court’s ruling that a man should be forced to continue paying child support even though paternity tests established that he was not the father of the child in question.

In 1993 Michele Gunter gave birth to a child and told Nicholas Walter that he was the father since she had not had sexual intercourse with any other men in the previous year. A judge ordered Walter to pay child support, to which Walter agreed.

Walter, however, had a series of work-related accidents and was perennially behind in his child-support payments. In March 2000, Walter asked a judge to modify the payment award since injuries sustained in an accident made it impossible for him to perform his job as a cab driver. He also asked for genetic testing to establish whether or not he was the after of the child.

The paternity test established that Walter was not the father of the child, and he asked the court to absolve him of the unpaid child support as well as order the mother to reimburse him for the money he had provided.

Maryland Circuit Judge James C. Cawood Jr. ruled in 2001 that Walter was not entitled to reimbursement of child support he had paid and must pay the unpaid amounts as well.

Walter appealed and Maryland’s high court ruled in a 4-3 decision that since he is not the biological father, he is not responsible for the past due child support.

In the majority opinion, judge Lynne A. Battaglia wrote that, “Without paternity, there is no legal duty; without a legal duty, there can be no financial obligation.”

Source:

Court frees man from child-support order. Arlo Wagner, The Washington Times, January 20, 2002.