Last Decade

/ September 24, 2009 4:23 pm

Worrying News

The U.S. government is probing the death of Bill Sparkman, a census worker in rural Kentucky. He was found hanged in the woods with the word “FED” scrawled on his chest.  I doubt Glenn Beck means to goad his viewers into violence when he tells them the federal government is trying to destroy American democracy, but he probably shouldn’t be ... Read More

/ September 10, 2009 3:46 pm

How Iran Stopped Worrying & Learned to Love the Bomb

So unsurprisingly, the Iranians now have enough uranium to make a nuclear bomb.  I say unsurprising because, well, the U.S. has been wringing its hands over it for years now.  While apparently the 2007 intelligence assessment that they aren’t actively designing a bomb was accurate, it’s now within their physical capacity to build one if they get that design work started ... Read More

/ September 9, 2009 3:20 am

Afghan Election Fail

In a plot twist which should surprise approximately no one, it seems that the August presidential election in Afghanistan was not entirely on the up-and-up. It’s not that the United States is particularly keen to create a warlord-ruled narco-”state” in perpetual war and essentially ungovernable…it’s more just that nations with no literacy, centralized power, or democratic tradition probably aren’t reasonable ... Read More

/ September 4, 2009 3:26 am

Japan!

So I actually just returned to school from a summer spent working in Tokyo, and so I have been following with great interest the returns from the recent Japanese election.  As you may have heard if you’ve heard anything, the bare-bones outline is this: the Liberal Democratic Party (neither liberal or democratic, truth be told), after 50 years of almost ... Read More

/ August 13, 2009 9:03 pm

A Fatter or Skinnier Fed?

Below is a piece on financial regulation from HPR alum Rahul Prabhakar ’09. Rahul is now a Fellow at the Glover Park Group in Washington D.C. ——————————————————————————————————————- Over the past month, the U.S. Congress has held a series of hearings to debate the Obama Administration’s proposal to overhaul the American financial regulatory structure. The fates of the SEC, CFTC, and ... Read More

/ July 23, 2009 6:38 pm

The Gates Arrest

I read the initial article in The Crimson confident that the arrest of Henry Louis Gates, Jr., would make waves far beyond Cambridge, Mass.  Allegations of racial profiling mounted; the charges were ultimately dropped.  But let’s not forget, as Stanford Law School professor Ralph Richard Banks wrote in The Times, that the police did exactly what we would hope they would ... Read More

/ July 20, 2009 4:49 am

Real Change Comes to Washington

So in some areas (civil liberties and wars come to mind), there is not so much daylight to be found between President Obama and his predecessor.  But in other areas that are not always so visible, it is clear that Obama does intend to pursue a somewhat ambitious liberal agenda.  And one of those extremely contentious yet poorly publicized battles ... Read More

/ June 11, 2009 8:43 pm

Sotomayor on Criminal Justice: Causes for Concern?

It now appears that the Obama administration, which once seemed so eager to explicitly press the case for liberal constitutional jurisprudence, is trying to characterize Sonia Sotomayor as a bona fide judicial moderate, if not an outright conservative. Take a look at the administration’s talking points: no more talk of “empathy” is to be found. Rather, they highlight her frequent ... Read More

/ May 29, 2009 2:07 am

A Letter to the Editor of the NY Times

To the Editor: Please explain to me the logic of an article that announces that Sonia Sotomayor has an “issue of temperament,” presents exactly one instance of allegedly intemperate questioning, and concludes with a quote from the lawyer to whom those questions were addressed, saying that the questions were “reasonable and fine.” Okay. Now explain to me how these are ... Read More

/ May 29, 2009 12:52 am

Conservative Mental Gestures

The last few days, I’ve been reminded of Lionel Trilling’s rather impolite description of conservatism as a philosophy expressed in “irritable mental gestures” rather than ideas. What keeps provoking this thought in me is all the carping about Sonia Sotomayor’s “reverse racism.” I got to thinking about what I find so, well, irritating about this particular conservative mental gesture. And ... Read More

/ May 28, 2009 5:12 am

Judges and Biography

Conservative pundits and their mainstream-media abettors are stunned, stunned I say, at the suggestion that a judge’s biography might have some sort of influence on his or her decisions. Somewhere under the Mojave Desert, a cabal of conservative engineers is working on the Adjudicator 9000, the amicus brief-processing automaton that will solve the problem of having, you know, humans on ... Read More

/ May 24, 2009 8:26 pm

Questions for George Will

George Will worked himself into quite a lather today about a law review article by some visiting assistant law professor at Duke that argues that the principle of free speech might be subordinated to governmental interests in combating corruption and the distorting influences of wealth on the political process. No surprises here: Will is a leading opponent of campaign finance ... Read More

/ May 22, 2009 9:48 pm

Justin Cosby, Victim of America’s Misguided Drug Policy

This past Monday Justin Cosby, 21, was shot in the basement of Kirkland House, one of Harvard’s twelve residences for upperclassmen. The tragic events were a huge surprise to a campus neck deep in finals, papers, and graduation preparations. Basic facts such as why Cosby was in a Harvard residence, how he gained entrance, and the identities of the assailants ... Read More

/ May 21, 2009 7:39 pm

Still Closing Guantánamo

After the Senate voted 90 – 6 against financing President Obama’s plan to close the Guantánamo Bay detention facility by January 2010, the President spoke today to reaffirm his commitment to closing the facility. The speech made numerous good points, including an explicit refutation of the ridiculous notion, peddled by both Republicans and Democrats, that the government is incapable of ... Read More

/ May 3, 2009 5:05 pm

Lies, Damned Lies, and the Supreme Court

The silly brouhahas that marked the weeks leading up to last year’s election have mostly been forgotten, but one might be on the verge of a comeback. Remember when the conservative punditry was screaming that Obama wants to redistribute wealth using the court system? Well, that old meme might be back, if Roger Kimball at Pajamas Media has anything to ... Read More

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