Archive for June, 2006

The perils of user moderation

Thursday, June 15th, 2006

Netscape and AOL have launched a service that looks a whole lot like Digg. Practically indistinguishable, actually. In case you’ve never been to digg.com, people sponsor news stories and other users “digg” them (vote for them) if they think they are important. The most important story on the new netscape site today, according to the readers there, is one entitle AOL Copies Digg.

L(A)OL!

Great Final Series

Wednesday, June 14th, 2006

This year’s Stanley Cup Playoffs are the best in memory. Actually enforcing the rules may have some old-timers peeved, but I much prefer letting the skilled players skate unencumbered. Great end-to-end action in all the games I’ve seen.

I don’t know much about the Carolina franchise, but I know Edmonton. Edmonton is a town that deserves another Stanley Cup. They support their team through thick and thin and as a community saved it from the brink of financial disaster.

Oilers in Seven!

MacBook Woes?

Monday, June 12th, 2006

If all of the new MacBooks do this, Apple’s in for a big recall. Or maybe the guy just likes turmeric.

The Greatest Crime of the Iraq War

Saturday, June 10th, 2006

It is one thing to have gangsters come to your neighborhood, plunder your goods, wreck your home, threaten you, kill your family and intimidate you into compliance. But it is quite another thing when they don’t leave, take up residence, and start to draw flies. Flies of the most abhorrent kind.

The biggest crime of the Iraq war is that it is not an “Iraq” war. The key to this understanding lies in the war on terror catch phrase popularized by George W. Bush and his followers: “We’re fighting them over there so we don’t have to fight them over here.”

It is well established that, as reprehensible as Saddam Hussein was, he had no substantial connection with al qaeda. By invading Iraq, the US took the fight with al qaeda to a theatre of war that is not the United States. On the face of it, a good plan. But there’s a problem.

The problem with taking the war with al qaeda to another theatre of war is that the chosen theatre, Iraq, is full of people with lives, loved ones, property and aspirations. Or, it was. There are now substantially fewer people in Iraq. There is markedly less property. Families have been shattered and decimated at levels we may not know for years to come. Civilian casualties are not currently calculable, but good estimates put them in the tens of thousands, perhaps more than a hundred thousand.

Iraq was a country in the hands of a dictator. Its modern, oil-financed infrastructure had deteriorated somewhat due to the costs of Iraq-Iran war, the first Gulf War, as well as neglect stemming from UN sanctions and the resultant choices by Saddam on how to deploy scarce resources.

But the outcomes of this current conflict have left Iraq a broken country, its infrastructure razed, its history plundered, its legacy spent and its spirit hostage to terror that streams in from outside and bubbles up on the inside, born from the pain and frustration of gross injustice.

This is the greatest crime of the Iraq War. When you put aside all the phony, jingoistic reasons for going to Iraq you are left with a few that stand scrutiny. There is the realpolitic reason of regional hegemony, which includes the goal of bases with striking proximity to Iran, Syria, et al. Relatedly there is the global economic reason of access to and control of Iraq’s oil. And there is the diversionary reason of creating a theatre of war that will draw jihadists and others to Iraq instead of allowing them to concentrate on other projects, namely attacks on US soil.

Pardon me. Oh, excuse us. We’ll be using your country for our war from here on in. Sorry about that. Try to stay indoors. In the basement. Behind a bomb shelter door. You might be ok.

Not only did the US attack and largely destroy a country with no connection to its current War on Terror (a great crime in itself), but now they remain, which is an even greater crime. The greatest crime of the entire scenario.

America, get out of Iraq. You are drawing flies of the most abhorrent kind. You are bad neighbors. You are not wanted. Your goals for Iraq are not the goals of Iraq.

Get out.

As long as it’s good

Wednesday, June 7th, 2006

I’m a music fan, and I like any kind of music as long as it is done well. When I’m in the mood for metal I often reach for Faith No More’s Angel Dust. 14 highly creative, interesting tracks. If you are young and like the Chili Peppers, FNM is the other band who blended metal, rap and funk in the late eighties and early nineties. More metal, less rap and definitely more wierd. The other FNM record worth owning is The Real Thing, which contains the big hit Epic.

There are better tracks on Angel Dust, but this one is remarkable in that it showcases the truly brilliant Mike Patton taking years off his vocal career in the service of one song. It is actually very hard to not feel a twinge of empathy for him as he hits the most painful notes. Parental guidance is advised for this one.