Assorted Links 11/19/09
Video: Rick Perry asserts Texas’s Tenth Amendment rights
- Understanding Congressional Budgeting and Appropriations, December 1, 2009
- Congress in a Nutshell: Understanding Congress, December 2, 2009
- Congressional Dynamics and the Legislative Process, December 3, 2009
- How to Find, Track, and Monitor Congressional Documents: Going Beyond Thomas, with WiFi Classroom, December 4, 2009
- Advanced Federal Budget Process, December 7-8, 2009
- Advanced Legislative Strategies, December 9-11, 2009
- Research Tools and Techniques: Refining Your Online and Offline Searches, with WiFi Classroom, December 15, 2009
- The Fire Department in Concord Mass in the Nineteenth Century – “There were no fire engines, horse-drawn or otherwise. The citizens were the fire department. Each house had its own firebuckets and in the event of a fire, everyone was meant to pitch in. That meant taking your firebucket and joining the line of people from the water tank to the fire.
Does the story so far give you a warm, fuzzy feeling? Friendly folk working together, helping each other out and living by the Kantian categorical imperative. Let me rain on your parade — I am an economist after all. The private provision of public goods is subject to a free-rider problem: The costs of helping someone else outweigh the direct benefits to me so I don’t do it. Everyone reasons the same way so we get the good old Prisoner’s Dilemma and a collectively worse equilibrium outcome.”
- Where Are the Judges? – “In the end, the primary reason for the slow rate of judicial confirmations is that neither the Obama Administration nor the Senate leadership has made judicial nominees a significant priority. The White House has been slow to make nominations, and the Senate leadership has made little effort to push those nominated through. Further, for all his talk of bipartisanship President Obama has yet to reciprocate President Bush’s decision to re-nominate stalled Clinton nominees, as Bush did at the beginning and end of his presidency.”
How do you convince someone to stay away?
- New GM’s Projected Cash Burn is . . . Unspecified – “Taxpayer money given to GM (not including the Department of Energy’s $10 billion, 25-year, no-to-low interest “retooling’ loan): $52 billion. Current cash pile: $42.6 billion. Cash flow (according to Automotive News source): was $3 billion. And what of future cash flow? On this key issue–the only key issue–GM’s non-standard accounting of its accounts is, by no account, clear.”
- Obama’s swelling ego – “At this rate, it won’t be long before the president’s ego is so inflated that it will require a ZIP code of its own.”
- Tanks on the borders of….Colombia? – “Everyone’s favorite autocrat, Hugo F. Chavez, is mobilizing his military to the Colombian border to heroically repel the expected US invasion.”
- Less Fearful Babies More Likely To Become Criminals – “Babies less prone to feel fear are more likely to commit crimes.”
- New Google Book Settlement Tries To Appease Worries – “I still stand by my original feeling towards the settlement, which is that I’m upset anyone felt it was necessary at all. Google had a strong fair use claim that I would have liked to have seen taken all the way through the courts. And, of course, this settlement really has nothing at all to do with the main issue of the lawsuit (that fair use question) and is really a debate over a separate issue: how to take the books Google scans and trying to turn them into a ‘book store’ rather than more of a ‘library.’ And, in doing so, the important fair use question gets completely buried — which I find unfortunate.”
- Where Is an Hour Not an Hour? – “In the new fairy-land of New York City parking, where drivers, who tend to act like children to begin with, will be treated thusly and indulgently, in an act of colossal political cowardice (the car is, if nothing else, the great vehicle for political pandering — remember the ‘gas tax’ holiday?). Why a five-minute ‘grace period’? Why not ten minutes? Why enforce any law at all?”
My nomination for Law Enforcement Officer of the Year!
- Has Anyone Seen the Tenth Amendment? – “I hate to be old fashioned and think that constitutional constraints limiting the size and scope of government are essential to sound government, but still, has anyone seen the Tenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution? It seems to be missing.”
- Asus Eee PC 1201N — Perfect Blend of Netbook and Notebook? – “The debate between netbook and notebook might have found some middle ground with the ASUS Eee PC 1201N. I just caught the LAPTOP Magazine hands on with this device and that’s the impression I came away with. Why is that? Mainly because the 1201N offers specs closer to a notebook, but has the price and size near to a netbook. The $499 price tag competes well with many high-end netbooks and offers”