Guantanamo limbo

It now appears that, with the building of a new detention facility in Guantanamo, Dubya & Co. don’t plan to ever try the “detainees” in custody for their crimes. The administration won’t call the men in custody prisoners of war, because then they would be legally obliged to send them home after the war in Afghanistan ends (if it ever does).

That’s fine. I think there’s strong reason to believe that these folks are dangerous and would pose a future terrorist threat. After all, they were captured fighting as members of Al Qaeda or the Taliban, right? That seems to be prima facie evidence that each is guilty of criminal conspiracy in the Sept. 11 murders or, at least, obstruction of justice in trying to stop capture of Al Qaeda and Taliban leaders.

If these prisoners are so obviously guilty and so patently dangerous, why would 12 men and women have difficulty in finding them guilty and legitimize the imprisonment they are now suffering without the courtesty of a trial? On the other hand, if the U.S. government fears that 12 men and women would find the evidence of their guilt lacking, how can we in good conscience continue to keep these folks locked up? Is the supposed evidence just the hearsay of the U.S. government? I sure hope not.

This could have far-reaching consequences, setting a precedent for future cases of imprisonment without trial, so long as the U.S. executive declares the country to be at war. Jeez, it doesn’t even require an official declaration by Congress.

It’s not fair! They had good teachers

Parents who don’t homeschool their children are complaining that homeschoolers have an unfair advantage over their institutionalized children in the national spelling bee because they have more time to study spelling.

It’s no wonder, as most homeschooled students spend half as much time “school” as schoolhouse students, especially government-school students. With the kind of one-on-one attention afforded by homeschooling, much more gets done in less time.

According to writer Jessica Wehrman, Paul Wehrman, executive director of the American Association of School Administrators, said:

… having a few homeschooled bee champs does not necessarily show the superiority of homeschooling. Saying one child’s triumph is evidence of the success of homeschooling, he said, is like saying all North Carolina colleges are good because basketball champion Michael Jordan attended one.

Hmm … there have been three homeschool champs since 1997, and in 2000 the top three finalists were homeschooled. Perhaps it doesn’t mean that all homeschools are good, but it certainly does mean that the best homeschools are awfully good, and that allowing parents the freedom to homeschool can do a lot of good for their children.

But what could be expected from the head honcho of an organization that opposes school choice, charter school districts and alternative certifications but strongly favors pumping up direct federal aid to government schools?

I think homeschooling activist Vonnie Crumpton said it best, as quoted in the story:

“Yes, we get math and English and grammar and everything, every day,” she said, “but we had more time to dedicate to the talents that God has given him … that’s the
beauty of homeschooling. You can spend more time where they have interests.”

Certifiable

I was interviewed by a guy named Terry Michael (a libertarian, as it turned out, which I found surprising for an organization that has Eleanor Clift on its board of directors) from the Washington Center for Politics & Journalism for their fall politics and journalism semester program. The interview went well and I think I’d have a good chance of getting into the program, but it turns out that it starts on Sept. 3, no exceptions.

As Karen and I are getting married on Sept. 1 and want to honeymoon, that’s a no-go. But here’s the part I found interesting. As part of the interview, Michael asked 37 trivia questions covering current affairs, political history, geography and more. I got 35 right. The two questions I missed? Where is Katmandu? (It’s in Nepal.) And what does FICA stand for? I knew that FICA was the Social Security tax, but feebly guessed “Federal Income Compensation Adjustment” for the answer. The Stris revealed that it’s actually stands for “Federal Insurance Contribution Act.”

It would be in bad taste to publish a more fitting, and more colorful, version of what the acronym really stands for, considering the poor return from Social Security. I’ll leave it to your imagination.

Therapeutic cloning should not be banned

Do you agree? Then you should sign this petition. Therapeutic cloning has thremendous potential to help cure disease and extend life. The petition reads:

We the undersigned recognize that the cloning of cells offers scientists the chance to advance medical research and perhaps one day treat devastating illnesses such as juvenile diabetes, Alzheimer’s, and Parkinson’s by replacing lost or debilitated cells.

Congress should not outlaw this research despite recent pressure from various political factions. Nor should Congress impose a moratorium on this research, which would have the effect of halting the advances that are currently being made.

We the undersigned — many of us conservatives, some of us scientists, all of us concerned for the future — want it known that therapeutic cloning has supporters from across the political spectrum. To halt this research would be a terrible blow to science and public health.

See what some leading thinkers have written about the left-right allied attempt to outlaw life-saving scientific research.

If you’re really, really evil, then you must be insane

That’s the logic of those who look at a case like Andrea Yates‘ and conclude that no sane person would kill her own five children. But the sad fact is that people do evil things all the time, and it doesn’t necessarily make them incapable of appreciating the consequences of their actions.

While Yates’ case got much more publicity, a local case here in suburban Chicago featured frighteningly similar circumstances. On March 4, 1999, Marilyn Lemak laced her three children’s peanut butter with drugs and then smothered them to death. They were 7, 6 and 3 years old. She was found guilty last December and now a judge has sentenced Lemak to life in prison, lecturing her in court thusly:

“It is appropriate that you spend the rest of your life thinking about these children,” Circuit Judge George Bakalis told Lemak in a blistering and rare display of outrage before a hushed courtroom full of spectators in Wheaton.

“It is appropriate that, every day, as you look at the walls, the floor, the ceiling, the bars, you will see the faces of these young children and hear these young voices asking you: ‘Why, Mom? We loved you, Mom. Why did you do this to us?'”

What a brave display. Indeed, holding people responsible for their crimes is not cruel, but rather gives people the dignity of shame. When we harm others, we should feel guilty and we should pay for our crimes. If nothing else, we need to make sure that violent people aren’t allowed another opportunity to kill again. Conversely, we owe nonviolent people the dignity of freedom. Instead, what we do, as psychiatry critic Thomas Szasz has noted throughout his career, is lock up innocent people we believe are crazy and set free guilty people we believe are crazy.

There may be some cases where a person is truly incapable of appreciating the consequences of his
actions. But why set them free, if a person who has demonstrated violent tendencies and cannot tell right from wrong is clearly a danger to society? “Guilty but insane” sounds good to me. Lock them up in a special psychiatric facility for the remainder of their lives. The important thing is to appreciate who really is dangerous to society and who is just someone who makes life hard for his family or the psychiatrist assigned to care for him.

Dubya misguided on Gov. Ryan

Michael Sneed reported last week that the White House is trying to get Gov. George Ryan to resign, fearing that the stink from the license-for-bribes scandal will drag down Attorney General Jim Ryan’s gubernatorial chances against Rod Blagojevich.

“Gov. Ryan is a party guy and may see the need to step aside in an effort to help Jim Ryan win the race,” a top GOP source told Sneed.

First, I don’t see any evidence that Ryan is a party guy. He has consistently double-crossed his party to make deals with both Madigan and Daley. For goodness’ sake, he ran in ’98 on a pork-barrel spending platform. Second, if Ryan were to resign, wouldn’t that make things tougher and not easier on the attorney general? It would be an admission of guilt on the guv’s part which would only reflect badly on Jim Ryan. It’s clear that Rod plans to make Ryan’s lack of initiative in investigating the licenses-for-bribes scandal a major part of his attack strategy.

To have the guv resign, especially so close to the election, would only help the Democrats. Now the attack becomes, “Why didn’t you do anything to investigate the governor who would be forced by the pressures surrounding the scandal to resign?”

But there’s a larger point of silliness here, which is the apparent belief on the part of Dubya and others at the White House that who’s in the governor’s office will make a difference in ’04. Illinois has gone big for Democrats three elections in a row. Certainly, a liberal Republican like Ryan didn’t make a difference in 2000, and I don’t see any reason to think that Jim Ryan would do much better. And, gee, didn’t Dubya also lose Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, where his gubernatorial pals John Engler, Tommy Thompson and Tom Ridge were supposed to help him out?

And his own brother left Dubya’s chad hanging for more than a month before the Supreme Court stepped in and settled things. In other words, Dubya needs to focus on winning over the voters in the suburban areas of these states if he wants to win. Republican governors won’t do it. Voters are very well able to distinguish between Republicans and Democrats at the state and national levels.

Hizzoner Jr. thinks he’s so funny

Mayor Daley, a lifelong Sox fan, took the opportunity yesterday to mock the Cubs for their bleacher windscreen idea. I agree that the notion that the windscreens have been put in for security purpsoes is laughable, but the point that Daley misses — as usual — is that he doesn’t get to have the last word on what private businesses in Chicago do.

There could be an argument made that it’s unfriendly of the Cubs to overturn a decades-old tradition beloved by visiting sportscasters everywhere, but how friendly is it of the Wrigleyville neighborhood to make it impossible for the Cubs to expand their park and schedule more night games? How much revenue have the Cubs brought into that neighborhood in the last 20 years? How much have property values increased? The neighbors’ whining is getting a little tiresome. If security around the park is really a problem, make the Cubs hire extra security.

They already charge fans an entertainment tax which — presumably — should be paying for the extra police and traffic officers that are placed around the park on game days. But don’t make it harder than necessary for the Cubs to compete while preserving the essentials of what make Wrigley Field such a magnificent place.

A noble idea

Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R-Calif.) says the U.S. government should "do what’s right" and compensate Afghans who lost innocent family members to American bombs.

This strikes me, at first blush, as an excellent idea. While I think there is a distinction between U.S. bombs which accidentally killed innocents and Al Qaeda terrorists who intentionally murdered innocents, to the extent that the U.S. government knew in advance that there would so-called "collateral damage," it has a moral responsibility to try and make restitution.

The certainty of Aghan civilian casualties was one factor that initially made me uneasy about the war in Afghanistan, the other being my fear that the war would only create more terrorists in the end. But it’s clear that the war has been successful in disabling or at least significantly hampering Al Qaeda’s efforts, and taking the Taliban out of power was a nice side benefit.

But that still does not erase the U.S. government’s moral responsibility to make restitution to those Afghan families that were unjustly torn apart by the bombings.

Rohrabacher, head of a nine-member congressional delegation that visited Afghanistan, called the compensation a "legitimate cost of doing business." That seems a little bean-counterish, but it’s right. The government is supposed to protect our lives, and part of doing that job in Afghanistan involved the foreseeable, but ultimately unavoidable, loss of innocent Afghan life.

Compensation won’t make the victims’ families whole again, but it is the right thing to do. In addition, it won’t hurt American PR efforts in the region, though I suspect nothing would help so much as immediate American withdrawal from all areas not directly related to the war on anti-U.S. terrorist groups.

The only thing about this proposal that concerns me is preventing fraud. How do you prove that a family member was killed by by an American bomb and had nothing to do with Al Qaeda or the Taliban? And how do you check those facts before doling out the cash? It would be a shame to see such a well-intentioned program be badly administered, as so many are.

Caution: This lollipop could help you stop smoking

Sounds great, right? You must not be a politician. Hundreds of pharmacists are producing lollipops spiked with nicotine that more closely mimic the hit of nicotine a smoker gets from lighting up, and they’re tasty too, unlike many nicotine chewing gum products which the FDA says shouldn’t be too appetizing.

Rep. Henry Waxman (D-Calif.) apparently doesn’t want people to have a good-tasting alternative to smoking. He wrote a letter to Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson, asking him to stop sales of the nicotine pops until they’re approved by the FDA.

Pharmacists, responding to the demand for a better smoking-cessation technique, innovate with new products and one has even tried to apply for FDA approval but, naturally, can’t afford the costs of testing. Seems only huge pharmaceutical corporations can afford those (and they are supposed to hate the FDA because …).

Everyone knows that smoking is infinitely more harmful than any other form of nicotine intake. Fine, as long as we have an FDA, let’s get these products tested and approved, but why should smokers be denied the products in the meantime? It’s said they haven’t been proven "safe and effective" yet, but they haven’t been shown to be dangerous either. Live and let suck, I say.

Waiting for debate

Brink Lindsey hates to do it, but he’s calling out the anti-war libertarians at Antiwar.com, LewRockwell.com, againstbombing.com and the Independent Institute.

He’s not bothering to make an argument, mind you, just pointing out that they dare to be anti-war, as if it were self-evidently ridiculous. You’ll find a lot of bad anti-war arguments coming from libertarians, that’s true, as you’ll find many bad pro-war arguments coming from libertarians as well.

So, to point to a few raving lunacies at LewRockwell.com (not a difficult task, I assure you, though Lindsey doesn’t even bother with that much) or wherever does not accomplish much. One could just as easily point to the many bloggers who think that invading Saudi Arabia is a dandy idea, or that a U.S. military presence could help the Palestinians and Israelis get along. One should tackle the opposition’s strongest arguments, not its weakest.

Lindsey reserves particular disdain for the Independent Institute, which is holding a forum at which leftists Gore Vidal and Lewis Lapham are featured. He writes:

What is going on? What’s wrong with these people? One can dismiss particular individuals or groups as disreputable or crankish, but the fact is that anti-war views similar to those held by the loonie [sic] left are not uncommon among libertarians these days.

Naturally, he doesn’t bother to specify what views those are, relying on ad hominem and a selected one-line quote from Lapham. Perhaps it’s because I’m not especially gung ho about the war in Afghanistan (but not opposed to it, either), but I don’t see every anti-war view coming from a leftist as being per se loony or idiotic. There are some good reasons to be opposed to the war (not that they necessarily carry the day, in the end) and some bad ones.

It seems most pro-war libertarian bloggers don’t bother to investigate the difference, or even acknowledge that there is one. Moreover, the debate right now isn’t so much about what’s been done in Afghanistan, but about where we go from here and what it means to the future of American foreign policy and the safety of the American people.

I don’t know exactly what Vidal (whose new book I have not read) and Lapham — along with respected libertarian historian Robert Higgs (among others) — will be saying at the Independent Institute forum Lindsey finds so offensive, but here’s the promotional blurb, with my comments interspersed:

Could the horrific events of September 11th be setting in motion a chain of events far more significant than the terrorist attacks themselves? After retaliating against the Al Qaeda terrorist network, and its Taliban enablers, the Bush Administration now speaks of “bringing justice” to an “axis of evil” countries not involved in the 9/11 attacks — all while Osama bin Laden and most of the major terrorist leaders have escaped.

Now what is so ridiculous about this? There is still no convincing evidence that any of the "axis of evil" countries had anything to do with the Sept. 11 attacks, and it’s absolutely true that while Dubya is trying to build up support for a war on Iraq, bin Laden and many Al Qaeda leaders remain at large. Seems like a reasonable question to raise: Will an expansion of the terror war distract from its core mission — ensuring that Al Qaeda and other anti-U.S. terrorist groups don’t strike again? But I guess that’s just loony.

Meanwhile, the Middle East may be teetering on the brink of a major war. World leaders in Europe, Asia, Africa, and elsewhere view U.S. military intervention with increasing alarm, and international opinion indicates that the United States may be more hated than ever. Could U.S. policies be provoking this hatred and the ever more ominous threats to the safety of Americans and people around the world? If so, how can we produce a safer world?

This teeters close to the thin line between asking a reasonable question and the "blame America" phenomenon, but if U.S. policies are provoking terrorism, isn’t it worth examining whether those policies are achieving goals which make them worth that risk? There are times when international opinion should be disregarded because the policy objective is so worthwhile. In this case, the very objective is to lessen the risk of another terrorist attack — and surely international opinion of the United States is at the heart of the matter.

On the home front, the U.S. government has acquired broad new police powers to systematically spy on and detain both American citizens and foreign nationals without due process. Will the USA PATRIOT Act — legislation still being written when it was passed by Congress last fall — really hinder terrorists, or will it simply enable militant fundamentalists to destroy American liberty as the U.S. itself shreds the Bill of Rights?

All perfectly reasonable questions, which pro- and anti-war libertarians should find worth debating.

Lindsey also seems to think that only anarchist libertarians could oppose the war. It is true that anarchists of any stripe are likely to oppose war, regardless. But not only are there plenty of minarchist libertarians who oppose the war, but the noninterventionist principle Lindsey eschews does not in any sense forbid action in response to the Sept. 11 attacks (as he seems to think). It’s precisely in response to such a direct attack the noninterventionist principle dictates that military action is permissible.

Lindsey writes that no general principle can guide us in foreign policy. While I don’t claim that the noninterventionist principle (like the nonaggression principle) is flawless or applicable everywhere at all times, I think it’s a principle worth hanging our hat on. And many of Lindsey’s colleagues at the Cato Institute seem to agree — e.g., Ted Galen Carpenter, Ivan Eland, Doug Bandow. Perhaps Lindsey should defer to their expertise.

Why libertarians are important

Interestingly, Lindsey finishes up by explaining that anti-war libertarians should be tossed so that worthwhile ideas such as vouchers and Social Security privatization aren’t weighed down by anti-war "baggage."

Virginia Postrel takes issue with that last bit, while agreeing with his otherwise "excellent posting," saying:

We’re important because we raise essential, long-term objections — both pragmatic and principled (a dichotomy I don’t entirely accept) — to giving the cause of "security" a free pass to do whatever happens to be on someone’s state-expanding wish list.

Hmm. Isn’t this precisely what anti-war libertarians are doing? They believe that many are using the laudable goal of security to widen the scope and size of government in the sphere of foreign policy. Does public choice analysis disappear the moment we hit international waters?

Just as many might disagree with libertarians about restrictions on civil liberties, many disagree with anti-war libertarians about the necessity of war. Does that make their opposition de facto unnecessary or unproductive? I don’t think so. It depends on the arguments offered. And the best arguments are worth considering, even if we ultimately reject them.

The answer is blowin’ in the windscreen

First things first, the Cubs’ new bleacher windscreens are not about security. If they are, it’s just one more example of idiotic overreaction to Sept. 11. When will folks in the sports world get it through their heads that they are not terrorist targets, and that all their supposed security measures only inconvenience the people who pay the bills — the fans?

But what is at issue here is the long-running battle between the Wrigleyville Rooftop Owners Association and the Tribune Co. In fact, back in December when the Cubs first started experimenting with the windscreen idea, Cubs Executive Vice President of Business Operations Mark McGuire didn’t say anything about security. What he did say:

Frankly, one of the reasons we would be looking at it now is that if the rooftops continue to be the one group aggressively trying to kill our [expansion] project, there is a feeling we should contemplate a more aggressive response.

Ah-ha! It’s true that the rooftop owners have opposed the Cubs’ plans to expand bleacher seating which would block some rooftop views of game action. One shouldn’t be surprised that they’re upset at the thought of losing a real cash cow, but just because they’re the David to the Tribune Co.’s Goliath doesn’t mean they’ve got right on their side.

In fact, the Tribune Co. is perfectly within its rights to expand Wrigley bleacher seating or alter the park in whatever manner it sees fit. Tribune Co. execs know that while Wrigley is their biggest money generator, they need the flexibility to make changes to stay competitive.

Which is why it is resisting the city’s efforts to make Wrigley a landmark. As McGuire told Dan Barry of the New York Times, "While we agree with the city that the facility in total is special, certain things are not, like chain-link fences and precast concrete."

Many people have the misimpression that declaring a property a landmark somehow "protects" it, but what it really does is make it more vulnerable by limiting the owners’ ability to alter it in such a way that it can survive and keep up with the times.

Landmark "protection" is really just another property taking without just compensation. Of course, owners themselves sometimes seek landmark protection, which is only done because they fear the market — i.e., the cumulative decisions of free individuals — won’t support their overvaluation of the property.

So what do we have here? We have a group of freeloaders whining that the Cubs are trying to block a view they have no legal or moral right to, and they have used the public process of zoning approval — notorious for its special-interest pleading and bureaucratic powermongering — to try and protect their something-for-nothing deal.

In the meantime, Team Marketing Report predicts the extra seats would yield $10.6 million annually for the Cubs. CNN Money’s Chris Isidore says that’s peanuts, but those are peanuts that the Tribune Co. — which, after all, puts on the games and maintains the "shrine" — should be gobbling up. As it now stands, the rooftop owners are getting the peanuts and leaving the Cubs with the empty shells.

Mmm … peanuts.