Author Archive for Roxeanne de Luca

Conservative Smorgasbord Featuring McCain Pate

Yes, it’s another “Roxey is busy” smorgasbord.  First up on the menu: Awww!  Why men should buy flowers for women. An additional reason for those men who say, “But wait! Flowers may be pretty, but they are totally impractical.”  Think of a vacuum cleaner; now think of the opposite of a vacuum cleaner.  See the appeal?

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A Louisiana justice of the peace denied a marriage license to an interracial couple, citing concerns over the longevity of the marriage. Now, here at Haemet, we’re all about making sensible marital decisions and staying in it for life, but those concerns are best brought up via a priest, pastor, or rabbi, not through the government or any of its agents.

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An obligatory post on the Meghan McCain debacle: Meghan posted a rather interesting photo of herself; the blogosphere erupted; and Meghan got upset and cried foul. Stacy McCain calls Miss McCain out on playing the victim. Obligatory commentary: Meghan’s picture just isn’t the sort of thing that nice girls post for the world to see, even if they are nice, modern, and sexually forward women; in fact, it bears a startling resemblance to the Pam Anderson picture on Stacy’s site. If you do not wish to be treated like a duck because you don’t quite feel like being made into pate, don’t walk and quack like one.

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Jeff Jacoby has a wonderful piece on the myth of the underpaid government employee. He points out that public-sector employees often make a lot more than their private-sector counterparts, especially once benefits are counted in with salary. Jacoby, remarkable as he is, missed a crucial point: the private sector creates jobs and wealth. Even if government employees were more educated, more talented, and worked longer hours for the same pay, they would not be in a wealth-creating job. It’s not just about who earns what, but about the work that those people perform.

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Finally, Obama told people in New Orleans that he would like to have a blank check to help them, but does not, and that rebuilding the city involves a complex relationship between state and federal government and various agencies. What he did not say, tellingly, is that this all shows us that George Bush and the conservatives are not the horrible, evil people that you would think we are.

Red States in Recovery; Blue States in Recession

MSNBC proudly announced that 79 metro areas are in an economic recovery, although most states are still in a recession.  Of the 11 states in recovery, nine went red last election.  Iowa went solidly for Obama, but Indiana went for him by a percentage point.

Washington, DC is also in a recovery; MSNBC euphemistically declared that this is due to “stimulus mnoey,” although a more apt description may be that the federal government takes care of its own and will use the force of law to ensure the security of its own jobs. While MSNBC attributes the recovery among the states to oil and gas economies as well as a more stable housing cycle, it ignores the incredibly strong correlation between state-wide politics and economic recovery.  Even the less-populous (and often, more conservative) areas are doing better in those states.  Conservative and libertarian principles (right-to-work laws, minimal government interference in business, and business-friendly laws) currently correlate very strongly with economic recovery.

It’s Sort of Like Trading Papelbon for a Little League Pitcher

As Massachusetts is one of only six states in the nation to not have a state-run law school, UMass is making a bid for the unaccredited Southern New England School of Law.  Part of the deal would be for SNESL to give UMass the campus and its cash for free; the university would then take over operations, gain ABA accreditation (the school is currently accredited only by the New England Association of Schools and Colleges), increase enrollment, and offer a discount to Massachusetts students.

Even with the donation of the buildings, cash, and campus to UMass, this proposal is not setting SNESL to be the next UC Irvine.  The latter school offered free tuition to its entire incoming class; as a result, it built a class with an average GPA of 3.61 and an average LSAT of 167Currently, SNESL charges $22,175 for tuition and fees (exclusive of other expenses, such as living costs and books).  If the school is taken over by UMass, in-state students would be charged about $24,000/year.  Exclusive of living expenses, then, a student who graduates from the “economically-priced,” newly accredited, and poorly ranked state law school would accumulate about $75,000 in debt before interest, housing expenses, and bar loans.

Moreover, the UMass school could remove an economical option for students in the Commonwealth: reciprocity with UConn.  Full-time MA students are charged about $34,000 for their first year and, if they choose to obtain Connecticut residency, $20,000 per year for the next two years (here).  The total cost is almost equal to that of UMass’s proposed law school – but UConn is a well-respected, strong second-tier school, not an unaccredited upstart.  Should UMass take over SNESL, UConn would likely revoke the privileges of reduced tuition and admissions advantages.

Thus, the argument for a state law school is not that Massachusetts students need an affordable option for law school – under the definition of “affordable” that is advanced by the Commonwealth, that is already available to them via UConn – it is that students who have no hope of getting into a second-tier law school need an option for a JD that will only run them into six figures of education debt after living expenses.  Issues of the Commonwealth’s billion-dollar budget deficit aside, it is beyond senseless to trade the UConn option for the unaccredited, almost-unknown SNESL.

Take That, Peter Singer!

CNN’s latest feel-good article is about a young woman who was brain-damaged before birth. A stroke left Mack with limited functionality in the left side of her brain; yet, the right side rewired itself (not at all uncommon in adult stroke victims and Alzheimer’s patients) to take over many of the functions typically performed by the left hemisphere.

Beyond the implications for medical science, this woman’s ability to lead a normal life has profound implications for the pro-life movement.  Whether the subject be unborn children who have Down’s Syndrome or a cognitive impairment or adults like Terri Schiavo, the diagnosis of mental deficiency should be thought of as a temporary one.  Those who advocate for abortion and  euthanasia are not only ignoring the inherent dignity of every human being, but demonstrate a profound ignorance of medical science as well.

An Inconvenient Patriot

One of our blogging friends has started a new blog. Mosey over to The Inconvenient Patriot for some wonderful reading.

Individualism Round-Up: Liberties, Religiousity, and Molecules

From Patterico’s Pontifications: apparently, Obama’s approval ratings and Monica Lewinsky have a lot in common. People who were squeamish about the Bush Administration’s actions towards terrorists must be absolutely irate over the current crowd’s manhandling of the Americans next door.

Not surprisingly, the Obama Administration intends to radically change the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division. This naturally reveals, yet again, the folly of this business of the centralisation of power: the changing of the guard in Washington should not change so much about people’s daily lives.

On a philosophical level, the difference between modern conservative civil rights and modern liberal “civil rights” movements is not, as the NYT proclaims, to be one about the availability (or lack thereof) of evidence of intentional discrimination: it is about individual civil liberties. The progressives believe that membership in a politically favoured group is a basis for a civil rights action; conservatives focus on ensuring that human beings are not oppressed by a hostile government.

Carrie Prejean is suing the Pageant for religious discrimination (HT: Volokh). While I would like to think that this is a case designed to put liberals in a bind – giving them the choice between endorsing Miss Prejean or complaining about lawsuits that infringe upon the rights and actions of private entities – it could just as easily be one that ends up further eroding religious liberty. That clause of the Constitution is already applied with less vigour than other elements of the First Amendment, as its only liberal champions are prisoners who use it to vindicate their temper tantrums.

More nerdy fun from Volokh.

Smorgasbord of Sense and Liberal Senselessness

Since I’m short on time and long on things to complain about, a round-up of the latest in liberal hypocrisy:

R. Stacy McCain offers a thorough trouncing of the Marxist ideology that passes for political discourse in Rep. Diane Watson’s office.

So-called feminists decry the basis of Title IX (i.e. sexual dimorphism is not a basis on which to deny women the ability to compete in athletics) in their rush to condemn anyone who would sex-test elite female athletes. Women have their own teams, competitions, events, and funding because we simply cannot compete alongside men.  For example, our testosterone levels are normally between 15 and 70 ng/dL, whereas those of men are between 200 and 1200 ng/dL (here).  This is not, and can never be, about gender or a social construct: it will forever be about biological distinctions and the need to ensure that women – real, biological women – have the opportunity to meaningfully compete in athletic events.

Just as women who have never decidated themselves to a sport can never understand the need for sex, not gender, rules in sports, modern “feminists” cannot understand why Women’s Studies will never be the equivalent of engineering or economics, no matter how obvious the results of such disparities.

Then again, these are the same people who view women – and their very lives – as nothing more than collateral damage in the war on America’s unborn. The New York Post, Mark Steyn, and Althouse have more.

One has to wonder why Republicans who engage in extramarital affairs are run out of office on the “hypocrisy” charge, but Democrats who engage in sexual assault, sexual harassment, and rape are excused on the basis of their political stances.  One also cannot help but wonder if those who excuse Teddy Kennedy’s actions would trade places with Mary Jo Kopechne or subject themselves to sexual assault so that the Senator could have his career and abuse his women, too.

Earmarks and Medical Malpractise: Reform, This Time Without the Statistical Vacuum

Back in the 2008 Presidential election, defenders of earmarks pointed out that they make up a minute part of the federal budget, accounting for approximately $17 billion in annual spending.  Factcheck.org trashed McCain for claiming that there would be cost savings through elimination of earmarks; presumably, eliminating earmarks only eliminates the associated spending.

Back in the summer of 2008, the obvious response – that earmarks are used to persuade Senators to vote for bills (often, spending bills) that they otherwise would not vote for – was ignored.  Several months later, vindication came unexpectedly in the stimulus bill: $1 trillion in spending that is largely pork, inserted therein to buy votes from Congressmen.  In contrast, Bush’s much-derided stimulus cost approximately $150 billion, or one-sixth of the 2009 version.  Much as one cannot claim that the true effect of flipping a switch on a dam that releases a deluge of water is but the force exerted on that switch, one cannot claim that the true cost of earmarks is just the value of money being directed towards special interests: it must include the cost of other spending that would have, but for the earmarks, not have happened. 

This effect also plays out in medical malpractise.  Ezra Klein, among others, repeats the statistic that medical malpractise – attorney’s fees, court costs, insurance, settlments, and awards – accounts for approximately 1/2 of 1% of the cost of health care in America.  The math only makes sense if one assumes that the threat of a multi-million dollar jury verdict has no other effect upon doctors than to persuade them to purchase insurance and not be totally reckless with their patients.  Any doctor with a reasonable amount of forethought and awareness is going to spend a good deal of time (and money) doing his best to avoid lawsuits. 

Aside from ordering extra tests, defensive medicine has other costs for the medical industry and patients.  It is not by accident that approximately 1 in 3 American women give birth via C-section: as Dr. Faith Friedan said, “They’re never faulted for doing a C-section.”  Many insurance companies will not insure a physician who performs a vaginal delivery after a C-section;  this more than doubles the cost of labour and delivery (from approximately $5,500 to $11,300) and has many adverse effects on women.  (The costs, of course, are not insubstantial: if the C-section rate were reduced from 30% to 10%, American women would spend about $5 billion less on child birth than they do  now.)  That is but one procedure for one group of patients. 

Not only does this raise costs for people who have insurance, it makes it very difficult for those who are paying out-of-pocket or have high deductibles to access medical care.  Doctors may be unwilling, and certainly not used to, patients who are more than content to get a basic amount of care.  Even if the doctors were willing to forgo additional, redundant tests, or let a patient risk her health by attempting a VBAC, they are well aware that reasonable care is not a defence to a lawsuit: only an extraordinarily high standard of medical treatment may suffice for a jury. 

Until Congress and Obama understand that lay juries are, intentionally or not, dictating medical policy in America, they cannot improve access to care.  Insuring patients is not enough: those patients need to be treated by doctors who value their jobs, have invested a tremendous amount of time and money into their careers, and, like anyone else, ultimately need to retain those jobs and bring home a paycheck for their families.  “One half of one percent” is the force needed to create the chaos we have now; it is hardly a full measure of the cost of that chaos, no more than a few million in Stimulus 2009 represents the cost of that debacle.

CNN: Failing Round 2 of distinguishing activism from terrorism

CNN’s headline reads: “Animal rights activist on FBI’s ‘Most Wanted Terrorists” list.”  One would think that the FBI was compiling its terrorist list in the same manner that Janet Napolitano makes her “right wing extremist” statements; however, one needs to read until the fifth paragraph to determine why he was put on the list.  Prior to that, there are two statements about the terrorist’s vegan eating habits.

This is appalling on several levels.  The idea that a vegan cannot/should not be a terrorist is silly; some vegans seem to espouse a hatred of the human race, which would incite them to violence against one animal (i.e. humans) while refusing to harm other animals.  Second of all, anyone who is familiar with PETA – and their habit of executing over 90% of the animals in their care – is well aware that many people who promote animal rights are hypocrites.  Furthermore, this man is first and foremost a terrorist: he bombed buildings because they maybe, sort of, could have had a connection with animal testing labs.  The logical conclusion of all of this is to throw acid on the faces of women who wear make-up, assault people who buy shampoo from Wal-Mart, and set fire to every Outback Steakhouse, as they are supporting animal-testing labs or animal cruelty.  Civilised people recognise such actions, however, as wrong, not as something that those big, mean FBI agents will use to lump you in with all those hard-core terrorists.

Finally, the way that CNN reports this – calling the terrorist who bombed buildings an “animal rights activist” – is asinine.  Al Qaeda is not made up of “religious rights activists;” we recognise that activism is a peaceful means of achieving one’s ends.  Sadly, CNN does all activists a disservice with its latest reporting.

Second Amendment Love

I shamelessly stole this from Tieki.  It’s great stuff.

What I never understand is the people who think that the Second Amendment ought to be read out of the Constitution.  Yes, our guns are bigger, better, faster, and more readily available than they were in the late 18th century, but, given the choice between getting shot in, say, 1789 and getting shot in 2009, I would choose the latter, and not just because the doctor would be more likely to give me a blood transfusion, rather than bleeding me to balance the humours.  Yes, it can be dangerous to arm private citizens, but the alternative is to have a government – or foreign powers – that have more firepower than the people they could oppress.