Friday, March 31, 2006
In private, when i am alone and the eggs were really good, I lick the plate. Only when the yolks were really runny do I do that. I came to the realization after I was scraping the yolk off of the "Rue Royal" Gien plate that I have fallen into the habit of eating two breakfasts. Pre-cycling breakfast (usually slogged down at 6am) and Post-cycling, pre-class breakfast. Today is Friday and I just finished breakfast #2 and am just about to head out to squash with a couple of my law school buddies. I head out to penn state today for my first bike race ever (this ought to be interesting). I swear I would be an pro athlete if i could find anything I was good enough at.
Saturday, March 25, 2006
I had compiled a list of things I'd wanted to comment on but now I am too lazy. I bought two books today from Ivy Books/Murder Ink: Arundhati Roy's "The God of Small Things" and Diane Ackerman's "An Alchemy of Mind." I'm a huge fan of Ackerman's "A Natural History of the Senses" and "A Natural History of Love" and I'm eager to see what she's whipped up in this book.
Also, I was a foodie a) before I knew I was a foodie, b) It was cool to be one and c) before the word "foodie" fell into common usage. Yesterday I made a superb soup with spinach, chicken stock, milk and a butter/flour roux. No, it was not cream of spinach.
Also, I was a foodie a) before I knew I was a foodie, b) It was cool to be one and c) before the word "foodie" fell into common usage. Yesterday I made a superb soup with spinach, chicken stock, milk and a butter/flour roux. No, it was not cream of spinach.
I had compiled a list of things I'd wanted to comment on but now I am too lazy. I bought two books today from Ivy Books/Murder Ink: Arundhati Roy's "The God of Small Things" and Diane Ackerman's "An Alchemy of Mind." I'm a huge fan of Ackerman's "A Natural History of the Senses" and "A Natural History of Love" and I'm eager to see what she's whipped up in this book.
Also, I was a foodie a) before I knew I was a foodie, b) It was cool to be one and c) before the word "foodie" fell into common usage. Yesterday I made a superb soup with spinach, chicken stock, milk and a butter/flour roux. No, it was not cream of spinach.
Also, I was a foodie a) before I knew I was a foodie, b) It was cool to be one and c) before the word "foodie" fell into common usage. Yesterday I made a superb soup with spinach, chicken stock, milk and a butter/flour roux. No, it was not cream of spinach.
Monday, March 06, 2006
I know I have a lot of work to do and not enough time to do it between now and Wednesday. But I just want to post a brief note congratulating the Supreme Court on upholding the Solomon Amendment. Basically, law schools which receive federal dollars must grant military recruiters the same recruiting opportunities as private firms notwithstanding the "don't ask don't tell" policy. While the court ruled along the lines of "conduct vs speech," declaring the Solomon Amendment regulates the method which falls into the acceptable course of action on part of a law school while not barring its right to openly denounce the military's treatment of homosexuals, I personally come to the same conclusion via a different a perspective - that of a student. To summarize the argument of the S. Court, however, it is quite simple: you may say what you like but you may not do what you like, in light of the fact that you receive federal dollars. But back to how I personally see this:
Whose right is it for a law school to censor my recruitment opportunities on behalf of a policy which may or may not affect me? You could make the argument that discrimination affects everybody - but that is based upon social mores and not law. Discrimination is unfair, but so is life and so, at times, is the law. Forgetting for a moment the discrimination that homosexuals arguably face when joining the military, does the fact that the silent discrimination of minorities, women and those who do not fit the stereotype of a "conservative WASP ivy league lawyer" prevent private firms from recruiting? The answer in short is no. While it is a stretch to call it legal hair splitting - the difference between silently advancing discrimination/prejudice and openly codifying it (and lawyers make plenty of money arguing these types of minutia) are in essence the same thing. It is almost an absurd case of reverse discrimination (though this argument is based upon social mores rather than law) to restrict military recruting on campuses for this flimsy reason.
That the school wittingly agrees with the government to a contract of allowing recruitment by millitary and government branches in exchange for federal dollars seems to me to be moot and just icing on the cake to why the Solomon Amendment should stand. This alone should make it painfully obvious why a law school which receives these federal funds ought to comply. Being in contract with the government is arguably no different from being in contract with a private party or corporation.
Bravo.
Whose right is it for a law school to censor my recruitment opportunities on behalf of a policy which may or may not affect me? You could make the argument that discrimination affects everybody - but that is based upon social mores and not law. Discrimination is unfair, but so is life and so, at times, is the law. Forgetting for a moment the discrimination that homosexuals arguably face when joining the military, does the fact that the silent discrimination of minorities, women and those who do not fit the stereotype of a "conservative WASP ivy league lawyer" prevent private firms from recruiting? The answer in short is no. While it is a stretch to call it legal hair splitting - the difference between silently advancing discrimination/prejudice and openly codifying it (and lawyers make plenty of money arguing these types of minutia) are in essence the same thing. It is almost an absurd case of reverse discrimination (though this argument is based upon social mores rather than law) to restrict military recruting on campuses for this flimsy reason.
That the school wittingly agrees with the government to a contract of allowing recruitment by millitary and government branches in exchange for federal dollars seems to me to be moot and just icing on the cake to why the Solomon Amendment should stand. This alone should make it painfully obvious why a law school which receives these federal funds ought to comply. Being in contract with the government is arguably no different from being in contract with a private party or corporation.
Bravo.
Wednesday, March 01, 2006
Lionel Tate, why are you alive? Why did you even bother taking the plea in order to take the death penalty off the table? You are a worthless waste of oxygen. Perhaps nobody has ever had the heart to tell you this, but you are W-O-R-T-H-L-E-S-S. You've caused nobody anything but heartache by your very existence (to say nothing of your mother's lunacy for saying she's "hopeful" and that she was "relieved by the plea"), and for that reason alone, you should be dead. Take your own life and stop wasting the resources you so blatantly don't give a damn about. you got away with second degree murder the first time because of a legal glitch and then found it in yourself to go buy a gun with that new lease on life, oh yes, i forgot: after running around with an 8 inch knife like the menace you undoubtedly are. You then proceeded to rob a fucking pizza delivery boy. You felt the need to rob a pizza delivery boy yet you had the money to buy a gun? Please take your own life and spare us the wasted ink in the Times.
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