Category Archives: Short Notes

A weekly feature that collects interesting links and adds a paragraph or two of content.

Noah’s Dinosaurs and other short notes

Dinosaurs on the Ark

[8/15/2011] Tax breaks and other incentives totaling just short of $100 million are going into the Ark Encounter theme park that is supposed to open near Williamstown, Kentucky in 2014.

Ark Encounter is the latest project of Answers in Genesis, the non-profit that already owns the Creation Museum 45 minutes down the road. Unlike the CM, though, Ark is a for-profit venture owned by its investors. (AiG will just manage it.) The two attractions share AiG’s young-earth Creationist view, as you can tell from the dinosaur-head sticking out of the Ark.

This is going to be a tricky separation-of-church-and-state case. On the one hand, as Daily Kos’ Kaili Joy Gray puts it:

you can’t use millions and millions of taxpayer dollars to teach people about Jesus. Pretty sure that building a creationist theme park on the taxpayer dime is actually the textbook definition of what you can’t do.

But a new Six Flags could probably wrangle some tax concessions too, so I think Ark-park opponents will need to argue that it’s getting a better-than-secular deal because state officials want to promote Christianity. As I said: tricky.

Still, try to imagine the uproar if tax breaks helped build a Mahabharata theme park intended to draw millions of Hindu tourists to Kentucky.


A North Carolina county board is going to appeal to the Supreme Court after an appellate court stopped it from opening its meetings with prayers to Jesus. The board’s vice chair says church-and-state isn’t being violated because the board’s “open door” policy would allow members of non-Christian faiths to lead prayers if they wanted.

Like my fantasy of a tax-subsidized Hindu theme park, though, it’s hard to imagine the response a meeting-opening Islamic prayer would draw.


Another 10 commandments fight is brewing in Florida.


Nate Silver interprets Saturday’s Ames Straw Poll. His model makes Michele Bachmann the favorite to win the Iowa caucuses, and has bad news for Santorum, Cain, Gingrich et al. Tim Pawlenty has already seen the writing on the wall and quit.

Now the focus shifts to Rick Perry, who announced his candidacy Saturday. Perry is making a “Texas miracle” case: Under his leadership Texas is creating jobs, and the same policies could work nationally.

As Paul Krugman and an NYT panel point out, Texas’ example wouldn’t scale up even if we wanted it to: Texas has benefitted from a high oil price and from snow-birding retirees who bring in money they earned in other states. Also, Texas is winning a race-to-the-bottom with other states by offering businesses cheap labor unprotected by state government. So Texas leads not just in new jobs, but in minimum wage jobs and in the percentage of people without health insurance.

In short: Texas isn’t creating jobs, it’s taking bad jobs from other states and making them worse. That’s not a route to national prosperity.



Grist boils the evidence that global warming is man-made down to one graphic. “It’s getting hotter” isn’t the whole case for man-made global warming. How and where it’s getting hotter eliminates alternative explanations like increased solar radiation.


Just because a corporation talks green doesn’t mean it isn’t funding climate-change denial through organizations like ALEC.


Mitt Romney’s claim that “Corporations are people, my friend” may have been true legally and even in the sense he intended (that a corporate tax ultimately means some person — most likely some very rich person — has less money). But he’s given the DNC fodder for an effective ad.

Make that two effective ads.

The quips are also piling up. One TPM commenter claims Romney really meant, “Corporations are my friends, people.” And I wasn’t the only person to come up with “Corporations aren’t people. Soylent green is people.”


Now that the United States has lost its AAA bond rating, you know who still has one? Socialist countries, mostly: Sweden, Finland, Norway, France, and a few others — all of whom have universal health care.

The Solar Oil Field, and other short notes

Wrap your brain around this: Oman is building a big solar facility to help it pump more oil. Solar energy makes steam that gets injected into the ground to bring up more oil.

You can tell Grist wants to hate the project, but just can’t.

If they work out in Oman, which desperately wants to keep its natural gas for other purposes, it could be huge: imagine entire oil fields covered with these things, silently mocking solar advocates everywhere.

Yeah, it’s helping produce oil which will get burned and cause more global warming. But the likely alternative is to produce the same oil with steam made by burning natural gas.


The Onion: Obama Turns 50 Despite Republican Opposition.

I thought that was a joke. But no: Michele Bachmann attacked Obama for celebrating his birthday on a day when stocks were crashing. And Fox News made sure their viewers knew the President was having a “hip-hop barbecue” with a bunch of other black guys instead of doing something to create jobs.


Do you miss the days when Jerry Falwell went after Tinky Winky? Well, tune into Fox News, where Sponge Bob is environmentalist propaganda.


Ever wonder how that E-Trade baby is doing now that the market is going down?


Matt Damon turns back a right-wing talking point about teachers getting lazy because of tenure.

A teacher wants to teach. I mean, why else would you take a shitty salary and really long hours and do that job, unless you really love to do it?


DIY nuclear reactor — bad idea. Damn those government regulations.


Last week (in the middle of Centrist in Exile) I ranted about Republicans’ attempt to blame the bad economy on the EPA. Grist follows up:

After 30 years, it is time to start ignoring all of the hyperventilating about the imaginary economic horrors of environmental protection. In reality, there is overwhelming evidence that a healthy environment is part of a strong economy; indeed, allowing pollution to continue unabated is the economically foolish thing to do.

Environmental regulation doesn’t cost money; it saves money. Dealing with pollution at the source is so much easier, more efficient, and healthier than cleaning up downstream.


The Onion News Network covers agitated climate scientists as if they were zoo animals: “Don’t some people believe that scientists can actually sense danger coming?”


Some classic Fox news-twisting: When President Obama issued a statement sending “best wishes to Muslim communities in the United States and around the world” on Ramadan, Fox & Friends was all over him: He was favoring Ramadan over Easter, which hadn’t rated a presidential statement.

Of course, Easter got mentioned in the President’s weekly radio address, there was the annual Easter-egg roll on the White House lawn, and Obama hosted an Easter Prayer Breakfast in which he talked about “the resurrection of our savior, Jesus Christ“. But all Fox-watchers know is that there was no official written statement, like Ramadan got.

Short notes

I’ll examine the full debt ceiling deal next week, but early reports from people I trust (Paul KrugmanSalon’s Andrew Leonard) are calling it a “surrender” by President Obama. Hunter on Daily Kos doesn’t use that word, but basically agrees.

Prior to the deal announcement, Matt Yglesias wrote:

[A]t this point the biggest damage is to the overall system of government. Obama has successfully transformed massive debt ceiling hostage taking from an act of breathtakingly irresponsible brinksmanship into a proven effective negotiating tactic. … Every time the president’s party has fewer than 60 votes in the Senate, we may face a recurrence of this crisis.


The debt ceiling is just a distraction from the really serious economic news: The Tooth Fairy is cutting back.


Who says conspicuous consumption can’t be environmentally correct? Check out the solar-powered bikini, which can get wet and still charge an iPhone.


A mother videos what happens when she takes her son to the DMV to get one of the Voter ID cards that Wisconsin now requires if you don’t have a driver’s license. If you know your rights, you don’t have to pay the $28. But it’s still a hassle. And what problem is being solved — other than the non-drivers’ tendency to vote for Democrats?


The University of Southampton just snapped together a pilotless aircraft from pieces “printed” on a 3D printer.


A few years ago I heard Daniel Ellsberg describe how he came to leak the Pentagon Papers: “I asked myself: What can I do to end this war if I’m willing to go to prison for it?”

Tim DeChristopher recently asked the same question about global warming. His two-year prison term just started, but he says “I’m happier than I’ve ever been.”

DeChristopher’s crime? Disrupting a Bureau of Land Management oil-and-gas-lease auction by making false bids. But Grist’s Shawn Regan asks an important question: Why can’t environmentalists bid for real, with the idea of leaving the land undisturbed? Currently, winning bidders are required to develop their parcels.


Nate Silver charts it: Democratic governors are more liberal or conservative depending on the politics of their states. Republican governors have the same agenda everywhere.


Cenk Uygur’s account of how he lost his MSNBC show says a lot about mainstream media: It would be bad enough if network decisions were all about ratings. But even good ratings won’t save you if you annoy the Powers That Be.


Remember when Apple was the good corporation that was going to save us from domination by the evil IBM?

Well, now that Apple owns the app market, it is acting the same way IBM did when it owned the business-computing market and Microsoft did when it owned the desktop. Kindle and Nook can have iPad apps, but not if they’re going compete with iBooks for sales.


More evidence that terrorism is a meaningless term: Tuesday night, a Planned Parenthood clinic in Texas was firebombed. Nobody covered it.


As of this morning, the Intrade prediction market rated Rick Perry as the favorite to win the GOP nomination, with a 32% chance compared to Mitt Romney’s 28%. Michele Bachmann is back to 7%, about where she was when I recommended buying her shares. I stand by the recommendation.


Jon Stewart’s GOP: Special Victims Unit looks at right-wing fantasies of their own victimization.

Short Notes

As the debt-ceiling deadline gets closer, the markets are starting to get nervous. As I said three weeks ago, I don’t see how the deal gets done without the motivation of a market panic, so I think we’ll see one.

Eventually this may get resolved by President Obama claiming the power to act on his own, as this NYT op-ed advocates. It’s a scary thought: Democracy becomes so dysfunctional that we need unilateral executive action to avoid default.

Meanwhile, a few conservatives economists are starting to explain to the faithful why the debt ceiling has to be raised. But only the Onion could tell it straight: Congress Continues Debate Over Whether or Not Nation Should Be Economically Ruined.


If you’re planning to lie to a Senate committee, first check whether Al Franken is on it. Focus on the Family’s Tom Minnery didn’t and wishes he had.


A father of daughters explains why women have trouble breaking into the mainstream: It all goes back to dogs and smurfs.


It’s been fascinating to watch the media react to the Norway attacks. They instantly assumed Islamic terrorism. And then when it turned out to be the exact opposite — an Islamophobic nativist — the follow-ups were like “Oh, sorry. We thought it was terrorism.”

So a political extremist kills nearly 100 civilians, including teens at a the summer camp of the Labour Party’s Workers’ Youth League, but it’s not terrorism because he’s a blond Christian rather than a swarthy Muslim. Glenn Greenwald is right: terrorism has become meaningless.


After receiving the proper military and presidential certification that it is not necessary for combat readiness, Don’t Ask Don’t Tell will officially end September 20. I love the advice from the Sergeant Major of the Marine Corps: “Get over it. … Let’s be Marines.”


Grist wonders: Could News Corp have hacked the ClimateGate emails?


As all the Murdoch properties circle the wagons to defend against the phone-hacking scandal, it becomes clearer than ever that (in Jay Rosen’s words) “News Corp is not a news company at all, but a global media empire that employs its newspapers – and in the US, Fox News – as a lobbying arm.”

Watch Jon Stewart’s reaction to Fox News’ attempt to paint Murdoch as the victim.


For nearly two years, Republicans have been complaining that half of Americans pay no income tax. (Often they overstate this as “pay no tax“, ignoring the Social Security and Medicare payroll taxes, plus state and local taxes.) Cantor, Bachmann and others have been singing this tune recently.

Nobody remembers: Cutting low-wage families’ income tax to zero or near-zero was one of the talking points for the Bush tax cuts. In his 2003 State of the Union, President Bush promised

A family of four with an income of $40,000 would see their federal income taxes fall from $1,178 to $45 per year.

But conservative rhetoric turns on a dime, and now those families are moochers and deadbeats. People over 55 should remember them when Paul Ryan promises full Medicare benefits. Conservatives promise you something, then vilify you later for taking it.


In case “love thy neighbor” needs clarification.


As the Captain America movie opens, the Mighty God King blog speculates on Steve Rogers’ Depression-era communist upbringing. Underneath that jingoistic costume, the Captain is a liberal. He even provided a Sift quote once.

Short Notes

3D printers are seriously cool, science-fictiony things. But they also will be very disruptive. What happens to manufacturing and shipping jobs — or to capitalist economics in general — when you can turn out a crescent wrench like this?

One attempt to answer this question is Peter Frase’s vision of Anti-Star Trek. In other words, what happens if you have Star Trek‘s replicators and limitless clean energy, but you’re not willing to embrace the Federation’s socialist economy? Frase pictures a future capitalism based not on production, but on collecting rents on intellectual property. It’s not pretty.

Another attempt to answer similar questions is Martin Ford’s The Lights in the Tunnel, which I discussed in May.


I’m ready to stop writing about Sarah Palin, but this is too good: A worshipful documentary about her, The Undefeated, opened Friday at 10 theaters in conservative hotspots. Atlantic’s associate editor Conor Friedersdorf went to the midnight premier in Orange County CA, where he imagined he would get fascinating quotes from the rabid Palinistas.

There weren’t any. Two women came in because Harry Potter was sold out. They soon left. A couple came to make out in the back row. They soon left too. Friedersdorf wound up interviewing the manager. “In hindsight,” he asked, “do you wish you’d had one more screen showing Harry Potter?”


Paul Krugman to his fellow pundits: If you’re just now noticing that the Republican Party has gone crazy, you’re part of the problem.

Bill Mahr says a lot the same thing to all the middle-class people who vote Republican, but he’s much funnier:


President Obama pointing out the obvious — that if the debt ceiling isn’t raised he can’t guarantee that seniors will get their full Social Security checks — is “fear mongering” according to Fox News. (Try making the trade-offs yourself. You don’t have to cut Social Security, but you have to cut something important.)

In this remarkable clip, Fox’s Eric Bolling not only claims “President Bush never fear-mongered like this,” but when another panelist brings up terrorism Bolling says: “America was certainly safe between 2000 and 2008. I don’t remember any terrorist attacks on American soil during that period of time.”

So, Eric, does 9-11 ring any bells?
Vodpod videos no longer available.


Dim bulbs. Tea partiers in the House are intent on repealing the law that raises light bulb efficiency standards. If the incandescent was good enough for Reagan, it’s good enough for us.


If only we could reduce all our issues to music videos like The Fracking Song.

BTW, the latest research on fracking indicates that water wells near fracked gas wells do get contaminated with methane, but not with the trade-secret fracking chemicals themselves. The problem might be as simple as bad piping. Because fracking wells are so deep, there’s a lot more pipe for gas to leak from.


Conservatives are still trying to pin the housing bubble on government rather than Wall Street, and they’re still wrong.


The Rupert Murdoch scandal is exactly the kind of thing I need Stephen Colbert to explain to me:

Vodpod videos no longer available.

Short Notes

Mark Fiore’s animations are very sharp satires. Check out “Trickle Down Tales”. And Tom Tomorrow is pretty good today too.


Democrats on the Senate Appropriations Committee have put together a chart explaining what happened to the surplus in Clinton’s final budget. It’s mildly deceptive (everything except defense is adjusted for inflation and population growth), but ignoring the too-high defense number, it makes a great point: We had a revenue crash and the population got older, but there was no discretionary-spending orgy.


Last week I mentioned the possibility of Obama invoking the 14th amendment to ignore the debt ceiling. Lawrence Tribe has convinced me that’s not a legitimate option.


Slate’s tech reviewer loves the new LED light bulb. It lasts 20 years, uses about 1/5 the power, and emits the spectrum we expect from incandescents. The problem: They cost $20 each. Long-term it’s a good deal, but people aren’t used to thinking about light bulbs as investments.


What if your windows could be solar panels?


If Republican election-reform laws aren’t about suppressing legitimate votes, then why does the new Ohio law say that poll workers don’t have to direct confused voters to their correct polling places?