Apr 042009
 

It’s been more than 24 hours since the Iowa Supreme Court legalized same-sex marriage and I can’t see any pillars of salt from my window. I’m a little embarrassed that our neighbors to the south beat us to the punch on recognizing marriage equality. Minnesotans have long lorded a sense of superiority over our Iowan cousins and made them the butt of jokes, but the Iowa decision makes us look backward and square. Local advocates for marriage equality will probably play it cool for a while as events unfold in our sister state. But I’m confident that Minnesota will follow suit in the not-too-distant future.

We should also note that many of the jurists coming out in favor of marriage equality are Republican appointees. The clarity and plain rationality of their decisions is a refreshing reminder that, when it comes to recognizing the fundamental issue of fairness at stake here, not all conservatives are blinded by fear and bigotry

Apr 032009
 

It’s Friday night and some of you might be reading this while you’re smoking a joint. I have no idea of what percentage of my readership partakes of the bud, but I’m betting there are at least a few of you. A recent Economist cover story and a question asked during an on-line Obama press conference have brought new attention to the issue of legalizing marijuana. But all that talk will probably remain just that…talk. For reasons both historical and cultural, Americans have no problem admitting they got wasted on Jell-O shots, but we keep our pot smoking on the down-low lest our colleagues and families think we’re hedonistic deviants.

I’m all for legalization. Marijuana holds real benefits for lots of people and our cops have better things to do. Sin taxes are the only kind of tax that gets broad support, so why not legalize and tax it? And to answer your next question, no, I’ve never tried it. I know what you’re thinking: “Mark, you urbane hipster you, how is it that you’ve never gotten high?” Well, I was too much of a chickenshit in high school and college to seek it out. And when I finally did get my hands on the stuff, I couldn’t figure out a way to get in my system without coughing up a lung. That, and I have a compulsive need to always feel in control. You’d probably have to get me drunk to get me stoned, which seems both excessive and redundant.

Apr 022009
 

The recession could reshape the economics of the legal profession, according to the Times. The era of lucrative starting salaries for new associates in private firms may be coming to an end, which could also restore some sanity to law school tuition. Law school deans could once point to the generous compensation packages awaiting law school grads as justification for soaring tuitions, but firms probably won’t be able to throw the money around like they once did. And if students can get a legal education without taking out a mortgage-sized loan, they might be more willing to explore careers in government or public interest law.

The big firms will always be able to outbid the legal aid societies when recruiting new hires, but more new grads might decide they don’t want to endure years of indentured servitude and would rather practice a more rewarding kind of law.

Apr 012009
 

Last night’s episode of Frontline entitled “Sick Around America” did a good job of personalizing the plight of the country’s uninsured and underinsured. It also highlights one of the most intractable problems facing policymakers: how do you cover everyone while keeping costs under control? As the program points out, Massachusetts requires insurers to cover everyone in the state, but the premiums are still too expensive for many individuals and families.

Many of us wonks think that any health care reform must include the choice of a comprehensive public plan in order to keep private plans honest. But moderate Democrats seem to view a public plan as little more than a bargaining chip to be traded away in final negotiations, which seems to concede the point a little too readily for my tastes. I’m not expecting us to get everything right the first time around, but universal coverage is going to be a hollow victory if it bankrupts us in a few years.

Mar 312009
 

In our latest installment of our ongoing “The Future Is Going To Be Totally Awesome” series, I present video of Honda researchers controlling an ASIMO robot using a brain interface that resembles Darth Vader’s helmet.

Excellent. Soon my private robot army will be ready for deployment and the revolution can begin. But we’re going to have to do something about that headgear shown in the video. I’m not going to launch my bid to take over the world looking like a complete dork. My thirst for power is rivaled only by my fashion sensibility.

Mar 302009
 

I spent the weekend attending a conference and, at least for a couple hours, playing tourist. Here I am at one landmark:

The dashing figure next to me is Franklin Roosevelt at the FDR Memorial near the Mall in Washington D.C. It’s a serene little area with a waterfall and several FDR quotes carved into the store walls. I found this one particularly resonant:

In these days of difficulty, we Americans everywhere must and shall choose the path of social justice, the path of faith, the path of hope and the path of love toward our fellow men.

Since the weather on my previous trips to Washington never allowed for much lingering on the Mall, I also paid a visit to the Lincoln Memorial, which offers a spectacular view of the Reflecting Pool and Washington Monument.

Here I am at the top of the Lincoln Memorial, with the Reflecting Pool behind me. DC is always an attractive city, but I was fortunate enough to be there when the cherry blossoms were in full bloom. Canopies of delicate pinks and whites line the area around the Washington Monument, where locals and tourists alike lounge in the grass and fly kites.

I’m home now and getting my information fix after a couple days of being off-line. So, back to your regularly scheduled blogging.

Mar 272009
 

Blogging is going to be on hiatus over the weekend, but will probably resume Monday. You now have a whole extra ten minutes of free time over the next couple days. Your fingernails could probably use a trim. And the kitchen counter could probably use a good wipedown. Or you could write me that fan e-mail you’ve been composing in your head.

Mar 262009
 

Conservatives live in constant fear that the United States is becoming more like that haven for socialists and layabouts known as Europe. But a quick glance at the news reveals that Europeans have a more sanguine reaction to the recession compared to the fear and panic keeping many Americans awake at night. As Ezra Klein points out, the social safety nets found in most developed European nations are softening the recession’s blow for their citizens. A job loss doesn’t deprive them of basic health care, education, and food. Americans, lacking such guarantees, tend to keep a wary eye on neighbors and colleagues during tight economic times and sharply pull back their spending when they see that the family down the street lost their home or several close friends lost their jobs. And this kind of massive spending curb only makes recessions worse.

We Americans may have arrived at one of those critical decision points that comes along once in a generation. Do we sacrifice a little economic growth for quite a bit of peace of mind? Or do we countenance the shantytowns springing up in American cities as the price to pay for the next boom?

Mar 252009
 

A couple months ago, Kay of The Gimp Parade blogged about the new Antony and the Johnsons single “Epilepsy Is Dancing”, but I finally got around to watching the song’s video and thought some of you might find it interesting. Antony and the Johnsons are a chamber pop outfit whose lead singer has an arresting androgynous tenor. The video begins with a young woman taking a stroll when she collapses to the sidewalk in the grips of a seizure. What follows is a kind of dream sequence in which the woman is transported into a forest whose inhabitants are really into body painting.
The video does feature semi-naked bodies, so you probably shouldn’t play this in your work cubicle unless everyone else is out sick and your boss is at lunch.

Mar 242009
 

Genetic researchers in Japan have developed an innovative method for treating Duchenne’s Muscular Dystrophy in dogs. The treatment involves a genetic “patch” that inhibits a portion of the DMD gene, causing the remainder of the gene to express itself as the milder Becker muscular dystrophy. Video of treated and untreated dogs shows noticeable improvements in the treated dogs, but it will be some time before this method can be tested on humans.

It will probably take decades before congenital disabilities can be completely erased from an individual’s DNA, but treatments like this–that trade a severe condition for a milder form–might be much closer to being realized.