cos: (frff-profile)
You probably already know that the US Supreme Court ruled in favor of Hobby Lobby, a company that said it violated their religious beliefs to provide health insurance plans to their employees that pay for contraception. After learning more about it, I realize this decision is not quite as horrible as it first seemed in the way that it first seemed, though it's quite horrible in another way.

One of the first things I wondered when I heard about it was, waitaminnit, isn't that totally at odds with the 1990 decision about peyote? In that one the court said that the Constitution didn't protect someone's use of peyote for religious purposes - it was still illegal if the law said using peyote was illegal. Did they overturn that precedent?

But no, they didn't. This new decision is actually not Constitutional. Instead, it's a decision about the "Religious Freedom Restoration Act", a law Congress passed in response to the peyote decision. If the Constitution doesn't give people religious exemptions from otherwise illegal acts they do for religious purposes, Congress decided, we'll just make it so the law gives people such exemptions instead. Yesterday the Supreme Court didn't say Hobby Lobby has a Constitutional right to not pay for this insurance benefit, it said the RFRA (a law passed by Congress) allows them to not pay for such plans.

Under the RFRA if any other law impinges on someone's religious beliefs, they get an exemption unless the law a) advances an important interest, and b) does so in a "narrowly tailored" way - in other words, doesn't impinge on their beliefs more than is necessary to achieve the goal.

At first I feared this means the Court decided providing contraceptive coverage wasn't an important enough state interest, but that's not the case. Rather than saying that providing contraceptive coverage isn't a valid state interest, they said that it can be achieved in a different way: Either the government could make insurance companies pay for the contraceptive coverage for employees of companies who sought an exemption, or the government could just pay for that contraceptive coverage directly. Doing either of those would have the full desired effect: Every health insurance plan would cover contraceptives. Since the government can achieve this goal without requiring these companies to pay for it, that means under the RFRA that these companies cannot be required to pay for it.

In that sense, it's a "narrow" decision, and may be easily fixable. The Obama administration already offered a deal to churches and religious nonprofits that sounds like what the court said it could do legally for companies like Hobby Lobby, so presumably they can expand that deal to include these companies. (There's another court case in the works challenging even that, so we'll see...*)

Here's what's fucked up:

1. That anyone would claim a religious objection to contraception seems like a ridiculous anachronism in the 21st century US. It wouldn't be happening if we didn't still have an awful lot of devaluing of women in our culture.

2. Unlike the peyote case, where someone was being penalized for participating in a religious ritual, this case isn't about the actual practice of religion. It's about employees choosing to use their compensation in a way the employer objects to; the employer isn't actually doing so. This seems crazy to me. Compensation for a job is money or other financial value given to the employee, which they can then choose to use however they want. Morally and logically, this seems no different from letting an employer tell you what you can't spend your wages/salary on!

... but here's the worst part:

3. When the RFRA was passed in response to the peyote case, the hubbub was about people and their right to practice their religion. Now the Supreme Court has decided that some corporations can also have religious beliefs, and thus have the same rights under the law. For-profit corporations can have religious faith!!

The whole point of incorporating is to shield the individuals who run the corporations and/or own it from legal liability and financial risk from what the corporation does. Yet somehow the Supreme Court thinks that separation between the individuals and corporations doesn't always apply in the other direction when it comes to religious beliefs.

So... we can get contraceptive coverage back, probably, without even needing Congress (and we certainly could with an act of Congress). But this ongoing trend of the Supreme Court giving corporations more and more rights and benefits that were intended just for actual people is going to be much harder to reverse.

Edit: Move to Amend is the coalition trying to reverse this trend of excessive corporate rights. You could sign their petition and join their email list.

Edit2: I really like this blog post, which makes some of the same points, and gives more of a legal analysis (in an easy to read manner).

*Edit3: Supreme Court is indeed signalling, in that second case, that they may throw a wrench into the workaround: Wheaton College injunction: The Supreme Court just sneakily reversed itself on Hobby Lobby
cos: (Default)
Opinions/views/discussion sought: Is Kurdistan finally happening for real?
cos: (Default)
The FCC is taking comments about its proposed new policy for net neutrality. Here's what I submitted:

    I've complained to my city government about our broadband Internet service provider only to hear their frustration about their inability to get another option for us. Once one company has installed the infrastructure, it's very hard to entice another to come in. I look longingly at neighboring towns that have two options for high speed Internet at home. Two options is what we aspire to and cannot achieve. *Two!*

    Whatever goals the FCC had in mind when you chose the contrived policy of treating last-mile high speed Internet companies as "information services", those goals have failed. They've failed so completely, so deeply, so fully, as to make Donald Trump's presidential campaign look bright and hopeful in comparison.

    High speed Internet to the home is a utility, and in the US, it is a monopoly. Regulate it like the utility and monopoly that it is. Start by taking the obvious and natural step of classifying these providers as "telcommunications" providers, which is what they clearly are, and as common carriers, which is what they should be but have been able to avoid acting as so far.


A bit of context )

Over 128,000 comments have been submitted to the FCC on this already! You can give them your comments - click on "14-28 Protecting and Promoting the Open Internet". You don't need to make long or detailed comments. Plenty of people are submitting very simple requests like "protect the open Internet" or "reclassify Internet providers as common carriers" or "make sure Internet providers treat traffic from everyone equally and fairly".
cos: (frff-profile)
I got one ticket to the Boston Grown-Ups Museum evening at the Childrens' Museum tomorrow, Wednesday June 18th. However it turns out I have to work tomorrow evening, so I'm probably not going to go. The evening is sold out. Anyone want this ticket?

Edit: Given to [livejournal.com profile] rhysara's friend
cos: (frff-profile)
Recently I listened to this bit on This American Life where John Hodgman surveys people about which superpower they'd pick if they could be the only person in the world with either flight, or invisibility? And why would they pick it.

What surprised me is that none of the people he included in sound bites, nor John Hodgman himself, ever even alluded to most of the things that came to mind first to me. So before you read what's below the cut here, I'm curious: What do you think? Which would you pick, and why? What would you do with it?

Edit: The reason I'm asking this question is to find out what you think are the reasons why you might want flight, why you might want invisibility, and why you'd pick the one you pick? (Before you read further and see what came to mind when I thought about it)

Well, okay, what came to mind first was... )

I'd certainly expect some of the people in the radio piece to have very different views from mine, but I thought the things that came to mind for me were obvious enough, or plausible enough, that I'd at least hear some of them, from someone. Now I wonder whether I'll see any of them from any of you who read this, before you read my whole post.
cos: (Default)
On December 31st, just before leaving Tampa to head to the Everglades, I took a tour of Big Cat Rescue. I haven't postprocessed or posted the photos yet, but I just put together this video from a few clips:


Missed some of the best parts, because this cat kept doing things or vocalizing right after I'd stop the camera :)
cos: (Default)
When I let Firefox upgrade from version 28 to 29 today on my Mac, the new Firefox started without any of the saved tabs I had from my previous session! Also, there was no longer a title bar along the top! Fortunately you can fix both problems.

1. Getting your saved session back.

Type "about:config" in the title bar, hit enter, and click the "I'll be careful" button.

You'll see a screen full of lines for various setting names like "accessibility.typeaheadfind.enabletimeout" and "app.update.auto" and on and on and on.

In the search bar at the top, type "browser.sessionstore.enabled" and hit enter. If you see an empty screen below the search bar, then you have the same problem I (and many other people) encountered: your browser.sessionstore.enabled setting vanished with the upgrade. So, you need to put it back...

Right-click somewhere in that empty space below.
From that right-click menu, select New -> Boolean.
In the popup window, enter browser.sessionstore.enabled and click OK.
Select "true".
You can close the "about:config" tab now. All your other tabs should immediately reappear.


2. Getting your title bar back.

Right-click on the top-right or top-left, on the same bar where all your tabs are, but not on one of the tabs. Anywhere to the right or left of the tabs, in the gray area or the buttons that are there.

From the right-click menu, choose "Customize..."

On the customize screen, on the bottom left, click the "Title Bar" button.
cos: (frff-profile)
On a cross country road trip in 2007, one morning when I got on the road before dawn heading east on I-94 in North Dakota, I started video on my camera and held it on the dashboard pointing vaguely forward, and captured a spectacular break of day. BT's album ESCM came to mind because of the part where it says "fire in the sky", so I put that on the stereo.


[ Sorry for the wobbliness, as I wasn't paying much attention to the camera or watching its viewscreen. And for the relatively poor quality of that old camera (a hand me down from [livejournal.com profile] mzrowan that died that following year). ]

Music I was listening to that you can hear on this video:

predawn to dawn: Andreas Vollenweider - Trilogy
dawn to sunrise: BT - ESCM
sunrise: Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon soundtrack (Yo Yo Ma)
cos: (Default)
Google is looking for some people to partipate in a study or focus group of some sort, for 90 minutes next Wednesday or Thursday at the office here in Kendall Square. I don't know anything more about it except what it says on the form: "this study will help the Google team better understand your needs in order to incorporate them into future product enhancements." You get $50 in Play store credit (Android's app & media store) if you participate. Fill out this form if you're interested.
cos: (frff-profile)
I wrote this post in 2006 when I was working for John Bonifaz's campaign for secretary of state of Massachusetts. Today's Supreme Court decision makes it even more relevant now. Please re-post this link.


The Wealth Primary


by cos, Thu Jun 29, 2006 at 07:43:34 AM EDT

This week's decision by the Supreme Court, striking down the spending and contribution limits in Vermont's public financing law, is a good time to reflect on why so many Americans want clean elections through public financing. Money distorts and corrodes politics in many different ways. Today, with June 30th filing deadlines approaching in federal and many state elections, one in particular is on my mind: the wealth primary.

Early in the 20th century, "white primaries" excluded black voters from determining party nominees in many states. They were considered legal under the theory that they were not "state action" - primaries were a private function carried out by party clubs, so equal protection did not apply. In the mid-20th century, the Supreme Court ruled "white primaries" unconstitutional, by reinterpreting "state action" to apply to processes that were clearly such a critical part of the electoral process. Being allowed to vote in the general election, but not to select your party's nominee, was an incomplete right to vote, and equal protection did apply.

Whites-only primaries are gone, but we still have another process that excludes whole classes of people from a critical part of the electoral process: Wealth primaries. At first, poll taxes were used to explicitly prevent the poor from voting, and these too were ruled unconstitutional. Over the years, another process has taken their place. Before a single vote is cast, candidates must raise money from private donors. Party leaders, and the press, look at the numbers, and candidates who haven't raised enough are written off. Dismissed as "not credible". Not covered on the front page, or much at all. In some cases, even pressured by party leaders to drop out of races.

I'm particularly sensitive to the wealth primary this year because of recent campaigns where I live (near Boston). At the beginning of this year, we had four candidates running for District Attorney, an open seat. One of those candidates was a state senator, and several candidates began running for his seat, which would become open since he was running for DA. One of those candidates was a state representative, as was one of the other candidates for DA, which opened up two seats in the state house for new candidates. And then, one by one, candidates dropped out of these races because they couldn't raise enough money to keep up with their opponents.

There is now just one candidate for DA - the one who raised so much money that it pushed the other three out of the race. The state senator decided to run for re-election, so all other candidates for his senate seat dropped out. Both state reps are also running for re-election. Now, I support most of these candidates. Nevertheless, at least four elections were all decided by contributors before any votes were cast!

Unlike white primaries, wealth primaries don't keep anyone from voting to choose the party nominee. What they do is reserve the process of selecting who will run primarily for the wealthy. A single donor who can afford to give $500 is worth as much as ten donors who can only afford $50. A single donor who can afford to give $2,000 is worth as much as a hundred donors who can only afford $20. In the Wealth Primary, it's one dollar, one vote.

This is also on my mind because I work for the man who developed legal theory behind the "wealth primary" argument, John Bonifaz. He founded the National Voting Rights Institute partly to advance this in the courts, and it was largely on the basis of this work that the MacArthur Foundation awarded him a fellowship, commonly known as a "genius award". He was a co-counsel in the defense of Vermont's public financing law.

Ironically, Bonifaz himself is in a wealth primary right now. As a new challenger running against a 12 year incumbent for secretary of state, it's sometimes a struggle to get the press to pay attention. In a healthy democracy, Bonifaz's expertise in election law and long history of effective voting rights advocacy both nationally and at home would be enough to mark him a credible candidate worth serious attention. But given his incumbent's 7-figure campaign warchest, Bonifaz's "credibility" will be determined, in the eyes of the press, by how much money people contribute before tomorrow's filing deadline.

Let's work hard to eliminate wealth primaries by instituting public financing of elections. But in the meantime, if you can afford to contribute, your favorite candidates (unfortunately) need your financial support today.


[ Slightly edited mostly to correct typos, update links, and clarify some sentences, but this is basically the same post I wrote in 2006 (so "This week" refers to a June 2006 decision). ]
cos: (Default)
boisterity: the quality that makes things boisterous
cos: (Default)
Yesterday walking to work I encountered a cute little woodpecker:
cos: (frff-profile)
Duck
Tern
Loon
Gull
I'iwi*
Crow
Wren
Coot
Teal
Kiwi*
Lark
Nene
Swan
Smew**
Ibis
Kite
Hawk
Dove
Myna

* In Hawaiian it's "`i`iwi", and the `okina is a letter, so it's a six-letter bird, but its English name counts as 4 letters.
** not sure if I've ever seen one in the wild.


Added from the comments: Rook, Dodo, Kaka, Weka, Cock

Bonus list: Four letter birds I found on Wikipedia that I'm not sure I was aware of before:
Kagu
Sora
Rail
Ruff
Skua
Koel
Coua
Iora
Guan

Point of ambiguity: Does "Bird" belong on the list?
cos: (frff-profile)
Years ago I made a "Music of the World" test on OkCupid, testing one's breadth of knowledge about music from all over the world. Recently I overhauled the test - about 1/3 ot the questions are new, most other questions have one or two new answer choices, some are reworded, and they're all rearranged into sections.

Scores don't give you fun categories yet, because I don't know how to score it. I need more people to take it!
http://www.okcupid.com/tests/the-music-of-the-world-test

Even people who know a lot more than I about music probably won't get 100% without using Google. I only got 94% and I made the test! But what scores mean what in the real world? The more I see scores from people I know, and whose level of music knowledge I'm familiar with, the better a sense I'll get. Wanna take the test and tell me what you got? (without Googling for answers, of course :)

Edit: Comments here have spoilers, so take the quiz before you read the comments!
cos: (Default)
Text message I sent to Alice at 5:16pm on January 3rd:
"I'm in love with Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge. What an amazing, serene, beautiful bird paradise."

I had a leisurely day leaving south Florida going to St. Augustine for the evening, so I decided to stop on the way at this place I knew almost nothing about except where it was and that it was probably a good place to see birds. Got there only an hour and a half before sunset, picked a path, and soon saw this:

In the foreground are glossy ibis, and behind them are mostly northern pintail ducks, with a few gadwalls and blue winged teals and maybe other species. Sorry about the wind noise - it was breezy but not enough that I thought of how much it would affect my camera's microphone; in real life I was hearing lots of bird calls, and in the video they're mostly drowned out :(

Everything I saw there was in just that one hour and a half, driving one loop road and hiking just the first 1/4 mile or so of two trails. Never more than a few minutes until the next exciting bird sighting. This was my favorite thing I saw )
And this video is a collage of various other moments from my brief time there.

Next time I'll go for a whole day, or several. Hike all the trails, and just sit down some places for a long time watching. I could've spent the whole hour and a half just sitting by that lake of ibis and pintails if I'd had more time.
cos: (Default)
August 1998
... five years pass ...
Oct 2003
Aug 2004
Nov 2004
Jul 2006
Aug 2007
Dec 2008
Jan 2009
May 2009
... almost five years ...
Feb 2014

Most of those visits were to the northern part of the front range cities. I did go to Colorado Springs once, Estes Park once, a few drives through Rocky Mountain National Park and I-70 and Grand Junction, but Denver/Boulder/Fort Collins were my most frequented places. In fact, I don't think I missed Boulder on any one of those trips.

Eight visits in five and a half years was enough to become familiar with the area and develop friendships and have favorite venues and restaurants and more. Then a five year gap. So much changed! Socially, and in the city, and people's lives.
cos: (Default)
The annual anonymous confessions poste hosted by [livejournal.com profile] aroraborealis went up today. She usually leaves it open for about a week. There are always some fascinating discussions and stories.
cos: (frff-profile)
My friend [livejournal.com profile] elfy posted this international friending post while I was at Arisia a week ago, Now that I've mostly caught up on LJ, I'll share this link a week late.

    Are you looking for a few more journals to read?
    Is your friendslist never active enough for you?
    Would you enjoy reading the journal of some more nice people from all over the world?

    Then this post is for you!


(elfy is in Germany, and it seems like people responding are about 50/50 Germans and Americans so far)
cos: (Default)
Catching up on (some of) the LiveJournal I missed during a 16 day trip over new years, I saw a bunch of people post the "where did I sleep" meme: a list of cities or towns where they spent one or more nights last year. I've never done this one before, so I'll do 3 years at once. Partly out of laziness, because each of the past three years I've gone on a trip over new years, so doing the last 3 years together means I don't have to try to figure out which part of each trip was before or after December 31st :)

The list, lj-cut for being 67 lines )

Roughly in order of when I thought of them as I mentally reviewed the past three years; not chronological, but obviously clustered by mental association. Also since this is from memory, maybe I accidentally forgot a couple of places, and maybe I accidentally put in a place that was actually from more than 3 years ago, but I don't think so.

A bit surprised that I haven't spent any nights in either New Hampshire or Maine for over three years! Less surprised that I haven't been to Southern California or Colorado in that long, though that's a big change too. But I'm about to remedy one of those with a trip to Colorado next month.
cos: (Default)
So far on this road trip, I've gone to some stores in Storrs (CT), and seen a row of flattened bushes on Flatbush Ave (NY). What's next?

And what've you encountered that's like that?
cos: (Default)
I have half a day to spare on Monday on the way from central Connecticut to Philadelphia, so I am probably going to stop in New York. If you're in NYC and have free time Monday morning/midday/early afternoon and want to get together, ping me.
cos: (Default)
I'm having the bathroom in my house redone soon.

One thing I worry about is the possibility of failing to specify or ask for things I may have always taken for granted, so they don't occur to me. I know what I'd like to gain, but I may not be aware of all the things I don't want to lose.

Like ten years ago when I got a car that didn't have map pockets on the backs of the seats, which I'd always depended on - I liked being able to store a few large atlases and laminated maps behind the passenger seat, and be able to easily reach for them when stopped at a light. It simply hadn't occurred to me that some cars may not have those. Or when I got some house windows replaced, and ended up with windows that don't have metal bars or little tabs near the bottom such that you can push them up from below to open. I'd simply taken for granted the ability to open a window next to my bed a crack while lying down, and it had never occurred to me that anyone might make a window you have to be standing up to open, so it wasn't something I asked about or looked for. I saw the windows before I agreed to have them, and just didn't notice that critical detail.

So, what am I not noticing about bathrooms? Any ideas?
cos: (frff-profile)
I'm going to replace my Galaxy Nexus, and keep the T-Mobile service I currently have. Given that, do you have an opinion on whether the Moto X or Nexus 5 is better, and why?

Reviews mostly seem to have a hard time choosing one over the other. What I care about:
* Battery life. Reviews are also confused about that, some say the Moto X has longer battery life and some say the Nexus 5.
* Being able to use the unlocked phone internationally (I won't get a locked phone).

* Good, non-jittery GPS that's good enough for navigation/Waze (this is one place the Galaxy Nexus fails very badly)
* Non-laggy app performance
* Easy to read display mainly for maps - but as long as it's not worse than the Galaxy Nexus, I'll like the display.

What I don't care about:
* Rooting. I don't plan to do that.
* Streaming music. I mainly use my iPad to carry music & podcasts around, for the car or for flights. No phone battery is good enough for this use, IMO; iPads last forever.

Edit: Thanks [livejournal.com profile] ckd, [livejournal.com profile] pir, [livejournal.com profile] lizkayl, [livejournal.com profile] sariel_t, for bits of helpful info. I ended up choosing Moto X. My main reasons were longer battery life and a smaller more comfortable to hold phone, though I've heard that I'll also really like the "active notifications", and that the camera is much faster.
cos: (frff-profile)
My last two days in Korea, I spent on my own in Seoul. [livejournal.com profile] estheruth left on Sunday afternoon to go home and start her workweek the next morning. She had taken me around one palace, and told me where to find another palace, near city hall, so I wandered over there later in the afternoon. $1 admission, and a free museum on the grounds.

No museum for me, though, because it was closed for renovations. The palace buildings were beautiful, and sunset was approaching, when I heard lots of musical instruments being warmed up or practiced, so I went over to see what was going on. People in suits, large numbers of children dressed formally and carrying violins and trombones and cellos and clarinets, rows of chairs being set up in a space between two palace buildings. I could see a stage being prepared but that area was cordoned off and I couldn't tell if this was a public event; the palace grounds were supposed to close at sunset, less than an hour away.

After going to see more of the palace grounds and buildings, I came back around to where the musicians were and noticed lots of people were sitting or standing on the stairs and raised floor behind the chairs, with nobody checking tickets or anything of the sort. I also noticed some people with shirts labeled "Youth Orchestra of Caracas".

Venezuela has a national government-sponsored system over over 100 youth orchestras, something they've been doing since the 1970s. These orchestras tour the world, with the large majority of their members kids from very poor backgrounds. The system pays for their musical education and their touring, and in many cases the government buys their instruments for them. When they play a show in a foreign country, they usually incorporate local musicians, and a local youth orchestra.

I'd never seen a Venezuelan youth orchestra. At first I just waited around out of curiosity to see what the show was going to be like, before I went to find dinner (I was hungry). Then they started, and I stayed for the two hour show, and wished it wasn't ending when it did.



P.S. I got one more video: Here's them covering a West Side Story tune.
cos: (frff-profile)
Add something to this world?

  • chardvark, a leafy-green insect eater

  • crêprevine, grown for its edible thin pancakelike fruit

  • great danish, a large canine often filled with cheese and topped with fruit

  • plexigrass, a transparent, heat-resistant grass


* Chardvark contributed by Alice Zelman; great danish from April Wells
Page generated Mar. 17th, 2026 11:35
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios