Ah, the Advantages of Objective Media

Over the past few weeks it seemed like Roger Ailes memo to George W. Bush was getting as much attention on CNN as the DC sniper’s tarot card did. As far as I’m concerned, all broadcast news is nothing but entertainment and should be treated as such, but CNN set out a clear standard of objectivity in its relentless reporting and criticism of Ailes’ memo.

So how come I wake up this morning and see this running across their news ticker,

Woman who wrote riot-inciting Miss World story resigns

So even CNN thinks the Nigerian riots were all the fault of some uppity woman reporter who didn’t know her place. Presumably we will soon see headlines like, “Woman dressed in high skirt and low-cut top gets raped.”

Maybe if they’d grow a spine down in Atlanta, they might be able to stop the ass kicking they’re receiving from Fox.

Google News

The first time around I missed the importance of Google News, though I figured it had to be doing something right given how Dave Winer was trumpeting RSS news feeds as superior. The other day, though, someone explained exactly why I should be using Google News and after a few days of playing around with it, I am extremely impressed.

As an information junkie, one of the benefits I like the best about my current job is that I have free access to Lexis/Nexis. For what I am interested in, however, I’m having more success keeping up with important news by using Google News than I am with Lexis/Nexis and certainly much better than with existing Internet resources (including RSS feeds).

For example, a quick search for all news related to animal rights keeps me on top of 90 percent of the stories I’m trying to track on that topic.

Depending on whether or not they charge for this after it leaves beta, and of course how much they charge for the service, Google could make a lot of money as a sort of poor man’s Lexis/Nexis.

Color me impressed.

PETA vs. Christie Whitman

While much of the criticism directed at Environmetnal Protection Agency head Christie Whitman has accused her of not doing enough to protect the environemnt and human health, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals continues to press its case against the EPA’s plan to conduct toxicity tests of industrial chemicals. Tests which are in large part animal tests.

According to PETA, the tests will “kill tens of millions of animals in toxicity tests called ‘blindly stupid’ and ‘appalling technology’ by scientists.”

This month PETA released a juvenile-looking picture of Whitman sporting horns and bushy black eyebrows with the copy, “Christie Whitman: New Jersey Devil To The Animals.”

Real creative campaign there.

Source:

Two minutes for roughing. PressofAtlanticCity.Com, November 21, 2002.

If John Ashcroft Doesn’t Get You, Harvard Law School Will

I just can’t think of any better comment on the state of American universities than this headline from the New Jersey Star Ledger about Harvard Law School’s proposed new speech code,

Harvard rethinking free speech

American universities — where criticizing supporters of terrorism is the New McCarthyism, but protecting students from ever having to hear anything offensive is the New Religion.

Eugene Volokh on Bigotry

For the life of me, I cannot figure out what the hell Eugene Volokh is talking about in this post, which is a roundabout defense of Mary Daly’s position about men that I’ve outlined here. Volokh writes,

If one is drawing analogies, while draw the analogy between sex and race, and not, say, sex and religion? We might think it’s wrong for people to refuse to hire non-Christians because of their religion; but if someone expresses a desire for a future world in which fewer people are non-Christian, I don’t think we’d see that as immoral or even bigoted (though we might disagree with the desire for other reasons).

Huh? Lets paraphrase Mary Daly substituting religion for sex,

There could be many alternative futures, but some of the elements are constant: that it would be Christian only; that much of the contamination, both physical and mental, has been dealt with. I think this will be accompanied by an evolutionary process that will result in a drastic reduction of the population of Jews. People are afraid to say that kind of stuff anymore.

I’m not sure how Volokh is spinning that sort of statement to claim that this would be non-bigoted. Even Daly herself with the line about people being afraid to say that kind of stuff seems to recognize that she is advocating something likely to be perceived as bigoted.

UPDATE:

Just to expand a little bit on this, I think arguing this issue by analogy is fraught with problems.

I don’t think it is bigoted, for example, to say that the world would be a better place without so many Muslim extremists (a la Nigeria). I do find it bigoted, however, to say that the world would be a better place without any Muslims at all.

The analogy below is similarly flawed,

Likewise, how about an analogy between sex and certain physical handicaps? For instance, we might think it’s unkind, unfair, or even bigoted to refuse to admit people to college because they have various handicaps or genetic diseases, or to refuse to hire them for most jobs (setting aside those where we think the absence of the disease is strongly related to the person’s ability to do the job). But I think the desire for a future world in which fewer people have those problems is downright laudable.

But we can wish for an end to genetic diseases without wishing that the people who have genetic diseases disappear. The ideal solution to Huntington’s Disease, for example, would be a genetically engineered cure that would simply deactivate the faulty gene that causes the disease, without requiring the gradual elimination of anyone.

I also think Volokh grants far too much to the sexually-determined behavior crowd. Yes there are likely broad sex-based behavior differences, but we also know that many of those are a) a lot less significant than once thought, and b) are of a degree rather than kind.

Women, in general, tend to be less violent than men, in general. But the difference is far less than was once thought (especially when it comes to something like domestic violence), and seems highly correlated to how the sexes are socialized rather than predetermined by genetics.

The one thing I agree with liberal feminists about is that there aren’t any morally relevant differences between men and women that justify treating members of either sex differently (most of the biological differences only are relevant at the extremes of human performance where size and musculature difference is important, such as in professional sports and other physically demanding tasks).

Well, Maybe He Can Give Saddam Pointers on Torture!

You just can’t make this stuff up. Thanks to PostWatch for a pointer to this Washington Post story about UN weapons inspections that features this bizarre lede,

The United Nations launched perhaps its most important weapons inspections ever yesterday with a team that includes a 53-year-old Virginia man with no specialized scientific degree and a leadership role in sadomasochistic sex clubs.

Post writer James V. Grimaldi must have loved putting that lede together.

On the other hand, this does have a more serious side — the implication is that Hans Blix is picking inexperienced folks in order to avoid angering the Iraqis and reduce the chance of actually finding violations,

The former inspectors, who worked for the United Nations Special Commission created after the Persian Gulf War, say the new inspectors have been selected in part to avoid offending Iraq. These critics say that Hans Blix, the executive chairman of the U.N. Monitoring, Verification and Inspection Commission (UNMOVIC), is bypassing some experienced inspectors because they were opposed by Iraq as too aggressive in the earlier inspections.

Source:

Weapons Inspectors’ Experience Questioned. The Washington Post, November 28, 2002.