Events

Later items

Krugman explains: Mr. Christie’s big move — the one that will define his record — was his unilateral decision back in 2010 to cancel work that was already under way on a new rail tunnel linking New Jersey with New York. At the time, Mr. Christie claimed that he was just being fiscally responsible, while critics said that he had canceled the project just so he could raid it for funds. Now the independent Government Accountability Office has weighed in with a report on the controversy, and it confirms...
Connecticut's house has voted to repeal the death penalty, which will make the state the 17th to abolish it: Senate Bill 280 cleared the House 86-62, a vote that broke largely along party lines. The bill now goes to Gov. Dannel P. Malloy, who has pledged to sign it, ending a form of punishment in the state that dates back to Colonial times when those convicted of being witches were sent to the gallows. [S]upporters of the repeal effort say the state's death penalty is irrevocably broken — just one man...

Henri's Ennui

    David Braverman
General
Pauvre chat: (Via Sullivan.)

Office Dog, day 3

    David Braverman
Parker
I'd say he's performing about as expected:
Theories also have predictive value; that is, in order for a hypothesis to graduate to theorydom, it has to fit all the available facts and predict future events. You know, like anthropogenic climate change, which gets closer to being a true theory every day. For example, via Fallows, a paper written in 1981 seems to have predicted it pretty well: Sometimes it helps to take a step back from the everyday pressures of research (falling ill helps). It was in this way we stumbled across Hansen et al (1981)...
The FBI has put together a committee of university presidents to root out foreign spies who have infiltrated American colleges: While overshadowed by espionage against corporations, efforts by foreign countries to penetrate universities have increased in the past five years, [Frank] Figliuzzi, [Federal Bureau of Investigation assistant director for counterintelligence] said. The FBI and academia, which have often been at loggerheads, are working together to combat the threat, he said. Attempts by...
I like being busy, but it does take time away from lower-priority pursuits like blogging. If I had more time, I'd pontificate on the following: Paul Krugman wonders why Paul Ryan is taken seriously, as do I; Chris Mooney and Kevin Drum wonder what about the Republican brain makes them so opposed to facts; The Atlantic Cities has a fun gallery of world subway platforms; and The Times examines the ridiculousness of taking laptops out at airport checkpoints. For now, though, it's back to the mines.

Tonight, on 60 Minutes

    David Braverman
General
Mike Wallace: Now, you've watched this gate for many years, right? St Peter: Yes, that's right. MW: And do you decide who gets in the gates? SP: Well...I mean, I don't make the final decisions, no... MW: But you can, for example, send someone to the back of the line? SP: That's...you know, that's not something that would be done. In some, rare cases, people decide to return to the end of the line on their own. MW: Peter, come on. Did Carl Sagan go back on his own? SP: Well, look...you know, Carl...
Some items that have gotten my attention: Linda Greenhouse on the Supreme Court's divisions, and how they may throw the health-care law into chaos Laura Miller on Game of Thrones' real-life inspirations and Charli Carpenter writing in Foreign Affairs on Game of Thrones as Realpolitik The Daily with more about craft brewing's increasing market share On Friday, schlock artist Thomas Kinkade died, joining a pantheon of artists we wish the world would forget but probably won't, a group that includes...
I found out, after too many failed download attempts for no reason I could ascertain (come on, Amazon), the 1940 Census data is also available on Ancestry.com. Their servers actually served the data correctly. And so, I found this: The apartment numbers aren't listed, and the building added an apartment to my entrance sometime in the last 70 years, but I think I can work it out. The first column shows the rent for each apartment. The three higher-rent apartments have to be the larger ones to the west....

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