Saturday, January 1, 2011

Question Of The Week: "The Velveteen Rabbit"

by Conor Friedersdorf

A reader writes:

I wanted to be deep. I thought I could search my brain, find something obtuse but well recognized. I wanted to be impressive. I wanted my comment posted, and for people to exclaim "ooh, good one." I read a lot. I know my music and my movies.

But when I think about what really guides my life, it isn't my politics, it isn't my worldliness, it isn't my education. It is the knowledge that life is kind of shitty, and then we'll all die. How long have I known this? Forever, it seems. At least before Camus or Tolstoy or Marquez reminded me as an adult. When I was a child, my mom would take me to The Hug Chair when life disappointed me and read The Velveteen Rabbit. I recognize now that it is not the most uplifting book. But it was a gift to acknowledge life's cruelties, and to learn that the only thing that would get us through it all is blind love.

Child Authoress

by Zoë Pollock

In a fine longread, Paul Collins profiles the sad case of one of the first child celebrities, author and prodigy Barbara Follett, who went missing at age 26:

Extraordinary young talents are all the more dependent on the most ordinary sustenance. But instead of a home and a college education, what Barbara Follett got was author copies and yellowing newspaper clippings. This girl—who should have been America’s next great literary woman—was abandoned by the two men she trusted, and her fame forgotten by a public that she never trusted in the first place. Her writings, out of print for many decades, only exist today in six archival boxes at Columbia University’s library. Taken together, they are the saddest reading in all of American literature.

Odd Atlantic archives connection: Follet's father who abandoned her to marry another woman "wrote a peculiar anonymous essay for The Atlantic—“To a Daughter, One Year Lost,” in May 1941—which expressed muted guilt and amazement: 'Could Helen Hayes be lost for ten days without a trace? Could Thomas Mann? Could Churchill? And now it is getting on toward forty times ten days…' "

The View From Your Window Contest

Vfyw-contest-1-1

You have until noon on Tuesday to guess it. City and/or state first, then country. Please put the location in the subject heading, along with any description within the email. If no one guesses the exact location, proximity counts.  Be sure to email entries to VFYWcontest@theatlantic.com. Winner gets a free The View From Your Window book, courtesy of Blurb. Have at it.

Tune In, Opt Out

by Zoë Pollock

Alan Jacobs insists opting out of social networks is still a viable option for some:

We tell ourselves, by way of self-justification, that we need Twitter, need our RSS feeds, need Facebook. But no, we don't. We just like them very much. And as far as I’m concerned that’s good enough. It’s just necessary always to remember that we’re making choices and could, if we wished, make different ones about how we’re informed and what we’re informed about.

In this light it’s good to be reminded of a passage from John Ruskin’s Modern Painters that I recently quoted on my tumblelog:

To watch the corn grow, and the blossoms set; to draw hard breath over ploughshare or spade; to read, to think, to love, to hope, to pray — these are the things that make men happy; they have always had the power of doing these, they never will have the power to do more. The world’s prosperity or adversity depends upon our knowing and teaching these few things: but upon iron, or glass, or electricity, or steam, in no wise.

The 2010 Daily Dish Awards: The Winners!

Hewitt-2010

by Patrick Appel

Malkin Award: With over a 1,700 votes, Roger Ailes of Fox News takes the prize for this comment: 

"[NPR executives] are, of course, Nazis. They have a kind of Nazi attitude. They are the left wing of Nazism. These guys don’t want any other point of view. They don’t even feel guilty using tax dollars to spout their propaganda"

Mental Health Break Of The Year: Goes to Radiolab and NPR for their breath-taking visual poem:

Yglesias Award: With around a thousand votes, Joe Scarborough wins highest honors for calling out Newt Gingrich: 

"The same politician who once saw himself as a latter-day Winston Churchill — sent by God to save Western civilization — now gets rich off political hate speech. These days, Newt Gingrich’s modus operandi is to smear any public figure who fails to share his worldview. His insults are so overblown and outrageous that after the rhetorical dust settles, the reputation most damaged is his own. The former speaker seems oblivious to that fact. Or maybe he knows that in a political landscape driven by talk shows, their childish insults resonate in Washington as nowhere else. In a recent New York Magazine cover story called 'Cable Ugly', Gabriel Sherman noted that among most prime-time cable hosts, 'schoolyard rules rule."

Face Of The Year

Fredrika 

Frederika, Sacha Goldberger's super-hero grandmother, won with around a quarter of the vote. An explanation of the project:

A few years ago, French photographer Sacha Goldberger found his 91-year-old Hungarian grandmother Frederika feeling lonely and depressed. To cheer her up, he suggested that they shoot a series of outrageous photographs in unusual costumes, poses, and locations. Grandma reluctantly agreed, but once they got rolling, she couldn't stop smiling.

Moore Award: After asking his readers to vote for him, TBogg of Firedoglake managed more than 1,600 votes for a come-from-behind victory. The winning quote:

"[A] traumatized America that, up until [9/11], thought it was “all that” was easily manipulated into being the blunt instrument of war that Bill Kristol and his chickenhawk buddies at PNAC had their hearts set on since the late 90’s. To them, the attack on 9/11 was the greatest fucking day of their lives because it gave them the causus belli fantasy that they had been masturbating to for years... [Kristol should] just fuck off and die, you evil piece of shit."

Chart Of The Year

CanadiansUSHealthcare

With more than a quarter of the vote, Aaron Carroll's chart showing just how few Canadians use the US health care system exploded a talking point and took the prize. His original comment on the winning pie chart:

I’m not denying that some people with means might come to the United States for care.  If I needed a heart/lung transplant, there’s no place I’d rather be.  But for the vast, vast majority of people, that’s not happening.  You shouldn’t use the anecdote to describe things at a population level.  This study showed you three different methodologies, all with solid rationales behind them, all showing that this meme is mostly apocryphal.

Hewitt Award: Dinesh D'Souza won handedly – earning almost half the vote for his nutty Forbes article on Obama. The quote we selected:

"Obama supports the Ground Zero mosque because to him 9/11 is the event that unleashed the American bogey and pushed us into Iraq and Afghanistan. He views some of the Muslims who are fighting against America abroad as resisters of U.S. imperialism. Certainly that is the way the Lockerbie bomber Abdel Baset al-Megrahi portrayed himself at his trial. Obama's perception of him as an anticolonial resister would explain why he gave tacit approval for this murderer of hundreds of Americans to be released from captivity.

... Incredibly, the U.S. is being ruled according to the dreams of a Luo tribesman of the 1950s. This philandering, inebriated African socialist, who raged against the world for denying him the realization of his anticolonial ambitions, is now setting the nation's agenda through the reincarnation of his dreams in his son." 

Shut Up And Sing: Paul McCartney and Stevie Wonder share the award for the "the smuggest, most pretentious pop song in history":

Von Hoffmann Award: With nearly 40 percent of the vote, Clifford Stoll won easily. He was nominated for this very, very wrong prediction from 1995:

"Visionaries see a future of telecommuting workers, interactive libraries and multimedia classrooms. They speak of electronic town meetings and virtual communities. Commerce and business will shift from offices and malls to networks and modems. And the freedom of digital networks will make government more democratic. Baloney. Do our computer pundits lack all common sense? The truth in no online database will replace your daily newspaper, no CD-ROM can take the place of a competent teacher and no computer network will change the way government works."

Hathos Alert: And last, and perhaps least, it should come as no surprise that Bristol Palin and The Situation's teen sex discussion was voted the Hathos Alert of the year: 

While We Were Sleeping

by Zoë Pollock

Sunny Biswas takes stock of the year, from a neurobiological perspective:

It turns out that in a couple of parts of the brain, neural stem cells are constantly giving birth to new neurons that travel around and plug into already existing networks. Sometimes they're replacing dying neurons and sometimes they're just helping a part of the brain grow. (A lot of neurons don't get replaced at all, though, so we're about half a ship of Theseus). There's a body of recent literature that suggests that this is how adults form new memories. Some of it also says that depressed people are worse at doing this—important chunks of our brains stay locked into these self-destructive patterns, while healthy people have brains that are malleable enough to change. ...

I read about neural stem cells and think about how different I am from even a few years ago, and I get the weird feeling that I was right when I was little, that I'm the most recent in a long line of not very good impersonators of myself. Science (science!) confirms that parts of me are here now that weren't there even a little while ago (and that parts of me that were there before are gone forever). In other words: one night someone else went to sleep and woke up as me.

The View From Your Window

Teaneck-NJ-1249pm

Teaneck, New Jersey, 12.49 pm

Medicinal Mushrooms, Ctd

by Chris Bodenner

A reader writes:

Look, I know psilocybin is probably not going to hurt in small doses, but this logic is really really terrible. Natural does not mean good. Natural does not mean safe. Natural does not mean that it's going to fix you. And it's really dangerous to believe any of those things.

Another:

When I saw the reader's description of their use of psilocybin to treat a demyelinating condition, I immediately googled it and came up with only papers about mushroom use leading to demyelinating episodes.  Here's a link (PDF) to a scary one, where the demyelination occurred in the brain and not peripheral nerves. I just thought I'd pass this along in case people who have a similar condition might see that and think, "Ooh, I ought to try that!"

Two-Faced Resolutions

by Zoë Pollock

Apparently the tradition of New Year's resolutions goes all the way back to Babylonian times:

It’s said that Julius Caesar started the tradition of making resolutions on January 1st as a way to honor the Roman mythical god Janus, whose two faces allowed him to look back into the past year and forward to the new year. 

This Will Be Our Year

by Zoë Pollock

Jack Stuef would like you to call this year by its rightful name:

The illogical continuance of the thousands format is just another sign of the end of world civilization. The double-digits format is practical and streamlined, while the thousands format is whimsical and overfed with syllables. “Twenty eleven” is utilitarian; “two-thousand eleven” is a hedonistic ode to excess. ...

The double-digits format is change. It is progress. It is the future. Not the speculative future; the actual future. And when we hold on selfishly to things that no longer work, we begin to tear down the whole history of progress we built. It’s like the fall of Rome all over again, but with a lot more fat people.

Friday, December 31, 2010

Faces Of The Day

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Christina and Caesar Bargas join revellers as they gather on Princes Street ahead of the New Year celebrations on December 31, 2010 in Edinburgh, Scotland. It is expected that around 80,000 people will attend the festivities in Scotland's capital. By Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images.

A Commune For The End Times

by Zoë Pollock

In Brooklyn, Erica Sackin prepares for the coming apocalypse:

Think about it. Why else would we eschew “real” jobs for things like baking, bartending or making coffee, all of which are, I might add, entirely end-times-proof professions? (You think people won’t need coffee after the world ends? Or a drink? Trust me, when those four horsemen ride in you’ll be begging for some of our small-batch-hand-distilled whiskey. Begging.) Living without health insurance? That’s stupid! Unless… you need practice for when things like hospitals and co-payments disappear in a rain of hellfire from the gods. ...

Remember when you were all laughing at us for wearing skinny jeans, only to be reading about them in the pages of Vogue the following year? Remember when the same thing happened with leggings, bangs and listening to Arcade Fire? Well this is like that, only with more fire and damnation.

Question Of The Week: "Grace"

by Conor Friedersdorf

A reader writes:

Hands down, it would be "Grace," from the late Jeff Buckley.

Question Of The Week: "The Great Escape"

by Conor Friedersdorf

A reader writes:

Without a doubt, the movie that has most shaped my life is The Great Escape (1963).  I view it not as a simple recounting of a Second World War prison escape, but as a larger parable for difficult times in one's life.

Question Of The Week: "Atlas Shrugged"

by Conor Friedersdorf

A reader writes:

Although I don't agree with Objectivism as a philosophy, and I recognize the glaringly obvious flaws of Rand's political ideas, its influence on me was very personal. And the other people I know who absolutely swear by her work, for most of them it is also a personal debt, not a political or philosophical one (I've personally never met a self-described objectivist in my life).

A Poem For Friday

Nightcam_lg

"Aubade" by Terese Svoboda first appeared in The Atlantic Monthly in July, 1998:

Sinews here and there,
his legs twined at desk
and all of him bare,

mousing around, click,
so the child won't wake.
Sinews, his sex thick

but laptopped, glasses
found then lost then
a child flushes

and my hands on him
count only as clothes,
as information.

Sinews, I say, sotto voce,
and he smiles into
his screen. At me?

(Image of Nightcam by Jake Ziemann)

Keeping Your New Year's Resolutions

by Zoë Pollock

Yes, there's an app for that.

Reasoning Backward From Utopia

by Conor Friedersdorf

This seems right to me:

Too often, people think about politics by starting from the assumption that there will be post-political utopia in which everything is frozen into place, then reasoning backwards from how that utopia looks.

I'm less sure about this:

...constitutional thinking constitutes a form of pernicious dreaming about the post-political utopia. Like what if the constitution really did entrench conservative policy preferences? What would happen then? We’re imagining that the structure of mass and public opinion are the same, and so is the structure of interest group politics. But suddenly most of the stuff progressives want to do is unconstitutional. What happens next? Do progressives all go home and just give up? That doesn’t seem realistic. Do progressives stage a violent revolution, arguing that it makes no sense to let the dead hand of the 18th century block social justice in the 21st? That doesn’t seem desirable.

There is always a constitutional amendment. And besides, constitutional problems often constrain means more often than ends, and apply only to public policy. There are other methods of changing society and addressing problems, and in a free country, those levers are more likely substitutes for free-wheeling wonkyness than violent revolution.

 

Cool Ad Watch

by Patrick Appel

(Hat tip: TDW)

What If The Military Were Filled With Notre Dame Grads?

by Conor Friedersdorf

In an op-ed on ROTC and college campuses, Colman McCarthy recalls a conversation he once had with a long time Notre Dame president:

When I suggested that Notre Dame's hosting of ROTC was a large negative among the school's many positives, Hesburgh disagreed. Notre Dame was a model of patriotism, he said, by training future officers who were churchgoers, who had taken courses in ethics, and who loved God and country. Notre Dame's ROTC program was a way to "Christianize the military," he stated firmly.

I asked if he actually believed there could be a Christian method of slaughtering people in combat, or a Christian way of firebombing cities, or a way to kill civilians in the name of Jesus. Did he think that if enough Notre Dame graduates became soldiers that the military would eventually embrace Christ's teaching of loving one's enemies?

The interview quickly slid downhill.

It's a thorny question, isn't it? I have a very high opinion of the ethics curriculum at Notre Dame, so as an American, I'd celebrate if the military ranks were filled with more recruits who'd gone through it. But if I were an orthodox Catholic professor, I'd probably conclude that the War on Terror runs afoul of Catholic just war theory in various ways, and instruct my students that if they enlist in the military, they may be ethically obligated to disobey direct orders and incur serious punishment. McCarthy goes on:

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"Non-Verbal Leakage”

by Patrick Appel

Randall Shinn contemplates body language:

Medical History Becomes History

by Zoë Pollock

Danielle Ofri sounds the alarm about some possible constraints of electronic medical records:

It turns out that in our electronic medical record system there is a 1,000-character maximum in the “assessment” field. While I’ve been typing, the character number has been counting backward from 1,000, and now I’ve hit zero. The computer will not permit me to say anything more about my patient. ...

I nip and tuck my descriptions of his diabetes, his hypertension, his aortic valve stenosis, trying to placate the demands of our nit-picky computer system. Nevertheless, I am still unable to fit a complete assessment into the box.

In desperation, I call the help desk and voice my concerns. “Well, we can’t have the doctors rambling on forever,” the tech replies.

Mental Health Break

by Chris Bodenner

The history of video games set to a familiar theme:

Medicinal Mushrooms

by Chris Bodenner

A reader writes:

I take small (no more than a pinch or two) quantities of psilocybin every day. Not to get high, not to unwind, but to try to heal my body. For 5+ years I've had an autoimmune problem that's demyelinating my peripheral nerves - it's called neuropathy. I do take a monthly treatment of gamma globulin to try to stabilize it, but the prognosis is for a long slow decline. Since "western medicine" doesn't really have a clue and basically has the equivalent of sledgehammers to treat this thing, I've tried a host of non-Western modalities, including acupuncture and Chinese herbs, homeopathy, bio-energy balancing and strict diet. Not entirely no dice, but my condition is still declining. I suppose my fail-safe maneuver is to visit Lourdes or John of God in Brazil.

Anyway, fortunately I've also got contacts in the spiritual community of "medicine", who have given me the idea of using what folks in Mexico call "the little healers". I have a scientist friend who used it in small quantities daily to recover from bad asthma. It is reputed to help with the immune system (as well as anxiety and depression).

I am as yet too scared to undertake a full trip, which evidently can be like 6 months or a year's worth of therapy in a few hours, but someday I will work up to it. I am befriending it right now, and I feel the mushrooms are helping my condition. You could call it merely a result of magic thinking, but what harm can it possibly cause? It's natural, and I am determined to use whatever I can to heal.

Take care, and please don't print my name.

Was DADT Better Than The Status Quo? Ctd

by Patrick Appel

A reader writes:

Worse. Undoubtably. Technically, that's always been the policy, so it didn't change much. But as a reader mentioned, before DADT the policy was more about conduct at least in the minds of the commanding officers, not the mere mention of the fact that one was gay or had those inclinations.

I joined the Army National Guard in 1988 and was called up for a time in Korea, Desert Storm and Bosnia. When I was called up for Desert Storm in 1991, I went overseas with my local unit. Several men there were my best friends (straight), including my commanding officer. There was something about going off to war that made my life clear. I had come out only months before being called up. I felt it was necessary to tell my commanding officer and I did. His response was, paraphrased, "well, just conduct yourself like you always do."

DADT ruined that detente. 

Good News For The Designated Driver

by Zoë Pollock

At least they'll stay warm:

Despite lots of folklore to the contrary, drinking alcohol to fight off cold temperatures only gives you the impression of warmth, and it can actually make you lose body heat faster than if you had drunk just water.

Cord Jefferson takes stock of the weather's impact on the Daily Beast's list of the drunkest cities.

Looking Back On A Dispiriting Year

by Conor Friedersdorf

 

In what must be one of the gloomiest Bloggingheads yet recorded, Michael Brendan Dougherty and I discussed the big stories of 2010. The clip above is our lament about the three ongoing wars that the United States is waging and the alarming erosions of civil liberties that have characterized the presidencies of George W. Bush and Barack Obama.

We discuss the film The Social Network, the meritocratic elite, and the commodification of friendship here.

Sully's Keepers: September-October 2010

Game On
The president's speech was a barn-stormer.

Humility And Humiliation
America's genius is not power. It is example.

"Heart Speaks To Heart"
Personal reflections on the Pope's visit.

Gays, The Battered Wife Of The Democratic Party
Readers dissent.

The NYT And Torture
The double standard deepens.

The View From My Window 2000 - 2010
I reflect on a decade of the Dish.

Homosexuals As "Victim Souls"
Gay misery supposedly gets them closer to God.

Yes, We Are At War
I respond to the shellacking from readers and Greenwald.

Answers For Glenn Greenwald
Yes, we are at war.

A Homophobic Dark Era To Come?
But the real goal is to get past politics to living.

The Hue Of Nostalgia

Solitaire

by Zoë Pollock

 Alexis philosophizes on the last days of Kodachrome film, which Conor touched on yesterday:

As much as I love digital cameras and tools that allow you to mimic the old film stocks like Hipstamatic and Instagram, there is just something special about the way Kodachrome captures light. ... [I]t's worth reflecting that it took 75 years for the first successful color film to actually exit the market. On the rare occasions when technologies actually die, they go slowly and leave much behind.

The Trouble With Non-Libertarians

by Conor Friedersdorf

As I read Chris Beam's piece "The Trouble With Liberty" in New York magazine – as a fan of his work I'm thrilled that he's writing there – I kept feeling as if a flip in perspective would demonstrate that a lot of what is asserted is backwards, or limiting, or incomplete. To be fair, this is probably to be expected: I've thought quite a lot about libertarianism, and I'm very sympathetic to it. Beam was writing as a good faith critic trying to sketch the philosophy for folks unfamiliar with it. (And he gets a lot right, along with getting important things wrong.)

What I hope to show his non-libertarian audience is why they ought to think of the political philosophy more sympathetically than they might if they only read Beam's article, and help them see why the piece seems flawed to a libertarian's eyes.

Here goes.

Think Of Old Friends At Midnight

by Conor Friedersdorf

Peggy Noonan sure can write:

"Auld Lang Syne"—the phrase can be translated as "long, long ago," or "old long since," but I like "old times past"—is a song that asks a question, a tender little question that has to do with the nature of being alive, of being a person on a journey in the world. It not only asks, it gives an answer.

It was written, or written down, by Robert Burns, lyric poet and Bard of Scotland. In 1788 he sent a copy of the poem to the Scots Musical Museum, with the words: "The following song, an old song, of the olden times, has never been in print." Burns was interested in the culture of Scotland, and collected old folk tales and poems. He said he got this one "from an old man"—no one knows who—and wrote it down. Being a writer, Burns revised and compressed. He found the phrase auld lang syne "exceedingly expressive" and thought whoever first wrote the poem "heaven inspired." The song spread throughout Scotland, where it was sung to mark the end of the old year, and soon to the English-speaking world, where it's sung to mark the new.

The question it asks is clear: Should those we knew and loved be forgotten and never thought of? Should old times past be forgotten? No, says the song, they shouldn't be. We'll remember those times and those people, we'll toast them now and always, we'll keep them close. "We'll take a cup of kindness yet."

May all Dish readers be raising a glass or kissing someone you love to ring in 2011.

Reality Check

by Patrick Appel

Doing a better job than I did, Kevin Drum explains the composition of the electorate: 

[A]bout 40% of the American population self-IDs as conservative, compared to only 20% who self-ID as liberal. You can argue all day long about what people really mean when they tell pollsters they're conservative, and you can argue all day long that liberals need to do something to change this instead of simply accepting it, but for any politician running for national office in the here and now, this is just the lay of the land. A hardcore conservative with hardcore conservative beliefs can count on a pretty big base of support right from the start, while a hardcore liberal candidate can count on bupkis. Conservative Republicans can win. Liberal Democrats generally can't unless they're running in very liberal congressional districts. If you're looking for a reason why liberal politicians tend to compromise more, you really don't have to look much further than this.

The 2010 Daily Dish Awards

Hewitt-2010

Click the following links to vote for the 2010 Malkin AwardMoore AwardYglesias AwardHewitt Award, Von Hoffmann AwardMental Health Break Of The Year, and Face Of The Year. Also - for the first time -  Chart Of The Year and Hathos Alert are on the ballot. The Shut Up And Sing finalists have likewise been announced; it's now up to you to pick the worst pop song designed to reflect a profound moral conscience. I.e. the smuggest, most pretentious pop song in history.

Among the various contenders for the prizes, a roster of the big names in political and cultural discourse: Sarah Palin, Rush Limbaugh, Kos, Justin Bieber, Bill Donohue, Jim Manzi, Glenn Reynolds, Sean Penn, Bryan Fischer, Keith Olbermann, Bristol Palin And The Situation, Larry Kudlow and ... Andrew Sullivan.

We're giving readers a week to pick the winners for these prestigious prizes. The polls will close on the first of the year. You picked many of the entries; we just marshalled the very best/worst for your selection.

Vote early. Vote often.

The Daily Dish Awards Glossary

Click here to vote for the 2010 Malkin Award!

Click here to vote for the 2010 Yglesias Award!

Click here to vote for the 2010 Moore Award!

Click here to vote for the 2010 Chart Of The Year!

Click here to vote for the 2010 Hewitt Award!

Click here to vote for the 2010 Face Of The Year!

Click here to vote for the 2010 Von Hoffmann Award!

Click here to vote for the 2010 Hathos Alert!

Click here to vote for the Pretentious Pop Song In History!

Click here to vote for the 2010 Mental Health Break Of The Year!

Chart Of The Day

Pew

by Zoë Pollock

Austin Carr looks at the bright side of Thursday's Pew Report (pdf):

Though figures are still low and users too frugal, the rate of consumer purchases is growing remarkably fast. It's been nine years since the iPod's release, and already music downloads have shot up to the most popular user purchase. In just three years since the Kindle came out, e-books have stretched to 10% of users and ballooned to a billion-dollar market. And in only two years since Apple's app store went live, smartphone and tablet apps are now purchased by a fifth of all Internet users.

How We Speak English In North America

by Conor Friedersdorf

A sprawling map tells the story – delve into it for a moment or an hour. (Note to the producers at This American Life: this would seem to present an amazing opportunity for a radio adaptation.)

The 2011 Disconnect

by Zoë Pollock

Robert Reich offers up some grim New Year's predictions:

The Dow Jones Industrial Average is rising because of foreign sales. General Motors is now making more cars in China than in the US, and two-thirds of its total sales are coming from abroad. When it went public last month it boasted that soon almost half its cars will be made around the world where labor is less than $15 an hour. ...

Corporate America is in a V-shaped recovery. That's great news for investors and everyone whose savings are mainly in stocks and bonds. It's also great news for executives and Wall Street traders, whose pay is linked to stock prices. All can expect a banner 2011.

But most American workers are trapped in an L-shaped recovery. That's bad news for the Main Streets and small businesses in 2011. It's also a bad omen for home prices and sales, and everyone whose savings are mainly in their homes.

Is Housing Still Falling?

by Patrick Appel

Ryan Avent counters Gary Schilling:

Dynamics in housing markets aren't supportive of strong growth. But neither are they worsening. Defaults may have peaked. Total REO inventory is high, but it has been higher. It's easy to imagine continued collapse in some local markets, where supply and demand remain very out of whack. But it's more difficult to see where a national crash might originate.

The View From Your Window

Okavanga-Delta-Botswana-12pm

Okavanga Delta, Botswana, 12 pm

Fish For Fertility, Beans For Money

by Zoë Pollock

Annette Foglino rounds up the luckiest foods for the New Year:

[O]ur Congressional slang “pork barrel” echoes a time when Americans stored salted pork in wooden barrels and the amount of meat indicated the state of the family’s circumstances. In folklore the pig is considered an animal of progress because it moves forward while rooting around for food. Chickens and turkeys scratch backward and are believed by some people to represent setbacks and struggle in the coming year, making them an unpopular choice for a New Year’s Day dinner.

 

Question Of The Week: "Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars"

by Conor Friedersdorf

A reader writes:

I was surprised to realize this at first, but the concert film Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars was definitely the most important single media experience for me. I was raised by very socially liberal parents who were all about being an individual and acknowledging and embracing diversity in many senses, and I went to a school that was much the same way. I had thought I understood that idea pretty well.  But the fact is that while the rhetoric was expansive and the intentions very good, the people I was around and the world I lived in consisted of a pretty clearly defined box. My peers and I were meant to grow up to be successful professionals who were socially liberal and infinitely accepting of others, but fairly conservative in behavior and identification.

Question Of The Week: "The Beach"

Conor Friedersdorf

A reader writes:

Okay, so Alex Garland's pinnacle (and first) novel, The Beach, is not what many academics consider a literary masterwork. But once you get past that initial criticism, you do realize that it is an impressively complex book buried within a thick candy shell of pop cultural accessibility, which is a recipe for a profoundly effecting novel with mass appeal for any twenty-something person with a restless spirit and dreams of escape. The book's primary message - as most people know, if not by reading the book then by seeing the Leonardo DiCaprio movie it spawned - is that of finding Utopia among like-minded vagabonds and travelers, then seeing it squandered and torn apart from within.

View From Your Window, Ctd

by Patrick Appel

Yesterday's window view was from Virginia Beach, not Los Angeles.  One of the many readers who noticed the error:

The View From Your Window posted that is supposedly from Los Angeles must be from a movie set because I have lived in LA for almost 7 years and the only time I have seen even a flake of snow was when they were filming a scene for The Office on my street. There must be a typo because there is nowhere in LA that it has snowed in the entire time I've been here. We have had temps in the mid-60's for several weeks now and quite a bit of rain but, alas, no snow. Sorry, but this photo is definitely no taken in LA and, according to Wikipedia anyway,  the last time it snowed in LA was 1932 and they got a whopping 2 inches ... it looks like about a foot in the photo. 

Thursday, December 30, 2010

The 2010 Daily Dish Awards

Hewitt-2010

Click the following links to vote for the 2010 Malkin AwardMoore AwardYglesias AwardHewitt Award, Von Hoffmann AwardMental Health Break Of The Year, and Face Of The Year. Also - for the first time -  Chart Of The Year and Hathos Alert are on the ballot. The Shut Up And Sing finalists have likewise been announced; it's now up to you to pick the worst pop song designed to reflect a profound moral conscience. I.e. the smuggest, most pretentious pop song in history.

Among the various contenders for the prizes, a roster of the big names in political and cultural discourse: Sarah Palin, Rush Limbaugh, Kos, Justin Bieber, Bill Donohue, Jim Manzi, Glenn Reynolds, Sean Penn, Bryan Fischer, Keith Olbermann, Bristol Palin And The Situation, Larry Kudlow and ... Andrew Sullivan.

We're giving readers a week to pick the winners for these prestigious prizes. The polls will close on the first of the year. You picked many of the entries; we just marshalled the very best/worst for your selection.

Vote early. Vote often.

The Daily Dish Awards Glossary

Click here to vote for the 2010 Malkin Award!

Click here to vote for the 2010 Yglesias Award!

Click here to vote for the 2010 Moore Award!

Click here to vote for the 2010 Chart Of The Year!

Click here to vote for the 2010 Hewitt Award!

Click here to vote for the 2010 Face Of The Year!

Click here to vote for the 2010 Von Hoffmann Award!

Click here to vote for the 2010 Hathos Alert!

Click here to vote for the Pretentious Pop Song In History!

Click here to vote for the 2010 Mental Health Break Of The Year!

Twittered Away

by Zoë Pollock

Felix Salmon puts an interesting spin on the spat between Glenn Greenwald and Wired's Kevin Poulsen over chat logs between Wikileaks whistleblower Bradley Manning and informant Adrian Lamo:

What we’re seeing here is the professionalization of the blogosphere — Greenwald and Poulsen both get paid to blog, as do I — and the way in which that has led to the less journalistic parts of blogging moving over to the informal and freewheeling venue of Twitter. ...

This development is not, in my mind, a good thing.

A Request From K-Lo, Ctd

by Conor Friedersdorf

All her criteria in one song!

(Original item here. Hat tip: Tim Heffernan, one of Esquire's finest.)

The ABCs Of College

by Conor Friedersdorf

Let's talk report cards:

It could be a Zen koan: if everybody in the class gets an A, what does an A mean?

The answer: Not what it should, says Andrew Perrin, a sociologist at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. “An A should mean outstanding work; it should not be the default grade,” Mr. Perrin said. “If everyone gets an A for adequate completion of tasks, it cripples our ability to recognize exemplary scholarship.”

But what if you're taking an introductory algebra class, or learning Spanish, or taking basic macroeconomics? In certain classes, mastery of the subject matter is the point, and if you're at an elite school composed of high school valedictorians with SAT scores in the 97th percentile, I don't see the purpose of worrying if most kids get As. (There are, of course, classes where recognizing exemplary scholarship makes more sense.)

Question Of The Week: "Cool Hand Luke"

 

by Conor Friedersdorf

A reader writes:

An "aspirational identification" would probably best describe the impact Cool Hand Luke had on me - specifically the scene where Luke and the chain gang are tarring the road.  I never had visions of grandeur for myself.  I always saw myself as just a regular guy.  However, when I watched this scene, it capture so much of who I am and what I would like to be.  The later is easy, just look at Newman, the whit, charm and good looks.  The who I am didn't really come out until later in life, but it was always there.  I like to challenge the establishment, nothing bold or brash, I'm no revolutionary.  I just like sticking it to the man from time to time. It never makes a difference in the larger scheme of things, but it does make me smile.

That is one of my favorite all-time scenes.

Question Of The Week: "The Bible"

by Conor Friedersdorf

A reader writes:

Without a doubt: The Bible. But not in a positive way.  

Question Of The Week: "Franny And Zooey"

by Conor Friedersdorf

A reader writes:

I was born into a Mormon family, and raised by a fairly neurotic mother, who, bless her heart, did everything in her power to keep me involved and active in the church. In addition to the normal methods such as compulsory church attendance up to and throughout my high school years, along with requiring full compliance to all the rules that the church dictated, she was also very skilled at using guilt and shame to control not only myself, but my brothers and sister as well when it came to religion.

Face Of The Day

107821629

Men dressed as Vikings lead the torchlight procession as it makes its way to Princess Street for the start of the New Year celebrations December 30, 2010 in Edinburgh, Scotland. Thousands of people joined in the torchlight procession, followed by the burning of a Viking long ship. By Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images.

Sully's Recent Keepers

Obama's Long Game: 65 - 31

It was painstakingly slow but thereby much more entrenched.

The Arc Of History

Ending DADT enlarges circle of freedom, shrinks victimhood.

The Long Game And Israel

Obama has not asserted; he has demonstrated.

As Netanyahu Gloats

Ending construction is essential to a viable dialogue.

Obama Hatred vs Bush Hatred

A blog-off with Pejman Yousefzadeh.

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