Yearly Archives: 2010

10 reasons why gay marriage should be illegal

Shared by Ian

They make some pretty good points in there.

The Sunshine Coliseum : Discovery News

Here's an idea for a power plant: the solar-powered sports coliseum. What if you skinned an entire stadium with solar such that it could satisfy its own ginormous appetite for power when filled with spectators, but when idle (which is usually often) it...

The Sunshine Coliseum : Discovery News

Here's an idea for a power plant: the solar-powered sports coliseum. What if you skinned an entire stadium with solar such that it could satisfy its own ginormous appetite for power when filled with spectators, but when idle (which is usually often) it...

Drawbed

Shared by Jon

Replace Matt with Mike D...

ZAGGsparq Holds Multiple Recharges for Your USB Devices [Stuff We Like]

Shared by Jon

Amusingly, we wouldn't have innovation in this space of generic batteries iif iphones and such had removable batteries in the first place. Yay for less battery waste!
The ZAGGsparq is a portable power supply about the size of an Airpor...

Apple's iPad heralds tablet explosion, analysts say (Jonny Evans/9 to 5 Mac)

Shared by Jon

Let's ignore the CES from last month that was full of tablet style devices powered by Android and Win7.
Jonny Evans / 9 to 5 Mac:
Apple's iPad heralds tablet explosion, analysts say — Apple's iPad tablet launch last week refl...

Judge censured for ordering class-action lawyer to take pay in $125,000 worth of gift-cards

Shared by Jon

Sucks that it was a sarcastic judge on his way out to retirement. The logic appears quite sound to me. If a settlement is meant to provide some sort of reparation to the plaintiffs and damage to the defense, then why would a gift card ...

Luntz, Meet Focault

Shared by Jon

To quote Spaceballs: "now you see that evil will always triumph because good is dumb."
I'm hardly naive about the willingness of politicians to twist the English language to suit their ends, so that tax hikes become "revenue e...

It’s About the Narratives

Matthew Yglesias expresses the political logic for passing health care reform, succinctly and, in my opinion, persuasively:

If you’ve already voted for health reform, which a majority of House members and 59 Senators have, then you’re already going to get hit with 100 percent of the hits that accrue to people who vote for Obamacare. Nobody is going to care about the fine nuances of “senate bill” versus “house bill” or whatever. It’s Obamacare and you’re going to get hit.

The question is whether you’d rather get hit for your participation in a discredited failure that’s been abandoned by its own architects, or whether you’d rather get hit for participation in a controversial but successful effort to fulfill the decades-long promise of universal health care? I don’t think it’s even close. If the bill passes, that generates a positive narrative around the bill that can compete with the negative narrative. If it fails, then you’ve got all the negative narratives but you also add on a new bonus negative narrative of gridlock and failure. If it passes, all the groups out there that like the bill can come out and explain to people about the good things in it. If it fails, then they all go running for the hills but your enemies still get to emphasize the unpopular parts. In other words, voting “yes” on Obamacare is politically problematic but it’s already happened now the question is whether your “yes” vote buys you an actual bill to stand and fight on.

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