TCS Daily : November 2003 Archives
The Next Litigation Battleground
As blogging has grown, so has its capacity to attract negative attention to the activity, and to those who participate in it. From the earliest nasty exchanges in USENET discussion forums to current flame wars between blogs on various issues,...
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Green Civil War
Wind power may well be the least environmentally-friendly idea ever proposed by environmentalists. That certainly seems to be the verdict of those who live near proposed and actual wind farm developments in both the US and UK. Conservationists as...
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Give Thanks for Small Victories
Last week Congress passed nanotechnology legislation that President Bush is expected to sign shortly (you can see a copy of the bill here). It's a victory for people who favor the responsible development of molecular nanotechnology. But it's a small...
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A Brave Soldier Fades Away
It was 1942 and America was in some of the darkest days of World War II. More than 5000 American soldiers died on the Bataan "Death March." Gasoline rationing was in full effect. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt gave major...
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Addiction Inflation
Every year more American and European children are classified as obese or overweight. While the classifications may be misleading -- not least because some overweight people are actually healthier than their skinny friends -- there is little doubt that...
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Beyond the FASB
Editor's note: What follows is testimony given this month before a hearing entitled, "The Financial Accounting Standards Board and Small Business Growth"; Subcommittee on Securities and Investment Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs, U.S. Senate
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Another Environmentalist Bromide
Environmentalism has never been more predictable than it is today. Left-leaning activists and environmental journalists reflexively turn every green issue into a formulaic "Bush administration rollback" story, often with little regard for the facts and history of t
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Doing Well By Taking Revenge
Ever wanted to punish telemarketers? Would you pay for the privilege of making them suffer? My revenge plan might just solve our telemarketing plague while raising a fortune for charities. The Telemarketing Revenge Plan Under the plan,...
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Giving Thanks for Turkey
As the ruins of the British Consulate and HSBC Bank in Istanbul were still smoldering, and the victims of an earlier bombing of two synagogues were buried, Turkey braced for more homicide bombings. The November 20 attacks, which killed...
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Beyond Cell Phone Etiquette
Was a time I used to enjoy a nice train journey. I'd settle by a window, open a book or newspaper, or simply gaze at the scenery rushing by -- the projects, or the Hudson, the rolling hills dotted with...
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Who's Right?
My recent City Journal cover story, "We're Not Losing the Culture Wars Anymore," has generated a lot of attention: it has been excerpted in the Los Angeles Times, written about by John Leo in U.S. News & World Report, re-posted...
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Ahead of the Curve
A certain compound curve -- blending a fender into the hood and front air intake, or bringing a roof line down a sail panel into the rear end of a car -- can make or break it in the eye...
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Deafened by the Right of Free Screech
Much ink, both digital and literal, has been spilt reporting on the protests that greeted President Bush, who indeed got a most colourful reception when he bravely dared to invade the nationwide personal space of the UK's chocolate box assortment...
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The Price Is Right
Convincing people to conserve water can be a challenge for government planners. The Department of Energy's mandate for water-efficient low-flow toilets has not proven very popular with users, who obstinately insist on flushing multiple times -- defeating the planne
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Learning From the Past
Can we find a way to fight AIDS without defeating ourselves in the process? Well-meaning people around the world have united around the wonderful idea of spending billions to help millions. And since what's been done so far hasn't worked...
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Marines' Machines
All modern societies are critically dependant upon bureaucracies. These organizations, be they for-profit, nonprofit, or governmental, are central to our well-being. Hospitals, schools, courts, and supermarket chains are all bureaucracies. They constitute our insti
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Wrong Idea, Wrong Time
A few years ago, I sat on a panel with six faculty and students at UCLA who for two hours debated the question: "Is There An American Identity?" I was the only person on the panel who thought there was....
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Fat and Frightened
The Blair government is about to get tough on obesity in children. An emergency salt summit is being held. The hounds of hysteria are baying loudly. The Observer grimly observed "Official: fat epidemic will cut life expectancy." This catchy...
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Closed Encounters of the Good Kind
Unscrupulous mutual funds, as investors have learned to their chagrin, have found plenty of ways to cheat. There are, however, sound alternatives with many of the benefits of mutual funds but without the drawbacks. I discussed one such investment --...
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The Air Up There - Is It Hotter?
If human activities are having a dramatic effect on globally-averaged temperature, then the temperature in the low atmosphere would be rising at a rate faster than at the Earth's surface. A flurry of recent studies continues to round out...
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London Calling
When Air Force One landed in Britain, London's mayor, "Red Ken" Livingstone hastened to roll up the carpet at City Hall. Only protestors dancing in the streets were welcomed to the reception he gave in dishonor of America's President. ...
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Howard's Ends
Libertarians thinking about voting for Howard Dean should be taking a long, hard look at their prospective candidate. In an interview with the Washington Post on November 18th, Mr. Dean indicated that one of his major priorities is going...
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From Here to the Great Society
Let's stipulate that fighting AIDS -- which has killed 28 million people and infected 42 million more worldwide -- is a noble goal. And let's note that poor countries are most at risk and most in need. And so let's...
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Burn, Baby, Burn?
Forest fires in California this year have burned more than 700,000 acres, destroyed more than 2,500 homes, caused $2 billion in costs and damages and killed 22 people. Last year's wild fires in the West burned about 7 million...
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Milton Friedman and Many Others on the Consequences of Price Controls
Editor's note: What follows is an open letter to the United States Congress. We are deeply concerned about proposed legislation to remove pharmaceutical companies' ability to control the importation of their products. The goal of this legislation will be...
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A Hardliner's Life
Richard Pipes is an historian who made, as well as studied, history. An expert on Soviet and Russian history, Pipes helped change the direction of U.S. foreign policy. In the 1970s, he headed a government panel of outside experts brought...
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Man vs. Machine
"I was surprised to see Kasparov favored. Once he lost to Deep Blue, the last big match (Kramnik vs. Deep Fritz) was a draw. I know it is not as simple as Moore's Law, but hey, don't these machines improve...
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Kafka in Kiev
At a time when the legal environment in Ukraine is more favorable for democratizing society and protecting human rights, there is still a significant gap between standards which exist on paper and the reality for millions of defenseless people, particularly...
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Libertarians and Gay Marriage
Libertarians love to duck fights, but on gay marriage they must take a stand. Some Americans genuinely believe that homosexuality is an immoral act that goes against God. Others either celebrate their own homosexuality or feel that those who...
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Exit Strategy for the Mean Streets
Even hard-bitten tax collectors have been overtaken by epiphany in the Middle East. On the eve of the war in Iraq, the last act of Saddam Hussein's sons was to strip the national treasury of several billion dollars in ready...
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Death of a Friend
I'm losing a friend, and it's time to say goodbye. The friend is MP3.com, the online music distribution site. Although it had a market capitalization of a billion dollars when it went public just four years ago, it will be...
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Constitutional Crisis
The European Union needs to focus more on creating a free market than on creating additional bureaucracy. The current European Constitution project is a relic of socialism, in the guise of the so-called "social market economy". A better solution would...
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Post-Reductio America
In the world of debate, philosophy and law, there's a method of attacking your opponent's argument known as reductio ad absurdum. In this line of attack, you take your opponent's argument to its most extreme conclusion, you reveal the...
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The Missing Link?
This past weekend, writer Stephen Hayes of The Weekly Standard came out with a blockbuster article that was based on a leaked memorandum directed to Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Pat Roberts and ranking member Jay Rockefeller from Undersecretary of Defense
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Same Old Story
The conventional wisdom has been that temperatures during the early years of the last millennium (~A.D. 800 to 1300) were relatively warmer -- in what was known as the Medieval Warm Period -- while temperatures decreased during the middle years...
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Iraq Is Not Vietnam
It has become fashionable among the anti-war crowd to say Iraq is the new Vietnam. "Iraq is Arabic for Vietnam," is a popular bumper sticker. Former Senator Max Cleland recently went on record as well: "Welcome to Vietnam, Mr....
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The Golden Years
In his 28 October TCS article Dominic Standish dismisses the coming pension crisis as a myth (see: "Old and In the Way?"). Cuts in pensions and welfare are unnecessary. Although he makes some valid points, his remedies are inadequate and...
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"I Planned to Attend, But I Now Cannot..."
Editor's note: This week the American Enterprise Institute, a Washington-based think tank where TCS host James K. Glassman is a fellow, is holding a symposium on climate change issues called "Return to Rio: Reexamining Climate Change Science, Economics and Policy."
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Combating AIDS on the Ground in Africa
GABORONE, Botswana -- By the time Dr. Andrew Mujugira gets to work early in the morning the waiting room is packed full of patients. From as early as 6 in the morning, patients begin to queue up to seen by...
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Latin America's Russian Dolls
Despite the recent collapse of World Trade Organization talks in Cancun, and despite the fact that the war on terrorism has restricted the flow of people, capital and goods into the United States more than it already was, the ministers...
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The Balance of Saving
"Isn't it just a little twisted that the United States, the world's richest country, is on track to borrow more than $500 billion from abroad this year? Isn't it even stranger that this borrowing includes sizable chunks from countries such...
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The Five Great Lies About Internet Taxation
Of all of the issues generating headlines in the Congress today -- judicial appointments, health care and appropriations bills included -- the one that will most affect consumers is the fight over taxing the Internet. Specifically, it is the...
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Ticking Firebombs
Having swathed ourselves in moral guilt for the impact human activity is having on the environment, we seem to be overlooking the fact that our efforts to fix problems can be misplaced. The psychology of this is interesting. It may...
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Trials in Error
Last month an appeals court in New York re-opened a case brought by several Nigerian families against the drug company Pfizer. They allege that the company violated their human rights by administering Trovan, an experimental drug, without adequately informing them.
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Antagonizing Traditional Friends
Many Latin Americans, from virtually every country in our hemisphere, were killed by the terrorist attack of September 11, 2001. None of the 19 al Qaeda assassins came from Latin America, and all of them entered the country with...
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Artists Without Pier: A Dissent
In a recent article for TCS (see: "Artists Without Pier"), Sidney Goldberg makes a number of highly disparaging remarks about the decaying piers in New York City along the Hudson River in the 60s, calling them "eyesores" and "junk." He...
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Birthdays and Funerals for Automotive Icons
The tiny but intense claque of historians who devote themselves to the automobile and other related transportation issues have found Nirvana in 2003. Thanks to an odd confluence of birthdays, anniversaries and other coincidences, this year prompts the celebration a
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Dean's Distortions
In one of G.K. Chesterton's Father Brown stories the solution to the crime hinges on subtle inconsistencies in the criminal's public persona. The perpetrator, presumably an Anglican pastor, goes unnoticed among his neighbors until he's unmasked by another cler
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Dr. Mahathir, Jews and Asian Terror
Dr. Mahathir Mohamed has just stepped down after 22 years as Prime Minister of Malaysia. He was one of Asia's longest rulers and most controversial rulers. His last public speech had one of his trademarks -- an attack on the...
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A New Stockholm Syndrome
By the time you read this, the Swedish police may have charged 24-year-old Mijailo Mijailovic with the murder of Sweden's Foreign Minister Anna Lindh. Or then again, maybe not. The investigation proceeds with a curious, dreamlike quality. When the...
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Shocking and Sickening
As the scandal in the mutual fund industry spreads, the case for hanging on to funds that engaged in unfair or illegal practices diminishes -- and, in some instances, vanishes into thin air. At Putnam Investments, Lawrence J. Lasser,...
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Food Phobic Nation
"Good nutrition is getting a bad name -- one that smacks of rigidity, guilt-making and extremism... Worse still, some eight out of ten (Americans) think foods are inherently good or bad... every single bite they take represents an all-or-nothing choice...
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Banning "Terrorist Specials"?
Who could possibly oppose continuing a ban on "plastic" guns? Referencing threats of terrorist sneaking plastic guns onto airplanes, last week Senator Ted Kennedy called renewing the legislation "clearly necessary in today's America." Yet, despite broad support in
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Nature's Affirmative Action
Biodiversity, represented by the 10 million or so animals, plants and microbes living on this planet, is threatened by many human activities. Amongst the numerous quasi-natural environments, the widest diversity is in the tropical humid forests, of which about half
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"If It Moves, Tax It"
Ronald Reagan's famous remark about the government's view of the economy at the White House Conference on Small Business in 1986 -- "If it moves, tax it..." -- still applies to many governments. In recent years, the government in the...
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Un-Free Enterprise
Editor's note: This is the second of a two-part series on science, technology, politics and health care. Among the things that the Republican Party has stood for throughout the years have been free enterprise and the profit motive. So,...
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The Technology Edge
"General LeMay -- did you hear about this? -- said he wants to take a supersonic plane around the globe, to shake up the Russians. [audience laughter] Ahhh, skepticism, eh? You don't think it will? Well, I do. I think...
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First, Do No Harm to Basic Research
Editor's note: This is the first of a two-part series on technology and the nation's health care system. President Bush and the Republican Congress are on the verge of wreaking havoc upon on America's preeminent medical research system, at...
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Too Hot to Handle
The Sun is the origin of deadly hazards in near space, which begins approximately 60 miles above earth's surface. An extreme flare that erupted from the sun on November 4 showed that the Sun's ferocity knows few limits. This extraordinarily...
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How Lonely is Our Planet?
Where are they? Physicist Enrico Fermi famously posed this question when asked about intelligent extraterrestrials. If such beings exist, why have we (presumably) not been contacted or visited? Fermi's Paradox, as it is now known, is more profound than...
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Kent Brockman on Unemployment
A while back, I wrote a column here arguing that outsourcing was likely to become an issue in the 2004 Presidential elections. And it looks as if I was right. Senator and Presidential candidate John Edwards, fresh from the rock-the-vote...
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The Only Thing Worse Than No Government
You probably didn't read it here first: the U.S. Senate declared war on spam. The bill, which passed by a close vote of 97 to nothing, throws everything but cruise missiles at spammers who clutter email in-boxes with offers to...
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The Rt. Honorable Blogger
On Wednesday, November 5th, blogger and American Rhodes Scholar, Josh Chafetz posted the following statement on his blog: WHAT ON EARTH HAVE I GOTTEN MYSELF INTO??? So, tomorrow night is the Oxford Union's debate on Iraq, with the resolution...
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The Political Economy of Terror
Al Qaeda's second massive attack in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia since May, and the closure of the U.S. Embassy have boosted the ultimate goal of Usama bin Laden to drive the "infidels" from the Land of Two Mosques and topple the...
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The Sect of Austrian Economics
"[Sociologist Ernst] Troeltsch distinguished between church, sect, and mysticism as primary types of religious life. The church is more peremptorily inclusive and achieves greater accommodation to worldly institutions. The sect demands voluntary commitment from its
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The "Real Reason" for the War
Suppose I adopt the (classical) liberal view that paternalistic legislation is unjustified. I believe, let us assume, that it is always a good reason to prohibit and punish actions that they threaten harm to others -- in other words, I...
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Media Bias Comes From Viewers Like You
Both left-wing and right-wing commentators lament media bias. The right wing cites the predominant Democratic orientations - often 80 to 90 percent - of major journalists. The left wing cites the right wing pundits, such as Rush Limbaugh, or the...
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AIDS and Authoritarianism
It is common knowledge that the AIDS virus is decimating Africa and is taking hold in parts of Russia, South East Asia and Latin America. But perhaps even more worrisome, the most populous country in the world is developing a...
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We're From the Government and We're Here to Help
Dan Peruchi, father of four, enjoyed fixing up old cars and reselling them. Because the dealers he worked with dealt mainly in cash, he usually had lots on hand. Peruchi was driving home to Ft. Worth, Texas when he noticed...
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Technology Is Ruining Movies
Why don't we just admit it: the last two "Matrix" movies, like the last two "Star Wars" movies, have been stinkers. These observations are more than just movie criticism -- although there will be some of that in the piece...
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Margaret Von Thatcher?
The US economy may be surging ahead with growth in the third quarter recorded at an impressive 7.2 percent, its best performance for nearly 20 years, but Europe's biggest economy is stagnating. In fact, 2003 will go on record as...
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Who Should Have Air Supremacy?
The Clean Air Act (CAA), perhaps the federal government's most powerful environmental tool, concedes in its very first section that "air pollution control at its source is the primary responsibility of states and local governments." Notwithstanding these sentiments
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Bush Boom, Euro Bust
The package of measures presented at last month's EU summit in Brussels helped to confirm an impression that most outsiders seem to have of Europe's policy makers. When faced with a crisis, the instinctive European response seems to be to...
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Bound to Misfire
This week President Bush's program, Project Childsafe, begins distributing 20 million gun locks. Over 712,000 locks will be given out just in New York. It seems like such a reasonable program, who could oppose it? After all, if a gun...
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White-Hat Terrorism
The terrorists threatening air travel rely on stealth, creativity, and individual initiative. They face security systems that operate in the open, by the book, and under bureaucratic control. That mismatch puts our safety at risk. The volunteer efforts of Nathaniel
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The Politics of Rage
Some time ago, TCS contributor Megan McArdle, writing as the pseudonymous "Jane Galt" on her blog, came up with "Jane's Law." The law states the following: "The devotees of the party in power are smug and arrogant. The devotees of...
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The Road to Milan
At the beginning of October, Russian President Vladimir Putin played a "knight's move" on global warming alarmists. Russians -- chess players all -- know the value of the knight, the chess piece that can jump over the opponent's defenses to...
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The Attention Economy Meets Spam
Few things unite people in ire as much as spam. Maybe because they feel like victims of a crime: attention theft. There are practical reasons to loathe indiscriminate posting: it clogs up mail systems, it frequently uses illegal or...
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The Prodigal Sun
The Northern Lights have seen strange sights, few weirder than a Canadian statistician being hailed for the Senate defeat of Kyoto Lite. While his footnote was being added to political history, the heavens themselves blazed forth the sun's displeasure at...
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Privacy Parts
Add telemarketing and spam to the dark side of the information technology revolution. If you doubt that people are concerned, consider the rush to sign up for the FTC's do-not-call registry, which, if held to be constitutional, will force telemarketers...
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It's Not the Late '90s
The cover of the latest Business 2.0, one of the few surviving techie-financial magazines of the go-go 1990s, issues a dire warning: "Why This Tech Bubble Is About to Blow," screams the headline. And the subhead: "Wall Street Is Doing...
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Resistance Isn't Futile
Given the global proportion of the HIV/AIDS epidemic and the attention brought to this growing calamity by the president's $15 billion commitment to tackle the disease in Africa, one would think drug firms are pumping more money into finding a...
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The Story of This War
Editor's note: This article is the second of a two-part series. All wars have stories. Moreover a war's story is not necessarily the same as a war's strategy. The story tells how a war is broadly understood and remembered....
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Reality Frights
Are the major media telling us the truth -- the whole truth, the real truth? Or are journalists merely hinting, instead of reporting? We might consider, as a case in point, The New York Times. It declares "All the...
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Loving Monsters
NPR science reporter David Baron has a new book out, called The Beast in the Garden: A Modern Parable of Man and Nature. Baron's book is about the return of cougars to the Boulder, Colorado area after decades of hunting-induced...
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Thank Goodness for Frank Advice
Maybe the U.S. should think twice about considering France an adversary in the war against Saddam Hussein and the remnants of his regime. Paris may be helping more than it hurts. Among the beans that Baathist mouthpiece Tariq Aziz...
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Lessons From the Recall
High levels of a cancer-causing natural toxin have been found in every single organic cornmeal product tested by the UK's food safety watchdog, the Food Standards Agency. That's a 100 percent failure rate, folks! The FSA instituted a UK-wide...
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Russia's Watershed
The attack on the major Russian oil company, YUKOS, which led to the arrest of its chairman and CEO, Mikhail Khodorkovsky, and his shares, and subsequently to his resignation, is a watershed event in post-communist Russian history. This development has...
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Assaulting the Ban
With the first sniper trial of John Muhammad getting started, the one-year anniversary recalls the horrors and fear. There are also legislative attempts underway to ensure that it never happens again. Two Democratic presidential candidates Congressmen Richard Gepha
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Can Conservatives Be Optimists?
"Can conservatives be optimists?" Not long ago this question attracted the considered reflection of several distinguished bloggers. Most answered, as good Reaganites would, with some qualifications, Yes. I am a conservative, and an admirer of Ronald Reagan;
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Courting International Law
Lost in the hoopla over the Supreme Court's decisions last term on affirmative action and gay rights is the development of a disturbing new legal trend, one hinted at by Justice Sandra Day O'Connor in a speech last week. ...
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Trade and Terrorism
Trade is supposed to promote peace, and in an unexpected way it may be helping to fight terrorism. APEC, a grouping of economies in the Asian Pacific rim, was established in 1989 to promote trade. The leaders of its 21...
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Eastern Europe's Invisible Fists
How is the free market doing in post-communist Romania? Consider that medical and bureaucratic services are bought and sold, as are Parliamentary positions. It would be safe to say that market forces do operate, though weak overall competition combined...
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Foreign Aid's Surprise Parties
Lately, the debate over foreign aid in Washington seems to have flipped upside down. Democrats are supposed to care about foreign aid and Republicans are supposed think aid is a waste of taxpayers' money, right? Maybe, but these days the...
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Getting Medieval
It all seemed like a done deal. After half a year of tough negotiations an agreement on the enlargement of the European Economic Area, a free-trade zone that includes all EU countries plus Norway, Iceland and Liechtenstein, had finally been...
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As California Goes...
Residents of Southern California have been inconvenienced for the past several days by two separate labor union strikes. A strike by the mechanics of Los Angeles' Metropolitan Transit Authority (MTA) have left half a million commuters scrambling to find alternate..
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It's a Spammer's World, After All
For only $19.95 a month, one can join an online club populated by individuals who, as many believe, make up the seedy underbelly of the Internet. No, it's not a club for pornographers or hackers but a support group for...
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Small Is the New Big
The myth of the Next Big Thing has a special place in the hearts and minds of Silicon Valley insiders. It is almost impossible to attend a technology conference or read an article on the future of the Valley without...
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