I thought this was an interesting post John Hummel made of recent events about Bush and surveillance. You can find the digg post here.

Co-Worker: So, it was all right if Bush allowed wire taps, because he was only doing it to bad people!

Me: Interesting. You know, the other day, my daughter got in trouble for eating a piece of candy.

Co-Worker: OK. So what does that have to do with anything?

Me: Well, you see, she knows that after dinner, as long as she asks me, she'll be allowed a piece of candy for dessert. She knows that if she brings me the candy, I'll still probably tell her OK. All I ask is that she come ask me, and I'll tell her it's acceptable to have the candy. The other night, she didn't ask - she took a piece and ate it, and now she gets no candy for the next few days.

Co-worker: And?

Me: It's the same thing. Bush could have asked for permission to do the wire taps. It would have cost him nothing, it wouldn't have gotten him into trouble, and it would take hardly any effort since he could even do it after he started. But he couldn't even be bothered to follow the law. Couldn't be bothered to say "Hey, this is what I'm doing" to a third party just to make sure. Instead, he found it easier to keep it hidden from everything - including the people he swore he would serve when he swore an oath to the Constitution. He got caught with his hand in the cookie jar. I didn't care that my daughter ate the candy - I cared the didn't respect me enough to ask first. I didn't care that Bush had people listening in to phone conversations - I cared he didn't respect us enough to ask first. Especially when the people he would have asked would have said "Yes."

Me: And if I can trust him with the little things - like getting a warrant even when he can wait until 3 days after he starts to get one, that a warrant for wiretaps has been denied only 4 times since 1976 so he's got no fear of someone saying "no" (far less than my daughter has than I will say "no" to candy) - if he can't even follow the law on such a simple and direct thing, how can I trust him to follow the law when it's hard? Like Dumbledore said: You have to choose between what is easy, and what is right. He choose the easy. I can no longer trust him with the right.


posted by dharh at 05/12/23

If your curious about what del.icio.us links I have you can go here. So far I've got about 200 links. One kinda cool thing is I have a wishlist tag that my friends and family can look at if they are wondering what to buy me for Christmas (hint hint). In related news it seems yahoo bought del.icio.us and you can read about it here. I'll have to wait and see what happens to del.icio.us but since I don't use yahoo except for the IM account it certainly won't make me use yahoo more.

posted by dharh at 05/12/11

Sometimes I wonder if I shoulda named this site Politic Blog or something with all the time I spend thinking and posting about politics. I get sorta worked up when I hear about yet another crapy thing Bush or the republicans are doing. Thankfully I have a job and classes or maybe it might become depressing.

Anyway I have v2.3 of sparce out. Lately I've been thinking about link/bookmark management and how to incorporate something like del.icio.us with a compact front end like sparce that uses a plugin to both do what the del.icio.us firefox extension does and also record the number of clicks on those links to manage the order of display in each category. I've also thought of some new types of tags such as smart tags like most visited links (by you or other del.icio.us users) or most popular links (by you or other del.icio.us users).

In that same vein I have been thinking alot about the statistics of my music and web habits. I wonder what songs or albums or artists I listen to the most, or what web sites I visit the most. iTunes does have that information, though listening to music on many different computers its spread across them and it is a bit cumbersome to try and grab that information. There doesn't seem to be much in the way of doing that kind of tracking for firefox without making my own extension. The people over at Attention Trust seem to be going in that direction at least in terms of using that kind of data for something useful.


posted by dharh at 05/12/08