May 17, 2008

April 30, 2008

April 28, 2008

  • On Science and Faith

    William Phillips, the 1997 Nobel Laureate in Physics, has written an essay about the relationship between faith and science.

April 24, 2008

  • At least a few writers are noting the popular vote fallacy. But it's still being repeated without sufficient critique in most news reports.

April 23, 2008

  • The Popular Vote Myth

    The mass media continues to regurgitate the flawed meme that there is even such a thing as a national popular primary vote, and fail to acknowledge the specious nature of a national "popular" vote count in the first place. At least
    four caucus states do not report the actual votes at the caucuses used to determine delegates (the "votes" reported are actually local precinct delegate totals, from which the state delegate totals are derived). Therefore all popular vote counts are at least partially statistical estimates. Furthermore the different methods used in each
    state mean that turnout rates will vary greatly according to the method
    used.

    In other words, (1) it is impossible to determine an accurate popular vote count such that each individual vote really counts, and (2) even if it was possible to count the votes accurately, the differences in each state's methods mean that different states would be represented unequally and the meaning of a "national popular vote" is murky at best.

    Obama is exactly right in saying that the "popular vote" in this
    sort of setting is an abstract exercise. There's really no such thing
    as a national popular vote in a party primary, when each state uses
    such different methods of voting, counting, and reporting.

April 19, 2008

  • Questions for John McCain
    (Countdown with Keith Olbermann)

    While the "questions" are largely ironic in light of the ABC Pennsylvania debate, it also brings up some facts about McCain, both in terms of his public career and private life, that don't fit the popular all-American notion about his persona that he would undoubtedly like to run on.

April 16, 2008

  • Government Acknowledges Potential Dangers of BPA

    A federal health panels report indicates a shift in the government position on the dangers of of bisphenol-a (BPA), amid growing concerns about its potential dangers. Read about it here.

April 14, 2008

  • This post by Andrew Romano of Newsweek is probably the best analysis I've seen on the subject of Obama's remarks on small town America.

  • Perhaps somewhat expectedly, Senator Obama's remarks are being
    misrepresented
    not only by his political opponents, but by the media as
    well.

    Senator Obama did not say that people like guns or are
    religious BECAUSE of their economic struggles. What he said is that
    when facing hardship, and due to frustration and lack of trust in
    government, small town Americans turn to BOTH positive things that are
    familiar (religion, guns) as well as negative things that are easy to
    scapegoat (xenophobia).

    Obama himself clarified this in remarks the day following the news
    reports. A fair news report would at least give Obama the benefit of
    the doubt in at least accurately reporting this clarification. Instead
    I continue to hear mindless parroting of a distorted and simplistic
    account of Obama's remarks.

    There was nothing inherently pejorative about Senator Obama's remarks.

    Senator Obama was perhaps speaking too compactly, as he is wont
    to do. (For example, some people missed the point when Obama said in
    his speech on Rev. Wright that while he had heard Rev. Wright say some
    controversial things, the publicized comments were beyond
    controversial. This was Obama's compact but oblique way of saying that
    he had not heard the remarks in question.)

    But the
    assumption that there was something pejorative says more about the
    latent elitism of the critics than it does about Senator Obama.

April 11, 2008

  • Obama defended by Toobin, Borger, Cafferty

    Jeffrey Toobin was particularly emphatic in defending Obama, and criticizing those who would distort his remarks.