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October 27, 2007

Clinton Takes on the Truthers

I cannot say I agree with Bill Clinton often.  I don't agree with him on matters of U.S. policy, and I don't really care to see his wife win the White House, but I have to give him props for what he said during a speech in Minneapolis on Wednesday.  While addressing a crowd, 9/11 Truthers showed up and interrupted him, shouting that 9/11 was an inside job.  A local affiliate in Minnesota has the footage:

Here's the full quote:

One heckler shouted that 9/11 was a fraud, and Clinton bristled. "No, it wasn't a fraud. I'll be glad to talk about it if you'll shut up and let me talk." The heckling continued, and he told another heckler "these people did not come here to hear you speak. If you don't have any self-control, we can deal with that."

When a third called 9/11 an "inside job," Clinton snapped back "How dare you? I live in New York, and I know who did that. You guys have got to be careful, or you're going to give Minnesota a bad reputation."

Hat tip to Ed Morrissey.

Posted by Jason Heppler at 04:33 PM | Permalink | TrackBack

Book Signing

Don't forget that Jon Lauck will be at Barnes and Noble in Sioux Falls today at 2 p.m. signing copies of the book the Argus Leader doesn't want you to read, Daschle Vs. Thune: Anatomy of a High Plains Senate Race.

Posted by Jason Heppler at 01:13 PM | Permalink | TrackBack

McCain and Woodstock

Woodstock and Hillary Clinton have made it in to John McCain's latest campaign commercial, which contains his great line about being "tied up at the time":

Groovy, man.

Hillaryflowerchild92

UPDATE:  Happy birthday to the former First Lady, by the way.

Posted by Jason Heppler at 08:52 AM | Permalink | TrackBack

October 26, 2007

Lauck's Book Moved to #3

Earlier today Jon Lauck's Daschle Vs. Thune topped out at #3 in books covering elections:

Amazon.com Sales Rank: #4,298 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

Popular in these categories: (What's this?)

#1 in Books > History > United States > State & Local > South Dakota
#3 in Books > Nonfiction > Government > Elections
#11 in Books > History > United States > 21st Century

It's currently settled at #7:

Lauckamazonrank

Posted by Jason Heppler at 06:51 PM | Permalink | TrackBack

Kranz's Book Bias

Bannedbooks

It's clear that Dave Kranz loves to write about books in his column, yet the gatekeepers of political news at the Argus Leader cannot seem to bring themselves to discuss Jon Lauck's new book:

October 5, 2007

-- Article about the book “Three Cups of Tea”; promotes Daschle staffer Steve Kinsella’s book “900 Miles from Nowhere”

September 28, 2007

-- Marshall Damgaard book about state capitol

September 14, 2007

-- Ken Burns’ book “The War”

September 12, 2007

-- Anti-Bush book “Dead Certain”

September 7, 2007

-- Complete article on “Dead Certain”

July 18, 2007

-- Article entitled “Trio of political books have S.D. connections”

June 8, 2007

-- Bernie Hunhoff’s "South Dakota Curiosities"/signing at Barnes and Noble and David Volk’s "Draftee”/signing 5 to 6:30 p.m. at Reader's Den

May 4, 2007

-- Dave Volk’s "Draftee”/signing at Zandbroz

April 23, 2007

-- Dave Volk book

March 30, 2007

-- Lois Hatton's “book based on the smiles she had from people she met on her way through life” and William O. Farber's book, "Footprints on the Prairie."

December 22, 2006

-- Joe Kippley, a Brookings High School and University of Notre Dame graduate and former page for Sen. Tom Daschle during the 9-11 terrorist attacks, signs his book, "A Page in History," from 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday at Zandbroz in downtown Sioux Falls.

December 11, 2006

-- Reports no Janklow book will be written

November 27, 2006

-- McGovern, signing his book, "Out of Iraq," at Zandbroz

November 24, 2006

-- Article on Kippley book

October 25, 2006

-- Mark Fuhrman's book "Murder in Brentwood"

October 20, 2006

-- Paul Horsted's book “The Black Hills Yesterday and Today" / signing Zandbroz. 

October 18, 2006

-- McGovern's book, "Out of Iraq," getting some good reviews in its early weeks of publication/Anna Quindlen of Newsweek praised the work on Public Television's "The Charlie Rose Show."

October 13, 2006

-- Authors Steve Kinsella, John Egan and George McGovern and photographer Paul Horstad will discuss and sign their new books here in the next few days.

September 21, 2006

--  A new book, “Hubris: The Inside Story of Spin, Scandal, and the Selling of the Iraq War,”…included in the book is a mention of the president and an incident involving then-Sen.Tom Daschle.

September 17, 2006

--  Juan Williams new book/V.J. Smith “The Richest Man in Town” and James McLaird on “Calamity Jane”

August 24, 2006

-- Article on McGovern’s new book

September 15, 2005

-- Gilbert C. Fite's book "Peter Norbeck: Prairie Statesman" is being released this month.

July 5, 2005

– New Iowa book, "Beyond the Facts: Faith Sees the Deepest Truth"

June 7, 2005

-- New  Oscar Micheaux book, "The Wind from Nowhere"

February 22, 2005

-- Thompson's book, "Fear and Loathing on the Campaign Trail, '72".

January 9, 2005

-- "Bush Survival Bible," by Gene Stone

September 26, 2004

-- McGovern speaks Friday at Zandbroz in downtown Sioux Falls about his new book, "The Essential America."

August 6, 2004

-- George McGovern has written nine books during his public life, but he thinks the newest one is the best.

June 23, 2004

-- Clinton's new autobiography, "My Life"

March 28, 2004

-- Thomas Patterson book "The Vanishing Voter."

December 14, 2003

-- Daschle will sign his book, "Like No Other Time," at noon Monday at Zandbroz in Sioux Falls .

November 30, 2003

-- Daschle also signs his new book, "No Ordinary Time," at noon Thursday at Zandbroz in Sioux Falls.

October 28, 2003

-- “Book tells why Daschle rejected run for president”

October 28, 2003

-- “Author expects criticism of work”

October 28, 2003

-- “Books examine state’s politics”

October 19, 2003

--  Daschle is promoting his new book.

October 5, 2003

-- Daschle tentatively has set his first book signing for Nov. 4 at Barnes & Noble in 

Sioux Falls.  The book, "Like No Other Time," will be first released that day.

August 17, 2003

--  Book-sellers are being told that Sen. Tom Daschle's book, "Like No Other Time," published by Crown Publishers, will be on their shelves Nov. 4.  Daschle's staff says it still is a work in progress.

February 16, 2003

--  Former Sen. Jim Abourezk is a key figure in four recently published books.  The books each have a chapter on Abourezk, a former  U.S. senator and now a Sioux Falls lawyer.

February 9, 2003

-- “Daschle is working his way toward completion of his book, but that is taking a disappointing direction.  Unfortunately, he will include events only from 2000 to the present.  Daschle is a student of Senate history, and his role as minority and majority leader has come during critical times in the nation's history.”

January 20, 2003

-- A book on the 2002 races.

November 24, 2002

-- Pat Halley has written a book on his life with the first lady throughout the

United States and around the world.

November 11, 2002

-- Brokaw book

Posted by Jason Heppler at 12:21 PM | Permalink | TrackBack

Thune Pushes Ethanol Provision

From the Rapid City Journal:

A proposal in the Senate farm bill to promote cellulosic ethanol could open up more ethanol opportunities for the West River area, according to a spokesman for Sen. John Thune, R-S.D.

Thune announced this week that the farm bill being taken up by the Senate Agriculture Committee includes his provision for incentives to grow switchgrass and other grasses and to promote biomass material such as wood chips for the production of ethanol. Thune is a member of the Senate Ag Committee.

So far, most ethanol production has come from corn, which has benefited farmers primarily in the eastern part of South Dakota, Thune spokesman Kyle Downey said. "The whole cellulosic thing could open it up to the entire state," Downey said.

A planned ethanol plant in Belle Fourche will begin using corn, but company executives are also looking at developing ways to produce cellulosic ethanol in the future.

A Rapid City company, KL Process Design Group, has built a new plant on the outskirts of Upton, Wyo., that produces ethanol from wood chips, sawdust and logging refuse. The plant has been operating for about 30 days now, KL president Randy Kramer said Tuesday.

Posted by Jason Heppler at 11:13 AM | Permalink | TrackBack

Power Line on DvT

Power Line:  Inside the Walls of South Dakota

Posted by Jason Heppler at 11:04 AM | Permalink | TrackBack

Johnson Votes For Amnesty For Illegals

Badlands Blue, the internet mouthpiece of the Johnson campaign, brags about Tim Johnson's vote for cloture on the so-called Dream Act, which indicates his support for the bill, and takes John Thune to task for opposing the same.  Let's take a look at the bill and what the Johnson supporters are saying about it. 

Here are the basics of the bill, which I am stealing from Wikipedia.  If there are errors here, please let me know:

This bi-partisan bill called The DREAM Act is a one time solution intended to provide a path to a permanent legal status for persons brought to the United States by their parents or guardians as children. This includes individuals with a current legal immigration status, individuals whose parents attempted to immigrate legally but were then denied legality after several years in application, and those initially brought here illegally at a young age.

To qualify, the immigrant student or soldier would have to meet certain requirements such as:

  • Proof of having arrived in the United States at age 15 or younger.
  • Proof of residence in the United States for a least five (5) consecutive years since their date of arrival.
  • Must be between the ages of 12 and 30 at time of bill enactment.
  • Having graduated from an American High School, or obtained a GED.
  • "Good moral character," essentially defined as the absence of a significant criminal record (or any drug charges whatsoever).

Lowell says that this bill deals with the immigration status of "certain alien students" and quotes the American Prospect saying that this bill "enables undocumented-immigrant young persons to stay in the U.S."  Lowell claims John Thune wants to "penalize children" by opposing this bill.

By "alien students" and "undocumented immigrants," what Lowell means is people who are in this country illegally.  What "stay in the U.S." means is amnesty for those who are in this nation by violation of United States law.  By "children" he means people as old as 30.  Indeed, since you must have a high school diploma to be eligible, it is safe to say that no "children" are covered by this bill.  I'd say that's three strikes on Lowell's accuracy. 

Take a look at this backgrounder (pdf alert) from the Migration Policy Institute, who I understand to be a supporter of this bill.  Note that they say that this bill gives immediate amnesty to 360,000 people aged 18-24 (not children) who are in this country illegally (MPI calls them "unauthorized").  Total numbers eligible for amnesty through this bill would total several hundred thousand more (read this backgrounder for various scenarios).  This is from a supporter of the bill.  The Center For Immigration Studies, who opposes the bill, estimates about 2.1 million illegals given amnesty.  While not everyone covered by this bill is an illegal alien, even the supporters agree that hundreds of thousands are. 

Do not misunderstand me.  Last year I posted here and here giving qualified support for amnesty (or, as I said specifically, "some method of legalization").  I certainly agree that those who serve in the military should be given citizenship.  But any amnesty program must go hand in hand with tighter border security, and the border security must come before the amnesty. 

On a more political note, if Tim Johnson is going to run as the amnesty candidate and if Mr. Moderate is going to start taking his political bearings from the left-wing American Prospect, then perhaps his re-election will prove more difficult than most think. 

Posted by Jon Schaff at 08:41 AM | Permalink | TrackBack

October 25, 2007

The American Republic and the Iraq War

My Keloland colleague and NSU colleague emeritus, Professor David Newquist, has this on the Iraq war at his original blog:

A friend who served in the military the same time I did spotted a pickup in a parking lot while we were chatting that carried a bumper stick that said support our troops by supporting Bush and his war on terror. My friend fumed over the absurdity of supporting a leader who tosses away the lives of soldiers as if they are used nose tissues. ...They are insisting that Iran will start World War III, and they are using the phony nuclear weapon scam again. I don't think we can wait for a year to get these maniacs out of office, he said.

I would be curious to learn that the Iranians aren't trying to get nuclear weapons.  I suspect this would come as a surprise to the Iranian theocrats, the North Koreans, and pretty much every leader in Europe.  I am even more interested in what my colleague's friend thinks we can do about Bush's next year in office. 

As it happens, I spent an hour this afternoon talking to a Marine Staff Sergent in my living room.  Staff Sergent M spent a year in Iraq.  He was part of a helicopter crew, responsible for all of the protective equipment for the rest of the crew, as I understand it.  He was guardedly contemptuous of the way the Press reports the war in Iraq, and was proud of the role he has played in his country's service.  I don't think he would have appreciated the remarks in the quote above. 

A reasonable person might certainly conclude that the invasion of Iraq was a mistake.  Only an adolescent, or someone stuck in permanent adolescence, would blame the war on "maniacs" in the White House.  What the Staff Sergent put his life on the line to serve is a Republic.  President Bush secured the support of Congress before he launched the invasion.  You may recall that Hillary Clinton voted to give Bush permission to do so.  So did John Kerry, before he voted against it. It was not George W. Bush who invaded Iraq.  It was the United States of America. 

So where are we now?  Here is the New York Sun on the maniacs running the Republic:

The People. United. Can in fact be defeated. Well not exactly, but this must be what America's anti-war movement is thinking as Congress and the president iron out the funding for the war with no danger of the Democrats attaching a withdrawal date to the bill. The Dems don't have the votes.

The Democrats control both houses of Congress.  They have the power to bring the troops home.  All they have to do is refuse to fund the war.  So why don't they do so?  They do not do so because then they would be responsible for the outcome.  If the US withdraws from Iraq too soon, the result will be a real civil war.  And that will produce an Iraq controlled either by Iran or Al Qaida.  So they continue to support President Bush.  But that means that they share responsibility for his policy.  In case you are wondering, that is what a Republic looks like. 

I have nothing but admiration for my Staff Sergent acquaintance and his comrades in arms.  They have chosen to serve a genuine Republic, and among human institutions, there is none more worthy of allegiance. 

Posted by Ken Blanchard at 10:04 PM | Permalink | TrackBack

Lap three on Lap Tops

Responding to my inestimable colleague Professor Schaff on the subject of laptop computers in schools:

1.  No, you are.

2.  A "bee in one's bonnet" does not imply irrationality; it implies only a preoccupation with some subject beyond what it warrants.

3.  I do indeed concede that giving students laptop computers (or other computers) will not improve educational performance, but I added "in itself."  Teaching someone to read, write, or type, in itself, will not make him more educated.  These are tools only.  What he reads, writes, types, or downloads will make the difference.  Learning to read is nonetheless vital to getting an education. I argue that the use of computers is an essential skill, at least as important as typing has been since the advent of computers. 

4.  Professor Schaff says this:

Like Prof. Blanchard I learned keyboarding in school (it was called Keyboarding and Word Processing).  But that is a far cry from making the use of computers central to the curriculum.

In the various articles that my colleague cites I find nothing about "making computers central to the curriculum," whatever that might mean.  There was some mention of teaching teachers how to integrate computers into the curriculum, which means nothing more than showing them online resources that they can use for their regular classes.  What all the articles focus on is providing more computers to teachers, schools, and perhaps directly to students. If it's practical, I am for it.

5.  I don't accuse my colleague of being a Luddite, though the bee in his bonnet may be a bit of a Luddite.  We agree that computers can be effectively used in genuine education, and that, in the absence of a genuinely liberal curriculum (see point 3), no use of technology will come to any good. But just as  providing technology cannot in itself promote education, so it cannot in itself do any harm.   What matters is the curriculum. 

6.  I do believe that someone without access to an internet connection is likely to be increasingly isolated as time goes on.  I pointed out that the internet is making vast cultural resources available to anyone almost anywhere, and many of them available free and for the first time: classical art and architecture, thousands of hours of great music,  great texts along with translation tools, etc.  Integrating these riches into the classroom and homework environments presents practical challenges, and I see no reason not to help teachers overcome them.  But at the same time, a lot of stuff that used to be sitting in file cabinets or boxes in library stacks will soon be available only online.

Education has always depended on highways.  Athens and Jerusalem, London and Rome, were all centers of commerce.  The information highway is more of the same.  Besides, how much poorer is the man who cannot log on and get access to Professor Schaff's lucid and penetrating prose. Or even mine.

Posted by Ken Blanchard at 08:47 PM | Permalink | TrackBack

Some Recent Votes By Our Legislators

Many interesting votes in recent days.  For example, the House of Representatives voted to recognize native Hawaiians as an Indian tribe allowing them to set up their own government. According to the bill, if one can trace back one's ancestry to a native Hawaiian from 1893, you too are a member of this "tribe." So this is something like the old Jim Crow "one drop rule."  Apparently this bill is a response to a 2000 federal court decision striking down an attempt to create "native only" elections in Hawaii.  This obviously violated the 14th and 15th amendments.  So the reaction is to define natives as an "Indian tribe," thus allowing them to set up a racially separate government and hold their own elections.  Rep. Herseth-Sandlin voted for this bill.  In the Senate last year Republicans filibustered the bill.  John Thune was for the bill's defeat, Tim Johnson against.  President Bush has threatened a veto of this bill. The US Commission on Civil Rights has urged rejection of this bill.  Commission member Peter Kirsanow has called it "the worst piece of legislation ever analyzed by the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights."

In the Senate, David "Ladies Man" Vitter proposed an amendment denying funds to organizations who perform abortions.  John Thune favored the amendment, Tim Johnson opposed.  Note, this is different from the Hyde Amendment, which denies federal funds for actual performing of abortions.  This amendment would have denied funds to organizations who get federal grants for other matters but also perform abortions.  Thus Planned Parenthood, for example, because it performs abortions, would have lost its considerable federal monies that go to "social services" that Planned Parenthood also provides. 

Finally, Senator Tom Coburn offered an amendment "To require Congress to provide health care for all children in the U.S. before funding special interest pork projects."  Tim Johnson voted against this amendment while John Thune was for it.  I wonder if Coburn had said, say, 95% of children instead of "all children" the vote would have been different?  Readers might recall that in the SCHIP debate President Bush's position was that states should be required to cover 95% of all eligible children before SCHIPs money could be used to cover non-eligible persons such as adults or those who make too much money to normally qualify for the program.   

Posted by Jon Schaff at 09:51 AM | Permalink | TrackBack

October 24, 2007

Lauck In Sioux Falls

NEWS RELEASE: Sioux Falls signing of Jon Lauck’s new book, “Daschle v. Thune: Anatomy of a High Plains Senate Race”

This Saturday (October 27, 2007), author Jon Lauck will sign copies of his new book “Daschle v. Thune: Anatomy of a High Plains Senate Race” at Barnes & Noble in Sioux Falls, South Dakota at 2:00 PM.  The Sioux Falls Barnes & Noble is located at 3700   West 41st Street. “Daschle v. Thune” is currently ranked as the top-selling book about South   Dakota by Amazon.com.
 
Michael Barone, Senior Editor of U.S. News & World Report, has said that "Jon Lauck’s account of one of the hardest-fought elections in the 2004 campaign should be must reading for Democrats as well as Republicans."  Joseph Bottum, writing in the Weekly Standard, said "Jon Lauck has written what should be required reading for anyone interested in how to win--and how to lose--a modern senatorial campaign." Professor Larry Sabato, Director of the University of Virginia’s Center for Politics, said “Jon Lauck spins a good tale about the contest that was arguably second only to the Bush-Kerry presidential battle in 2004. … This is a great read, and one that students and politically interested citizens alike will enjoy.”

Posted by Jon Schaff at 10:52 AM | Permalink | TrackBack

Your Education Will Be Upgraded: Laptops, Part II

Ken Blanchard gives an alternative view of the use of laptops in school to counter my negative assessment.  A brief response.

Prof. Blanchard says I have a "bee in my bonnet," which is what one usually says when a person is irrationally perturbed over a small matter.  I assure our readers that on this matter my rationality is solidly intact. 

Prof. Blanchard makes a large concession to my view:

[Prof. Schaff] is right about one thing: giving computers to students will do little or nothing in itself to improve their performance in education. It is possible that it does some small measure of harm, in so far as it adds to the distractions that they are exposed to.

I am against spending large amounts of money for something that will at best do nothing and at worst produce even a "small measure of harm."  I say take that money and give it to the teachers. 

Prof. Blanchard's fundamental misunderstanding is that he confuses the issue of giving students a background in technology (I am for it) with giving every student a laptop and then creating a curriculum around the use of computers.  Prof. Blanchard assumes that one is keeping students "isolated from the world network" if we do not create a curriculum based around laptops.  A couple points.  First, I am not against teaching computer courses.  Like Prof. Blanchard I learned keyboarding in school (it was called Keyboarding and Word Processing).  But that is a far cry from making the use of computers central to the curriculum.  Second, Prof. Blanchard and I have plenty of students who do not own laptops.  Are they "isolated from the world network"?  I should think not.  To the extent they are, it can be cured by a one credit class in online data bases provided through our university library. No need to burden our students (or the taxpayers) with the expense of buying a laptop.   I take class time in American Government classes to show students how to look up various kinds of information online (for example, we look at both the House and Senate sites, as well as the sites the White House and various Executive Branch agencies).  Use of the online world can be taught as needed to supplement curriculum as opposed to creating a new curriculum around a piece of technology. 

Lastly, I'd ask Prof. Blanchard to consider what he knows about the eduction profession and then ask himself whether the ubiquity of laptops will be used to teach classics to students.  Again, I am not a Luddite.  I do not oppose technology in education.  So by all means use the Blue Letter Bible in class (although those teaching in public schools may face a lawsuit for accessing that particular data base). But I suspect that laptops will be used for trendy software that contain lots of bells and whistles and provide scads of visual and audio stimuli but do not really teach much.  "Interactive" learning will replace memorization, contemplation, imagination, and proficiency in the use of language.    

Posted by Jon Schaff at 09:18 AM | Permalink | TrackBack

Journalistic Malpractice?

I've heard Stuart Taylor on the radio outlining the arguments of his book Until Proven Innocent in which he and coauthor K.C. Johnson lay out the various injustices that occurred in the rape case brought against Duke lacrosse players.  As we now know, all charges where dropped and the DA who brought the case has lost his job and law license.  Taylor shows no mercy to the field of journalism, which he argues bought into a false storyline because it made good copy and also fit the political predilections of most reporters on the case. 

Could the same thing have happened regarding the so-called "Jena 6"?  A reporter from Jena, writing in the Christian Science Monitor, thinks so.  If he is right, Mr. Taylor may have his next book waiting for him in Louisiana.  Here is part what Craig Franklin of the Jena Times writes today:

By now, almost everyone in America has heard of Jena, La., because they've all heard the story of the "Jena 6." White students hanging nooses barely punished, a schoolyard fight, excessive punishment for the six black attackers, racist local officials, public outrage and protests – the outside media made sure everyone knew the basics.

There's just one problem: The media got most of the basics wrong. In fact, I have never before witnessed such a disgrace in professional journalism. Myths replaced facts, and journalists abdicated their solemn duty to investigate every claim because they were seduced by a powerfully appealing but false narrative of racial injustice.

Read the whole thing for various "myths" that Mr. Franklin claims have been reported as fact.  He offers alternative explanations. 

      

Posted by Jon Schaff at 08:45 AM | Permalink | TrackBack

Warrantless Searches

Read Robert Turner in the WSJ on the constitutionality of warrantless searches for national security reasons.

When Congress passed the first wiretap statute in 1968, it expressly declared that nothing in it would limit "the Constitutional power of the President" to collect foreign-intelligence information. Every administration from FDR to (and including) Jimmy Carter engaged in warrantless foreign-intelligence wiretapping in the belief that this was one of the "exceptions" to the Fourth Amendment's warrant requirement. Others include border searches and searches of commercial airline passengers and their luggage (not to mention the requirement, imposed by Congress, that citizens entering a congressional office building to exercise their constitutional right to petition their government for redress of grievances must submit to a warrantless search absent the slightest probable cause).

Posted by Jon Schaff at 08:34 AM | Permalink | TrackBack

October 23, 2007

SDP Jazz Note: Heroin and Genius

Peppermeets Heroin addiction famously took out a lot of  rock stars and jazzmen.  It may be one of the most insidious characteristics of the stuff that, while it inevitably destroyed people, it did not prevent many jazz giants from producing extraordinary music while it was flowing through their veins.  It was a common view among jazzmen (and later, rock musicians) that mind altering drugs actually promoted genius.  I have contempt for that idea, because I am sure that it killed a lot of beautiful minds.  But I confess that I am not sure it was always wrong.  I think it is silly to believe that heroin or LSD opened up any new pathways in the brain.  Beethoven didn't need LSD.  But heroin may have kept at bay certain personal demons that otherwise would have put a stop to the music.  Genius often goes hand in hand with a dysfunctional personality, and that is the setting for tragedy. 

One of the epochal recordings in jazz is Art Pepper Meets the Rhythm Section, which I recently acquired from EMusic.  Pepper was a piece of work:  brilliant alto player, heroin addict, convict.  His wife arranged the gig for him, but didn't tell him until just before it happened for fear he would get cold feet and run off.  He hadn't played for six months when he shot up with smack, grabbed a horn held together with bandaids, and went into the studio with what might be the greatest rhythm section in the history of jazz: Red Garland on piano, Paul Chambers on base, and Philly Joe Jones on drums.  That was the same trio that laid the foundation for Miles Davis' first quintet (with Coltrane). 

The music is indescribably delicious, so I won't try to describe it.  Heroin did eventually kill Art Pepper, but it it didn't kill his genius, at least on this occasion.  High as a kite, he worked his saxophone with a brilliance that precious few gods or human beings could match.  I am not sure there is any moral to this story. It is a clue to how deep and uncharted the human soul is that so much of it could be submerged beneath the orgasm of heroin, and yet room is left for the saxophone. 

Posted by Ken Blanchard at 10:43 PM | Permalink | TrackBack

Laptops, Education, and the Blue Letter Bible

Rind3gif Professor Schaff, has a bee in his bonnet about laptops in public schools.  It is not a large bee or a particularly aggressive African sort of bee, but it does buzz around rather frequently.  While I agree with a lot of things that my colleague says, I still think the policy of providing schools and hopefully students with computers is a good one. 

He is right about one thing: giving computers to students will do little or nothing in itself to improve their performance in education.  It is possible that it does some small measure of harm, in so far as it adds to the distractions that they are exposed to.  But keeping them isolated from the world network would be too high a price to pay to avoid those distractions.

One of the things that education up through high school needs to do is teach certain basic skills.  In addition to the most obvious-reading, writing, arithmetic, etc.-some of those skills are technological.  I learned to type in a home economics course in eighth grade.  It is hard to think of a basic skill (after reading and writing) that had more impact on my subsequent education.  I think that this is the right analogy for teaching basic computer skills to young students.  A student whose household has no desktop or internet connection will depend on libraries  (which he or she may never visit) and the school house.  Otherwise the student remains isolated from the world net, where most public conversations are happening.  Isolation has always been the greatest obstacle to education. 

I certainly agree with my colleague that an education in classics is the foundation of the most developed mind.  Some time ago a student achieved one of the highest scores on the SAT exam after she prepared by reading the Norton Anthology of English Literature all the way through, twice.  The classics teach you how to think about whatever you happen to confront or become curious about.  But these days, a household without an internet connection probably doesn't have a copy of the Norton Anthology either.

BiblethegameMoreover, the internet offers resources to a student that I, as a graduate student in political philosophy, could only dream about.  Consider, for example, the Blue Letter Bible site. Using that site, one can look up any passage in the Old or New Testament, and see the original Hebrew or Greek.  Now it would be a wonderful thing if we taught our high school freshmen either or both of these ancient languages, and to be sure no translation software is any substitute for mastering the language.  But the Blue Letter Bible site allows the reader to look up any word in the Bible, and consider the range of ancient meanings.  The student can find out, for example, that the word spirit in Genesis 1:2 is originally the word for breath.  He can learn that the word for gentiles in Romans means nations or tribes and the student may recognize that the Greek word is the basis for the modern word "ethnic".  There is a lot to chew on there. 

Professor Schaff's hero out of Evelyn Waugh, Mr. Scott-King, says this:

"If you approve, headmaster, I will stay as I am here as long as any boy wants to read the classics.  I think it would be very wicked to do anything to fit a boy for the modern world."    

I suspect that Mr. S-K could do a lot with the Blue Letter Bible to make sure that his students are not fit for the modern world. 

 

Posted by Ken Blanchard at 09:16 PM | Permalink | TrackBack

Lauck's Book Officially Makes #1 on Amazon for South Dakota

Bannedbooks_3

Jon Lauck's Daschle Vs. Thune: Anatomy of a High Plains Senate Race has officially moved into the number one spot on Amazon.com's best-selling list for South Dakota (see this post for why it wasn't officially considered number one).  The Argus Leader also seems to be getting the message.

Lauckstats

Posted by Jason Heppler at 12:16 PM | Permalink | TrackBack

More Good News from Iraq

Following the reinforcement of American troops, the violence in Iraq has dropped by 70 percent.  Remember when people were denouncing the surge for failing, although the surge wasn't complete yet?

Meanwhile, ladies and gentlemen, the Bush administration has been accused of covering up the good news from Iraq. 

Posted by Jason Heppler at 09:23 AM | Permalink | TrackBack

South Dakota Education: Fitting The Youth For The Modern World?

The Laptop Revolution continues apace:

Three Stanley County teachers and a parent are getting a chance to see how the new high school Computer Connections program is working at local high schools.

Stanley County is looking to join the state’s high school computer program where tablets are provided to both teachers and students. The group toured both the Winner and Riggs High School programs last week and plan to tour at least one more in Kadoka later.

Teacher Laura Snow, who is chairperson of the school’s Classroom Connections program, says at both schools, the group got to talk to both staff and students about the program. She says they got a lot of comments.

Snow says the group’s mission is fact finding in nature. Snow says a survey of Stanley County high school teachers show that an "overwhelming number" support the idea.

In the program, the school would pay most of the cost of purchasing the needed 200 tablet computers for staff and teachers and there would be some state financial assistance as well. Snow says cost is an important factor.

Snow says the group will present a recommendation to the school board later this year, which will make the final decision on whether to apply to be part of the program next fall.

Indications are that the laptop hegemony is coming to the state university system:

The university system will convert to wireless, Jewett said.

“We will fix that as fast as humanly possible,” he said. Students will have to pay for the laptops, but by law the cost can be part of college loans, he said.

It's “clearly wrong,” Jewett said that the state's university students studying to be K-12 teachers are not being trained in a wireless laptop environment when that's the environment they will be placed in once they take teaching jobs.

“It's the way the world is going.”

My thoughts on laptops in education are not a secret, although, it should be noted, they are my own, not my employer's. 

Let me repeat a story I have told before.  In Evelyn Waugh's short novel Modern Europe, one of those Englishmen with a hyphenated last name, Mr. Scott-King, serves as a classics instructor at a finer public school.  After an adventure in continental Europe, he arrives back at his school only to be informed that, once again, his school will be teaching fewer of the classics.  The headmaster who delivers this news to Scott-King says, "As you know I'm an old Greats man myself.  I deplore it as much as you do.  But what are we to do?  Parents are not interested in producing the 'complete man' anymore.  They want to qualify their boys for jobs in the modern world.  You can hardly blame them, can you?"   To which Scott-King replies, "Oh yes.  I can and do."  The headmaster suggests Scott-King teach some more "relevant" subjects along side the classics, and Scott-King responds, "If you approve, headmaster, I will stay as I am here as long as any boy wants to read the classics.  I think it would be very wicked to do anything to fit a boy for the modern world."   

Posted by Jon Schaff at 08:50 AM | Permalink | TrackBack

Lauck's Book Now #1 Amazon.com Book on South Dakota

Bannedbooks_2

A reader of SDWC writes:

I was intrigued by your comment that “Daschle v. Thune” by Jon Lauck was the #2 best-selling book about South Dakota on Amazon.com now. I checked to see what was #1 and found out it was a book NOT about South Dakota, but about Virginia, the James River in particular (”the 340-mile river, stretching through the heart of Virginia”). I guess there was confusion because South Dakota also has a James River. Regardless, this is a major mistake by Amazon.com. The truth is that LAUCK’S BOOK IS THE #1 SELLLING BOOK about South Dakota on Amazon.com these days. Which makes the Argus Leader’s attempt to blacklist the book that much more outrageous.

Lauck’s book is also #14 nationally in books about elections, which is very good, and makes it even more crazy that an election and political “expert” like Dave Kranz is trying to purge the book from the public’s memory.

#14 in Books > Nonfiction > Government > Elections

Here’s the list of the best-selling Amazon.com books about South Dakota.

Posted by Jason Heppler at 08:46 AM | Permalink | TrackBack

October 22, 2007

Fight the Power!

Some of these images regarding the Argus Leader's avoidance of Jon Lauck's book are swirling around the blogosphere, and several readers have sent them along to me.  Here they are:

Castroarguseditiondvtbn

Castropoint1

Arguseditors

Ouch.  So do your part: read the banned book!

Bannedbooks

UPDATE:  Welcome Power Line readers!  Enjoy your stay here at South Dakota Politics, and do your part: buy the book the Argus Leader doesn't want you to read.

Posted by Jason Heppler at 10:59 PM | Permalink | TrackBack

Is the other Hsu about to drop?

It was appear that the Clinton dynasty, recalling the once and future Gore and Chinese Templegate, regards Chinese Americans as a vast campaign money-laundering network. The Washington Post has this bit about "Dishwashers for Clinton."

DONORS WHOSE addresses turn out to be tenements. Dishwashers and waiters who write $1,000 checks. Immigrants who ante up because they have been instructed to by powerful neighborhood associations, or, as one said, "They informed us to go, so I went." Others who say they never made the contributions listed in their names or who were not eligible to give because they are not legal residents of the United States. This is the disturbingly familiar picture of Hillary Rodham Clinton's presidential campaign presented last week in a report by the Los Angeles Times about questionable fundraising by the New York senator in New York City's Chinese community. Out of 150 donors examined, one-third "could not be found using property, telephone or business records," the Times reported. "Most have not registered to vote, according to public records."

This appears to be another instance in which a Clinton campaign's zeal for campaign cash overwhelms its judgment. After the fundraising scandals of President Bill Clinton's 1996 reelection campaign, the dangers of vacuuming cash from a politically inexperienced immigrant community should have been obvious. But Ms. Clinton's money machine seized on a new source of cash in Chinatown and environs. As the Times reported, a single Chinatown fundraiser in April brought in $380,000. By contrast, 2004 Democratic presidential nominee John F. Kerry raised $24,000 from Chinatown in the course of his entire campaign.

The LATimes article can be found here.  It includes these tid bits:

The tenement at 44 Henry St. was listed in Clinton's campaign reports as the home of Shu Fang Li, who reportedly gave $1,000.  ...A tenant living in the apartment listed as Li's address said through a translator that she had not heard of him, although she had lived there for the last 10 years.

A man named Liang Zheng was listed as having contributed $1,000. The address given was a large apartment building on East 194th Street in the Bronx, but no one by that name could be located there...

Salespeople at a store on Canal Street were similarly baffled when asked about Shih Kan Chang, listed as working there and having given $1,000. The store sells purses, jewelry and novelty Buddha statues. Employees said they had not heard of Chang.

Another listed donor, Yi Min Liu, said he did not make the $1,000 contribution in April that was reported in his name. He said he attended a banquet for Clinton but did not give her money.

It is pretty clear that Ms. Clinton has a network of money launderers working for her in Chinese immigrant enclaves.  There is no reason to believe that she herself has anything to do with this, but if she doesn't know about then she doesn't know what her own campaign is doing.  This could be very bad if someone in her campaign is indicted in, say, February. 

Money will find its way into political campaigns, by legal means or some other means.  The only thing campaign finance reform accomplishes is to drive fund raising underground and make it more difficult to tell who is behind what political activity.  Full disclosure without limits on contributions would bring almost all of this out into the light, where we could judge it.  But the advocates of campaign finance control cannot resist the temptation to try to purify politics.

Posted by Ken Blanchard at 09:04 PM | Permalink | TrackBack

Reid as the Next Daschle

John Hinderaker:  "Harry Reid should be the Tom Daschle of 2010."

Posted by Jason Heppler at 04:21 PM | Permalink | TrackBack

Press Freedom

Reporters Without Borders ranks nations based on press freedom.  See the latest rankings here.  Of the 169 nations ranked, Eritrea is the worst offender.  The fourth nation for press freedom is Iran, and the sixteenth worst nation for press freedom is Syria.  So perhaps going to these nations to denounce the United States (ranked #48, btw), is a bit silly.  Of note, Iraq is ranked as the thirteenth worst offender of press freedom.  This is not surprising given the presence of war in the country.  If the efforts to create a free Iraq are to be successful, though, this will have to change. 

Posted by Jon Schaff at 09:51 AM | Permalink | TrackBack

News About Iraq, From Iraq

Perhaps you are familiar with Michael Yon, a military veteran who now serves as an independent journalist in Iraq.  Glenn Reynolds directs us to the latest post from Yon.  Here are a some snippets.

No thinking person would look at last year’s weather reports to judge whether it will rain today, yet we do something similar with Iraq news. The situation in Iraq has drastically changed, but the inertia of bad news leaves many convinced that the mission has failed beyond recovery, that all Iraqis are engaged in sectarian violence, or are waiting for us to leave so they can crush their neighbors. This view allows our soldiers two possible roles: either “victim caught in the crossfire” or “referee between warring parties.” Neither, rightly, is tolerable to the American or British public. (snip)

Anyone who has been in Iraq for longer than a few months, visited a handful of provinces, and spoken with a good number of Iraqis, likely would acknowledge that the reality here is complex and dynamic. But in the last six months it also has been increasingly hopeful, despite what the pessimistic dogma dome allows Americans and British to believe. (snip)

But it wasn’t until I spent that week back in the States that I realized how bad things have gotten. I believe we are witnessing a conspiracy of coincidences conflating to exert an incomprehensibly destructive force on the free press system that we largely take for granted. The fact that the week in question also happened to be when General Petraeus and Ambassador Crocker were delivering their reports to Congress makes me wonder if things are actually worse than I’ve assessed, and I returned to Iraq sadly convinced that General Petraeus now has to deal from a deck clearly stacked against him in both America and Iraq.

Here is the amazing part of Yon's post and it should be spread around South Dakota and elsewhere.  Yon is offering to members of National Newspaper Association the right to use excerpts and photos from his reporting for free. Here are the South Dakota members of the NNA.  I note that The Rapid City Journal is a member. I urge all South Dakota member papers to take Yon up on his offer. See Yon's post on the details.   

Posted by Jon Schaff at 09:38 AM | Permalink | TrackBack

October 21, 2007

Pheasant Hunting With Senator Thune

From KELO:

It's was big day for South Dakota hunters Saturday. Pheasant season kicked off at noon. Hunters from across the state were welcomed in to the state. Senator John Thune was among the many who donned the orange gear and took aim at a few pheasants.

Walking the fields with his friends at the Rubendall Ranch near Artesian is something Senator John Thune has looked forward to the entire year.

"It's something I've been doing literally since I was 12 years old when I hunted with my dad and now I'm hunting with my brother and friends and some nephews," Senator John Thune said.

Out of state hunters bring lots of money to South Dakota, $153 million to be exact. And Thune knows the experience is what always brings the hunters back each fall.

"It's a tradition that gets passed down from one generation to another and just on a family and friend level. It's a great opportunity to experience something truly unique," Thune said.

Senator Thune says along with the economics and sportsmanship pheasants bring to the state, for him opening day is one big holiday.

"When I was a kid, this was a bigger deal than Christmas, I mean opening day of pheasant season was the day of the year. And its nice now to have a more abundance of pheasants," Thune said.

Add to that an abundance of sunshine and everybody in todays group had an excellent hunt.

"It's something I think we're blessed to have in South Dakota and hopefully we're able to enjoy for a lot of generations to come," Thune said.

And it's the younger hunters who are helping to spread the tradition.

The South Dakota Game Fish and Parks Department says for the most part, Saturday's opening day was a success. But some hunters didn't like the muddy conditions. Officials also say at least five hunting accidents were reported but none were life-threatening.

Posted by Jason Heppler at 08:04 PM | Permalink | TrackBack