Tuesday, April 13, 2010

IF YOU CAN READ THIS (you're reading DtB)

• As you know, the highly verbular Andrew Tonkovich (aka “Red Emma”) has a celebrated (by me anyway) weekly radio show on KPFK. He informs us (see) that his guest tomorrow is a seriously cool philosopher:
My guest Wednesday at 2:30 on KPFK is Jack Bowen. He is the author of a book you'll want to keep in the glove compartment, and otherwise close, as it is a practical philosophical primer taking on as its vehicle (sorry for pun) for considering our culture, politics and worldviews...the bumper sticker. In If You Can Read This: The Philosophy of Bumper Stickers, Bowen, a philosopher, does a take-apart of why and how we choose to see the world, from Plato to "My Child Beat Up Your Honor Student," the two being, he argues, connected. About this book Christopher Hitchens writes, “In the sense of being pregnant with meaning, this book has a baby on board.” Jack Bowen teaches philosophy at Menlo School in Atherton, California, and runs the Stanford Summer Philosophy Camp. He will be featured along with Richard Dawkins and Leonard Susskind in an upcoming documentary, "The Nature of Existence." His first book, a philosophical novel titled The Dream Weaver, was a San Francisco Chronicle bestseller. We sure have some fun here at Bibliocracy Radio, don't we? Engaging topic, smart guest, charming host...all on So Cal's only community-sponsored anti-corporate free radio station. Listen live, online or download later.
• This just in from Diane Oaks’ office:
The Board of Governors has just selected [Irvine Valley College’s] Linda Renne as one of six Classified Employees to be honored as Employee of the Year. The Award will be presented at the May 4th Board of Governors meeting in Sacramento.
U of Maryland: police beating caught on video

Adam's stink

I WAS SO PLEASED with the appearance of the “Voice of Orange County” two weeks ago that I chose not to mention the slightly negatory, but arguably insignificant, fact that VOC is partnering with the execrable Adam Probolsky, a right-wing pollster and pal-o'-Fuentes.

You remember him. He was the guy running up and down the aisle when the fix was in to select county GOP chief Tom Fuentes as Steve Frogue's board replacement (July 2000).

Two weeks ago, VOC’s Editor-in-Chief Norberto Santana Jr. explained that
I’ve known Adam – a prominent Republican central committee member – for years and respect his polling work as well as his insights on the mechanics of politics….
Probolsky is very much a part of the Orange County Republican mafia. But it wouldn’t surprise me if, despite that, he is also a good pollster. So, OK, whatever. Let’s not talk about it anymore.

Yesterday, I happened to watch Rick Reiff's “Inside OC”—on KOCE. (See it here.) Reiff’s guests were Irvine Councilwoman Beth Krom, VOC’s Norberto Santana, and—Adam freakin’ Probolsky!

D'oh!

I sure hope Adam’s stink doesn’t rub off on Norberto.

If VOC's alliance with Probolsky weren’t bad enough, the always undistinguished Matt Cunningham (Red County) whooped and hollered about it today:

Voice of OC/Probolsky Poll on OC Sheriff's Race Out Tomorrow
I think the VOC/Probolsky poll is a great idea – it gives OC it's own version of a Field or PPIC poll. For politicos it will provide welcome insight into the status of various races, and a convenient alternative to scavenging results from closely held private polls. Watch for it to start exerting an independent gravitational pull on candidate campaigns and fundraising.
Yeah, whatever.

Today, VOC’s senior writer, Tracy Wood, offers an interesting piece concerning the OC Treasurer’s office:

Is an Elected Treasurer the Best Thing for Orange County?

(As you know, trustee Dave “Quisling” Lang is running for OC Treasurer. Five years ago, right about the time Lang inexplicably switched sides re the support of the odious Raghu P. Mathur, it was rumored that Lang, a bean-counter, had set his sights on the Treasurer's office and that an alliance with trustee Tom Fuentes—Mathur’s biggest booster—would be helpful with regard to that ambition. In the recent board struggles with regard to Mathur’s fate, Lang has quietly “stood by his man,” i.e., Tom Fuentes, voting with him against the infamous "settlement.")

Some, such as Fred Smoller, a political scientist at Chapman University, believe that the Treasurer's office should be appointed, not elected.

Well, as they say, there are two sides. Wood lays it all out.

The piece ends on a bummer note:
[H]ow will voters know if their next treasurer is another John Moorlach [who seemed to work out] or another Chris Street [a pal of Fuentes, who clearly did not]? They won't, argues Smoller.

"We truly don't have a watchdog media, we do not have a competitive political system, we do not have an engaged electorate," he said.

In the June, 2006 election, only 27 percent of Orange County's registered voters cast ballots, according to the Secretary of State's office.

Said Moorlach, "At the end of the day, you get the government you deserve, isn't that the saying?"
Yeah. It sure is.

D'oh!

(Retro photo: OC Register.)

Like a sloppy undergrad

UC Berkeley bloated, wasteful, consultants say (San Francisco Chronicle)
For a world-class university studded with Nobel laureates and innovative research, UC Berkeley manages its finances a bit like a sloppy undergrad, a new report suggests.  
The campus could save about $75 million a year by streamlining purchases, concentrating job duties and laying off "redundant" managers, according to consultants hired last fall to help the school become a leaner operation.
. . .
The campus has five big areas of bloat, according to Bain & Co., the Massachusetts consulting firm being paid $3 million to identify waste. 
The biggest, say the consultants, is too many managers. The human resources department alone has one manager per 63 employees, compared with an average of one per 127 employees across other universities.
. . .
The school spends $17 million on academic advising, but even students don't think the money is well spent. 
"School and department advising is terrible," wrote one undergrad responding to a survey from the consultants. "I never trust what I am being told."….
Fallout From Calling Off Bill Ayers Talk (Inside Higher Ed)
The University of Wyoming, which called off a talk by William Ayers, the one-time Weather Underground leader who is now a leading education researcher, is facing new criticism over the move. While Ayers has been canceled before, Wyoming officials were frank about their concerns over political fallout from a visit (as opposed to claiming security or scheduling problems). As a result, a Colorado lawyer, David Lane (also the lawyer for Ward Churchill), announced that he will sue the university for free speech violations unless it invites Ayers, theAssociated Press reported. The suit would be filed on behalf of a student who wanted to see him talk on campus.
Documents Reveal Secrets and Scope of China's On-Campus Police Informants (Chronicle of Higher Education)
Internet documents have emerged detailing how China's security apparatus recruits large teams of campus-based spies to inform on students, prevent outbreaks of unrest, and squash dissenting opinions.
. . .
At Dezhou University each spy is expected to report "three or more items of valuable security information" each month in exchange for a regular reward, with "a great reward" for especially valuable intelligence….(continued)

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...