Entries Tagged as 'Uncategorized'

Monday, June 23rd, 2008

Updates!

I never expected to win this because I was up against my colleague Radley Balko, who regularly uncovers incidents of prosecutorial misconduct. How many people do you know–honestly–who tangibly change the state of the world with their journalism?
I’ll be debating Kay Hymowitz all week over at the L.A. Times. This piece of Kay’s is full […]

Tuesday, June 17th, 2008

Baby Bust!

I have a cover story in the July issue of Reason on fertility panics.

Tuesday, June 10th, 2008

Even Friedmans Get Confused

Bryan Caplan digs up that much-deployed, ill-considered, VDare-riffic Milton Friedman immigration quotation: “You cannot simultaneously have free immigration and a welfare state.” As it turns out, the quotation is even worse in context. When Friedman is offered the alternative of a status for immigrants that specifically excludes them from eligibility for welfare, he says:
I haven’t […]

Saturday, May 24th, 2008

The Persistence of Memoir

It’s a bit odd to accuse Emily Gould of “narcissism” or “navel-gazing” for having written a New York Times Magazine cover story about her experiences as a blogger. It is in fact a personal essay. Such essays often involve the first person singular, yet somehow we manage not to accuse Joan Didion and Richard Rodriguez […]

Monday, May 19th, 2008

Cyclone and Sanctions

There is little love lost between pro-development aid workers in Burma and DC-based pro-sanctions types. I teach the controversy over at reason.

Sunday, May 18th, 2008

Isolating Burma

This report from a recent European conference on Burma is helpful in articulating the differences between American, European, and Asian approaches to the country:
There was a widespread sentiment and frustration among participants that the West’s two-decade long policy of sanctions had failed, even if it showed support for the democracy cause. One participant claimed that […]

Saturday, May 17th, 2008

Biting the Hand That Feeds Other People

David Steinberg’s chapter on Foreign Assistance in Burma: The State of Myanmar goes some way in explaining the current impasse. Rangoon may be thick with foreign NGOs, but convincing an independent Burma to accept humanitarian aid has never been easy:
Yet Burma was dependent on foreign assistance, which at various junctures was essential to the […]

Saturday, May 17th, 2008

Kaplan on Burma

I spent some amount of time at my desk in Rangoon daydreaming about UN tanks rolling down Sule Pagoda Road. (It was a weekly paper; we had lots of time.) In one very narrow sense, the conditions seemed ripe for a clean transfer of power. Burma has an elected leader, we were surrounded by Burmans […]

Wednesday, May 14th, 2008

On The Value of Not Pissing Off Than Shwe

Anne Applebaum, David Cameron, and others have been calling for the rest of the world to ignore the junta and just start blanketing the country with aid from the air. It’s certainly tempting; orphaned kids are getting sick as planeloads of medication wait a short trip away, and it’s ludicrous that anyone should have to […]

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

Cotton Castle

Will and I are in Turkey for the week, and the above is a shot Will took from Pamukkale. It’s bizarre, other-wordly white rock that cascades down the side of a small mountain. It looks like ice, but it’s 70 degrees out and warm water from hots springs runs right down the incline. Tourists can […]

Tuesday, April 29th, 2008

“In a Sense, They’re Handicapped”

The eminently reasonable Jason Kuznicki weighs in:
[B]eing troubled by both the state and the FLDS does not make one any less a radical for individualism. It’s perfectly conceivable that giving more control to either one means that individualism loses. Highly controlling environments like the FLDS may indeed approach the status of a government, Howley argues, […]

Tuesday, April 29th, 2008

Ambiguity and Abuse

Tim Lee demands clarity!
There appears to be evidence of statutory rape. That’s a relatively easy-to-define and plainly problematic crime that the state can and should prosecute. If there’s evidence that some of the teenage or pre-teen girls have been raped, that would be reasonable grounds for holding all of the girls between the ages of […]

Sunday, April 27th, 2008

A Fun and Eye-Opening Experience!

Kim Kardashian reports:
My sisters and I recently did a public service announcement about the country of Burma’s struggle for freedom. Their Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi is imprisoned right now and has endured torture.
It’s an incredible story and I’m honored to have helped raise awareness about Burma’s plight. Over all it was […]

Sunday, April 27th, 2008

Skakel Update

The Moxley/Skakel saga continues:
Michael Skakel, nephew of Ethel Kennedy and murderer of Martha Moxley, is now an artist.
Kennedy cousin Michael Skakel, imprisoned for killing a teenage neighbor, is spending some of his time in prison creating art that depicts beauty, danger and the loss of innocence.
Skakel, convicted in 2002 of killing Martha Moxley in 1975, […]

Sunday, April 27th, 2008

FLDS and Informed Consent

What to make of the bizarrely limited conversation surrounding the FLDS raids? A number of people have linked approvingly to this OpEd arguing that the men of FLDS are hapless victims of state-initiated force, guilty only of “teaching their kids that a woman’s highest calling is giving birth and raising children.” With the […]