# 26 January 2012

The Caging of America

The logic is self-evident if we just transfer it to the realm of white-collar crime: we easily accept that there is no net sum of white-collar crime waiting to happen, no inscrutable generation of super-predators produced by Dewar’s-guzzling dads and scaly M.B.A. profs; if you stop an embezzlement scheme here on Third Avenue, another doesn’t naturally start in the next office building. White-collar crime happens through an intersection of pathology and opportunity; getting the S.E.C. busy ending the opportunity is a good way to limit the range of the pathology.

And unfortunately the logic is only used to keep white collar criminals out of jail.

Filed under [Crime] [America] [Equal Protection] [New Yorker]
# 18:43
Here the company (which spends millions lobbying legislators) is obliged to caution its investors about the risk that somehow, somewhere, someone might turn off the spigot of convicted men.
Filed under [Corporatism] [Evil] [Prison] [America] [New Yorker]
# 17:03
The normalization of prison rape—like eighteenth-century japery about watching men struggle as they die on the gallows—will surely strike our descendants as chillingly sadistic, incomprehensible on the part of people who thought themselves civilized.
Filed under [Rape] [America] [Prison] [New Yorker]
# 15:23

The Caging of America

In truth, there are more black men in the grip of the criminal-justice system—in prison, on probation, or on parole—than were in slavery then. Over all, there are now more people under “correctional supervision” in America—more than six million—than were in the Gulag Archipelago under Stalin at its height. That city of the confined and the controlled, Lockuptown, is now the second largest in the United States.

Filed under [Prison] [America] [Stalin] [New Yorker]
# 19 December 2011
The young man did not get down from his seat, although most of those next to him did. His tenacity made an impression on me, because I find it hard to imagine myself plumply saying ‘No’ to a police officer’s request, even if the request seems less than fully justified. The incident reminded me that the police have no authority except insofar as they are enforcing the law.
Filed under [Smartphones] [Police] [Law] [Due Process] [Elite Opinions] [New Yorker]
# 9 June 2011
Drake is refusing, so far, to plead guilty to any wrongdoing, arguing that it is a lie, and he won’t compromise the truth.
Filed under [Lies] [Surveillance] ['merca] [Due Process] [Laws] [New Yorker]
# 7 June 2011

The New Politics of Climate Change

For decades, climate scientists have predicted that, as global temperatures rose, the side effects would include deeper droughts, more intense flooding, and more ferocious storms. The details of these forecasts are immensely complicated, but the underlying science is pretty simple. Warm air can hold more moisture. This means that there is greater evaporation. It also means that there is more water, and hence more energy, available to the system.

What we are seeing now is these predictions being borne out.

Filed under [Climate Change] [Energy] [Obama] [New Yorker]
# 11 March 2011
It almost reads like parody to me; I mean, The New Yorker isn’t exactly The Nation in its geriatric disconnect, and yet Cassidy’s piece reads like it was written by Monty Burns.
Filed under [PPW] [Brooklyn] [Cycling] [New Yorker] [Old Media] [MetaFilter]
# 4:00
I don’t have anything against bikes. I just hate the infrastructure that makes biking possible.
Filed under [Cycling] [NYC] [New Yorker] [Old Media] [Lies] [Naparstek]
# 10 March 2011
It seems that New Yorker writers like Prospect Park West residents, are just more faux liberals, more enraptured with their own privileged life-styles than reasoned discourse or arguments supported by facts.
Filed under [Faux Liberals] [Elitists] [Old Media] [New Yorker] [Facts] [Streetsblog] [Comments]