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I’ve been talking to people lately.

Dave Walker of the New Orleans Times Picayune interviewed me for a piece about the response of blog communities to David Simon’s show, Treme. Walker and I had a nice long phone conversation about The Storm, what kind of person it takes to capture it in a semi-fictional tv series and the blog as a mere yet powerful medium. I’ll expand on this over at Back Of Town in a little bit.

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The Big news on the desi intertubes yesterday was a TIME column by Joel Stein entitled “My Own Private India.” Oh boy, you say. Yeah. It seems Stein suffers from some inner turmoil about the changing ethnic nature of his Jersey hometown which Tums and a glass of Shut The F**k Up juice alone could not settle. He had to share on the pages of a national newsweekly. And they accuse the blogs of killing journalism. The inimitable ANNA wasn’t going to let this slide and wrote an appropriately scathing response over at Sepia Mutiny, in which she quotes from emails that friends and I sent in to her. I encourage you to read both before coming back here.

My entire email response to Anna follows. As you read it, keep in mind that the older I get, it’s not the overt racists and the content of the racism that bother me as much as the “latent” racists among us and the why of what they say and do. (South Carolina Senator Jake Knotts calling gubernatorial candidate Nikki Haley a “f**king raghead” is the dual-headed demon of old hick racism and dirty politics as usual at play. Then, there’s the super-educated white guy I know who has referred to a bunch of brown folks, including me, as terrorist one time too many. Is it different? Moreover, what does this level of discourse prove and why is it so easy?). Anyway, my response:

“Even if this were a simple observation on Joel Stein’s part of how his town has changed economically through the decades, he could have done it a bit differently. Case in point: ‘In retrospect, I question just how good our schools were if ‘dot heads’ was the best racist insult we could come up with for a group of people whose gods have multiple arms and an elephant nose.’ Like these attributes of Hindu gods are insult-worthy. With this, Stein gave up the protection of self-deprecation and crossed that line. Why is it still so easy to do so?

“I was recently invited to a costume party which encouraged attendance dressed as your favorite Indian of the western or eastern variety. The photo montage on the front of the invite (because such a thing requires overt, graphic description) consisted of badly cut-and-pasted Pocahontas, Sitting Bull, a South Indian dancer, Hindu goddess Durga, and Gandhi positioned over a wild west barrel. For a while, I fumed over it. Even if they live in a small town outside of Cleveland Ohio, these are adults, “professionals” even, who have attended college. How could young, ostensibly educated people in 2010 create and enjoy not-malicious-but-tasteless shite like this, especially when this town overflows with Indians of all walks of life, some of whom employ area residents by the hundreds? Who do these people think they are sending out an invite like that? How would they feel if I were to send them ones for a Come Dressed As Your Favorite Undereducated Small-Town White B party?

“Then I realize that no matter the globalized, trendy clothes they wear and ‘ghetto’ music that they listen to [forget that they’d probably pee their Ed Hardys if they accidentally walked into an actual ghetto], they are products of their upbringing and do not have editors, internal or external, who tell them they ought to know better.

“Time Magazine ought to know better.

“Yet, still, hitherto, even at this point, I can dismiss the whole article as noise. What really cooks me here is not Stein’s provincialism or even how easy it still is to use Indians as the butt of jokes. It’s the Indian-Americans, the ones who keep their heads down, ‘adjust,’ and don’t make waves, who will tell us not to be so sensitive and to shrug it off. ‘Let them say what they want. We should not internalize these things and let them bother us. Grow a sense of humor.’ Because of their being doormats, it is easy for the Steins of the world to give ink to the Wholly Unnecessary. They make it so easy to do so. No more. I’m an American. The residents of Edison have been Americans for longer than Stein’s had a column. They don’t need this. Fuck you if you can take a ‘joke.’

“And you can tell the [expletive deleted, but it’s the favorite of one Mr. Al Swearengen of Deadwood] who will inevitably show up in the SM comments’ section, ever pointing out the thin nature of our confused brown skins, I said so.”

One more thing: Not all of us are doctors or engineers, ok? Some of us reserve the inalienable American right to be straight fuck-ups. Like business owners or musicians or geologists or journalists. My mother is as disappointed about this as I’m sure Stein’s mom is.

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These Books Were Made for Walking

What books are you reading this summer? Any good enough to recommend?

Books I have to finish and GET. OUT. OF. MY. LIFE. ALREADY. or at least off my bedside table

1. G.K. Chesterton’s The Man Who Was Thursday
2. Denis Leary’s Why We Suck
3. Kevin Baker’s Dreamland
4. Best American Short Stories of 2009 – two measly stories left

Books Purchased That Have Yet To Be Cracked Open

1. Stieg Larsson’s The Girl Who Played With Fire
2. Cory Doctorow’s Little Brother
3. Hunter S. Thompson’s Kitchen Readings – yeah, yeah, I know, my lazy bum

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Books To Re-Read

1. Robert Heinlein’s Stranger In A Strange Land
2. James Gleick’s Genius

Books To Buy

1. Neal Stephenson’s Anathem
2. China Mieville’s Kraken
3. Alex Bellos’s Here’s Looking at Euclid: A Surprising Excursion Through the Astonishing World of Math
4. Walker Percy’s Love In The Ruins
5. Cory Doctorow’s For The Win
6. Amitava Kumar“s Passport Photos
7. John Brandon’s Citrus County

Have any of you read Charles Stross’s Laundry Files series? What do you think? (Attention, D&D fiends, this is the dude who invented the githyanki and githzerai).

Also must get over book-owning obsession and germophobia and get myself a library card.

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No Wedding Cake

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Some thoughts, feel free to refute them with proof, reasonable arguments, nunchucks, etc.

1) It takes six months for “the commission to determine how to prevent this from ever happening again?” Arbitrary duration and a poorly-stated goal. The way to prevent this from happening again is known. But it’s going to take a lot more than six months, given the pace at which the federal government moves, to measure and enforce real behavior change that should come from within a given company, set up a verifiable and analyzable flow of data between the company and the MMS, remove the conflicts of interest between energy companies and the MMS, and revamp the regulatory agency in any lasting fashion.

2) Not all oil companies are the same. Other players will already have increased safety measures in a hurry. Even if they have not, what is going to happen in six months to change standard operating procedure? What are we doing to address the smaller leakers? If the goal here is “to prevent this from happening again,” can we get a guarantee that this oil spill or even a smaller version of it will never happen again IN SIX MONTHS’ TIME?

3) I guarantee you that someone has done a tremendous amount of market research on behalf of the government that by the six-month mark, the public will have softened its stance on drilling enough for things to go back to business as usual. It’s a nice round we’ve-all-done-enough-penance number.

Yes, you heard me right earlier. The way to prevent this from happening again is known. There are folks opposed to and for offshore drilling who say that we can never prevent a recurrence and therefore we should stop drilling or continue to drill, respectively. An accident happens when you follow all the rules of the road and external, heretofore-unknown circumstances conspire against you. In this case, the driver didn’t have the seatbelt on, the tires were under-inflated, the brakes were non-operational but no one had bothered to check them, and the car was driven anyway even after passengers expressed concern and asked for the handover of keys. (Hey, if folks in the industry are going to liken this ongoing disaster to a car accident or plane crash, you can bet I will run miles with the metaphor.) So, this much was and still is absolutely preventable.

What about the rest? As commenter Blair, who incidentally is a rocket scientist, said in a comment to a previous post, “It costs to do fault tree analysis and establish contingency plans, but the cost of NOT planning is getting too high. I worry that governments are reactive in nature and will never get ahead of the situation. Government CAN require industry to have plans in place before they proceed with potentially risky activity.” You cannot prevent lightning from striking the collection ship thus halting oil recovery for a while. That is a legitimate accident. But to not anticipate and not plan for any critical component of the operation failing due to human oversight or act of god, even and especially in the recovery phase? It’s going to take a lot more than six months and a drilling moratorium to fix systemic breakdown.

Fire away.

Update: Oil gushing at spill site after vent damaged; cap removed after robotic sub hits vent

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It could be worse. Could be raining oiled pelicans.This AM: Judge blocks Gulf offshore drilling moratorium; White House will appeal

I wondered, “There are judges in Louisiana and Texas who don’t have to recuse themselves from oil spill cases because of conflicts of interest?”

This PM: Judge who overturned drilling moratorium reported owning stock in drilling companies

I have to highlight Jeffrey’s reaction to this for posterity: “Seems like only one administration ago when the unitary executive was supposedly free to be a decider without having the shareholders meddlesome courts overrule the decidings.”

It ain’t New America if it doesn’t resemble Old India at least once a day.

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