Matamata, New Zealand, 12 pm
Year: 2013
Corporate Feminism And The Class Divide, Ctd
Ben Smith is already seeing the effects of Sandberg’s book:
It’s been less than a month since Sheryl Sandberg published Lean In: Women, Work, and the Will to Lead,” and I’ve already had two women bring up her name in salary negotiations. I’m not alone: Other editors whom I asked this week told me that women who worked for them had brought up the book — its broadly empowering message, and its specific advice on pushing for a raise. It’s a concrete, if anecdotal, suggestion that Sandberg’s high-profile effort to start a movement is having real consequences on a dynamic that’s well known to managers and backed by volumes of research: Women often ask for less money than they could get, and negotiate less aggressively than men.
The new phenomenon of women invoking Sandberg in salary talks “has happened here,” New York Times editor Jill Abramson said in an email. “I do think the book and all the attendant publicity have emboldened some women to speak up more directly about compensation, which is, of course, a welcome development.”
Previous Dish on the debate sparked by Sandberg’s book here, here, here and here.
The Width Of Nations
China and other developing nations are experiencing the wrong kind of growth:
Increased foreign direct investment, the arrival of fast food restaurants, and increasingly sedentary lifestyles … have caused obesity and diabetes cases to rapidly increase in Brazil, India, and China (though to a lesser extent in Russia and South Africa, where malnourishment seems to be more prevalent). In Brazil, by the mid-2000s, the number of obese individuals has increased from 11.4 percent of the population in 2006 to 15.8 percent in 2011. And by 1998, 4.9 million adults had diabetes, with a projected increase to 11.6 million by 2025 . For a nation experiencing ongoing poverty and malnourishment, the rise of these silent but deadly diseases is alarming.
And it could sabotage their economies:
For example, if China were to provide insulin and oral medications – such as metformin and glibenclamide – to its diabetic population at one-third of the total U.S. per patient annual costs, and if only 25 percent of China’s total 92.4 million diabetes cases were treated, total annual costs would be approximately $46 billion per year – roughly half of China’s 2011 military defense budget.
(Photo: Overweight students attend military training during a weight-loss summer camp on July 30, 2009 in Shenyang of Liaoning Province, China. By Yang Xinyue/ChinaFotoPress/Getty Images)
Police Work Isn’t That Dangerous
Balko points out that “last year was the safest year for cops since the early 1960s” and that “a cop today is about as likely to be murdered on the job as someone who merely resides in about half of the country’s 75 largest cities”:
In researching my forthcoming book, I interviewed lots of police officers, police administrators, criminologists and others connected to the field of law enforcement. There was a consensus among these people that constantly telling cops how dangerous their jobs are is affecting their mindset. It reinforces the soldier mentality already relentlessly drummed into cops’ heads by politicians’ habit of declaring “war” on things. Browse the online bulletin boards at sites like PoliceOne (where users must be credentialed law enforcement to comment), and you’ll see a lot of hostility toward everyone who isn’t in law enforcement, as well as various versions of the sentiment “I’ll do whatever I need to get home safe at night.” That’s a mantra that speaks more to self-preservation than public service.
When cops are told that every day on the job could be their last, that every morning they say goodbye to their families could be the last time they see their kids, that everyone they encounter is someone who could possibly kill them, it isn’t difficult to see how they might start to see the people they serve as an enemy. Again, in truth, the average cop has no more reason to see the people he interacts with day to day as a threat to his safety than does the average resident of St. Louis or Los Angeles or Nashville, where I live.
Reality Check
Newspaper ad revenue continues to free-fall:
The blue line in the chart above shows the total annual print newspaper advertising revenue (for the three categories national, retail, and classified) based on annual data from 1950 to 2012. The annual advertising revenues have been adjusted for inflation using the CPI, and appear in the chart as billions of constant 2012 dollars. Newspaper print advertising revenues of $18.9 billion in 2012 fell to the lowest annual level of print advertising since the NAA started tracking industry data in 1950. In 2012 dollars, advertising revenues last year were below the $19.75 billion spent in 1950, 62 years ago.
The decline in print newspaper advertising to a 62-year low is amazing by itself, but the sharp decline in recent years is pretty stunning. Print ad revenues fell by almost 50% in just the last four years, from $37 billion in 2008 to less than $19 billion last year; and by 66% over the last decade, from $56.3 billion in 2002.
A Route Through The Gridlock?
Ambinder finds “reasons to think that the partisan gridlock that paralyzed Congress for the past several years is beginning to ease”:
The prospects for passing a major overhaul of immigration laws remains high. The media fetishizes the role of Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, positing that somehow, if Rubio bolts or begs off from the task, immigration reform is dead. I think pundits are confusing Republicans rallying around Rubio as a personality who will be a viable presidential candidate with the much different optics and effects of passing an immigration bill. On the news, you might hear something like: “Marco Rubio was seen frowning today, and so immigration reform looks dead.” The next day, Republican and Democratic senators unveil part of their immigration reform bill.
The Other Other White Meat
Most recent scientific work looking at guinea pigs and diet mostly concerns what the animals eat (as a proxy for humans), and not having them eaten (by those same humans), but research from the 1980s finds guinea pig is good for you, with more protein and less fat than flesh from pigs, cows, sheep, or chickens. Guinea pig is also good for Mother Earth—you don’t need a Ponderosa-sized spread to raise them, and they convert their feed into edible protein twice as efficiently as a cow.
Update from a reader with insights as to why the meal isn’t more popular in American restaurants:
My father is from Peru and I’ve eaten home-cooked guinea pig while up in the Andes visiting family. Unlike what you can get away with when serving chicken, guinea pig – to taste at the very least “good” – must be cooked to order. This fact would disqualify most restaurants from serving it, I assume. It’s often pan fried whole in a chili paste/sauce in a wok-like vessel and because there is no thick portion of meat. And I would not want to eat a whole guinea pig that had been sitting under a heat lamp for three hours. It’s different with a fried chicken leg or breast, right? This is probably why (at least as of 10 years ago when I last visited) most all restaurants in Peru won’t serve it on menu.
(Image by Flickr user Erin & Camera)
The Trade Deficit Isn’t Dangerous?
Millman ponders a 2005 paper (pdf) downplaying America’s trade deficit:
We know how much we pay to service our debt (public and private) owned by foreign entities, and we know how much we receive on the assets we’ve accumulated abroad. And it turns out that the net income number is positive, relatively stable, and has been rising over a long period of time. What the paper concludes from this information is that the real value of America’s investments abroad has risen faster than our liabilities have accumulated, and that the apparently massive accumulated trade deficit is just an accounting fiction. It’s not that we mortgaged Alaska to buy a Lexus or a Mercedes. It’s that we mortgaged Alaska to buy Eurodisney, with a little money left over to buy a Lexus or a Mercedes; and Eurodisney has proved so profitable that if we sold it we could easily pay off the Alaskan mortgage.
The Bitcoin Bubble? Ctd
A cool primer for those unfamiliar with the futuristic currency:
A reader responds to our previous post:
It seems the main way Bitcoins are used is for the Dark Web, that part of the Web that is unregulated and used by many folks to get unregulated materials. You can buy nearly anything there, from drugs to chemicals or other materials that you can use for good or nefarious ends. Bitcoins are used because they are a legitimate means of commerce that is not easily traced. And pegging the coins to the gold standard is one of the reasons for that. You can store your coins with a bank in Switzerland as an actual lump of gold and get that gold sent to you when you want to cash out. So, in a sense, it’s not like other currency.
I confess to being really curious about this other world of gold and less than legitimate commerce. My fantasies have turned it into something out of a Philip K. Dick novel. You can access this world safely and away from prying eyes – if you have the knowledge about how to do so. But I’m not going to dip my toe in.
The NRA’s Unlikely Role Model, Ctd
A reader writes:
The idea of arms being limited to “well-regulated militias” in the Constitution, as your reader claims his father taught him, shows a complete lack of understanding of both the document and the history of its writing. The (presumably sarcastic) remark that the Court has “let any unstable jerk be a militia, and let him regulate himself” is actually the entire point of the Second Amendment. The right to bear arms was an essential right in 1787 because of the risk of Indian incursion, not as a bulwark against tyranny or a defense against foreign invasion. The concept of a “well-regulated militia” as it concerned pre-Revolutionary America actually would often have been little more than a posse of all available homesteaders organized to defend the area or march on a nearby settlement.
In this context, each individual actually does represent his own militia, because he may be the only one available to defend an isolated farm. The idea that the Founders intended weapons to be limited exclusively to organized military formations is preposterous; with few exceptions, such formal organizations did not exist. In many frontier regions, there would have been no defense available to settlers if the Amendment was read as many now propose.
This absolutely does not mean that gun control is unconstitutional, however. The inclusion of the phrase “well-regulated militias” in the Amendment was not an accident, even if it is frequently misread today.
The Founders intended weapons to be readily available to the extent that Americans would be ABLE to form a “well-regulated militia” to defend against incursion. This is the appropriate reading of the Amendment. Gun control should therefore be based, as it was in 1934 and 1994, on a determination of what constitutes a necessary weapon to enable the formation of a militia. I personally think that hunting rifles and pistols probably constitute an adequate complement of weaponry for a militia (in a country with a standing army), but others may disagree. Tragedies like Newtown should be occasions to reevaluate our definitions.
Instead people on the right defend the right to bear all weapons as a defense against Obamacare or something while people on the left, like your reader, dismiss the right to bear arms entirely on the grounds that militias don’t exist anymore.
Is the Second Amendment outdated? Probably, but I don’t see a sizable movement to repeal it anywhere. Instead of talking past each other we should be debating which types of weapons are defensive and which are not. This is what Obama has tried to do in the past few months, to his credit.
Another reader:
You published correspondence from a reader who wrote: “Well, the NRA finally found a Court that was willing to ignore the word ”militia” and the concept of “well-regulated” – overturning 230 years of jurisprudence. ” This statement is way off-base. The NRA was not behind either of the cases that went to the Supreme Court resulting in the finding that the Second Amendment protects an individual right.
In fact, the NRA tried every imaginable approach to keep the case that eventually became Heller from going forward. They filed a copycat suit with other plaintiffs and named additional defendants who brought much more power and influence to the opposing side. They tried to have their suit consolidated with the original suit, with their attorney named as counsel. They also tried to get their allies in Congress to enact legislation that would moot the case. Only after those bringing the suit had prevailed at the appellate level (four years after the original filing) did they finally simply stay quiet while the rest of the litigation proceeded. Similarly, they did not finance or back the McDonald case that incorporated the right established in Heller to state law.
When the Heller case was decided, it brought the Supreme Court’s jurisprudence into line with the consensus of the majority of Constitutional Law scholars, including liberal Constitutional Law scholars. Your correspondent should read the amicus brief filed by Jack Balkin of Yale Law and others – whom no one could possibly describe as anything other than liberal – in the McDonald case.



