There’s an interesting post at Feministe in which blogger Jaclyn grapples with some of her thoughts about dating a “cisgender man” (viz.: a biological male who was born that way and presents/performs male gender) after a long period of being involved exclusively with women and transmen. I’ll suggest in passing that some of the unease […]
How About Lieutenant Feminist Third Class?
August 8th, 2007 · 9 Comments
Tags: Sexual Politics
Your Moment of Beauchamp
August 8th, 2007 · 2 Comments
I have no idea at this point whether or to what extent the much-gnawed-upon “Scott Thomas” diaries in TNR were truthful, but this seems like odd reasoning: I made this point in my column today, but let me tease it out: All things being equal, it’s more likely that the Army got the truth than […]
Tags: Journalism & the Media
Social Darwinism
August 8th, 2007 · 3 Comments
A new book about Herbert Spencer apparently argues against the conventional wisdom that he preached “social Darwinism.” I think that’s right, and the association has lasted as long as it has just because it was useful to have an identifiable foil. I remember taking an intro-level ethics class in college where Spencer’s social Darwinist views […]
Tags: General Philosophy
Michael Ignatieff in the Flames
August 8th, 2007 · 2 Comments
All through reading Michael Ignatieff’s NYT Mag contribution to the chastened hawk’s mea-minima-culpa genre, it took a tremendous effort of will to suppress the urge to grab the nearest fork and make like Oedipus. (No, no, Mom, the other thing.) But the Wheel of Karma turns, and David Rees’ takedown at Hufflepuff returned a solid […]
Tags: War
I Am Firm; You Are Stubborn; He Is Pig-Headed
August 7th, 2007 · 1 Comment
Ezra links, in a spirit I think we can charitably call self-flattering, to Dani Roderik’s taxonomy of dismal scientists. “First-best economists” (we learn) decide public policy questions by “knee-jerk” application of simplistic, idealized models. “Second best economists”—who understand that the world is, like, complicated and stuff—are more amenable to targeted regulation. (Is there some kind […]
Tags: Economics
Gay Parents are OK
August 7th, 2007 · 1 Comment
A couple years back, as part of a long article on gay adoption, I wrote about Ann Magro and Heather Finstuen, a lesbian couple who were fighting to overturn an Oklahoma law that denied recognition of out-of-state second parent adoptions by same-sex couples. An appeals court has now overturned that law as inconsistent with the […]
Tags: Sexual Politics
Fun With FISA
August 7th, 2007 · 1 Comment
I’ve got an article up at Reason today about the weekend’s FISA amendment. If you just can’t get enough, see also Tim Lee’s take at Ars Techica, Patrick Keefe at Slate, and Ryan Singel at Threat Level.
Tags: Privacy and Surveillance
Fact Check Yo’self Before You Wreck Yo’self
August 7th, 2007 · 6 Comments
It looks like I may have been too quick to accept TNR‘s reported corroboration of (most aspects of) their Iraq diarist’s dispatches: The Weekly Standard is reporting that the author has recanted. Though, of course, now that he’s been named, there are obviously reasons to take that with a few heaps of salt as well. […]
Tags: Journalism & the Media
Is Our Children Learning?
August 7th, 2007 · 6 Comments
One of those ten-second underwriter promo spots on NPR just now was touting the virtues of Teach for America, which was described as a program that works to help “underresourced” schools. In fairness, though, this is actually more defensible than the ubiquitous but nonsensical use of “underprivileged” as a synonym for “poor.”
Tags: Language and Literature
Is Your Fetus Smart Enough to Live?
August 3rd, 2007 · 7 Comments
Since most of my readers are not sitting in this coffee shop right now, and therefore didn’t get to hear the louder-than-was-probably-wise argument I just had with Megan McArdle about this post, allow me to offer an alternative to the explanation Megan offers here: My thoughts are a little ragged here, but here goes: most […]
Tags: Moral Philosophy