Preference Personnelle
I just checked out Laura Kipnis' '
Against Love: A Polemic,' though I haven't started to read it. I am a big fan of '
Bound and Gagged,' an earlier book. It's second probably only to Nadine Strossen's '
Defending Pornography' in my mind when it comes to books about the topic. And here's an article Kipnis wrote for Slate: '
Meet Playboy Sr. - Has the once-groundbreaking magazine become culturally irrelevant?'
News from Detroit: Slander charge against Eminem dismissed--judge produces
explanatory rhyme. Here are some excerpts (thanks, Detroit Free Press):
Mr. Bailey complains that his rep is trash
So he's seeking compensation in the form of cash.
Bailey thinks he's entitled to some monetary gain
Because Eminem used his name in vain.
Eminem says Bailey used to throw him around
Beat him up in the john, shoved his face in the ground.
Eminem contends that his rap is protected
By the rights guaranteed by the First Amendment.
Eminem maintains that the story is true
And that Bailey beat him black and blue.
In the alternative he states that the story is phony
And a reasonable person would think it's baloney.
The court must always balance the rights
Of a defendant and one placed in a false light.
If the plaintiff presents no question of fact
To dismiss is the only acceptable act.
If the language used is anything but pleasin'
It must be highly objectionable to a person of reason.
Even if objectionable and causing offense
Self-help is the first line of defense.
Yet when Bailey actually spoke to the press
what do you think he didn't address?
Those false-light charges that so disturbed
Prompted from Bailey not a single word.
So highly objectionable, it could not be
-- Bailey was happy to hear his name on a CD.
Bailey also admitted he was a bully in youth
Which makes what Marshall said substantial truth.
This doctrine is a defense well known
And renders Bailey's case substantially blown.
The lyrics are stories no one would take as fact
They're an exaggeration of a childish act.
Any reasonable person could clearly see
That the lyrics could only be hyperbole.
It is therefore this court's ultimate position
That Eminem is entitled to summary disposition.
The latest news from Arkansas:
Vehicles outnumber deputies 3-to-1
Saline County JPs to vote on auctioning off extra sheriff’s cars
BY RODNEY BOWERS ARKANSAS DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE
BENTON — Saline County Quorum Court members say they are puzzled as to why their county has nearly three times as many patrol cars as it has sheriff’s deputies.
As a result, J.R. Walters, a justice of the peace from Alexander, has introduced a resolution calling for a reduction in the size of the sheriff’s fleet. It will be considered for a vote at tonight’s Quorum Court meeting.
"We don’t know how many cars we have," Walters admitted in a recent interview. "One time it’s 72. Another time it’s 80 and another, 60."
Whatever the number, it’s far too many for the department’s 22 deputies, he said.
The resolution would reduce the fleet to 50 and authorize the county judge to sell the surplus vehicles.
Walters said Quorum Court member Penny Kemp, a Republican from Shannon Hills, recently surveyed four similarsized counties — Craighead, Jefferson, Faulkner and Garland. "One sheriff has 55 [cars]," he said. "The rest have fewer."
Jefferson County, which has 55 patrol cars, has 34 investigators and patrolmen, he said. Garland County has 50 cars for its 40 investigators and patrolmen, while Faulkner County has 48 cars for 23 officers. Craighead County has 35 cars for 19 officers, he said. A spokesman for the Saline County judge’s office, which administers county finances, said the sheriff has 68 patrol cars, the oldest of which is a 1995 model. The spokesman said eight cars are assigned to reserve deputies.
Sheriff Phil Mask, a Republican, has been unavailable for comment for nearly a month after recently undergoing heart surgery. His chief deputy, Bill Field, also has been unavailable for comment and failed to return telephone messages left with his office.
Fuel records, however, show that only 44 sheriff’s cars were on Saline County roads the week of Oct. 6-12. Odometer readings for those vehicles ranged from 174,000 miles on a 1999 model to 12,000 for a 2003. The average odometer reading was just below 94,000 miles.
The sheriff ’s office has by far the most vehicles of any Saline County department. Three others — roads, maintenance and emergency services — have a total of 14 vehicles, according to the county judge’s office.
Walters said he is concerned about upkeep and insurance for nonessential sheriff’s vehicles, some of which are parked and have not been moved for months.
The county judge’s office said most repair work is done inhouse ; major repairs are contracted outside the department. The sheriff’s office spent $88,500 last year maintaining its vehicles, four of which were listed as scrapped or as spares, according to county records.
A spokesman in the county judge’s office said it was unknown how much money could be saved by selling surplus vehicles, but that a minimum of $5,076 a year could be saved in insurance premiums on the basis of the current rate of $282 per vehicle.
Saline County Judge Lanny Fite said revenue from the auction of surplus vehicles would go back into the county general operating fund. But, he said of aged patrol cars with extended mileage, "they usually don’t bring much money at all," usually only a few hundred dollars apiece.
Walters predicted passage of his resolution, noting that it already has received support from the Quorum Court Finance and Personnel Committee.
"But does all this sexual imagery in the air mean that sex has been liberated—or is it the case that the relationship between the multi-billion-dollar porn industry, compulsiveness, and sexual appetite has become like the relationship between agribusiness, processed foods, supersize portions, and obesity? If your appetite is stimulated and fed by poor-quality material, it takes more junk to fill you up. People are not closer because of porn but further apart; people are not more turned on in their daily lives but less so."
So here's this Naomi Wolf
article, and here are two sets of lj comments:
luxnightmare and
fridaygoldman.
Esquire magazine tried to pick the six
best stories to ever run in the magazine. I don't necessarily agree with the choices, but all are probably worth reading.
Album covers are derivative. See the
Knockoff Project.
Via
Slashdot,
Kevin Kelly's Recomendo, a weblog of snazzy stuff, much of which I want to buy. Along the same lines, kinda, is
Amazon Early Adopters.
Via my coworker John, an LA Times article (use my registration)--
3 decades of Schwarzenegger groping.
Via
mefi, an
article from an 'urban hunter-gatherer' (those are ironic quotation marks). And a
bit about Apple and packaging.