My latest article over
My latest article over at Wired News: College Questioning Site's Link.
Review of Peter Gabriel's
Review of Peter Gabriel's new album, Up, in the sidebar on the right. Also, Monday's review of John Steinbeck's Travels with Charley is still available. 'Tis all for now.
An Indian doctor detained
An Indian doctor detained on Delta Flight 442 last month has filed notice of his intent to sue the U.S. government for illegal detention. (Read: racial profiling.)
Unknown to most passengers on the Atlanta-to-Philadelphia flight, the marshals upon landing also seized an Indian passenger from first class and silently whisked him away in handcuffs.
...
Far from being a terror suspect, the second detainee turned out to be a former U.S. Army major and military doctor from Lake Worth, Fla., where he has had a family practice for two decades
...
"This is blatant racial profiling," Rajcoomar, a naturalized citizen since 1985, said by telephone from Florida. "They think they can pick up anybody, willy-nilly... . It's not in keeping with traditions of the United States."
...
Stefan Presser, legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Pennsylvania, which filed the lawsuit notice, called the detention a civil-rights violation that should "send a wake-up call to Americans before it's too late... . In our haste to protect ourselves, we are literally turning on each other."
Forget American Idol, Pepsi's
Forget American Idol, Pepsi's looking to create the next intergalactic idol.
Should it reach agreement on buying a seat on the rocket, the soft-drink giant would back the program with a powerhouse marketing budget. Among its plans: a reality TV show with contestants competing to win a trip to space.
What was that I was saying about there needing to be IQ requirements for space travel?
Florida, can't you get
Florida, can't you get anything right? First you botch the 2000 elections, then you repeat the mistake last week, and now you're patting yourself on the back for having detained three Middle-Eastern and South-Asian medical students for 17 hours? No wonder your SAT scores are the lowest in the nation.
"It appears that there isn't any kind of detonation device but it is important to show this system works," said Florida Governor Jeb Bush of the day's events.
Right. We can all sleep better now. I'm sure Butt, Chaudhary, and Gheith feel better, too, knowing that their participation in this drill proves that our country's response to uncorroborated claims is top notch.
What I'd like to know is: How is this an example of a system that works? Although Jeb Bush said the information came from "credible witnesses," a Georgian who enjoys a good breakfast at Shoney's is hardly a credible witness. (Ah, but she claims to have "very good hearing"!)
As for the length of the investigation, the police said it was extended because of confusion over the men's licenses. But the licenses turned out to be just fine.
And the bomb-sniffing dogs apparently reacted to both vehicles involved. But after searching the cars, analyzing their surfaces, and blowing up one of the student's backpacks, the police noted that there were no explosives in the cars, nor were there even traces of explosives.
Nothing about the system "worked." Every one of the early-warning tests returned a false positive.
Now the students and their families are saying that Mrs. Stone was likely prejudiced in her assessment of the three men. For the most part, this is a "he said, she said" scenario, and I generally reserve caution in such cases. Yet, there's a very subtle but frightening clue about Stone's state of mind in her comments to the press. According to The New York Times, Stone said she was "surprised to hear the three speaking in perfect American accents."
Why would that be surprising? It shouldn't be, unless you have certain preconceived notions about any group of people that looks like it's made up of Middle-Easterners.
Stone also told reporters, "My son said, 'Oh Momma, they're just messing with you.' Then I thought about it, and I said, 'Well, you know, they shouldn't be messing around like that.'"
This is not a woman who is doing her country a service by alerting police to a potential terrorist cell. This is a woman who was upset that a group of foreigners had gotten the best of her, and she was determined to teach them a lesson about how they should feel about September 11th.
Is it possible that the students were talking about events in their own lives when referring to Sep 11 and Sep 13? Is it possible that "bring it down" was in reference to personal items that one of the students needed brought down to Miami?
I do concede that the students most likely weren't just talking about personal events--if they said these things at all--because then they would have explained that to the police and the press. But the point is: When you overhear bits of a conversation, you don't quite get the full story. Bad sitcoms have been playing off this theme for years. Kids call this game "operator."
Essentially, what this entire situation proves is that anyone can have the police detain you on a whim. It says quite clearly that foreign-looking people, especially, need to watch what they say or don't say in public, lest they be suspected by their neighbors, harassed by police, hounded by the press--all the while having their personal belongings destroyed by the bomb squad.
Oh god bless this new, patriotically paranoid America. If anyone needs me, I'll be at the IHOP spying on the people in the next booth. Or maybe I'll be detained myself. I am a brown guy who speaks English and likes to take cracks at the government, after all.
Not sure what to
Not sure what to do with yourself on Sep 11? Rather than sitting in front of the television watching broadcast after well-meaning broadcast, go check out some art. Here in San Francisco, SFMOMA will be open for free all day.
The Museum will open its doors to the community free of charge on Wednesday, September 11, making art freely available to anyone who wishes to seek solace, find hope and inspiration, or simply desires a quiet place in which to contemplate the many emotions and events of the past year.
More on what is
More on what is now being called e-waste: SB 1523 and SB 1619, two bills by California Senators Sher and Moreno, have passed the Assembly and Senate and are on their way to Governor Gray Davis's desk. If approved, retailers selling cathode ray tubes (monitors, TVs, etc.) will be required to charge an extra $10 as an upfront recycling fee. The money will be used for local recycling grants.
The Californians Against Waste site has a pretty good account of those bills and related legislation.
Also, I recommend Dude, Why Won't They Take Back My Old Dell? [pdf] a report from the GrassRoots Recycling Network that looks at how some hardware vendors are exporting their electronic waste to China, India, and Pakistan rather than set up take-back programs in the U.S.
What do I do
What do I do all day? My latest article is now online.