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Posts tagged with Media Trips

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10:43 PM

Bill Nye on climate change

Tonight on Rachel Maddow, Bill Nye (the science guy) provided commentary on certain people’s insistence that a snowstorm on the east coast in February proves that climate change isn’t real. I’m psyched but disheartened that Maddow felt she needed to ask for Bill Nye to explain the difference between climate and weather. I know I learned that concept in school (probably thanks to Bill Nye, come to think of it), but the fact that she thought this was a necessary fact to air is very telling of the level of discourse in which these certain people are conducting themselves.

The whole theme of the full-court shot and the montage of the facts that don’t negate concepts/theories was great, though it was hard to tell exactly where she was going with it at first. I’m more partial towards the insights of David Byrne on this matter :

Facts are simple and facts are straight
Facts are lazy and facts are late
Facts all come with points of view
Facts don’t do what I want them to
Facts just twist the truth around
Facts are living turned inside out
Facts are getting the best of them

– From “Crosseyed & Painless”

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7:48 AM

More Important?

Silly me, I thought the fact that Iran’s president informally (but publicly) accepted the terms of a nuclear deal negotiated by the US, UK, Russia, China, France and Germany was significant.

Apparently, a mouse, two turtles and a worm are worthy of more sensational headlines?

I’m a little confused here, haven’t we been sending actual people to live and research in space for decades now? Aren’t we even to the point in our relationship with space that the government is transitioning space ferrying from NASA to the private sector?

Yet somehow, the American media reports direct quotes from Ahmadinejad stating his conviction that “The scientific arena is where we could defeat the (West’s) domination”. Meanwhile an important concession made by the president of Iran in nuclear talks is remaining under the radar – and I was really looking forward to hearing the wide-eyed rantings of Liz Cheney today. Rats. I mean a mouse, two turtles and a worm?

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10:09 AM

The Oregon Blues

Maybe not for long though. With the passing of Measures 66 and 67, voters in Oregon enacted by popular vote the increase of income taxes for those who reside in the top 3% (income > 250,000$/year) and the increase in minimum corporate tax for most businesses (which for decades meant most businesses paid a measly 10$/year in corporate taxes). The revenue generated by this increase (slated at roughly 727$ million) is meant to go towards public education, health care and other social services and was included in the Oregon State Legislature’s current budget.

The folks who railed against this increase saw their narrow interests overwhelmed by progressive populism – the argument for the tax increases relied upon stressing how many people would be negatively effected by the budget shortfall if the measures failed, particularly schools and students who faced the threat of having to cut 3 weeks worth of school days.

Coming on the heels of Democratic losses in a Massachusetts special election, many were quick to jump to enormous conclusions over what this means, and were keen upon drawing parallels between the two special elections. The bravado of the statements made after the Oregon election was much more reserved than those made by pundits after soon-to-be-Sen. Scott Brown’s victory, which included the brilliant analysis by David Gergen of CNN who opined “This is not the time to go out and crusade for liberal causes”.

As a matter of fact though, the two elections are completely tangential to one another, owing to the specific conditions in each coastal state. As to the Oregon vote’s larger interpretation, I think the Nation’s Katrina Vanden Heuvel got it right when she wrote:

“The campaign wasn’t about class warfare, or taking on the banks as evil beasts (though there’s nothing wrong with that!), it was about progressive taxation, an art form in economic policy that has somehow been lost over these many decades. It’s worth remembering that under President Eisenhower the top marginal tax rate was over 90 percent.”