During 14 years in the Michigan Legislature and 11 years in Congress, Rep. Nick Smith had never experienced anything like it. House Speaker Dennis Hastert and Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson, in the wee hours last Saturday morning, pressed him to vote for the Medicare bill. But Smith refused. Then things got personal.
Smith, self term-limited, is leaving Congress. His lawyer son Brad is one of five Republicans seeking to replace him from a GOP district in Michigan's southern tier. On the House floor, Nick Smith was told business interests would give his son $100,000 in return for his father's vote. When he still declined, fellow Republican House members told him they would make sure Brad Smith never came to Congress. After Nick Smith voted no and the bill passed, Duke Cunningham of California and other Republicans taunted him that his son was dead meat.
Gay marriage, gay marriage, gay marriage. I don't think I've ever written a column on gay marriage. Perhaps I should. Trouble is, I can't get my mind around it. In this zone, I am totally a dinosaur. When I hear people talking about gay marriage, it falls on my ears as if they were saying: "OK, from now on, we are going to have Mars revolving round the Sun in Venus's orbit, and Venus in Mars's." Oh, are you? That's nice. But how are you going to do it? By an edict from the Supreme Court?
I suppose that religious conservatives see marriage as a fact of nature rather than a human-created social institution because God is supposed to have established it. (Then again, God is also supposed to have put his stamp of approval on slavery, the subjugation of women, and many other delights conveniently forgotten.) In any case, the appeal to God doesn't make the argument any less stupid.
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Tuesday, November 25, 2003
The Overdue Update By Diana Hsieh @ 10:54 PM
My farrier came to trim the horses hooves today... and lo and behold, he caught me on TV! I'm famous! Okay, well, maybe that's a bit of an overstatement. But my first appearance as a talking head (discussing animal rights on "Drawing the Line with Reggie Rivers") was pretty exciting. Thankfully, I didn't embarrass myself with horrid arguments. But I found it harder than expected to get to the meaty philosophical points.
The official caption reads "Jennifer Melton, David Crawford, Ari Armstrong, Diana Hsieh, and Reggie Rivers discuss animal rights November 19 on Rivers' show, Drawing the Line."
Now I'm going to go add that "Media Appearances" section to my CV! :-)
Gack! By Diana Hsieh @ 9:52 AM
Tonight, I'm slated to discuss animal rights as part of a panel for "Drawing the Line with Reggie Rivers," a local PBS show (on Channel 12 at 8pm). I'll be arguing against animal rights along with Ari Armstrong, who was good enough to think of me for this gig.
Advice on the Academic Job Market By Diana Hsieh @ 10:05 PM This article details one Ph.D's search for the right job in the right location... and the need to settle for the right job in the wrong location. Given that Paul and I are bound to the Denver area by his job, this is a depressing bit of realism for me. (I really like Colorado, so I'm hardly dying to leave. But if it were just me, I'd be willing to move pretty much anywhere for a good tenure-track job. Then again, if it were just me, I'd still be programming and not philosophizing. Even philosophy is not worth enduring poverty.)
(To be clear, Arthur never asked for money... but such a request would not have been hypocritical according to the Objectivist ethics anyway. In general, the characterizations of Rand's philosophy as social darwinism would be laughable if not part of such a repulsive and depraved personal attack.)
I will not dignify the horrid comments by responding to them... but I will happily hit Arthur's tip jar... and hope that the strike is resolved soon. (If you want to contribute a bit too, use the PayPal link on his main page.)
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Sunday, November 09, 2003
Flutie Magic By Diana Hsieh @ 11:28 PM
Drew Brees, the quarterback for the San Diego Chargers, has been playing miserably lately. Headed into this Sunday, San Diego had only won one of its eight games. So this week, my beloved Doug Flutie took his place... and played a kick-ass game. He led San Diego to victory over the Vikings 42 to 28. Under his leadership, the offense scored four touchdowns on the first four possessions of the game. It was glorious to behold. Flutie might be 41 years old now, but he hasn't lost his edge.
As luck would have it, the Chargers are playing at Denver next week. I've never seen Flutie play in person... and after Drew Brees got the quarterbacking job last year, I didn't think I'd ever have the opportunity to do so. But now I will... and all that I need to do is acquire some last-minute tickets from eBay.
The Matrix Revolutions By Diana Hsieh @ 9:17 AM
Paul and I saw The Matrix Revolutions yesterday. It was absolutely awful. We left feeling cheated. Why? Because so much was incoherent or simply left unexplained. Sure, the story did resolve in a superficial way, but not in a way that made sense.
Essential to the greatness of the original Matrix was its tightly integrated plot and ever purposeful characterization. The second Matrix lost some of that and the third abandoned it altogether.
Um, No By Diana Hsieh @ 11:01 PM
According to this Fortune interview, Michael Shermer (the founder of the Skeptics Society) has a book forthcoming entitled The Science of Good and Evil. Based upon his answer to the first question, I won't bother reading it.
Q: What makes people good or evil?
A: All of us have, in our genes, the capacity for great good and great evil. Genetics determines roughly half of our behavioral tendencies, including personality, temperament, and moral and immoral behaviors. The other half is determined by culture and environment, including parents, siblings, family dynamics, teachers and mentors, and especially peer groups. As adults we are particularly influenced to do good or evil by the immediate social context and community. When you're surrounded by co-workers all hyped about a get-rich-quick pyramid scheme, it is truly hard to resist.
6th Annual Rocky Mountain Student Philosophy Conference By Diana Hsieh @ 10:51 AM
This post is simply an announcement for my fellow grads students (and undergrads too) in philosophy. (Even cooler: Our department will be hosting a virtue ethics conference this spring -- and Rosalind Hursthouse will be speaking. Yeah!)
6th Annual Rocky Mountain Student Philosophy Conference
Feb 20-21, 2004
Papers accepted from graduate and undergraduate students in all areas of philosophy.
Keynote Speaker: Stephen Yablo, M.I.T.
Submission Details
Papers must be:
8-12 pages, double spaced
Accompanied by an abstract of no more than 100 words
Formatted for blind review. The author's name should not appear in the paper or abstract but only in a cover letter including the author's name, school affiliation, paper title, and status (graduate or undergraduate)
Documents must be in Word, HTML, PDF, or plain text format
For email submissions, attach the documents to a cover letter indicating the author's name, title and school affiliation and send to David.Liebesman@colorado.edu
For paper submissions, send three copies of both the paper and the abstract to:
Rocky Mountain Conference
Department of Philosophy
Campus Box 232
University of Colorado at Boulder
Boulder, CO 80309-0232
The submission deadline is December 20, 2003. (Early submissions are encouraged.) No registration fee!
The Culture Wars By Diana Hsieh @ 12:03 PM
Paul just pointed me to this long article on the culture wars. It is an excellent and detailed analysis of the rise of conservative opinion. Of course, I'm no conservative... although perhaps "South Park Republican" isn't so far off. Nevertheless, the broadening of this nation's cultural and political debates beyond liberalism is nothing but good news.