Midweek Special

Hurricane Rita in the Gulf. Umm. Hmm.

What woman could be the next US Supreme Court justice? Slate’s Emily Bazelon does an analysis – one could be troubled by the conservative women already on the federal appeals bench:

The women on the shortlist are crazy or lightweights or both, the naysayers complain. In their most despairing moments, they worry that the administration has deliberately cut down the pool of women candidates by refusing to seriously consider anyone who isn’t a federal appeals court judge (with the exception of Attorney General Alberto Gonzales and former Deputy Attorney General Larry Thompson).

So, Bazelon notes that one could try to find the female John Roberts:

It may be that the female John Roberts is out there. Like Roberts, Maureen Mahoney is a leading Supreme Court litigator; she’s been arguing before the court since 1988. Like Roberts, she’s from the Midwest (born in South Bend, Ind.). Like Roberts, she clerked for Chief Justice William Rehnquist. Like Roberts, she was one of Kenneth Starr’s deputies when he was solicitor general for Bush I. Mahoney’s problem: She has argued in favor of affirmative action—on the winning side for the University of Michigan Law School in the 2003 Supreme Court case Grutter v. Bollinger. But that shouldn’t disqualify her if defending development restrictions around Lake Tahoe—a bad loss for the property-rights movement—didn’t disqualify Roberts. Also, Mahoney isn’t a judge. In 1992, George H.W. Bush nominated her for a federal trial bench seat in Virginia, but Bill Clinton became president before confirmation. So, she’s still a lawyer at the Washington, D.C., firm Latham & Watkins. At first blush, it would seem odd for the administration to single out a plain old lawyer for the nation’s highest court. At second blush, why not? Mahoney is smart and she knows the court. […]

Mahoney lacks what another late-surging female candidate has—a longtime spot in the president’s inner circle. White House Counsel Harriet Miers has been vetter-in-chief of the Supreme Court candidates. What if Bush selects her over them, in the Dick Cheney tradition? Before she got her current job, Miers was assistant to the president and his staff secretary. She was the person who knew where all the paper in the White House was coming and going. She never talked to reporters. She came with Bush from Texas, where she was chair of the state lottery commission and the first woman president of the Texas State Bar. But Miers isn’t a skilled Supreme Court advocate. She has no reputation outside the insular Bush circle. Firepower-wise, she looks like a big gamble.

So, there are many factors to consider. Hmm. Obviously, deciding who would replace Justice O’Connor isn’t going to be easy.

Alan Alda – what a guy.

Fareed Zakaria of Newsweek does an interesting analysis of what in the world is the government doing to deal with the numbers behind the problems this country is facing:

People wonder whether we can afford Iraq and Katrina. The answer is, easily. What we can’t afford simultaneously is $1.4 trillion in tax cuts and more than $1 trillion in new entitlement spending over the next 10 years. To take one example, if Congress did not make permanent just one of its tax cuts, the repeal of estate taxes, it would generate $290 billion over the next decade. That itself pays for most of Katrina and Iraq.

Robert Hormats of Goldman Sachs has pointed out that previous presidents acted differently. During World War II, Franklin Roosevelt cut nonwar spending by more than 20 percent, in addition to raising taxes to finance the war effort. During the Korean War, President Truman cut non-defense spending 28 percent and raised taxes to pay the bills. In both cases these presidents were often slashing cherished New Deal programs that they had created. The only period—other than the current one—when the United States avoided hard choices was Vietnam: spending increased on all fronts. The results eventually were deficits, high interest rates and low growth—stagflation.

Bush is not the only one to blame. Congressional spending is now completely out of control. The federal coffers are being looted for congressional patronage, and it is being done openly and without any guilt. [….]

Today’s Republicans believe in pork, but they don’t believe in government. So we have the largest government in history but one that is weak and dysfunctional. Public spending is a cynical game of buying votes or campaign contributions, an utterly corrupt process run by lobbyists and special interests with no concern for the national interest. So we shovel out billions on “Homeland Security” to stave off nonexistent threats to Wisconsin, Wyoming and Montana while New York and Los Angeles remain unprotected. We mismanage crises with a crazy-quilt patchwork of federal, local and state authorities—and sing paeans to federalism to explain our incompetence. We denounce sensible leadership and pragmatism because they mean compromise and loss of ideological purity. Better to be right than to get Iraq right.

Hurricane Katrina is a wake-up call. It is time to get serious. We need to secure the homeland, fight terrorism and have an effective foreign policy to advance our interests and our ideals. We also need a world-class education system, a great infrastructure and advancement in science and technology.

For all its virtues, the private sector cannot accomplish all this. Wal-Mart and Federal Express cannot devise a national energy policy for the United States. For that and for much else, we need government. We already pay for it. Can somebody help us get our money’s worth?

Plenty of food for thought.

Update

Been a really hectic September. Flew to KL twice and back going through Changi and HK on the way back. Cathay’s hub in HK is nice but the layover can get really long and tiring. B- and I just finished moving out of our old place and into our new place. it’ll take a lot of work to bring it up to speed but it’s bigger, and has more of a home feel. We’ll turn this place into a home office and maybe rent out one of the rooms out.

Taipei can get really dirty and this place is no exception. The filth is overwhelming and clean up is slow. Nevertheless, we got static IP with our internet connection through Taiwan Fixed Network which was offering half off the other TW competitors. Just bought a wifi router for the place and will slowly put everything up.

Monday

Friday – I checked out the symposium at Alma Mater Law School about Justice Blackmun. It was intruiging stuff. And, of course, considering the timing of the event, no speaker could avoid talking about the proceedings to confirm prospective Chief Justice John Roberts. A lot of great praise for Linda Greenhouse’s book, “Becoming Justice Blackmun,” which I’d love to get my hands on one of these days (if only to glimpse what a treasure trove of info that his rat packing ways provided).

Sunday – Emmy night!

— Such a shame Hugh “Dr. House” Laurie did not win best dramatic actor (I suspect that the nomination of HBO’s “Deadwood” actor – also a Brit doing an American accent – cancelled out the Hugh Laurie nomination). Don’t quite understand why that award went to James Spader, while his colleague William Shatner won the best supporting actor – their work on ABC’s “Boston Legal” wasn’t that strong in my mind.

Tony “Monk” Shalhoub won best comedic actor – umm, well, I guess that’s nice (mind you, I consider “Monk” to be in the (not-yet-in-existence) category of dramedy, not comedy.), but I do wish Jason Bateman or Zach Braff had their shot at winning the Emmy.

— Felicity Huffman of “Desparate Housewives” won best comedic actress; lovely speech about how she loved her husband William H. Macy. Roseanne Arquette won the best dramatic actress award for her work in NBC’s “Medium.”

— Best supporting comedic actor and actress given to Brad Garrett and Doris Roberts of “Everybody Loves Raymond” – but too bad that Peter Boyle didn’t win (it was a toss between him and Brad Garrett, I’m sure, and Brad Garrett had the more laughs, simply because those writers could not stop torturing his character in such hilarious situations).

— The theme song Emmy Idol gigs was a not entirely fun. I missed the Shatner pairing with Fredericka von Stade doing the “Star Trek” theme; Kristen “Veronica Mars” Bell did “Fame” – while I enjoyed it, I felt she was a bit light on the singing chops. Gary Dourdan (“Warrick” of “CSI”) paired up with Macy Gray to sing the “Jeffersons” – and they captured the “Jeffersons” feeling just right, I thought (ok, I confess – I used to watch way too much “Jeffersons” when I was a kid). O just didn’t think much of the Donald Trump-Megan Mullally doing “Green Acres” (while I can buy Mullally as Eva Gabor, I just don’t see Trump as Eddie Albert) – so I thought it was silly that they “won.”

— the homage to the TV anchormen – Tom Brokaw and Dan Rather doing a tribute to Peter Jennings and David Letterman’s homage to Johnny Carson – both were stuff that gave me a lump in the throat.

— S. Epatha Merkerson won for her tv movie role on HBO’s “Lackawanna Blues” – and as the MSNBC’s posting of the AP article notes:

S. Epatha Merkerson was named best actress in a miniseries or movie for “Lackawanna Blues,” on HBO, and proceeded to charm the audience by announcing her acceptance speech, which she’d tucked into her bosom, had slipped down and couldn’t be retrieved.

There was something touching about watching a veteran of stage and tv so surprised and happy to win and shocked that her thanks fell into her dress. She thanked her “Law and Order” crew too – wow. The show really is something, to get thought about even when the winner wasn’t winning for it.

— So pleased that David Shore won for the best episode of “House” (the one where House reveals how the stroke in his leg ended his relationship with the lawyer).

— I was disappointed that the speeches were cut by the music; I’m sorry, I’m a sucker for speeches.

— Hugh Jackman! Sorry, but he’s a showman. Nice that he won for his Tony work. Thought it was cute that at the end, he and Whoopi Goldberg (frequent Oscars host) were the ones giving the final awards to best drama and comedy (“Lost” and “Everybody Loves Raymond”).

— “Everybody Loves Raymond” getting a final send-off, winning the Emmy over the “Desparate Housewives.” At least an old fashioned sitcom won.

— Ellen DeGeneres did a pretty good job.

Monday – premieres on tv! “Arrested Development” – funny season premiere. America – please watch this funny show! (and “Scrubs,” once it’s back from hiatus, whenever that it’ll be).

Watching the series premiere of “Kitchen Confidential” on FOX, wherein Bradley Cooper (the ex-Will of “Alias”/the TA of “Jack and Bobby” of WB/and the Psycho Boyfriend of “Wedding Crashers” the movie) is a chef. A sitcom by the makers of “Sex and the City.” A show with potential, so is my sense of it. Cooper’s a cutie (I’ve obviously warmed up to him since his “I’m in deep trouble, Secret Agent Sydney” days). Actor John Cho plays a seafood chef. An Asian in a cast!

The series premiere of “Out of Practice” on CBS, in the 9:30pm slot — well, I will always have a soft spot for Henry Winkler (previously the incompetent attorney on “Arrested Development”), but this new series had a premiere episode that just wasn’t funny to me. Oh, well – to each his/her own.

New Orleans v. NY Giants – on Monday night football. Hmm…