CSPAN-2 Meets Jersey Shore

I guess this counts as hair-pulling by C-SPAN's standards. Appearing as panelists to discuss Jonah Goldberg's new collection of essays, Todd Seavey and Helen Rittelmeyer engage in a remarkable ex-lover spat:

Seavey clearly had some unresolved issues with the break-up and decided to take them out on Rittelmeyer during the event, which was being televised on CSPAN2. The result is the wonkiest, nerdiest Internet revenge ever. Here is Seavey’s bizarre soliloquy, punctuated by a surprised Rittelmeyer’s short responses.

Money quote from Seavey:

It might come as a surprise to some of you that we dated for two years, not just because we have ideological differences, but because there are probably some people in this room who also dated Helen during those two years, given how tumultuous it got.

The Upside Of Ambition

Jonathan Bernstein speculates:

[O]f the modern presidents, the one that was least ambitious was probably George W. Bush, and that’s a good part of why he was a terrible president.  It’s rare to reach the presidency without aiming at it one’s entire life. 

Bill Clinton, as far as anyone can tell, was aiming for the White House from at least high school on.  George H.W. Bush was ambitious for a long time.  Ronald Reagan, remember, ran for president for about fifteen straight years before finally achieving it.  And one could argue (indeed, I would probably argue, although as I said it’s pretty speculative) that lack of intense ambition was a real problem for the younger Bush in the White House. 

Would a more ambitious president, one who was really desperate for the job, have found himself fighting two wars in a haphazard way in an election year? Would a more ambitious president have been so apparently indifferent to the fate of New Orleans?  Now, ambition isn’t foolproof, as a quick look at Richard M. Nixon will show.  But the greatest presidents were certainly quite ambitious.  In my opinion, you can’t be a great president without it.

“Homer And Bart Are Catholics”

So says the Vatican's official newspaper, L'Osservatore Romano. Money quote:

"The Simpsons are among the few TV programmes for children in which Christian faith, religion, and questions about God are recurrent themes." The family "recites prayers before meals and, in their own peculiar way, believes in the life thereafter".

Rand Paul’s College Pranks

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Some background on the NoZe Brotherhood from a Baylor grad whence the Aqua Buddha story, used on Conway's ad. Seriously, if Conway is deploying this as a weapon to call Paul anti-Christian, he's really contemptible. Money quote:

Please understand what Baylor alumni understand. It’s hard to take seriously anything that a NoZe says when discussing the affairs of the NoZe. But the whole point of the society was to make fun of Baylor and, especially, the top administrators. Obviously, that meant making fun of Baptist culture.

Some NoZe scribes were better at this than others. Were many of these satirical scribbles crass? You betcha.

Yglesias Award Nominee

"The American people are about to give Republicans a second chance that we know we don’t deserve, that we haven’t earned. … The American people have every right, and every reason, to blame a Republican president and a Republican Congress for the mess that confronted the Obama administration on January 20, 2009 — let us be honest be about this," – Congressman Tom McClintock (R-CA).

My Other Problem With The Tea Party

A reader captures it:

If the tea party had really wanted to change America they would have embraced all of us. Not just “real Americans”. The tea party just seems to be a group that wants the Rs to be even more ruthless than they are and cut every entitlement to the middle class and the poor. Especially the poor. However they do not seem to mind the corporate welfare that is shoveled out thru Congress and until a group really seriously addresses these issues then I guess we’re stuck dancing with the ones that brung us

Any attempt to reduce the power and size of government has to end corporate welfare and the insanely complex tax code that allows them to exploit the rules to stay ahead of the rest of us. Tax simplification and the end of all deductions now!

A Computer Connected To Your Brain

Adam Ozimek peers into the not-so-distant future. He predicts:

[Eventually you'll] have a powerful computer in your future iPhone-like-device that is connected to a special contact lens that so that screens floats in front on your face, and you steer the whole thing with your brain. The most important facts about this technology is that a) nobody will be able to tell whether you’re looking at your computer or not, and b) it will always be available to you.

Why he expects widespread adoption of this technology:

Because nobody will be able to tell whether you’re using it, genius will be indistinguishable from brain mounted computer use. If nobody uses it you will have the advantages over your coworkers that perfect memory would give you today. If everybody but you uses it you will have all the disadvantages that someone with really terrible memory has today. When everyone else uses brain mounted computers, those without them will look forgetful and unknowledgeable.

Drum argues that understanding isn't the same as information retrieval. Ozimek agrees and disagrees.