Carbon Dioxide Regulations Display EPA’s Arrogance » The Foundry

December 8th, 2009

Compelling evidence on our atmosphere’s makeup nicely summarized by Nick Loris at Heritage Foundation:

Out of the entire atmospheric makeup, only one to two percent is made up of greenhouse gases with the majority being nitrogen (about 78 percent) and oxygen (about 21 percent). Of that two percent, “planet-killing” carbon dioxide comprises only 3.62 percent while water vapor encompasses 95 percent. And of the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, humans cause only 3.4 percent of annual CO2 emissions. The cause for concern is that carbon dioxide emitted from burning fossil fuels trap heat from the sun, and as the atmosphere heats, it holds more water vapor, produces thinner clouds and increases the temperature. Climate models predict this positive feedback mechanism is what will eventually doom planet earth.”

Read more at Carbon Dioxide Regulations Display EPA’s Arrogance » The Foundry


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Liberal Ideals vs Economic Realities

November 11th, 2009
by Nathan Glass

Compassion is one thing and misguided liberalism another. Often there is a wide distinction between the liberal ideal and the actual outcome. The story usually goes like this: an ideal gives birth to a government program which creates an outcome. Note, this is the short story version.

What’s the motivation behind the ideal? Compassion and altruism? or power and control? Are the ideal powered programs achieving the desired outcome?

Note this writing focuses on the liberal idea because they are in the politcal hot seat currently as they have the majority and liberals tout their ideals unlike conservatives in general. In conservative-ville, we call them principles. Regardless, one should always question the underlying motives despite which side one is on.

Fannie Mae is an example of government involvement yielding the opposite result as the initial ideal. The government sponsored private corporation became political and infused with the ideal of providing home loans to lower income Americans – again, not a bad notion itself.

The problem is the mortgage loan market became skewed due to the pressure Fannie Mae put on lenders to give loans. The pressure meant more and more banks were looking for people to give loans to with fewer and lower qualifications. Fast forward to 2008 and we have the housing crisis.

This explanation is far from thorough and while there are a myriad of factors the causal connection between FannieMae and the current housing crisis cannot be denied. The result of this ideal being forced is millions of foreclosures, and bankruptcies to lower income Americans; the exact opposite of the ideal.

The latest example of a liberal ideal gone and going wrong: health care. The liberal ideal is for everyone in America to have access to health care. As most ideals go, it sounds great.  Most conservatives would probably agree this is something worth striving to attain.

If health care for all were the true goal, then we must question the liberal Democrats recent actions. Why are they trying to rush a bill through? If everyone wants better health care, then shouldn’t we take the time to do it right. Why is it all or nothing when it comes to their bill? Why are the they not considering alternative plans such as the Republicans which are cheaper and require less government involvement?

Aye, there’s the rub – government involvement. It’s hard from a conservative view not to think the real goal, the underlying agenda must be an increase in power by the government by stretching its reach into health care. Otherwise, wouldn’t we want to take our time to create the best health care package with the lowest cost possible no matter where the ideas come from?

For more on the government expanding health care bill see “U.S. House Votes in Favor of Obamacare” at the Heritage Foundation website (1).

Briefly, a foray into economics: one idea behind government run health care is that private industry has failed so the government must take charge. Consider this basic economic principle: the government can never has as much information as the collective public has. Thus the collective public expressing their knowledge through prices is a far more efficient engine than a government body dictating prices. Free markets allow the most efficient exchange of information through prices; something a government oversite committee could never accomplish. See Russian history book.

If free markets, and capitalism have created cheap affordable products in almost every other industry, why would they not work for health care?

The health care bill marching through Congress will undoubtedly have far reaching econcomic consequences which should be carefully considered. Here’s an example of a trade off in the bill from Senator Mike Rogers:

“Here’s the other trade off. According to the national cancer intelligence center for the U.K. and the Canadian Cancer Registry. Here’s the trade off they picked by having government run health care. If you get prostrate cancer, you have less chance of survivability than you do in the United States. And that’s the same for skin cancer, breast cancer, bladder cancer, cervical cancer, kidney cancer, ovarian cancer, luekemia, and the list goes on and on and on.” (2)

There is always a balance between a free market and the regulations needed to protect those in the free market. The government must regulate to provide security in a market so people trust it and want to participate in it but no more regulation than is necessary. At some point the regulation becomes a hinderance to the market. In the middle is a balance between the open nature of a free market and the closed nature of regulations. This balance is the ideal we ought to seek.

Further reading

In a recent article by John Gordon entitled “Obama and the Liberal Paradigm” (3), he discusses the origins of the liberal movement and what it stood for at its genesis. The discussion moves into modern day liberalism where he shows the mismatch between the liberal view and the reality of today. This article provides a backdrop for the mentality behind the liberal ideals.

On the mismatch between programs and outcome, read Basic Economics by Thomas Sowell. This book serves as a great primer into, well, economics. For recent articles by Thomas Sowell on such topics as health care costs see the Real Clear Politics website (4).

Bibliography

(1) Moffit, Bob and Owcharenko, Nina. “U.S. House Votes in Favor of Obamacare.” The Heritage Foundation. 8 Nov. 2009 <article link>

(2) Rogers, Mike. Speech to Congress. Youtube.com. 16 July 2009. <video link> <http://www.mikerogers.house.gov/>

(3) Gordon, John Steele.  “Obama and the Liberal Paradigm.” Wall Street Journal. 4 Nov. 2009 <article link>

(4) Sowell, Thomas. Real Clear Politics. <article link>

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Mac Tech for the 1L

September 26th, 2009

As I began my first year of law school a month ago, I found myself scavenging the web for tools to use on my Mac and iPhone to help with law school. Below I have listed the apps, links and other resources I found most valuable.  Several of these apps offer student discounts, be sure to check.

Book

1L of a Ride” is a great book that can calm your nerves as a 1L and put things in perspective. Lots of great advice from a professor on the first year experience.

Useful apps for Mac

Things – a great ToDo, Get Things Done (GTD) app without all the complication. Simple and flexible. I set up each course as a “Project” in Things to keep my tasks per class separated. You could also achieve separation by using tags.

Things Screenshot


iCal - built in app from Apple. Between iCal and Things I can pretty much stay organized. These apps play well together too, read more on Things website.

OmniOutliner – great tool for outlining.

OmniOutliner Screenshot

OmniGraffle – Great for those who like see visual relationships. Also, I found it works great to make T-briefs in. Here is my template file: T-Brief OmniGraffle Template (use at your own risk, I take no responsibility for it).

OmniGraffle Screenshot

WriteRoom – If you need to get some words down without the distractions use this app. Great for essay writing.

TextExpander – Use this for repetitive words or phrases. For example, type “IIED” and TextExpander turns it into Intentional Inflection of Emotional Distress, whoa a mouthful – see why its handy? You do NOT want to type that more than once.

Useful apps for iPhone


Blacks Law DictionaryI don’t actually have this but it looks nice. At the moment, I’m relying on the built in Dictionary app with Bouvier’s law dictionary added into it (see below). Note the edition currently available offers the 8th edition of the dictionary where the 9th is out in print. So there may be an update coming soon with the next edition.


Things - this app works great as a standalone or with the app for Mac. If you have both, they sync wirelessly.

Links


Mac Law Student Blog – this is a great resource which goes well beyond the scope of my little post. The whole blog is dedicated to using a Mac as a law student. Lots of great info here.

Article on studying for exams – recommended by my professor.

Add a law dictionary to Mac’s built in Dictionary

Dictionary Screenshot

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Gcuts = Gmail Shortcuts

August 26th, 2009

If you spend alot of time in Gmail as I do then you may be wondering how to speed up navigating through emails. Keyboard shortcuts are a powerful way to speed things up. Using the mouse is great, but believe it or not the keyboard can be faster once you invest a little time learning the magical keystrokes. Let me introduce the keyboard shortcuts I use most often to get you started.

First, keyboard shortcuts must be enabled in your Settings. Check this first.

Using shortcuts may be awkward at first but once you learn a few you will be addicted. Give it a try, you may be surprised.

To see all the keyboard shortcuts type “?”. Hit any key to close the keyboard shortcuts guide.

Gmail shortcuts to live by:

Go to Inbox. g then i.

Buried deep in a conversation, and need to re-center your chi: g then i.

Go to Drafts. g then d.

I use Drafts as a place to store notes so I’m always in there. I have one email draft called “Scratch” that I take notes in and as a bonus I can add notes to this draft from my iPhone as well.

Go to Tasks. g then k.

Tasks is another handy place to keep things.

Go to Labels. g then l.

Labels are powerful. Think of them like folders but better. My favorite way to use labels is by setting up filters that automatically archives emails, thus cleaning up my inbox, and applies labels to them. For example, I’m always getting notifications from Facebook so these are archived out of my inbox and have the label “Facebook” applied.

Select conversation. x.

Great if you want to delete a conversation or label it or archive it.

Try this: Select a conversation with “x” then hit “l” to pull up labels. Start typing a label name, then hit enter to apply label. Then “x” again to deselect label or * then n to deselect all conversations if multiple conversations are selected.

Newer/Older conversation. k/j

Good email navigation keystrokes.

Move to trash. #

Very handy.

Open conversation. Enter.

This is how you get into an email and read it.

Scenarios

Let’s put these keystrokes in action. Here are a couple scenarios I find myself in and keystrokes to make things snappy.

One. Open up your inbox, you go down the list of emails and delete a few of them.

g then i. Takes you to your inbox.
j to move down the list of emails.
x to select the current email. continue until all emails are selected you want to delete.
# to delete all the selected emails.

Bravo! Well done.

Two. Open your inbox, select some emails, and apply a label.

g then i. Takes you to your inbox.
j to move down the list of emails.
x to select the current email. continue until all emails are selected you want to apply a label.
l to pull up Label menu.
Start typing the name of the label to be applied. Once the correct label appears, hit enter.
* then n. Deselects all emails.

See how easy that was. Congratulations you’re a Gmail Master.

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How to use Firefox with more fire and more foxy.

July 26th, 2009

Firefox logo

10 Keyboard Shortcuts for Firefox that could save lives…the lives of a few seconds anyways.

Firefox has several keyboard shortcuts that can save you time. In order to move to the next level of Nerd-dom, then consider learning these. These are for Mac users. Windows users’ shortcuts will be slightly different. See the link below.

Complete list of Firefox shortcuts.

By the way, for Mac users “Command” means the button with the Apple logo and/or the flower-ish thing, not sure what it’s called. Cmd = Command.

My Favorite Firefox Keyboard Shortcuts.

1. Find. Cmd+F.

Often I find when I’m searching for a specific model number or specific name or word on a webpage that using the Find command makes things faster. Cmd+F to pull it up then start typing what you want to find. As you type Firefox automatically starts searching the page and takes you to the first instance of the search word. Then use F3 to find the next instance.

2. Select tab. Cmd+(1-9).

I put Gmail in the first tab, Facebook in the second, and Twitter in the third. Everything else is after that. Now if I want to jump back over to Gmail from another tab, all I do is Cmd+1 and I’m there. Or Cmd+2 for Facebook, etc. This is also helpful if there are two tabs I’m flipping between often. I’ll slide them over to the first few tabs so I can take advantage of this trick.

3. Open new tab. Cmd+T.

Use this to open a new tab. By default, the cursor is placed in the Location box or URL box. Start typing and Firefox will try to fill in as you type. Hit the down arrow to select a link that Firefox pulls up and then enter to go to that page.

If you’ve opened a new tab but want to search Google instead, then hit the Tab button to shift the cursor to the Search box.

4. Close tab. Cmd+W.

Use this when you’re done using the web page on the current tab.

5. Open link new tab. Cmd+click.

Hold the Cmd button while clicking on a link to open the page in a new tab. When searching for something on Google, I will look through the list of links Google gives me and open the seemingly best two or three pages in new tabs using Cmd+Click. If the pages don’t give me what I want, I go back to the Google search tab and keep looking. This way, I can keep track of what pages I’ve visited.

6. Reload the current page. Cmd+R.

Forget the reload button; use a shortcut to reload that page.

7. Print. Cmd+P.

Prints the current page.

8. Select Location bar. Cmd+L.

Moves cursor to the Location bar a.k.a. the URL bar.

9. Web search. Cmd+K.

Moves the cursor to the search bar.

10. Complete .com Address. Cmd+Return.

Say you want to navigate to amazon.com. Hit Cmd+L for the cursor to move to the Location bar. Type “amazon”. Now hit Cmd+Return and “amazon” is turned into “amazon.com”.

Final note: if you use a keyboard shortcut while inside of a text box or certain fields inside a web page, then the keyboard shortcut will not work. You must click outside the box then use the shortcut.

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Conservatives give more than Liberals

December 23rd, 2008

As a conservative, I assume my side gives more than the other and not surprisingly Liberals assume the same about their side. Rush came across this Op-Ed piece in the New York TImes yesterday. Now we have evidence from liberal researchers showing that Conservatives do in fact give more.

Bleeding Heart Tightwads by Nicholas D. Kristof, New York Times, December 20th, 2008.

Besides financial giving, Conservatives bleed more according to the article: “If liberals and moderates gave blood as often as conservatives, Mr. Brooks said, the American blood supply would increase by 45 percent.” Shocking.

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