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    <updated>2010-03-12T13:27:28Z</updated>
    
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<entry>
    <title>Expect the Unexpected: Revisited</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/2010/03/expect_the_unexpected_revisite_1.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=2/entry_id=2042" title="Expect the Unexpected: Revisited" />
    <id>tag:www.rollingdoughnut.com,2010://2.2042</id>
    
    <published>2010-03-12T13:06:19Z</published>
    <updated>2010-03-12T13:27:28Z</updated>
    
    <summary>Our political obsession with identifying Others is potentially as dangerous as it is offensive. Safety is a legitimate role for the government, to the extent it can reasonably be achieved. But we need to uncover the psychopaths (or related variants)...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Tony</name>
        
    </author>
            <category term="Government" />
            <category term="Logic" />
            <category term="Politics" />
            <category term="Propaganda" />
            <category term="War" />
    
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        <![CDATA[<p>Our political obsession with identifying Others is potentially as dangerous as it is offensive.  Safety is a legitimate role for the government, to the extent it can reasonably be achieved.  But we need to uncover the psychopaths (or related variants) who would be murderers, regardless of skin color.  Racial profiling is the appearance of safety for political cover.  With <a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/03/09/AR2010030902670.html" title="&#147&#148">this week's news</a> about Colleen Renee LaRose, the Philadelphia woman (<a href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/Images/PH2010030904113.html" onclick="window.open('http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/Images/PH2010030904113.html','popup','width=228,height=216,scrollbars=no,resizable=no,toolbar=no,directories=no,location=no,menubar=no,status=no,left=0,top=0'); return false">Image</a>) suspected of recruiting for terrorist organizations, I want to repost <a href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/2005/10/expect_the_unexpected.html">an entry</a> I wrote almost five years ago.<p><center>**********</center><p>With a new <a href="http://apnews.myway.com//article/20051007/D8D38HV81.html" target="new" title="&#147Officials Shut Down Part of Penn Station&#148">terrorist threat</a> to the New York subway system gripping the nation, the blogosphere is abuzz.  I obviously share everyone's concern and want our police and security forces to thwart any (potentially) forthcoming attacks.  In an effort to accomplish this, the debate seems to descend to an argument simple profiling.  When the constitutionality of profiling inevitably arises, the proponent either responds with some variation of "Constitution be damned" or "random" searches.  New York implemented a random search policy for backpacks, which was incomplete, at best.  (<i>ed. note: Dead links omitted.</i>)  Yet, the proponents of profiling continue to advocate ineffective policies.  Consider this from <a href="http://lashawnbarber.com/archives/2005/10/07/subway/" target="new" title="&#147SubwayBombingCowardsRUs&#148">La Shawn Barber</a>, who writes extensively and credibly about the threat of terrorism:<blockquote><p>Will Islamofascists bomb the NYC subway? Is it all just a rumor? Your guess is as good as the government s. Flip a coin. Draw a straw. Throw it against a wall and see if it sticks.<p>Are they still searching little old ladies and skipping young men of Middle Eastern descent because it would be racist to search them? Probably.</blockquote><p>It would be racist but I'm not against if for that reason.  <i>Immediate</i> threats to safety must shake the debate from simple intellectual discourse.  But within that intellectual discourse, reason can provide insight into how such a policy could fail, and fail miserably.<p>I don't normally agree with Michelle Malkin on much, as evidenced by the posts here where I've referenced her blog.  But with <a href="http://michellemalkin.com/archives/003680.htm" target="new">her reporting</a> on last weekend's suicide bomber in Oklahoma, she's doing excellent work highlighting deeper facts in the case.  There are indications that the bomber, Joel Henry Hinrichs III, was a Muslim.  He attended a local mosque in Norman, OK.  His Pakistani roommate hasn't been heard from since the bombing.  Mr. Hinrichs' bomb included TATP, an explosive compound not commonly used in America, but popular with terrorists.  He tried to purchase a large amount of ammonium nitrate.  On Saturday, he apparently tried to enter the stadium during the Oklahoma football game before settling on the bench where he blew himself up (intentionally or unintentionally).  Etc.  I don't know what story these and other facts will eventually tell, but it seems clear that there is more to the story than just some depressed guy commiting suicide.  While I'm not ready to declare this an Islamofascist suicide bombing on American soil, the details of this case should be pursued.<p>This case also highlights the ineffectiveness of racial profiling in our attempt to prevent further terrorism.  <a href="/Images/Stereotype.html" onclick="window.open('/Images/Stereotype.html','popup','width=111,height=180,scrollbars=no,resizable=no,toolbar=no,directories=no,location=no,menubar=no,status=no,left=0,top=0'); return false">Click this</a> picture of Mr. Hinrichs.  (<a href="http://www.oudaily.com/vnews/display.v/ART/2005/10/03/4341fe8b294e8" target="new">Image Source</a>)  Ignore the beard; a roommate of mine in college had a beard like that and he was no terrorist, unless you count accidentally killing fish when his hydroponic fish tank failed.  So let me ask the obvious question.  Say Mr. Hinrichs had tried to bomb the New York subway.  Would racial profiling for "young men of Middle Eastern descent" have caught him?  Is it reasonable to assume that if we rely on racial profiling, terrorists will switch tactics to include racial (and gender) profiles we're not looking for?</p>]]>
        
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<entry>
    <title>Grace, go to bed. You obviously have had a very busy day of crazy.¹</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/2010/03/grace_go_to_bed_you_obviously.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=2/entry_id=2041" title="Grace, go to bed. You obviously have had a very busy day of crazy.¹" />
    <id>tag:www.rollingdoughnut.com,2010://2.2041</id>
    
    <published>2010-03-11T22:05:33Z</published>
    <updated>2010-03-11T22:23:41Z</updated>
    
    <summary>Here&apos;s actress Debra Messing testifying before the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Africa and Global Health in her role as an ambassador for PSI, asking for more federal tax dollars to support &quot;voluntary, adult&quot; male circumcision in Africa (emphasis added):......</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Tony</name>
        
    </author>
            <category term="Circumcision" />
            <category term="Government" />
            <category term="Propaganda" />
            <category term="Ranting" />
            <category term="Stupidity" />
    
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        <![CDATA[<p>Here's actress Debra Messing <a href="http://www.psi.org/news/press-releases/2010/03/psi-ambassador-debra-messing-testifies-house-foreign-relations-committee">testifying</a> before the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Africa and Global Health in her role as an ambassador for PSI, asking for more federal tax dollars to support "voluntary, adult" male circumcision in Africa (emphasis added):<blockquote><p>... I would like to tell you today about two prevention tools that could make a difference if there is continued investment: male circumcision and HIV testing and counseling.<p>First, <b><i>voluntary adult male circumcision</i></b>. There is now strong evidence that male circumcision reduces the risk of heterosexually acquired HIV infection in men by about 60 percent, yet only about one in ten Zimbabwean adult men are circumcised. PSI and its partners run circumcision clinics in Zimbabwe and other countries, with support from PEPFAR and other donors.<p>I was invited to observe the procedure, which is free to the client, <b><i>completely voluntary</i></b> and according to the young man I spoke with who underwent the procedure, painless. The cost of the procedure at that clinic—including follow-up care and counseling—is about $40 U.S. dollars.<p>UNAIDS and the World Health Organization have issued guidance stating that male circumcision should be recognized as an important intervention to reduce the risk of heterosexually acquired HIV infection in men.<p>Even with no demand creation, the clinic I visited serves upwards of 35 clients per day. It is estimated that <b><i>if male circumcision is scaled up to reach 80 percent of adult and newborn males</i></b> in Zimbabwe by 2015, it could avert almost 750,000 adult HIV infections—that equals 40 percent of all new HIV infections that would have occurred otherwise without the intervention—and it could yield total net savings of $3.8 billion U.S. dollars between 2009 and 2025. Male circumcision programs get robust support from the U.S. government in Zimbabwe and other countries, but greater resources would yield greater results.</blockquote><p>Always remember that when public health officials - or actresses - talk about <i>voluntary, adult</i> male circumcision, they never mean <i>voluntary</i> or <i>adult</i>.<p>¹ <small>Title quote reference <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0157246/quotes?qt0286700">here</a>.</small></p>]]>
        
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<entry>
    <title>(My) Marriage and the State</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/2010/03/my_marriage_and_the_state.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=2/entry_id=2039" title="(My) Marriage and the State" />
    <id>tag:www.rollingdoughnut.com,2010://2.2039</id>
    
    <published>2010-03-01T19:01:14Z</published>
    <updated>2010-03-01T19:48:48Z</updated>
    
    <summary>At The League of Ordinary Gentlemen, Jason Kuznicki asks questions about marriage under three scenarios. Two of those scenarios are relevant to me, and they&apos;re interesting because they correlate closely with my personal life.The first scenario:1. The United States government,...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Tony</name>
        
    </author>
            <category term="Personal" />
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/">
        <![CDATA[<p>At The League of Ordinary Gentlemen, Jason Kuznicki <a href="http://www.ordinary-gentlemen.com/2010/03/what-would-it-take-to-un-marry-you/" title=&#147What Would It Take to Un-Marry You?&#148">asks questions</a> about marriage under three scenarios. Two of those scenarios are relevant to me, and they're interesting because they correlate closely with my personal life.<p>The first scenario:<blockquote><p>1. The United States government, at both the state and federal levels, peacefully dissolves into anarchy. The functionaries all read David Friedman, agree with him, and close up shop. Are you still married? Or not?</blockquote><p>My short answer is, "of course we'd still be married."<p>My long answer is more complex.  Danielle and I have been in a relationship since the latter half of 2003.  More than six years later, we haven't yet married, but we have a shared mortgage.  That's enough to me to signify my commitment that I'm not going anywhere.  When we've talked about this, she's agreed.  Our relationship is what matters, not the approval of others.<p>In a bit of coincidental timing, we decided last week to get married. There was no traditional popping of The Question. It came up because of specific, values-based legal nonsense that makes it significantly cheaper - free versus many thousands of dollars - to have the state's sanction. After discussing it in rational terms in our kitchen, we decided it's time to jump through the state's hoops.<p>The engagement will be short-lived, because we'll be married soon. Neither of us wants a religious ceremony, so we have none of the time-constraining obstacles that involves. The courthouse will suffice. Packing family and friends traveling great distances into a courthouse for a "Do you? Yes. Do you? Yes." ceremony seems rather much a waste of everyone's time and resources. There will be plenty of time to celebrate, as if we haven't done that by being committed for so long already.<p>Also, I'm not big on symbolism, in general, so adding the state's approval means nothing. While I won't get into the martyrdom of saying I won't get married until everyone in my <s>state</s> commonwealth may enjoy their right, the fight for marriage as a way to be approved by the good opinion of others led to me evaluating state approval from minor into nothingness. If my neighbors - representing whatever boundary one wishes to draw and call the "state" - think they need their god's judgment and blessing, that's interesting. If they think I need their god's judgment and blessing, and the discriminating hand of the state is the only way to achieve this, then I don't think much of their god. And I won't care about the state that enforces these subjective, unprovable rules.<p>As unromantic as it may appear, Danielle and I became married long ago through our choices, with no definitive anniversary date. The state had nothing to do with that. If it disappeared tomorrow, maybe we'd continue celebrating whatever the official wedding date turns out to be, but we'd continue on unchanged by its influence.<blockquote><p>3. Your entire family, on both sides, and any children if you have them, all reach a consensus: You and your wife are all wrong for each other. They’re not going to recognize your marriage, no matter how happy you are, and regardless of how you conduct yourselves. Still married? Or not?</blockquote><p>Again, my short answer is, "of course we'd still be married."<p>My long answer depends on the opposite scenario.  It's the traditional story. After a couple has been together beyond the family's opinion of long enough, the hints start appearing. Direct questions follow. If you still don't marry, the pleas begin. Danielle and I reached the pleas some time ago.<p>Or, to be precise, I reached the pleas some time ago.  As the man, I'm expected to take the traditional role.  But I missed the script.  Not intentionally or consciously. (Mostly not consciously, since I'm not oblivious.) I know and trust Danielle enough to reasonably expect her to say something if our relationship needed to change. Since she shares my opinion on marriage as well as two individuals probably can, especially when one of those people is me, she didn't try to force anything when the hints or questions or badgering started.  As unromantic as it seems to outsiders, since it doesn't fit the frame inside which we're supposed to place it, we decided together to get married, without a bended knee or a diamond.<p>Our families and friends had an image of how our relationship was supposed to develop.  Speaking for myself, I never cared about that.  Their validation (or revoked validation, in Jason's scenario) is irrelevant to the extent that I'll allow it to affect my behavior.  They're happy that we're making it official, and that's good, but it doesn't sway my value of the state-sanctioned validation they sought for us compared to our voluntary choices and manner of expressing our relationship.</p>]]>
        
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>Corporatism ≠ Capitalism</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/2010/02/corporatism_capitalism_1.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=2/entry_id=2038" title="Corporatism ≠ Capitalism" />
    <id>tag:www.rollingdoughnut.com,2010://2.2038</id>
    
    <published>2010-02-28T01:09:37Z</published>
    <updated>2010-02-28T01:21:14Z</updated>
    
    <summary>I&apos;m always fascinated by critiques of capitalism that rely on untrue assumptions. From a Boing Boing review of John Lanchester&apos;s Whoops!: Why Everyone Owes Everyone and No One Can Pay earlier this week:Lanchester explains the econopocalypse thus: a climate (the...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Tony</name>
        
    </author>
            <category term="Capitalism" />
            <category term="Economics" />
            <category term="Government" />
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/">
        <![CDATA[<p>I'm always fascinated by critiques of capitalism that rely on untrue assumptions.  From a <a href="http://www.boingboing.net/2010/02/22/whoops-why-everyone.html" title="&#147Whoops! Why Everyone Owes Everyone and No One Can Pay - funny and well-written economics book&#148">Boing Boing</a> review of John Lanchester's <i><a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/1846142857/downandoutint-21">Whoops!: Why Everyone Owes Everyone and No One Can Pay</a></i> earlier this week:<blockquote><p>Lanchester explains the econopocalypse thus: a climate (the fall of the Soviet Union and the triumphal do-no-wrong belief in unfettered capitalism that ensued), a problem (using derivatives to expand risk, rather than limit it, which led to reckless lending in the housing market), a mistake (bankers assuming that they had laid off the risk using complex derivatives) and a failure (regulators refusing to look the financial gift-horse in the mouth). This provides an excellent framework for explaining the ways in which history, greed, and hubris conspired to create the worst financial crisis in memory.</blockquote><p>There may be a "triumphal do-no-wrong belief in unfettered capitalism," but the presence of regulators proves that what we have is neither unfettered nor capitalism.  Since, according to the review of his book, Mr. Lanchester concludes that the economy will remain sluggish due to regulatory capture, the current climate is corporatism.<p>I'm not sure if the mistaken word choice originates with Mr. Lanchester or the book's reviewer, Cory Doctorow.  Regardless, those of us who support capitalism (as a synonym for a free market) do not support corporatism.</p>]]>
        
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</entry>
<entry>
    <title>Spying on Students in Pennsylvania</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/2010/02/spying_on_students_in_pennsylv_1.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=2/entry_id=2037" title="Spying on Students in Pennsylvania" />
    <id>tag:www.rollingdoughnut.com,2010://2.2037</id>
    
    <published>2010-02-20T18:25:57Z</published>
    <updated>2010-02-20T18:23:49Z</updated>
    
    <summary>For a brief summary:The FBI is investigating a Pennsylvania school district accused of secretly activating webcams inside students&apos; homes, a law enforcement official with knowledge of the case told The Associated Press on Friday.The school district has acknowledged that each...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Tony</name>
        
    </author>
            <category term="Ethics" />
            <category term="Government" />
            <category term="Libertarian" />
            <category term="Propaganda" />
            <category term="Stupidity" />
    
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        <![CDATA[<p>For a brief <a href="http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100219/ap_on_hi_te/us_laptops_spying_on_students" title="&#147Official: FBI probing Pa. school webcam spy case&#148">summary</a>:<blockquote><p>The FBI is investigating a Pennsylvania school district accused of secretly activating webcams inside students' homes, a law enforcement official with knowledge of the case told The Associated Press on Friday.</blockquote><p>The school district has acknowledged that each student's school-issued computer has software that allows the district to access it remotely, including the ability to capture images.  My guess is that, in the case of the student who's parents have sued, the alleged image was likely something the student downloaded and the school saw on his hard drive. If I'm right, it's still creepy, but (momentarily) relegates to possibility the theories that the school captured images of naked students.<p>Since the privacy implications must still be considered, the article includes commentary from privacy experts.  The experts aren't quoted as saying anything surprising.  The reporter offers a different perspective in her transition:<blockquote><p>The Pennsylvania case shows how even well-intentioned plans can go awry if officials fail to understand the technology and its potential consequences, privacy experts said. Compromising images from inside a student's bedroom could fall into the hands of rogue school staff or otherwise be spread across the Internet, they said.</blockquote><p>Which school officials would not be 'rogue' if such pictures fell in their hands?  I take the implication that somehow there are school staff members who should be legitimately authorized to see such pictures, that some spying is appropriate.  I'm sure that's lazy writing rather than a disturbing lack of skepticism of authority.  But someone obviously authorized the installation of this software and didn't notify the students or their parents that it was included.  I always assume stupidity first, if it's possible, but it would be unwise to rule out an conscious disregard for civil liberties.<p>(They're children, after all.  They have no rights at school <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morse_v._Frederick">or away</a> from school if school officials deem those rights an impediment to order.)</p>]]>
        
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<entry>
    <title>Correlation Still Does Not Equal Causation</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/2010/02/correlation_still_does_not_equ_1.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=2/entry_id=2036" title="Correlation Still Does Not Equal Causation" />
    <id>tag:www.rollingdoughnut.com,2010://2.2036</id>
    
    <published>2010-02-17T18:45:29Z</published>
    <updated>2010-02-17T18:50:51Z</updated>
    
    <summary>Nancy Pelosi&apos;s office blogged about the Department of Labor&apos;s latest jobs report. This graph is included in the brief entry:From this, Rep. Pelosi declares:Today’s jobs report marks a welcome step in the right direction for our economy and our families:...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Tony</name>
        
    </author>
            <category term="Economics" />
            <category term="Government" />
            <category term="Logic" />
            <category term="Politics" />
            <category term="Spending" />
            <category term="Stupidity" />
            <category term="Taxes" />
    
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        <![CDATA[<p>Nancy Pelosi's office <a href="http://www.speaker.gov/blog/?p=2144" title="&#147A Welcome Step In The Right Direction&#148">blogged</a> about the Department of Labor's latest <a href="http://www.bls.gov/news.release/empsit.nr0.htm">jobs report</a>.  This graph is included in the brief entry:<p><center><img alt="Pelosi_jobs.jpg" src="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/Images/Pelosi_jobs.jpg" width="500" height="361" /></center><p>From this, Rep. Pelosi declares:<blockquote><p>Today’s jobs report marks a welcome step in the right direction for our economy and our families: the unemployment rate is going down. The Recovery Act, which Congress passed one year ago to pull our economy back from the brink of collapse, has already created or saved nearly 2 million jobs so far.<p>Yet our work is far from over. This recession that President Obama inherited has taken the worst toll on our job market since World War II. Too many workers have lost their jobs through no fault of their own. Leaders of both parties must work together to keep our recovery on track by helping small businesses create jobs, investing in our infrastructure and clean energy industries, and keeping police, firefighters, and teachers on the job. Congress will continue to act to build a new foundation for long-term prosperity.</blockquote><p>I see the correlation I'm supposed to perceive, but that doesn't prove what Rep. Pelosi expects me to assume, that the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act is the reason the graph looks as it does.  It's easy to claim success when you establish superficial results as the standards for success.  If she's going to make this claim, she must defend it with specific details about how money was spent and how that improved the jobs situation.  Saying it isn't enough if you're skeptical of power rather than merely skeptical of your ideological opponents.<p>(Via <a href="http://twitter.com/Ireneartist">Irene</a> retweeting <a href="http://twitter.com/markos/status/9240643259">Markos Moulitsas</a>)</p>]]>
        
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>Massachusetts Will Debate The Right to Bodily Integrity</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/2010/02/massachusetts_will_debate_the.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=2/entry_id=2035" title="Massachusetts Will Debate The Right to Bodily Integrity" />
    <id>tag:www.rollingdoughnut.com,2010://2.2035</id>
    
    <published>2010-02-17T02:25:28Z</published>
    <updated>2010-02-19T05:16:14Z</updated>
    
    <summary>The Massachusetts legislature is considering a bill that would make non-therapeutic genital cutting (i.e. circumcision) on healthy minors illegal....(a) For the purpose of this section, the term “genital mutilation” shall mean the removal or cutting or both of the whole...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Tony</name>
        
    </author>
            <category term="Circumcision" />
            <category term="Ethics" />
            <category term="Libertarian" />
            <category term="Logic" />
            <category term="Politics" />
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/">
        <![CDATA[<p>The Massachusetts legislature is considering <a href="http://www.mass.gov/legis/bills/senate/186/st01/st01777.htm">a bill</a> that would make non-therapeutic genital cutting (i.e. circumcision) on healthy minors illegal.<blockquote><p>...<p>(a)                For the purpose of this section, the term “genital mutilation” shall mean the removal or cutting or both of the whole or part of the clitoris, labia minora, labia majora, vulva, breast, nipple, foreskin, glans, testicle, penis, ambiguous genitalia, hermaphroditic genitalia, or any genital organ.<br>...</blockquote><p>Reading the bill in its entirety shows that the author(s) shaped it directly from the Federal Prohibition of Female Genital Mutilation <a href="http://frwebgate.access.gpo.gov/cgi-bin/getdoc.cgi?dbname=104_cong_bills&docid=f:s1030is.txt.pdf">Act</a>, while correctly updating the text to remove the federal law's gender discrimination. It includes protection for females, which is useful (if likely redundant) since Massachusetts does not have a state law prohibiting female genital mutilation.  The Massachusetts bill is reasonable and should move out of committee, where it's scheduled for a <a href="http://www.mgmbill.org/hearing.htm">public hearing</a> on March 2nd, and pass into law.<p>It won't, of course.  I'm hopeful it will at least get an honest hearing, but I've worked on this topic too long to be that naive.  Too many people are unwilling to consider all facts, particularly those detrimental to their status quo preferences.<p>For example, <a href="http://www.wickedlocal.com/roslindale/opinion/x88436942">this editorial</a> from Massachusetts, from <i>Wicked Local</i>, reveals that its authors fail to understand even the actual text of the bill.<blockquote><p>Thumbs Down:<p>Circumcision is a crime? Through state Sen. Michael W. Morrissey, Charles Antonelli of Quincy has decided to waste the Senate’s time with a bill that would ban male circumcision of anyone under the age of 18 in Massachusetts unless medically necessary. The measure would get right in the way of parental rights, imposing a fine and/or up to 14 years in prison on people who violate this ban. Antonelli is the Massachusetts director of MGMbill.org — a group of “we know better than the majority of doctors” nuts working to ban what it calls “male genital mutilation.”</blockquote><p>Is it a waste of time to get in the way of parental rights to alter a daughter's genitals?  Because the bill does that, as the excerpt above proves.  The federal Anti-FGM act does the same.  So, the question here is what is the full list of plenary parental 'rights' that require only that the child have a penis?<p>For what it's worth, if a doctor believe a healthy child needs surgery, yes, I'm more informed than he or she is.  And he or she violates the Hippocratic Oath when recommending genital cutting, regardless of the healthy patient's gender.<blockquote><p>This group shoves aside the belief held by most of the medical community that circumcision reduces susceptibility to HIV and other sexually transmitted diseases as well as urinary tract infections and penile cancer. The anti-circumcision group declares “those findings are not a valid reason to amputate a healthy, functioning body part of a child.”</blockquote><p>I won't speak for those involved with MGMBill.org, but for me, I shove nothing aside.  Prophylactic circumcision has the potential to achieve those results, statistically.  So what?  Because, somehow, possessing an objectively healthy, functioning body part does not indicate that surgery is not valid for that healthy, functioning body part.  There are apparently no ethical considerations involved.  There is apparently no need for an objective look at the relative and absolute risks involved.  There is apparently no need to question whether or not the child might want his normal, healthy foreskin.<p>It's frustrating that <i>Wicked Local</i> defiantly states that circumcision reduces susceptibility to HIV without also noting that every study showing this risk reduction involved only adult volunteers, not non-consenting children.  Note, too, that the studies only found a reduction in female-to-male transmission through vaginal intercourse, a significantly smaller problem in the United States than in Africa.<p>But <i>Wicked Local</i> seems to perceive the issue to be about only potential benefits, no matter how trivial or easily avoided with lesser methods the risks posed by the foreskin.  So surely we are failing all children by not proactively removing dangerous body parts from their bodies.  To avoid getting in the way of parental 'rights', when do we start studies to determine whether or not there is a potential medical benefit to be achieved from prophylactic breast tissue removal?  Although, since some adult women are already voluntarily having their breasts removed pre-emptively, we can assume that a plenary parental 'right' to remove the healthy, functioning breast tissue from daughters exists.  What's good enough for the parents is good enough for the children.  Right?<p>That's all intentionally absurd, of course.  But without a boundary, there is nowhere to end the madness.  The subjective boundary <i>Wicked Local</i> establishes here is arbitrary and based on its editors personal preferences.  The law cannot be based on such whim.  For proxy consent, the child's objective needs matter first.  Where there is no objective need for intervention, there is no parental 'right' to intervene.  Surgery must be prohibited.  That is a clear standard that applies to males and females, genitals and not genitals.<blockquote><p>Also ignored is Jewish and Muslim tradition in which all males are usually circumcised as part of their faith.</blockquote><p>Passive voice, males are circumcised.  They do not choose.  Indeed.  But this bill does not seek to prohibit religious circumcision.  Adult males may still choose circumcision for themselves if they believe their God demands it.  This bill focuses on minors, where civil law must take precedent over religious texts.  It codifies that the human rights of every individual exist first, and no amount of parental preference can supersede that in the pursuit of subjective, unprovable spiritual or cultural benefits.  Unless we're opening the law books to strike any law that violates a religious dictate governing what one person may do to another, there is nothing objectionable on this front.  Are we opening the law books in this manner for a purge of religiously objectionable civil laws?<blockquote><p>The bill has not yet been assigned to committee. It would be best to see this ridiculous waste of government time sniped from the legislative agenda and left discarded on the Senate clerk’s floor. Parents and doctors, not legislators, should decide the merits of whether a male child should or should not have a circumcision.</blockquote><p>Parents and doctors, not legislators, should decide the merits of whether a female child should or should not have genital cutting?  Again, if we're saying that parents have a plenary 'right' to alter their sons for subjective reasons, the same plenary 'right' must exist for their daughters.  Or we could consider the importance of the omitted word, a <i>healthy</i> child, and recognize that the answer is irrefutable because it is illegal (and immoral) to discriminate based on gender alone.  Either all children have the same right to bodily integrity or no children have that right.  The former breaks our current ignorance, while the latter turns children into property.<blockquote><p>And here’s a tip for the angry anti-circumcision group — you would do a lot better with an informative public education campaign and debate rather than going state-to-state trying to shove your will on everyone and toss parents who don’t agree with you into jail for up to 14 years — a tact that so far has not seen even one state go along with this nonsense.</blockquote><p>I agree, an informative public education campaign and debate is the best way to go.  We shouldn't need to legislate against something unjust.  But we do, because the rights of boys in America (and Massachusetts, in this case) are violated every day.  I can explain how male circumcision is egregious because it violates human rights.  I can explain how male circumcision is egregious because it is not the least invasive solution for every perceived benefit.  But the <i>Wicked Local</i> editors haven't even bothered to understand the text of the bill.  I can overcome ignorance. I cannot overcome willful ignorance.</p>]]>
        
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>Schumer and Hatch Almost Discover Incentives</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/2010/01/schumer_and_hatch_almost_disco_1.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=2/entry_id=2034" title="Schumer and Hatch Almost Discover Incentives" />
    <id>tag:www.rollingdoughnut.com,2010://2.2034</id>
    
    <published>2010-01-26T18:20:33Z</published>
    <updated>2010-01-26T18:28:37Z</updated>
    
    <summary>Senators Charles Schumer and Orrin Hatch have a plan to help employment. As expected, the usual caveat about bi-partisan action applies.Here’s the idea: Starting immediately after enactment, any private-sector employer that hires a worker who had been unemployed for at...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Tony</name>
        
    </author>
            <category term="Economics" />
            <category term="Politics" />
    
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        <![CDATA[<p>Senators Charles Schumer and Orrin Hatch have <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/26/opinion/26hatch.html" title="&#147A Payroll Tax Break for Jobs&#148">a plan</a> to help employment.  As expected, the usual caveat about bi-partisan action applies.<blockquote><p>Here’s the idea: Starting immediately after enactment, any private-sector employer that hires a worker who had been unemployed for at least 60 days will not have to pay its 6.2 percent Social Security payroll tax on that employee for the duration of 2010. The Social Security trust fund will then be made whole with spending cuts elsewhere in the budget between now and 2015. That’s it. Simple to understand, and easy to explain.</blockquote><p>I'm going to leave the issue of economics, of whether or not this could work, to those more qualified to answer.  For me, the issue is incentives. They're trying to create an incentive for employers to expand employment.  It's fine if you like that sort of meddling, but I don't.  I'd rather they get the government out of the way than try to find the 'correct' plan to lead. They've already stated in the article that the Congress of the 1970s created ineffective, burdensome incentives.  Our default assumption should be that today's Congress will do the same whenever it tries.<p>To this plan, though, what about the worker who hasn't been unemployed at least 60 days?  Why is it fair to disadvantage her, however marginally?  What's magical about day 60 that isn't burdensome about day 59? Day 58?  I can think of many complicated individual circumstances - some ridiculous, some not - complicated by this arbitrary incentive.<p>More:<blockquote><p>In addition, because the benefit starts on the date of hiring and does not have an arbitrary cap, more businesses will want to use it. And since it is an elimination of the employer’s share of the Social Security tax for these workers — rather than a fixed or capped dollar amount — the complexities of making the incentive work with a firm’s payroll software are greatly reduced because employers will know simply to zero out the tax for these workers.</blockquote><p>I work with financial software systems. Contrary to what the good senators believe, software design often excludes "simply zero out the tax" for individual workers.  Incorporating such changes is often supported in a company's license with the software provider, but those changes must be implemented in some capacity.  That takes time.  Maybe it is "simply zero out the tax," but it's more likely to require a new field to turn this feature on and off.  That requires testing to verify that it doesn't create other problems.  These changes may require new code to apply the proposed 60 day minimum requirement for unemployment history.  There may also be new levels of approval, since you wouldn't want everyone to have the authority to "simply zero out the tax."  All of this must be maintained.<blockquote><p>In the current environment, no business wants to wait until 2011 to receive a tax credit for someone it hires today. Another obvious benefit of this proposal to forgive payroll taxes is that it keeps money in a business’s pockets, since the tax is simply not collected in the first place.</blockquote><p>If these software changes can't be implemented immediately, the tax will be collected in the first place, creating further paperwork to receive a refund.<blockquote><p>There are some additional rules that would have to be put in place. For example, eligible workers would have to be hired for a minimum of 30 hours per week, and workers who are family members of the employer would not be eligible. The payroll tax reduction would be for private-sector jobs only; new jobs that are created by tax dollars in the first place would not be eligible. And any employer with a lower total payroll in 2010 than it had in 2009 would have to forfeit the benefit — businesses shouldn’t be allowed to shed jobs and still receive a tax benefit.</blockquote><p>Isn't this plan supposed to be simple?<p>Like all politics, this is about appearances hiding the desire for control.  There's no concern for productivity.  Much can happen in the next eleven months that could cause a company to shed jobs, despite a good faith effort to expand.  But it shouldn't be allowed, because we need full employment, not full productivity.  To a politician, digging unneeded holes is no less valuable than any other job.  This is no more true than when the politician can claim credit for creating the hole-digging job.</p>]]>
        
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</entry>
<entry>
    <title>Ezra Klein&apos;s Fundamental Pact</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/2010/01/ezra_kleins_fundamental_pact.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=2/entry_id=2033" title="Ezra Klein's Fundamental Pact" />
    <id>tag:www.rollingdoughnut.com,2010://2.2033</id>
    
    <published>2010-01-20T23:17:32Z</published>
    <updated>2010-01-20T23:21:51Z</updated>
    
    <summary>It&apos;s tempting to point and snicker at the schadenfreude in this Ezra Klein entry, Demoralized Democrats, but that&apos;s rather pointless. Anyway, there&apos;s a useful insight to be drawn from his partisan naivety. Consider:The fundamental pact between a political party and...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Tony</name>
        
    </author>
            <category term="Politics" />
            <category term="Stupidity" />
    
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        <![CDATA[<p>It's tempting to point and snicker at the schadenfreude in <a href="http://voices.washingtonpost.com/ezra-klein/2010/01/demoralized_democrats.html" title="&#147Demoralized Democrats&#148">this</a> Ezra Klein entry, <i>Demoralized Democrats</i>, but that's rather pointless.  Anyway, there's a useful insight to be drawn from his partisan naivety. Consider:<blockquote><p>The fundamental pact between a political party and its supporters is that the two groups believe the same thing and pledge to work on it together. And the Democratic base feels that it has held to its side of the bargain. It elected a Democratic majority and a Democratic president. It swallowed tough compromises on the issues it cared about most. It swallowed concessions to politicians it didn't like and industry groups it loathed. But it persisted. Because these things are important. That's why those voters believe in them. That's why they're Democrats.</blockquote><p>The problem with Klein's fundamental pact is that disaster must result from believing one can be all things to all people, even when "all people" is a subset of all people.  He seems to believe the Democratic base consists of everyone who voted Democrat in November 2008.  But the proof against his theory is within his paragraph. Where do concessions to politicians come from? Where do concessions to industry groups come from?  Our corrupt two-party system requires compromises like this because the complexities of life must be divided into either-or options.  But there are many people who possess ideas and preferences other than either-or.  It's a stupid way to run a government, but it's obviously our current system.  Klein's fundamental pact doesn't exist the way he thinks it does.  I suspect his belief is widespread among all partisans, which is why this stomach-churning political pendulum continues.<p>The silliness of this supposed pact is why libertarians prefer a government of limited, enumerated powers.  Everything else is left to individuals to decide for themselves.  Concessions are voluntary or there is no agreement.  Life isn't viewed as a zero-sum game, as it must be in politics.  The partisans continue playing this game, bloating our government more as each party's minority-of-the-population base wins its next "decisive" victory to dictate public policy, believing that somehow its newest win is the final, lasting proof of its divine correctness.  The rest of us must take solace in the predictable schadenfreude, which is expensive and unrewarding.</p>]]>
        
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<entry>
    <title>Why I Skim The Daily Dish</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/2010/01/why_i_skim_the_daily_dish_1.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=2/entry_id=2032" title="Why I Skim The Daily Dish" />
    <id>tag:www.rollingdoughnut.com,2010://2.2032</id>
    
    <published>2010-01-20T22:57:18Z</published>
    <updated>2010-01-20T22:57:26Z</updated>
    
    <summary>I still have Andrew Sullivan&apos;s blog in my RSS reader, but only as a way to stay informed on what&apos;s happening. Most days I only skim it, not carefully. Where he used to be open to questions, however scattered he...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Tony</name>
        
    </author>
            <category term="Government" />
            <category term="Libertarian" />
            <category term="Politics" />
            <category term="Ranting" />
            <category term="Stupidity" />
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/">
        <![CDATA[<p>I still have Andrew Sullivan's blog in my RSS reader, but only as a way to stay informed on what's happening. Most days I only skim it, not carefully. Where he used to be open to questions, however scattered he may have bounced around on his emotional responses, now he usually exhibits a single with-me-or-against-me attitude. In anticipation of Brown's victory in yesterday's special election for the Massachusetts Senate seat previously held by Ted Kennedy, Sullivan <a href="http://andrewsullivan.theatlantic.com/the_daily_dish/2010/01/so-what-does-it-mean.html" title="&#147So What Does Massachusetts Mean?&#148">wrote</a> (emphasis in original):<blockquote><p>The second explanation is the Brooks/Noonan theory that somehow everything <i>feels wrong</i> to the Independent or conservative-leaning voters. They have an instinctual fear of more government and, even though the Senate bill couldn't be more minimalist within the confines of expanding access and controlling costs, this gnaws at them. I think this is a legitimate feeling (I have it too) - but an illegitimate <i>argument</i>.<p>Look: the markets conservatives have believed in <i>have failed</i>.<p>As the more honest conservatives (Greenspan, Posner, Bartlett) have noted, the financial crisis was a clear indicator that we need a more active and vigilant government in regulating the financial sector. And when you look at the results of America's hybrid and dysfunctional healthcare system, it is more than clear that the status quo is unsustainable. Yes, this system has pioneered amazing breakthroughs and a pharmaceutical revolution that has transformed lives. But the cost and inefficiency of this is simply staggering. Look at the graph above. If you think it's great, support the GOP. They don't want to change anything, but a few tweaks.</blockquote><p>Which part of America's <i>hybrid and dysfunctional</i> health care system proves that the market has failed?  It's an interesting claim, but it's not an argument. It's a silly analysis of what the market <i>should</i> provide and how much it <i>should</i> cost.  There's nothing objective here. There's only the expectation that we all agree that the government is the only way to fix the market failure of our <i>hybrid</i> health care system. As he writes later in his post:<blockquote><p>At least Obama seems interested in government. The GOP seems interested only in politics and rhetoric that can sustain the bubble of deep denial they live in.</blockquote><p>Obama and the rest of the Democrats are interested in government as the solution, which is the wrong approach.  It's easy to suggest that government will be reformed in the process, but that's a rather nonsensical assurance when the problem is systemic in our interest-driven political system.  Wishful thinking will not stop the flow of special handouts and exemptions that result with government involvement.<p>There's a complex case to be debated, which hasn't happened because it's easier to spew anecdotes as universal fact. It's easier to write "...Tea Partiers are just opposing the working poor having a chance to buy health insurance," as Sullivan <a href="http://andrewsullivan.theatlantic.com/the_daily_dish/2009/11/consistency-revisited-i.html" title="&#147Consistency Revisited I&#148">wrote</a> in November, than it is to confront a group's objections.  In fairness, Sullivan has questioned what Republicans would do instead. But assuming indifference and malice in the face of silence is unhelpful speculation.<p>This is not to endorse the Republican approach.  I find the party to be devoid of any value, which is to say I hold Democrats and Republicans in equal esteem.  Nor am I endorsing Senator-elect Brown as a beacon of principled leadership newly arrived in Washington. From the little I've read, he's more of the same, defending torture by the American government, for example.  But him not having a coherent or satisfactory answer on the current Senate and House health care bills does not equate with there being no coherent or satisfactory rebuttals to the current bills. As Mark at <i>The League of Ordinary Gentlemen</i> <a href="http://www.ordinary-gentlemen.com/2010/01/nihilism/" title="&#147&#148">wrote</a>:<blockquote><p>It is increasingly frustrating to me that, for many supporters of Obama, any belief that the existing health care reform bills will do more harm than good is automatically written off as being in bad faith or, as it were, “nihilistic.”</blockquote><p>I believe I've advocated here that any health care reform aimed at reducing costs must start with untangling health care from employment.  An individual's employer is no more responsible for her health than it is for insuring her automobile or home.  It's a holdover from the ridiculous tax rates of the World War II-era, where offering health insurance as an employment benefit was economically wise.  Rather than fix the rates, government enshrined the concept in tax law.  That was stupid, but it worked when people worked at a single company for life. Today it's uncommon to have had only a single employer by age 30.  If we don't fix that broken government-provided incentive, we'll continue to have people lose their health insurance when they lose their jobs.<p>The current legislation keeps that tie, but punishes indiscriminately for receiving "too much" of a benefit. That's just doubling down on the madness of the past, thinking that government can fix what government broke by adding more government.  It's the nonsensical thinking of the central planner, the kind who believes that anything that isn't what it <i>should</i> be in a hybrid market is clear proof that the market has failed, requiring more of the planner's expertise.<p>To show that other ideas exist, Megan McArdle <a href="http://meganmcardle.theatlantic.com/archives/2010/01/killing_off_the_insurers_the_c.php" title="&#147Killing Off the Insurers the Conservative Way&#148">offers</a> her suggestion:<blockquote><p>Raise the Medicare tax by half a percentage point, and eliminate the tax-deductibiity of health insurance benefits for people making more than $150K a year in household income, $100K for singles. Then make the federal government the insurer of last resort. Any medical expenses more than 15% or 20% of household income, get picked up by Uncle Sam.</blockquote><p>I'm not a fan of this because it still messes with the tax code, encouraging employers and employees to tinker with non-cash compensation for borderline salaries. Other people may want that approach, but I'd rather have cash and make my own decisions.  Social engineering is not good.  For example, a $100k threshold means different realities in D.C. versus Omaha.  It's a lot of money either way, but that punishes people unfairly in areas with a higher cost of living.  The tax code would need to be more complicated to rectify this problem, which proves the need to simplify away from government trying to influence "correct" decisions.<p>That said, I'm willing to consider it as an opening to ridding the tax code of the health insurance exemption.<p>So, alternative ideas clearly exist. But it's easier for Sullivan to vent, lumping everyone who disagrees with him into a tidy, immature opposition.  In a later post yesterday, he <a href="http://andrewsullivan.theatlantic.com/the_daily_dish/2010/01/a-libertarian-revolt.html" title="&#147A Libertarian Revolt?&#148">wrote</a> in a post titled "A Libertarian Revolt?" (emphasis in original):<blockquote><p>Since so much of the energy behind the Brown candidacy seems to be driven by anti-government sentiment, why is someone like me - who actually criticized Bush for being big government long before these late-comers - so dismayed?<p>Here's why. The rage is adolescent. It did not exist when the Republicans were in power and exploded government during years of economic growth. Fox News backed Bush to the hilt through it all, as he added mounds of unfunded entitlements to the next generation's debt, and then brought Beck in as soon as Obama inherited the mess. Scott Brown, moreover, has no plans to cut the debt or control government: none. He is running in defense of <i>every cent</i> in Medicare. He wants to <i>increase</i> the deficit by more tax cuts. He favors an all-powerful executive branch that can suspend <i>habeas corpus</i> and torture people. He has no intention of cutting defense. His position on the uninsured is: get your own states to help. His position on soaring healthcare costs is: stop the first attempt to control them.<p>We hear Karl Rove lamenting big government! We hear Dick Cheney worrying about deficits! The cynicism here is gob-smacking. And the libertarian right is just happy to go along.</blockquote><p>Like I said, I don't endorse Brown for these reasons. If I lived in Massachusetts, I wouldn't have voted for him or Coakley in yesterday's election.  So why am I lumped into the nihilist group because I'm a libertarian who thinks the current health care bills would cause harm to the nation?  Sullivan is aware enough to understand that Libertarians ≠ Republicans, yet he pretends they're synonymous without looking at what libertarians offer because both groups oppose the solution he wants.  It's unfair to rant incomprehensibly against something that is clearly untrue.  One might say it's adolescent, which is why The Daily Dish is no longer must reading for me.</p>]]>
        
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>Our Security Makes Me Afraid</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/2010/01/our_security_makes_me_afraid_1.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=2/entry_id=2031" title="Our Security Makes Me Afraid" />
    <id>tag:www.rollingdoughnut.com,2010://2.2031</id>
    
    <published>2010-01-09T16:53:57Z</published>
    <updated>2010-01-09T16:57:32Z</updated>
    
    <summary>This:The man who is believed to have slipped into a secured area of Newark Liberty International Airport and to have caused a six-hour shutdown of a major terminal on Sunday has been arrested, Port Authority officials said on Friday night....Mr....</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Tony</name>
        
    </author>
            <category term="Government" />
            <category term="Libertarian" />
            <category term="News" />
            <category term="Ranting" />
            <category term="Stupidity" />
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/">
        <![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/09/nyregion/09newark.html" title="&#147Man Charged in Newark Airport Security Breach&#148">This</a>:<blockquote><p>The man who is believed to have slipped into a secured area of Newark Liberty International Airport and to have caused a six-hour shutdown of a major terminal on Sunday has been arrested, Port Authority officials said on Friday night.<br>...<p>Mr. [Haisong] Jiang’s arrest [on a charge of defiant trespass] came a day after a video showing security footage of the incident was released by Mr. Lautenberg. It shows a man in a light-colored jacket standing near where arriving passengers exit a secured part of the airport. When a security guard leaves his post, the man embraces a woman and slips across the rope into the secured part of the terminal. The two then walk away together.</blockquote><p>I don't have much to say on the facts of the case. I haven't seen the video, so I can't decide whether or not the Mr. Jiang's alleged actions were intentional. Instead, I want to comment on this:<blockquote><p>The security guard has been on administrative leave since Tuesday, and he faces disciplinary action, according to the Transportation Security Administration. Derrick F. Thomas, a national vice president with union representing the guard, told The A.P. that the guard has “been rated a model employee.”</blockquote><p>While in high school, I worked at a drug store. One day, the assistant manager in charge of the store during my shift left for approximately 30 minutes to run personal errands.  She left a senior clerk in charge.  If my memory is correct, that clerk was a high school student like me.  Nothing occurred at the store during her absence.  The next time I reported to work, I learned the manager had fired the assistant manager for her action.<p>If <s>secure</s> restricted areas of an airport demands attention and scrutiny to each individual entering, as we're told it does, what's less severe here than what occurred at a drug store twenty years ago that makes administrative leave appropriate rather than immediate dismissal?<p>My initial conclusion is to accept the obvious distinction. The drug store was a private enterprise. The TSA is a government entity.  The former requires accountability. The latter can't.  I'm inclined to be skeptical of this conclusion, since I don't wish to be an ideologue.  Then I <a href="http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100108/ap_on_bi_ge/us_newark_airport_evacuation" title="&#147TSA guard in security breach called model employee&#148">read this</a> (via <a href="http://twitter.com/KipEsquire/status/7536168829">KipEsquire</a>):<blockquote><p>A bystander waiting for an arriving passenger noticed the breach and told the guard. TSA officials then discovered that surveillance cameras at the security checkpoint had not recorded the breach and were forced to consult backup security cameras operated by Continental Airlines.</blockquote><p>There could be any number of issues why such a lapse might occur, technical or otherwise. None of them are acceptable. This is security theater, not security. And we're doubling down on our stupidity with every new, predictable incident.</p>]]>
        
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>Two-Plus Months Later</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/2010/01/twoplus_months_later.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=2/entry_id=2030" title="Two-Plus Months Later" />
    <id>tag:www.rollingdoughnut.com,2010://2.2030</id>
    
    <published>2010-01-09T16:30:24Z</published>
    <updated>2010-01-09T16:33:25Z</updated>
    
    <summary>Hi....</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Tony</name>
        
    </author>
            <category term="Blogging" />
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/">
        <![CDATA[<p>Hi.</p>]]>
        
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>Science Requires Ethics, Part 3</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/2009/11/science_requires_ethics_part_3.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=2/entry_id=2029" title="Science Requires Ethics, Part 3" />
    <id>tag:www.rollingdoughnut.com,2009://2.2029</id>
    
    <published>2009-11-01T22:09:11Z</published>
    <updated>2009-11-01T22:08:46Z</updated>
    
    <summary>Jake responded to my last entry in our ongoing series. (My first and second entries.) I&apos;ll just jump in. Addressing my view that he is a pro-circumcision advocate, Jake writes:I find this a rather peculiar statement. I suppose in a...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Tony</name>
        
    </author>
            <category term="Circumcision" />
            <category term="Ethics" />
            <category term="Logic" />
            <category term="Science" />
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/">
        <![CDATA[<p>Jake <a href="http://circumcisionnews.blogspot.com/2009/10/in-ongoing-inter-blog-discussion-about.html" title="&#147Intact America, part 3&#148">responded</a> to my last entry in our ongoing series.  (My <a href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/2009/10/science_requires_ethics.html">first</a> and <a href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/2009/10/science_requires_ethics_revisi.html">second</a> entries.)  I'll just jump in.  Addressing my view that he is a pro-circumcision advocate, Jake writes:<blockquote><p>I find this a rather peculiar statement. I suppose in a sense that any attempt to weigh benefits against risks will have some subjective qualities, and perhaps that can't be avoided altogether. However, as subjective values are meaningless to another person I would hope that most observers try as objective as is reasonably possible. I certainly try; I can only hope that I succeed.<p>I am uninterested in convincing or encouraging parents to circumcise their sons, and have been careful to avoid making a recommendation either way. Anyone sufficiently interested (not to mention patient) can verify this by working through the many thousands of my public comments over the years - I use the same name everywhere, so it is not difficult to find them via Google. Indeed, I believe that such advocacy would be contrary to my pro-parental choice position: I genuinely believe that parents should make that decision, not me.</blockquote><p>Unlike my perception of many individuals I've encountered when discussing circumcision, I believe that Jake advocates parental choice with the intention he states, which is that I think he accepts the decision by parents who do not choose to circumcise their sons.  Many parental choice advocates do not believe that decision is valid in their parental choice worldview.  In that respect, my saying that Jake "uses his conclusion to encourage parents to circumcise" was incorrect.<p>Rather, I believe that he is effectively a pro-circumcision advocate because he views his assessment of circumcision as containing some level of objectivity.  It can't, just as my assessment can't.  The difference between our views, I think, is that mine involves the child's opinion, placing it above that of his parents.<p>I don't have an opinion on circumcision, per se.  I think it's an odd choice for a healthy male to make, but that's the lens of my preferences and experience.  Jake has his own opinion, which is clear from his choice to have himself circumcised as an adult.  Again, I think that's odd, but my opinion on that is irrelevant because his choice is valid for him.<p>On the topic before us, though, the focus of infant circumcision must be <i>infant</i> circumcision, not infant <i>circumcision</i>.  I write from the former, while I believe Jake writes from the latter.  That difference is why I claim that his conclusion is subjective and incomplete.<p>Next, Jake considers my take on an appeal to authority:<blockquote><p>My first inclination was to agree, but on reflection I think it would depend on the situation. Consider the following hypothetical scenario:<p>PERSON A: Circumcision is awful because the AAP don't recommend it.<br>AAP: [Introduces a recommendation in favour of circumcision]<br>PERSON A: Oh, the AAP are biased, ignore them.<p>Here the appeal to authority is utterly invalid. It is quite apparent that it is a sham: the AAP are being presented as an authority merely because the person hopes to gain an advantage by doing so. The person clearly has no integrity, nor any credibility, and can and should be ignored. ...</blockquote><p>This scenario is close to what I considered.  Although I wouldn't go as far as Jake does in condemning the person's integrity without more information, it is the response I predict any person to have to the scenario and why I despise appeals to authority.<p>Even though Jake's first scenario exemplified my point, his second scenario is instructive:<blockquote><p>... Now consider this:<p>PERSON A: Circumcision is awful because the AAP don't recommend it.<br>AAP: [Introduces a recommendation in favour of circumcision]<br>PERSON A: Okay, the AAP now recommend it, so it's okay.<p>In this situation, it seems to me that this is a valid appeal to authority, in that the person is willing to adapt their position once the authority changes theirs.</blockquote><p>I disagree, again because the focus of the appeal is <i>infant</i> circumcision, not circumcision.  It's an abdication of judgment in favor of someone else's conclusion.  If Person A is the individual being circumcised, I am indifferent to his acceptance of the authority's conclusion and judgment.  That's not what's at stake.<p>It's possible to make this too broad.  I am not suggesting that expert opinion is worthless or should be ignored.  I am saying that, when the focus is on <i>infant</i> circumcision, and specifically the circumcision of <i>healthy</i> infants, citing the authority's subjective conclusion of a net benefit (or neutrality) is a diversion from the individual child's lack of need and possible preference for keeping his normal foreskin.  The AAP is relatively neutral today, and I contend they're wrong because they ignore facts (out of philosophical ignorance).<p>Next, on circumcision versus vaccination:<blockquote><p>I see: Tony applies a different standard for surgery and vaccinations. This doesn't make much sense to me, for several reasons. Firstly, from an admittedly pedantic point of view, is there really that much of a difference? Surgery involves risk. Vaccinations involve risk. Surgery involves cutting the skin. Vaccinations (as delivered by a needle) also involve cutting the skin, albeit in a minor way. So I have to ask, where exactly would you draw the line?<p>Secondly, does it make sense to create multiple standards? To my mind, no. But I may be biased: I'm trained as an engineer, and when I observe lots of different little rules I see a situation in which there ought to be one, more general rule. Special cases are usually an indication that the general rule needs some more attention. Maybe one shouldn't apply engineering principles to ethics. I don't know, but I can't see any reason why one shouldn't...</blockquote><p>Yes, there is a difference.  Surgery removes a healthy, functioning body part.  Vaccination does not.  I draw the line between them for that primary reason.  So, yes, it makes sense to create multiple standards.<p>In turn, it doesn't make sense to create multiple standards for boys versus girls for the same parental activity and justifications. Later, in response to my view that anti-FGM laws would not be overturned if female genital cutting was shown to have potential benefits, Jake writes:<blockquote><p>In an ideal world, I wish I could say that anti-FGC laws would indeed be overturned if scientific knowledge changed significantly. However, I'm sorry to say that Tony is probably right in that they wouldn't be. I don't think that this has anything to do with rights, though: it's a simple case of collective prejudice. The notion that FGC is horrific is deeply ingrained into modern, Western society, and it takes an awful lot to dislodge that notion. I know this from personal experience: I have to make a conscious effort to think about FGC objectively, and have to fight the knee-jerk reaction. And I consider myself very open-minded.</blockquote><p>I accept that circumcision can have potential benefits. I am opposed to prohylactic¹ infant genital cutting because pursuing these potential benefits for an individual who can't consent is unethical.  It is unethical because there are real and potential harms.  Jake is wrong in his view because he is valuing science in a manner that leaves it insufficiently tethered to ethics.  It's a view that, because we can achieve something, it is ethically valid to pursue it.  I find that approach abhorrent.  It gives parents the choice to pursue an option that is not theirs to pursue.  Their opinion must be subordinate to the objective facts of their child's healthy body.<p>To my point that adults can choose condoms and that parents can't know if their sons will be irresponsible, Jake replies:<blockquote><p>To both points, I agree. Nevertheless, it seems difficult to deny that if it were performed during infancy, circumcision would help to reduce this risk when the child became an adult.</blockquote><p>I'm not denying that it might help reduce this risk, but it requires a specific, low-risk, low-probability situation to be effective.  The choice of surgery to chase a miniscule benefit must be left to the individual.<p>Of course, it's worth a reminder that the studies in Africa involved adult volunteers.  Leaving aside the ethical difference, declaring that circumcision would help males (especially Western males) circumcised as infants is speculation.  There are more variables involved, including the foreskin's adherence to the glans in infants and the prevalence of HIV in the society.<p>In response to my review of his opinion on "most effective/least invasive":<blockquote><p>Here I believe Tony has misunderstood, or at least has not considered the issue with sufficient care. If there is a medical problem to address, then the physician's responsibility is to solve that problem while exposing the patient to the least risk. That's the essence of the "most effective/least invasive" standard. But if there is no medical reason for considering circumcision, then it is meaningless to even consider the "most effective" solution. If circumcision is being considered for non-medical reasons then it is in all probability the only solution to the problem (that being that the child is not circumcised). So it is the wrong standard to apply.</blockquote><p>I believe I've understood him correctly.  He is wrong.  If there is no medical reason (i.e. need) for circumcision, it's unacceptable to permit it on children.  Normal genitals are not a "problem," no matter how opposed the boy's parents are to his normal genitals.  I repeat my earlier criticism: Jake is begging the question he wants to answer.  Medical need is the standard for proxy consent to surgery.  Without medical need, the process stops.  No intervention is valid.<p>Next:<blockquote><p>At this point Tony declined to list '"surgeries we recognize as offensive" that are valid when benefits and risks are properly weighed', stating:<blockquote><p>I am not citing any particular science or surgeries because that was not my point.</blockquote><p>This is a shame. I had hoped that Tony would at least try. I cannot think of any, and my suspicion is that this is because none exist. And if none exist, then Tony's earlier objection that "Setting the ability to chase potential benefits as the ethical standard opens the range of allegedly valid parental interventions to include any number of surgeries we recognize as offensive" seems a rather empty objection.</blockquote><p>Immediately following my objection, I wrote that "I am attacking a way of thinking," which is to say that I reject the notion that because we can achieve a potential benefit, it is ethically valid to pursue it.  At its core, prophylactic infant circumcision is about chasing potential benefits.  I reject that for the multitude of reasons I've presented.  Speculating that I did not cite any because none exist is a straw man.<p>Citing "surgeries we recognize as offensive" is a pointless diversion.  However, I'll play along briefly.  I nominate removing the breast buds from infant females to reduce their risk of breast cancer.  I have no idea if this would work or it's been studied in any manner.  It doesn't matter, because my point was to reject the thinking that believes a potential benefit may be chased.  I suspect this would be offensive to most parents, as it almost always is when I raise it in debate.  Non-essential, healthy, functioning breasts are different from non-essential, healthy, functioning foreskins, somehow.  My guess is that Jake's approach to this would be his utilitarianism, which would assess whether removing breast buds has a potential benefit.  (Unless he has some objection I haven't determined.)  If it does in his evaluation, it is a valid choice for parents, even if only chosen by those few parents who don't find it offensive.  I reject that because the healthy girl may not want the intervention.<p>Next:<blockquote><blockquote><p>It is meaningful to compare female genital cutting to male genital cutting because, ethically, they involve the same issue. Unnecessary surgery on a non-consenting individual is wrong.</blockquote><p>If you take that last sentence as axiomatic, then you will probably see the two issues as similar (although, presumably, there's no reason to focus on genital surgery in particular). Those of us who adopt a different ethical principle - something like "harmful surgery on a non-consenting individual is wrong" see no problem with circumcision, and a problem with female genital cutting.</blockquote><p>(I realize that I'm about to object to an issue of semantics in his axiom, but I'm certain I've gotten the gist of any future clarification correct.)<p>All surgery is harmful, including <a href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/2009/08/matt_steinglass_is_mistaken_on_1.html">circumcision</a>.  It's meant to achieve some benefit greater than the harm.  Jake concludes that circumcision is, at worst, neutral.  But that is his subjective evaluation.  It is as irrelevant as my opinion that it is a net harm.  Proxy consent is not valid for prophylactic infant circumcision because circumcising healthy infants is objective harm pursuing subjective benefits.  Jake writes:<blockquote><p>... Evaluation of potential benefits should not be dismissed as mere opinion. The literature contains a relatively large amount of data, which can be summarised in the form of objectively quantifiable data.</blockquote><p>Potential benefits are based on objectively quantifiable data.  Determining the value of applying those objectively quantifiable data to the objectively healthy penis of an infant male is subjective, mere opinion.  Deriving an opinion is only valid for the male himself as applied to his body.<p>Finally:<blockquote><blockquote><p>There is an obvious double standard. Girls may not have their healthy genitals cut for any reason. Boys may have their healthy genitals cut for any reason. That's the valid comparison.</blockquote><p>That's not even correct. Try getting a surgeon to perform a glansectomy on a healthy boy. Or castrate him. Or perform any number of other surgeries on his genitals. He or she will refuse. Most such surgeries are a net harm (except when actually needed, in which case the benefits are considerably greater, thus making them a net benefit), and cannot therefore be ethically performed. Circumcision is unusual precisely because it is a surgery which is neutral or (depending who you ask) a net benefit. And that's why the reason for a specific circumcision doesn't really matter.</blockquote><p>I think it's obvious that my declarative statement about genital cutting implied "as it's commonly practiced in Western society," which would preclude intentional glansectomy, for example.  Moving on.<p>What Jake omits here is telling.  Circumcision is neutral or a net benefit, according to him.  He's ruled out that prophylactic infant circumcision can be a net harm, the glaring mistake in his analysis.<p>A male who suffers a serious complication from circumcision would unquestionably qualify as experiencing a net harm.  That risk is inherent in every circumcision.  But leaving that aside, a "normal" circumcision has results.  Evaluating those results, even if just on a cosmetic level, is a subjective process.  There is no correct, objective way to evaluate a change, which is what circumcision is.  All tastes and preferences are subjective to the individual.  Even a preference regarding the potential health benefits of circumcision.  The possibility of "No, thank you" is why infant circumcision is unethical.<p>¹ <small>I am no less opposed to ritual infant circumcision.  Discussing it in depth here would be a distraction.  For a primer on my opinion, see <a href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/2006/02/selfownership_begins_at_birth.html">here</a>.</small></p>]]>
        
    </content>
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<entry>
    <title>&quot;Doesn&apos;t everyone believe that it is evil to be selfish?&quot;</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/2009/10/doesnt_everyone_believe_that_i_1.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=2/entry_id=2028" title="&quot;Doesn't everyone believe that it is evil to be selfish?&quot;" />
    <id>tag:www.rollingdoughnut.com,2009://2.2028</id>
    
    <published>2009-10-31T17:47:32Z</published>
    <updated>2009-11-01T18:48:10Z</updated>
    
    <summary>Spoiler Alert: This entry includes a discussion of plot points from &quot;The Fountainhead&quot; and &quot;Atlas Shrugged.&quot;In the New York Times Adam Kirsch reviewed Anne Heller&apos;s new Ayn Rand biography, “Ayn Rand and the World She Made.” I have nothing to...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Tony</name>
        
    </author>
            <category term="Books" />
            <category term="Capitalism" />
            <category term="Libertarian" />
            <category term="Propaganda" />
            <category term="Stupidity" />
    
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        <![CDATA[<p><i>Spoiler Alert: This entry includes a discussion of plot points from "<a href="http://search.barnesandnoble.com/The-Fountainhead/Ayn-Rand/e/9780452286375/?itm=5&USRI=fountainhead">The Fountainhead</a>" and "<a href="http://www.amazon.com/Atlas-Shrugged-Ayn-Rand/dp/0452011876/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1257006225&sr=8-1">Atlas Shrugged</a>."</i><p>In the <i>New York Times</i> Adam Kirsch <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/01/books/review/Kirsch-t.html" title="&#147Capitalist With a $&#148">reviewed</a> Anne Heller's new Ayn Rand biography, “<a href="http://www.amazon.com/Ayn-Rand-World-She-Made/dp/0385513992/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1257002559&sr=8-1">Ayn Rand and the World She Made</a>.”  I have nothing to say regarding Heller's book specifically because I haven't read it yet.  Here I wish to focus on Kirsch's grasp on Ayn Rand's two major novels.  There is nothing to definitively suggest he hasn't read them, although I suspect he hasn't.  There is plenty to prove that he hasn't understood them if he has read them.<p>He reveals his ignorance in the first seven words of his review:<blockquote><p>A specter is haunting the Republican Party — ...</blockquote><p>The implications of <i>Atlas Shrugged</i> and <i>The Fountainhead</i> are as relevant against the Republican Party as they are against the Democratic Party.  Neither cares about anything beyond handing out favors to its preferred group of insiders in exchange for continued power.  The individual is a tool to be manipulated for the party's needs.  Kirsch's references to Whitaker Chambers and Wendell Willkie should've been enough for him to at least explore the validity of his thesis.  Instead he cited the rantings of outrage-huckster straw man Glenn Beck, who is not a libertarian.<p>(Note: The term <i>libertarian</i> is the easiest way to represent liberty here.  But Rand was an Objectivist, which is similar but not synonymous.  See <a href="http://www.aynrand.org/site/PageServer?pagename=education_campus_libertarians">here</a>, for example.)<p>Next, Kirsch attempts to summarize Rand (emphasis added):<blockquote><p>And while it’s not hard to understand <i>Rand’s revenge-fantasy appeal</i> to those on the right, would-be Galts ought to hear the story Anne C. Heller has to tell in her dramatic and very timely biography, “Ayn Rand and the World She Made.”</blockquote><p>"Going Galt" is likely a revenge fantasy to those claiming they will now "Go Galt" as a result of some offense by the Obama administration, but that doesn't guarantee it reflects the meaning of what they've co-opted.  First, Rand would've been no less an opponent of George W. Bush's administration than she would've been of Obama's.  Or likely any other presidential administration since the publication of <i>Atlas Shrugged</i> because of the ever-growing control of the modern presidency (and legislature) over the choices of individuals.<p>More importantly, "Going Galt" is about withdrawing from a society that seeks only to act as a leech.  Some of the <a href="http://amberandchaos.com/?page_id=106">words</a> Rand gave to Galt:<blockquote><p>There is a difference between our strike and all those you’ve practiced for centuries: our strike consists, not of making demands, but of granting them. We are evil, according to your morality. We have chosen not to harm you any longer. We are useless, according to your economics. We have chosen not to exploit you any longer. We are dangerous and to be shackled, according to your politics. We have chosen not to endanger you, nor to wear the shackles any longer. We are only an illusion, according to your philosophy. We have chosen not to blind you any longer and have left you free to face reality-the reality you wanted, the world as you see it now, a world without mind.<p>We have granted you everything you demanded of us, we who had always been the givers, but have only now understood it. We have no demands to present to you, no terms to bargain about, no compromise to reach. You have nothing to offer us. We do not need you.</blockquote><p>Galt's speech is "goodbye," not "let's negotiate a compromise."  But it's only a goodbye to the world of moochers and looters, not from producing or living as he wishes.  Galt's Gulch was a society where men and women produced.  This year's "Going Galt" meme was about going idle.  It is a reaction to the ongoing problem identified by Rand, but it is not her solution.<blockquote><p>For one thing, it is far more interesting than anything in Rand’s novels. ... The characters Rand created, on the other hand — like Galt or Howard Roark, the architect hero of “The Fountainhead” — are abstract principles set to moving and talking.<p>This is at once the failure and the making of Rand’s fiction. The plotting and characterization in her books may be vulgar and unbelievable, just as one would expect from the middling Holly­wood screenwriter she once was; but her message, while not necessarily more sophisticated, is magnified by the power of its absolute sincerity. ...</blockquote><p>Rand was a Romantic, which is why her characters "are abstract principles set to moving and talking."  I've heard it said (I forget by whom) that Rand was a 19th century writer in the 20th century.  That's an accurate description, but as a criticism from Kirsch, it's purely subjective.  The proper approach to criticism is to judge whether or not the literature works at what the writer attempted rather than whether or not the reviewer approves of the writer's intent and/or method.  Her ideas, which are what Kirsch attacks¹ in his essay, are not false simply because he perceives her characters as abstract principles.<p>Personally, I enjoyed Rand's approach to both novels as literature.  I found her characters and situations compelling and effective in achieving what she sought to present.  However, she could not write sex scenes.  The sexual relationships in both <i>The Fountainhead</i> and <i>Atlas Shrugged</i> suggest that she had a bizarre concept of sexual intimacy.  Whatever she believed in her life, Roark's rape of Dominique in <i>The Fountainhead</i> is an inexcusable error in her presentation of Howard Roark as an idealized man.  She was not a perfect novelist never to be questioned.<p>Kirsch reveals his misunderstanding (or ignorance) of Rand's novels in this paragraph:<blockquote><p>Rand’s particular intellectual contribution, the thing that makes her so popular and so American, is the way she managed to mass market elitism — to convince so many people, especially young people, that they could be geniuses without being in any concrete way distinguished. Or, rather, that they could distinguish themselves by the ardor of their commitment to Rand’s teaching. The very form of her novels makes the same point: they are as cartoonish and sexed-up as any best seller, yet they are constantly suggesting that the reader who appreciates them is one of the elect.</blockquote><p>In <i>Atlas Shrugged</i> there is a difference between John Galt and James Taggart, but there is also a difference between John Galt and Eddie Willers.  Rand presented the idea that talent is real and identifiable, but also that, while everyone isn't moral, anyone can be.  Eddie Willers wasn't invited to "Go Galt" because he wasn't a creator, but he wasn't despised because the heroes of <i>Atlas Shrugged</i> knew him to be moral who recognized the difference between producing and looting.  Patronizing to the untalented moral man?  Probably.  Evidence that Rand believed everyone could be an elite?  No.<p>Kirsch next engages in the type of cartoonish characterization he attributes to Rand's novels.  When discussing Rand's process for writing and publishing Galt's speech, he states (emphasis added):<blockquote><p>... Rand labored for more than two years on Galt’s radio address near the end of “Atlas Shrugged” — a long paean to capitalism, individualism and selfishness that makes Gordon Gekko’s “Greed is good” sound like the Sermon on the Mount. ... [Random House's Bennett] Cerf offered Rand an alternative: if she gave up 7 cents per copy in royalties, she could have the extra paper needed to print Galt’s oration. <i>That she agreed is a sign of the great contradiction that haunts her writing and especially her life.</i> Politically, Rand was committed to the idea that capitalism is the best form of social organization invented or conceivable. This was, perhaps, an understandable reaction against her childhood experience of Communism. ...<p>Yet while Rand took to wearing a dollar-sign pin to advertise her love of capitalism, Heller makes clear that the author had no real affection for dollars themselves. <i>Giving up her royalties to preserve her vision is something that no genuine capitalist, and few popular novelists, would have done.</i> It is the act of an intellectual, of someone who believes that ideas matter more than lucre. In fact, as Heller shows, Rand had no more reverence for the actual businessmen she met than most intellectuals do. The problem was that, according to her own theories, the executives were supposed to be as creative and admirable as any artist or thinker. They were part of the fraternity of the gifted, whose strike, in “Atlas Shrugged,” brings the world to its knees.</blockquote><p><i>Wall Street</i> is a fine film, but it's full of hogwash as an attempted refutation of capitalism.  The movie is Oliver Stone's half-understanding of "greed", which is similar to the very common misunderstanding of Ayn Rand's vision of "selfishness."  Advocates of capitalism don't push it as the best form of social organization in order to create an enclave of Gordon Gekkos.  It is the best form of social organization because it is based on voluntary exchange. Decentralized decision-making is better at discovering and meeting individual needs and desires.  It is based on the realization that elites can't possibly know what's best for everyone <i>or</i> anyone.<p>A key facet of economics is that all tastes and preferences are subjective.  Rand's willingness to concede 7 cents per copy to keep Galt's speech unaltered indicates only that she valued the presentation of her unedited work more than 7 cents per copy.  It was a voluntary exchange, mutually beneficial to her and Random House.  Suggesting that this is a contradiction of her philosophy, that no "genuine capitalist" would ever give up money, is a pejorative little different than suggesting that "no genuine Jew" would choose principle over pennies.  Kirsch's statement is a smear of lesser magnitude because his stereotype is more acceptable politically, but it is still a smear.<p>Rand presented her view of money in <i>Atlas Shrugged</i>, as spoken by Francisco d'Anconia in his <a href="http://www.capmag.com/article.asp?ID=1826">speech on money</a>.  An excerpt relevant to Kirsch's cartoonish mischaracterization of capitalists:<blockquote><p>"So you think that money is the root of all evil?" said Francisco d'Anconia. "Have you ever asked what is the root of money? Money is a tool of exchange, which can't exist unless there are goods produced and men able to produce them. Money is the material shape of the principle that men who wish to deal with one another must deal by trade and give value for value. Money is not the tool of the moochers, who claim your product by tears, or of the looters, who take it from you by force. Money is made possible only by the men who produce. Is this what you consider evil?</blockquote><p>The notion that Rand's only action consistent with her philosophy would be to hoard "lucre" reveals Kirsch's ignorance of Rand.  His disagreement with her does not disqualify him from critiquing her.  Not understanding her novels or her philosophy does.<p><b>11/1 Update</b>: The more I think about Adam Kirsch's book review of <s>Ayn Rand's <i>The Fountainhead</i> and <i>Atlas Shrugged</i></s> Anne Heller's <i>Ayn Rand and the World She Made</i>, the more I realize it was worse than I depicted.  Rand explained what she thought of Kirsch's idea of the "genuine capitalist" in <i>The Fountainhead</i>.  His name was Gail Wynand, the news tycoon who published ideas he believed to be false in order to collect "lucre" from customers.  Nothing was beyond Wynand's preference for pennies over principle, as evidenced by his publishing Ellsworth Toohey's words.  In the novel's conclusion, Wynand did not get what he wanted because he did not deserve it.  He'd sacrificed himself for something smaller.<p>¹ <small>Remember, though, that his essay is ostensibly a book review of a Rand biography.</small></p>]]>
        
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<entry>
    <title>Science Requires Ethics, Revisited</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/2009/10/science_requires_ethics_revisi.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=2/entry_id=2027" title="Science Requires Ethics, Revisited" />
    <id>tag:www.rollingdoughnut.com,2009://2.2027</id>
    
    <published>2009-10-26T00:50:34Z</published>
    <updated>2009-10-26T00:51:51Z</updated>
    
    <summary>Jake Waskett responded to my critique of his entry about Intact America&apos;s letter. I find it lacking.... It&apos;s a shame that he mischaracterises me as a &quot;pro-circumcision advocate&quot;, though (I&apos;m pro-parental choice, not pro-circumcision).I do not accept that I&apos;ve mischaracterized...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>Tony</name>
        
    </author>
            <category term="Circumcision" />
            <category term="Ethics" />
    
    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/">
        <![CDATA[<p>Jake Waskett <a href="http://circumcisionnews.blogspot.com/2009/10/analysing-analysis-of-analysis-of.html" title="&#147Analysing the analysis of analysis of...&#148">responded</a> to my <a href="http://www.rollingdoughnut.com/2009/10/science_requires_ethics.html">critique</a> of his entry about Intact America's letter.  I find it lacking.<blockquote><p>... It's a shame that he mischaracterises me as a "pro-circumcision advocate", though (I'm pro-parental choice, not pro-circumcision).</blockquote><p>I do not accept that I've mischaracterized his position as a pro-circumcision advocate.  However, I'll clarify to be as specific as possible.  He believes the potential benefits of infant male circumcision outweigh the risks and negatives, a subjective conclusion based on his preferences.  Given that he uses his conclusion to encourage parents to circumcise their sons, the difference he states is immaterial.<p>Next:<blockquote><blockquote><p>... has attempted a deconstruction of the letter, labeling it "propaganda".</blockquote><p>"Labelling" seems a curious choice of word, implying that the choice of term is dubious. Propaganda is defined as "The systematic propagation of a doctrine or cause or of information reflecting the views and interests of those advocating such a doctrine or cause." Thus, it seems a perfectly appropriate choice of term for an advertisement created by an anti-circumcision organisation for the explicit purpose of promoting their cause to the AAP.</blockquote><p>This is a matter of semantics versus intention. Definitionally, <i>propaganda</i> is an acceptable choice.  It is also impossible to ignore the cultural implication of the use of the word.  We do not think <i>marketing</i> when we hear it.  Rather, we hear <i>lies</i>.  That was the intent I perceived, which informed my response.<p>Still, it's a minor point in the realm of this topic.  Obsessing on it would be a diversion, so I retract the point.<p>Next, when I wrote that I agreed with the opening paragraph of Intact America's letter, I stated that I'm not a fan of appeals to authority.  Specifically:<blockquote><p>As should be evident with the apparent intention of the CDC to recommend infant circumcision, it only takes one ill-conceived recommendation to distract from the core issue.</blockquote><p>Jake writes that this is "utterly incomprehensible."  I'm not sure how, so I'm not sure how to clarify.  If an authority cited directly (e.g. AAP) or indirectly (e.g. CDC) changes its position in a way that then conflicts with the original appeal, the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Appeal_to_authority">appeal to authority</a> may weaken the case for the target audience.  It's an ineffective strategy.<blockquote><blockquote><p>Despite my misgivings, Intact America structures the argument correctly because it identifies that core: ethics demand not imposing medically unnecessary surgery on normal, healthy children, regardless of gender or potential benefits.</blockquote><p>Tony is, of course, free to subscribe to whatever system of ethics he so chooses. However, to my mind he is setting an extraordinary requirement: that an intervention should not merely be medically beneficial, but must actually be necessary. If applied consistently, such a standard would mean, for example, that vaccinations are unacceptable, since they are rarely necessary.</blockquote><p>His assessment is close, but too neat for this complicated comparison.  That is the requirement I set for proxy consent to surgery.  The scenario for vaccinations differs.  As I wrote before, the difference rests on how the problems the interventions are meant to prevent occur. Becoming infected with measles requires no effort other than participation in society, while acquiring HIV from an HIV+ female through vaginal intercourse requires a very specific action, an action not undertaken by infants.  Later in his reply, he writes about this:<blockquote><p>This is a nonsensical argument: it is absurd to analyse the issue as though children never grow up. Peter Pan is fiction. Children grow up to become adults, and yes, that includes having sex.</blockquote><p>Of course, to which I reply as a start: condoms.  Condoms are among the many possibilities short of circumcision <i>as an infant</i> available to adult males, including circumcision as an adult, to reduce the risk of HIV transmission.<p>Ultimately the comparison to vaccines must rest on diseases like HIV rather than the other potential benefits used to justify circumcision.  They roughly share some of the same characteristics.  The comparison fails because, as I wrote, the way in which the diseases spread differ.  For most vaccines, it is the most effective and least invasive way to stop the spread of the targeted disease.  With comparable diseases, circumcision is neither the most effective or the least invasive method available.<blockquote><blockquote><p>The risk of female-to-male HIV transmission through vaginal intercourse is a significant problem in Africa. In America HIV transmission risk through sex overwhelmingly involves male-to-male transmission, from which the (voluntary) circumcision of (adult) males has shown no statistically significant reduction.</blockquote><p>Tony's words are somewhat misleading here. There haven't been any controlled trials of voluntary circumcision in MSM yet. The American studies to date have mostly compared previously (and probably neonatally) circumcised men with uncircumcised men. Some studies have shown a statistically significant reduction, but others have not.</blockquote><p>Fair enough on precision. However, an implicit point in my argument here stands unaltered.  Assuming voluntary adult circumcision is shown to reduce the risk of all forms of HIV transmission through sex, parents can't know that their sons will be irresponsible and "need" this intervention.  It's a speculation that does not need to be made for a child.  He can choose it later.<p>Responding to my declaration that surgical risks be weighed against objective (lack of) need rather than potential benefits, Jake replies:<blockquote><p>As Tony correctly observes, the situation we're discussing is not one in which there is an immediately pressing need for therapeutic intervention, hence the "most effective and least invasive" criteria for choosing that intervention do not apply. Instead, the situation involves a healthy child, much as with vaccinations. And as with vaccinations, we weigh the risks (adverse reaction) against the future benefits (reduction of risk of disease). Tony is of course free to apply his own ethical standard, but he should not be surprised that others choose not to follow him.</blockquote><p>There is no need, so "most effective/least invasive" doesn't apply?  Jake is begging the question he wants to answer rather than addressing objective facts.  He's saying that the standard for surgical intervention on a child should be <i>stricter when the child is sick</i> than when he is healthy.  Parents can be more speculative and exploratory with surgery for their healthy (male) children?  That's ridiculous.  Without objective need for an intervention, proxy consent for surgery can't be valid.  With objective need, it can be valid because the child needs some form of decision made and he is incompetent to make that decision.<blockquote><blockquote><p>Setting the ability to chase potential benefits as the ethical standard opens the range of allegedly valid parental interventions to include any number of surgeries we recognize as offensive. The science becomes ungrounded by any concern for the individual child as an individual.</blockquote><p>Unfortunately, Tony hasn't identified any of these "surgeries we recognize as offensive" that are valid when benefits and risks are properly weighed. I would be interested to learn of any that he - or anyone else - can think of.</blockquote><p>I am not citing any particular science or surgeries because that was not my point.  I am attacking a way of thinking, particularly about the ethics of circumcising healthy children, but it applies more generally.  Jake is a utilitarian. I am not, precisely because of the way it permits his mixing of subjective criteria into a universal recommendation.  I recognize that each person is an individual with different preferences and desires.  Prophylactic (and ritual) circumcision violates that child's rights.<p>But to his retort, if a study were to find potential health benefits for genital cutting in a study of adult female volunteers, would that be acceptable to apply to healthy female minors?  I've had this discussion with Jake <a href="http://forum.richarddawkins.net/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=84928&start=425#p2156215">previously</a>, so I know he'd have no problem with it if parents subjectively valued the benefits more than the risks.  He is wrong.  Society would be (correctly) outraged at the suggestion of violating the child's rights in favor of her parents' "rights".  Our anti-FGM laws would not be overturned.  Those results would never be applied, regardless of the science.<blockquote><blockquote><p>Add to this the fact that parents treat the same maladies circumcision is supposed to prevent with less invasive, non-surgical methods when they affect their daughters, and Jake's argument misses the ethical case against infant circumcision because he's making the case for circumcision devoid of context and ethics. That's a case that works only if it's a voluntary decision by the adult male himself.<br />
</blockquote><p>This paragraph makes no sense.</blockquote><p>That paragraph is clear.  We apply different standards to boys and girls.  A female minor's risk of UTI is higher than that of a male minor's, yet we do not vigorously seek proof that genital cutting is the answer, nor, as I said above, would we apply it to infant girl if we could find such results.  Now replace UTI with cancer.  Ethically, we'd have the same approach to girls.  Their genitals would be off-limits.<blockquote><blockquote><p>[<i>Quotation of my words omitted</i>]</blockquote><p>If Tony had been paying attention, he would have noticed that I actually identified the three reasons why IA claimed that circumcision was unethical, and addressed each in turn.</blockquote><p>As I've explained, Jake's version of ethics is flawed because he values only his own opinion as a viable conclusion on the subjective topic.  Proxy consent requires objectivity first.  A passive-aggressive insult directed at my reading comprehension does not prove that I was wrong.<blockquote><p>As a reminder, here is what IA claim: "Doctors have a responsibility to tell parents the truth: circumcision does not prevent disease. Most European nations, with circumcision rates near zero, have lower HIV/AIDS rates than the United States."<p>As I read that, the second sentence seems to be presented as evidence for the first. If that is so, IA appear to be saying that the most definitive evidence can be found in between-country comparisons.</blockquote><p>I read it a differently, based on the context of how the letter is organized.  I will not defend the statement Jake objects to because I believe Intact America's statement is poorly written.  I read it as saying a) studies have found that (voluntary, adult) circumcision has been shown to reduce the risk of (female-to-male) HIV transmission and b) other similar countries that do not circumcise have lower HIV rates, therefore c) infant circumcision is not the answer.  I made that point in my response.  Doing so in the way that he did, it's clear we're using different interpretations.  I do not think Jake is wrong to call out Intact America's wording.<blockquote><blockquote><p>The risk factors among America's population are similar to those of European nations, not African nations. Our risk is male-to-male transmission and shared needles during IV drug use.</blockquote><p>If Tony is confident in his assertions, perhaps he will volunteer to have heterosexual intercourse with an HIV+ woman. Probably not, I suspect, because of course that's a risk anywhere. The main difference, of course, is that the probability of exposure changes dramatically. Put bluntly, if you sleep with a person then your risk of acquiring HIV depends on the probability that they are HIV+.</blockquote><p>Jake establishes a straw man here.  I made a statement of fact about HIV transmission in the United States.  His rebuttal is that I should be willing to have sex with an HIV+ woman because I state that voluntary, adult circumcision applied to infant males is not what we need.  Presumably he means without a condom.  Where have I said that unsafe sex - of any kind, with or without a foreskin - is wise?  Jake's scenario is a stupid diversion.<blockquote><blockquote><p>The complications of circumcision affect individuals. Those individual have rights. We recognize this for female minors, legislating against parental proxy consent for medically unnecessary genital surgery on daughters for any reason. The ethical argument against infant male circumcision involves the equal rights concept that the same protection should be applied to males. Waskett hasn't yet made a coherent case for denying these rights to male minors.</blockquote><p>It is not meaningful to compare female genital cutting to circumcision. Female genital cutting is a net harm, with no known medical benefits, immediate risks, and a considerable chance of permanent harm. Society passes laws to protect the vulnerable from harm, and so it makes sense to protect children from female genital cutting. But - applying the same principle - it doesn't make sense to legislate against circumcision, because there is no net harm. Most reasonable people, weighing the risks and benefits, come to the conclusion that it is neutral or beneficial.</blockquote><p>It is meaningful to compare female genital cutting to male genital cutting because, ethically, they involve the same issue.  Unnecessary surgery on a non-consenting individual is wrong.  America's <a href="http://frwebgate.access.gpo.gov/cgi-bin/getdoc.cgi?dbname=104_cong_bills&docid=f:s1030is.txt.pdf">anti-FGM law</a> makes no exemption for potential benefits or parental opinion.  The former is, as Jake points out, not shown by studies.  The latter is all that informs infant male circumcision, since an evaluation of potential benefits is opinion absent any objective indication for the child's healthy genitals.  There is an obvious double standard.  Girls may not have their healthy genitals cut for any reason. Boys may have their healthy genitals cut for any reason.  That's the valid comparison.<p>To Jake's claim of "no net harm" from male circumcision, I'll repeat that it is a subjective evaluation.  It is his opinion.  I weigh the objective harms - scar, lost nerves, excised frenulum, asymmetrical suturing, altered functionality - from my "normal" circumcision differently than he weighs them from his (self-chosen) circumcision, but he is not me.  As he was correct in deciding on circumcision for himself, I am correct in evaluating it differently for my body.  Not Jake, not my parents, not "most reasonable people", not whoever else he wishes to cite who approves of circumcision.  That gets lost in his utilitarian disregard for ethics on a topic without a valid objective conclusion for his position.</p>]]>
        
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