The First Amendment, According To Justice Scalia

This really pissed me off, just one of a number of things that have gotten stuck in my craw today.

Antonio Scalia gave a speech at a Mississippi high school on the wonder of the U.S. Constitution. When it was done, he ordered federal marshalls to confiscate the press’s recordings of his speech.

Excuse me, but who died and made Mr. Scalia king? I mean, if you give a speech in a public place, your words are fair game. I don’t care who you’re talking to or what the topic is, it’s fair game. Scalia is a public official who traveled to this event on the taxpayer’s dime. As taxpayers, we have a right to know what he said. Period.

In general, I support our judicial system. It’s not perfect, but its the best one we have. In an ideal world, our judicial system provides checks and balances to the abuses of government. Only, lately it seems the judicial system has forgotten its role. For example, Scalia should recuse himself from hunting buddy Cheney’s energy case, no matter what he says. Whatever illusion of impartiality that still exists between the Judicial and Executive branches vanishes if he does not. He can be friends with whomever he wants, but when that conflicts with his role, he must step aside.

Many speakers have guidelines against recording their speeches. Which is fine with me … unless they speak while they are still employed as a public servant. If you’re on the public’s dime, you have no right to restrict what you say, especially to a public audience.

How Scalia could praise the Constitution and then turn right around and restrict the freedom of the press just boggles my mind. The high schoolers he was addressing have a better grasp of the Constitution than Justice Scalia.

Just in case anyone needs a reminder:

Amendment I

Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.

Blogs: The New Hometown Newspaper

I had a note come out of the blue the other day from MT.Net reader number 12. Jay introduced himself, saying he read my blog and was interested in learning more about the area.

I gave him the scoop on the area, then thought later how cool it is that my blog could act as some sort of ambassador. In a larger sense, blogs are like the fabled hometown newspaper, telling the local story the way that newspapers used to do. Now that so many papers opt to carry nothing but wire stories, you can’t get a feel for the local scene. Blogs help to fill that gap.

I just wish that Localfeeds was up and running again so there’d be a centralized place for this local news.

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VoicePulse SIP Service Now Available In Raleigh

I got this email today from VoicePulse, announcing the availability of 919 numbers for their SIP service. For $8/month, I can get a 919 phone number that rings my SIP devices (like Asterisk or Sipura) and get long distance for 2.9 cents per minute.

I think I’ll try it.

Hello,

Recently, you signed up to be notified when VoicePulse was available in your area. This one-time email notification is to let you know that we are now available in the area codes and cities listed below. Remember, if your exact city isn’t listed below, you can still pick a phone number from the closest city.

Area Code (919):
CHAPEL HILL (CHAPELHILL)
DURHAM (DURHAM)
RALEIGH (CARY)
RALEIGH (RALEIGH)

Regards,
VoicePulse
http://www.voicepulse.com/

Running Linux Under Windows

Well, I finally got around to configuring CoLinux (cooperative Linux) that I mentioned earlier and I am quite impressed. I can now run Linux sessions in a window on my Win2K machine. It’s like VMWare, but free.

I’ve booted the sample Debian image and also the Fedora Linux partition I’ve got on the other side of the dual-boot machine. Neither one is perfect for this setup, however (the fstab must be tweaked to point to virtual colinux devices, rather than physical ones), so I’m going to create a fresh Fedora image to use for testing.

Now all I need is an X client for Windoze and I can run graphical Linux apps straight from Windows. Pretty cool stuff.

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Talk Like Sean Connery

The office has turned into a Talk Like Sean Connery zone. People converse using a Sean Connery accent. It’s a bit bizarre, even by my standards.

It all started with our conferencing software, WebEx. I’ve long thought their voice prompt guy sounds like Sean Connery. So, every time I logged in to Webex, I would do it in a Sean Connery voice. Well, the voice has escaped my cubicle and spread. Now half of the office is talking like Sean Connery. It’s gotten out of control.

The appeal is simple: if you want to make anything sound funny, just say it as Sean Connery. Try it. I’ll wait.

Bumper Snicker

Every day I drive by a pickup truck with a sticker that says “My Other Car Is A Jet.” Which is pretty impressive, if you think about it: driving a jet. Not bad, right? Except I once saw one that had that one beat.

Back in the early 90’s, my ship was visiting Alameda, CA for some repairs. At an adjacent pier was the USS Abraham Lincoln, a massive, floating steel city. In the commanding officer’s parking space was a tiny Honda Civic with a sticker that read (wait for it): “My Other Car Is An Aircraft Carrier.”

It don’t get much bigger than that.
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TV Kills Attention Span

Research indicates that TV permanently affects the attention span of kids. Seems the fast-paced images are to blame, permanently altering how the brain develops.

“The newborn brain develops very rapidly during the first two to three years of life. It’s really being wired” during that time, Christakis said.

“We know from studies of newborn rats that if you expose them to different levels of visual stimuli … the architecture of the brain looks very different” depending on the amount of stimulation, he said.

Overstimulation during this critical period “can create habits of the mind that are ultimately deleterious,” Christakis said. If this theory holds true, the brain changes likely are permanent, but children with attention problems can be taught to compensate, he said.

I find the whole topic fascinating because … hey, have you seen penguin baseball?
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