Author: ssw15

  • The Day After Election Day

    Last night was indeed a long night, plus plenty of channel-changing to catch the coverage.

    – I now know more than ever why I despise FOX News coverage; Shepard Smith, the anchor, is scary-looking to me. Just a gut reaction; no rationale really.

    – Switched to NBC – thought it was sweet of John McCain to give Tom Brokaw a little “Thanks for the years of good work” farewell; Brokaw was almost blushing. Thought it was funny that NBC’s Tim Russert lost his voice so early in the night; he also ditched his dry-marker board of 2000 for a high-tech, cool looking PC tablet – very cool.

    – Dan Rather on CBS went all weird with his Texan sayings and using a pencil as a pointer thingy rather early in the night too.

    – Peter Jennings was his usual steady and safe stuff – he kept ABC steady – they didn’t call Ohio for Bush the longest (as opposed to, say, NBC and FOX – very surprised that NBC called it so early; the same with Florida – but then again, Florida wasn’t in the same scenario as it was four years ago – they really didn’t want to do that again in that state).

    – PBS’ Jim Lehrer did okay, waiting it out to see how the networks and Associated Press called it before confirming – but he lacked the massive wall-to-wall coverage that the others did (it is PBS after all). I did go to bed, by the way, but feeling not very optimistic at all.

    It was just before 1pm today, when I went on-line and there was the post on the NY1.com website: John Kerry was conceding at 1pm, with his speech, and George W. Bush making his victory speech at 3pm.

    So, I come home from work and watched the Lehrer Newshour to watch the speeches. Kerry was gracious – lovely, loquacious speech. Poignant – as the talking heads on the Lehrer Newshour noted that apparently, the 2000 and the 2004 Democratic candidates’ finest moments were their gracious concession speeches.

    I’m certainly disappointed by the results in South Dakota, where Senator Tom Daschle’s public career has ended – which leave the Democrats in the Senate without a minority party leader. In fact, the Dems have lost more seats in the Senate.

    Where do we go with all this? I’m not sure. Kerry’s right – we need a united country and it doesn’t quite look like we are united (putting aside that Pres. Bush has the popular vote – it’s not like he won it handedly). Michael Hirsh writes on Newsweek with “Let’s all Calm Down” – posing the possibility that, to establish a historical legacy a la Reagan, Bush will be more centrist in his second term – in a slow, evolutionary sort of way, in all likelihood.

    Heck, Bush even promised to unite the country in his victory speech – but he made that same promise to be a uniter four years ago. Hmm. Or, more appropriately: hmmph. (ok, I’ll stop this before I start sounding like the disappointed Marge Simpson).

    So, I visit Slate.com, looking for some kind of explanation and solace. (Lehrer Newshour and Peter Jennings weren’t doing it – all that talk about how morals was the big issue and how that hurt Kerry – just about bummed me out).

    – Dahlia Lithwick of Slate.com notes how beneficent that “the legal nightmare [ ] never materialized”. She concludes:

    The real reason Ohio didn’t become Florida isn’t just that Kerry lost the popular vote, unlike Gore four years ago, or that the margins were too close to beat. The reason was that much maligned lawyers all around the country did their jobs. There’s a reason we all talk trash about ambulance chasers, yet would never dream of buying a house, or writing a will, without an attorney: Lawyers are troubleshooters and problem-solvers, sherpas through ambiguous terrain. This election they did precisely what they were meant to do: learned from the last time, monitored the rough patches, interceded in the close cases, and backed off when it became irrelevant. The law, at its best, anticipates trouble and builds systems to protect against it. That is what John Kerry recognized…, and we are all better off for it.

    So, Lithwick says that there’s hope for the legal profession. We’re not total losers after all, even if Kerry and Edwards (both lawyers) haven’t won it.

    – William Saletan tries to explain why it hasn’t been easy to beat Bush, and posits that the only way that a Democrat can win the red states is to keep a simple message and show your values are everyone’s values – which is why Saletan feels that, if he can keep himself productively occupied for the next four years, John Edwards may have another shot at the White House. Well, I say it’s notable that Edwards’ own state didn’t go Democrat in its presidential or senatorial vote this year.

    – Heck, I think that Chris Suellentrop of Slate.com had the best line: “My take on the election: Vision without details beats details without vision.”

    – Timothy Noah, Slate.com’s Chatterbox, tries to explain what it means to be a Democrat – a question to ask because it seems that the Democrats’ attempt to go right (or become more centric) backfired; the attempt to more left didn’t work either; and doing nothing but wait it out until the country joins you – well, that’s not workable, now is it? There are no answers, just lots of questions.

  • Election Day addendum

    Ok, so there was no line at the polls (which is what I get in my neighborhood, and for going to vote around lunchtime).

    Plus, I really despise the idea of voting for judges. Yeah, I’m in the profession and presumably should educate myself of who are these judges for whom I’m voting. But, it wasn’t as if I knew who these candidates were and I wonder how laypeople know how to make their decisions as far as what judge to vote. Worrisome elements in what we call elected democracy (especially in a borough where the judges have gotten bad publicity for corruption).

    Ok, now just biding my time for tonight…

  • Election Day, or the D-Day or Whatever

    Watched Saturday Night Live’s Presidential special last night. Pretty funny – and showed how stuff hasn’t changed in 30 years of SNL and American politics:

    – Chevy Chase as Gerald Ford vs. Dan Ackroyd’s Jimmy Carter; Carter’s accused of being… a flip-flopper (sound familiar?) and Ford’s accused of being… not very bright (a sentiment that never changes, I guess – do we always tend to think of that with our presidents?). Well, at least two guys (the real Ford and Carter) are now seen warmly and are honored in their old age and are applauded in hindsight (Ford for preserving dignity in the presidency and Carter for trying to make the world better for peace).

    – Oh, and there was a previous guy named Bush, too. That Dana Carvey has the George H.W. Bush thing down cold. And, Kevin Nealon as Sam Donaldson – he, in imitation of the real Donaldson, looked like a waxed Vulcan (i.e., the Star Trek aliens who aim to logical but often get real perturbed).

    Plenty of laughs, but quibble – SNL edited the clips too much, missing out some priceless stuff (like the skit where Dana Carvey’s Ross Perot left Phil Hartman’s Admiral Stockdale on the side of a road in a forest after the vice presidential debates of 1992, and SNL cut the scene where Stockdale, an honored Vietnam veteran – even if a little addled-brain in his old age, vigorously ran alongside Perot’s car… – such a great scene – why cut it out? Well, if you’re all that concerned about time constraints – SNL only had a one hour time slot).

    Anyway, it’s my day off (local holiday, to get us civil service folks to vote and lobby others to vote; civil service has it’s benefits). I’ll vote before lunch, to see if I can avoid the lines of senior citizens. (no, the lines are probably there, so maybe it’ll be heartening to see, as opposed to how it was when I voted on primary day back in the spring, when no one was literally there).

    I may blog later, if my nerves aren’t so shot by watching/listening to loads of news (which is why I’m listening to pop music right now – 1010 WINS news radio was just driving me nuts with replaying the words of this nut mom-and-son pair in NJ whose big concern is terrorism (re: Bush) vs. the dad-and-son pair in NJ who voted because of economy concerns (re: Kerry) – thus their votes canceled each other out (no, I don’t think they were in the same family – I just thought it was weird that the reporter somehow found these people to demonstrate contrast – as if Kerry wasn’t as worried about terrorism and Bush wasn’t as worried about the economy. Whatever – the media is what it is).

  • All Saints Day/Eve of Election Day

    Hmm. Is there tension in the air, or is it just me?

    Relating to the profession that some of us bloggers/blog readers are in, let’s just recognize that this election is important for being yet another reason why people hate the legal profession so darn much. Terry Carter of the ABA Journal (or its electronic version, the E-Journal) notes that lawyers are in the crossfire with the campaign season’s rather sickening (in my opinion anyway) lawyer bashing. I have thought that all this lawyer-bashing is really pathetic – I mean, last I checked, being a lawyer wasn’t against the law. But, the question is:

    But [the anti-lawyer bashing has] an impact on what? The jury will be out on that one for a while. But some say the prominence of anti-lawyer ads in the presidential campaign is having an amplifying or synergistic effect on the ever-increasing lawyer-bashing in election races for other offices at the federal, state and even local levels.

    “The pervasiveness of attacks on lawyers for political advantage has an inevitable effect on the image of the bar,” says Stephen Gillers, who teaches ethics at the New York Univeristy School of Law. “Trial lawyers, and therefore all lawyers, have been portrayed as the devils in the machine. That’s unfortunate, but it’s politically useful.”

    [….]

    And while it is debatable that ads with a focus on lawyers will swing the election either way, there is some concern that the messages critical of lawyers might leave a lasting gut feeling in a lot of people.

    That might be because the anti-lawyer messages in the various election campaigns are kept very simple and repeated often. And they build on more than 20 years of the same.

    [….]

    Many remain unswayed by the ads. A recent CNN/USA Today/Gallup Poll found that 69 percent of voters say the fact that Edwards is a lawyer will not affect their vote. But that hasn’t stopped Bush and Vice President Cheney from hammering the point. And while it may or may not have much influence on the election, many say it will have one on the legal profession—especially in swing states that are being inundated with political ads.

    And, furthermore, the e-Journal includes a humorous yet poignant article: Legal humorist Sean Carter is so concerned about the impact the campaign has on lawyers, he suggests that to spare lawyers from more harm, let’s have the candidates fight it out by the tried and true method of… rock, scissors, paper; not only do we save ourselves from frightening rounds of litigation,

    Even more importantly, lawyers won’t take the blame for subverting the democratic process. Some of us may even be able to come ‘out of the closet’ to our friends and family members about what we do for a living, provided we’re not personal injury lawyers.

    I look forward to the day when I can stand up in a crowded room and say, “My name is Sean Carter and I’m a … a … used car salesman. Anyone need a ’67 Pontiac?”

    Yes, let me stand up and say, I’m SSW and I’m a lawyer. Gasp.

    No, I will not be making any prediction. Election Day ain’t like figuring out who’s going to be Time magazine’s Person of the Year.

    Anyway, go vote tomorrow. You’ll be glad that you did.

  • Halloween

    We get one extra hour of sleep for one day. Lose more daylight though. Oh well.

    Goodbye to October; hello to November. Less than two days to Election Day. Ah, the true day of horror.

    In light of Election Day, consider these two articles:

    Stephen J. Marmon’s op-ed piece of October 29, 2004, in the NY Times
    explains how it’s possible that there could be an Acting President John Edwards – a nightmare scenario:

    a tie: “Electoral College 269-269 deadlock, and send the tied contests to Congress; the House would choose the president and the Senate the vice president.

    “In the Senate, at least 51 votes would be required to elect a vice president. Given current polls, the Democrats can gain control of the Senate by picking up seats in Alaska, Colorado, Illinois, Kentucky and Oklahoma, while losing seats in Florida, Georgia and South Carolina. Senator Edwards would be elected as vice president.

    “The House, however, votes for president by state, with 26 delegations required for election. If members of the House then voted as their states did, President Bush, in this scenario, would carry 28 states, thus leading to a Bush-Edwards administration.”

    But – a Congressional deadlock may mean no president in a timely manner –

    “The Constitution provides that the vice president becomes president if the president dies, resigns or is removed from office. But the 20th Amendment states that: ‘If a president shall not have been chosen before the time fixed for the beginning of his term, or if the president-elect shall have failed to qualify, then the vice president-elect shall act as president until a president shall have qualified.’

    “The House could remain deadlocked for two years, and perhaps even four, depending on the results of the 2006 Congressional elections. And until the House reaches a decision, Acting President John Edwards would occupy the Oval Office.”

    Uh… yeah… Hopefully unlikely, but it can happen. I guess.

    Plus, today’s column in the NY Times – Thomas Friedman endorses… George (H.W.) Bush, due to his courage in domestic and foreign politics (even if Bush the Elder didn’t have total finesse, he had sense and sensibility). Interesting. First Senator Lincoln Chafee, now Friedman – going for Bush the Elder…

    October reading: The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini – a lovely first time novel by an Afghan-American physician, who writes of the coming of age of two Afghan boys; the time of war-torn Afghanistan of the early 1980’s and the Taliban of the 1990’s. Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban by J.K. Rowling – I liked the movie; the book filled in lots of stuff – better than the other two books, I daresay; now I’m heading into book 4 of the series – let’s see if I really can finish the series by the end of the year… Plus, one romance novel – Dearest Love by Betty Neels (I couldn’t help it; I needed some kind of transition before plunging into Harry Potter Book 4 – the size of the thing is intimidating…)

    Have a good week…

  • Friday

    “Star Trek: Enterprise” – wow. Amazing episode. The whole digital filming thing has made the picture really stunning. Plus – this time, the writing’s tight and plotting really interesting, which made for pretty good acting. Scott Bakula was his strongest as Capt. Archer (I had liked him when he was Sam Beckett in “Quantum Leap” – so seeing him tonight as an able character was just great Archer wasn’t a Janeway, so to speak (and longtime Trekkies will know what I mean – and I’m someone who didn’t really hate Capt. Janeway). Brent Spiner (the former Data of “Star Trek: The Next Generation”) – he’s quite an actor. Oh, and the rest of the cast and guest cast were pretty good too (again, good writing helps). I can almost forgive the Trek folks for the ridiculous cliffhanger of last season and the weird alternate WWII history episodes.

    Notice how nicely that I haven’t given away anything plot-wise? 😉 Seriously, it was a good episode – and I think we’re supposed to get more of Spiner for another two episodes. Maybe continue with this stronger Archer… for the rest of the season. If you missed the episode tonight, catch the re-broadcast (Channel 9, 7pm, in NYC metro area).

    Oh, and I forgot to mention this in the Wednesday night post — I was at the alma mater law school Wednesday night for a reception, and of course there’s the excited chatter about the new building and that there’s a bed in the student lounge to sample the new bed for the new dorm… So, when I left the law school, and passed by the lounge, I had to just stand there and realize, Good Grief – the dean wasn’t kidding – there was a bed in the lounge. Gosh, I remember all the times just about everybody has slept in the sofas of the lounge and the library and how my classmates would joke that they ought to put beds… and there was a real bed right there…

    Eh. So the world changes; the rest of the law school looked pretty much the same (oh, ok, so the last time I was there was just six months ago, but I look for the little changes, really I do).

    TGIF.

  • History

    I never quite thought that I’d see it in my life time, but apparently it has actually happened – the Boston Red Sox has won the World Series. The world may not have ended, but the world as we knew it indeed has ended. Maybe pigs will start flying now or something like that. God forbid, maybe even the Chicago Cubs will win the World Series someday now. I will spare non-Bosox fans any links to some heart-wrenching articles (at least, assuming I don’t find anything worthy of reading).

    Well, enough of the melodrama on my part.

    100 yrs of the subway. Cool. And, it’s also been 100 yrs of the plane (the Wright brothers at Kitty Hawk, NC, was 100 yrs ago). So, if we think about it – it’s been 100 yrs of planes, (underground) trains, and automobiles…

    Lunar eclipse. Cool.

    Umm – is this for real? Anthropologists have discovered an early human or human-like species – that resemble hobbits. Methinks that someone out there have been reading/watching way too much Lord of the Rings.

    Other stories:

    I can’t get over this story – how a British police officer, Sgt. Colin Webber (whose wife, Claire, is a constable – both of whom are of the Leicestershire constabulary) managed to stop a fleeing knife-stabber assaulter when Sgt. Webber and the missus were in the jewelry district browsing (they were on vacation – as off-duty as two cops could have been). Check out the more expansive version of this story on NY Times. NY1.com has some footage too.

    And, the prize for least-surprising story of the day – “Study: Sleepy Doctors Make More Errors.” – apparently, it takes a funded study to prove what years of “ER” and other medical dramas (and “Scrubs”) and common sense have long known about those people in the hospitals who are overworked – they don’t quite function up to snuff if they’re that tired. D’uh. The real problem is how do you reform it, when the reality is that training medical doctors takes so much time and effort – not too mention risk (they do learn from their mistakes – you just hope nothing fatal occurs or at least a causal link to death type of occurence).

    Ok, let’s just get through this Thursday without incident – especially to those in Boston…

  • Monday

    No World Series tonight; tomorrow is Game 3 in St. Louis.

    Some interesting links and comments:

    On Wednesday, Oct. 27, 2004, NYC’s subway is having its 100th anniversary (amidst depressing budget woes). Joe McKendry provides a cool look at the subway in his NY Times’ Op-ed on 10/23/04:

    One hundred years ago next Wednesday, at precisely 2 p.m., a wall of sound shook New York City from Battery Park to Harlem. Church bells and the sounding horns of ferryboats competed with the steam whistles of hundreds of power plants and the firing of salutes. Cheering citizens flooded the streets, creating what this newspaper described as a “carnival” atmosphere that had the city “in an uproar from end to end.” [….]

    For all the excitement on opening day, it didn’t take New Yorkers long to revert to their jaded selves. On Oct. 28, the day after the subway opened, The Times reported: “Men on the trains were quietly getting out at their regular stations and going home, having finished what will be to them the daily routine of the rest of their lives. It is hard to surprise New York permanently.”

    There are interesting slides/graphics – check them out before NY Times archives them…

    A NY Times article by Joseph Berger on America’s Asian Indian community and how they’re dealing with assimilation of America and its socialization/dating mores versus the caste system – which takes into account arranged marriages to preserve caste, commonality, and culture.

    Daily News has an interesting story on a Filipina-American, Consuelo Dungca, who has a number of accomplishments – a colonel in the Army Reserve’s 8th Medical Brigade; the city Health and Hospitals Corp.’s senior assistant vice president for clinical affairs; wrote “U.S. Army Nurse Corps Standard of Nursing Practices,” a text for training Army nurses, and co-authored “Standards of Critical Care,” a text used by health professionals in and out of the armed forces; earned two master’s degrees and a doctorate in nursing education from Columbia University’s Teachers College. Her doctoral dissertation was titled “Leadership Behavior Style and Job Satisfaction”; and…. a less-than-5 ft. tall woman who is “expert marksman with a .45-caliber pistol. She can fire it standing, sitting, kneeling and lying down.” Okay. Cool stuff.

    Slate.com’s “Ad Report” reviews the Emerald Nuts ads – wherein Emerald Nuts tries to compete with Planters with willy ads “Encouraging Norwegians Love Emerald Nuts” and “Egostistical Normans Love Emerald Nuts.” While “Ad Report” liked the EN ads, I haven’t been thrilled with the EN ads – they make me want to avoid the stuff. (Of course, the new version of Mr. Peanut of Planters – who debuted during the NCAA tournament this year – looked scary in that Bizarre Pop Art way). Umm, I like nuts otherwise, no matter the brand.

    An amusing Slate article – could it be that having Democrats for parents mean more successful kids (re: nerdy elitist snobs) v. lenient Republicans who let kids be kids (re: you know, drinking, driving, drugging, whatever). Hmm.

    Monday will be over soon…

  • Thursday

    Thanks for the regards, FC. Yep – it’s been two years at the same job. As the saying goes, time flies when… (take it or leave it).

    Yankees v. Bosox – yep, I’d blame it on the pitching. Not pretty tv watching (well, not if you’re a Yankees fan/non-Bosox fan).

    St. Louis has just beaten Houston; World Series will be St. Louis v. Boston. Very interesting to watch.

    Oh, and FC – have you noticed this spammer(s) on the blog? He/they have been posting odd comments to my past posts – and it has been clogging my bulk e-mail (well, I don’t care for the clogging part, but the comments were weird). I can delete them when I get a chance… (this weekend, maybe).

    TGIF tomorrow.

  • Tuesday into Wednesday

    Yankees v. Bosox – the saga continues. A historic Game 7 of the American League playoffs is on tomorrow.

    Oh, and that stepchild National League playoffs, Houston v. St. Louis, is still on by the way – Game 6 tomorrow.

    In the middle of all these sports, FOX has been promoting all its crappy yet-to-premiere new reality shows. And, I mean craptacular. I wouldn’t watch this stuff and the commercials are only making me want to avoid them – “My Big Fat Boss…” and then there’s “The Rebel Billionaire” to compete for Virgin’s CEO Richard Branson’s job (kind of watchable, but still silly – like I’m really supposed to believe that doing Branson-type stunts will really land someone his job of running the airlines and music and all that).

    FOX’s promotion of the series “House, M.D.” is actually intruiging. Of course, I say that because I’m a big fan of the star, the British actor, Hugh Laurie, who’s playing House, a doctor who solves the causes of weird medical problems as if he were a cop. (a cooler looking version of NBC’s “Medical Investigation” – which hasn’t been nearly as cool as I was hoping it’d be). Laurie, though, is playing an American, so it’s jarring hearing his accent. But, he looks cool and I like that FOX is actually premiering a non-reality series.

    Oh, and “The O.C.,” “The Simpsons,” and “Arrested Development,” are also being nicely promoted in the middle of the Major League Baseball playoffs. Hopefully FOX will get the ratings to show for this effort.

    NY1 is doing an interesting comparison: “A Tale of Two Subways” – see how Tokyo’s system matches up with NYC’s.

    Apparently, the attorney representing the woman suing Bill O’Reilly for sexual harassment is someone who was admitted to the NYS bar without going to law school. Slate.com’s “Explainer” nicely explains how the admissions process worked for this attorney (although, I think most of us lawyers who went through the NYS admissions process probably knew about this explanation already).

    Slate.com’s Chris Suellentrop posts that he heard Presidential candidate John Kerry speaking French – but the recording was hard to hear (or else Kerry’s French is a little on the garbled side). An intruiging listen anyway for me (yep, studying French for years is good for something). (oh, and Slate readers ended up translating for Suellentrop; Kerry apparently told Haitian-Americans that he plans to help Haiti).

    Bring on the Yankees v. Bosox. I’m so not eager for a Houston v. Bosox World Series (for a number of reasons, but I’ll let the readership figure out the implications)…