Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Some perspective on Egypt

The following was sent to me from my friend, Nathan, who is studying the effects of centralized and social media on democratic reforms in the Middle East. It provides a little contextual nuance. Also, Nathan recommends Marc Lynch's contributions at Foreign Policy: http://mideast.foreignpolicy.com/blog/2202

Here's Nathan:

Well, as you can imagine, I have been riveted by what has been occurring in Cairo and across Egypt, and I've been following events very closely.

Here's one first person account of some of the clashes near Tahrir today:

http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2011/02/the-battle-in-cairos-tahrir-square/70663/

AJE is reporting that there are sizable anti-regime protests in Luxor. This is really the first I've heard of significant protests in Upper Egypt, which could be telling.

My take on some of the action today by "pro-Mubarak" supporters/protesters/
plainclothes thugs, aka "baltagiya"/paid mobs/regular citizens (probably a mixture of all of these):

One possibility: This "counter-revolution" may have been what Mubarak gearing up for all week. A planned rollout of "concessions," (in two separate speeches) while pro-regime planners organized the plainclothes security forces, "thugs" and other recruits for days, to build up numbers and unleash a coordinated attack to retake the square. The Army's relaxed stance during much of this suggests that they may be complicit in -- or at least aware of -- this strategy. Difficult to know for sure, though.

One other thought is that it might NOT be Mubarak directly or even people around him, but remnants/core of the NDP who have so much to lose, and who are organizing and mobilizing the violent types. Two facts that people on the streets have established today: 1) that at least some people coming to confront protesters in Tahrir were plainclothes police/security (IDs were confiscated by anti-regime protesters) and 2) people were either paid (I've heard figures ranging from 50LE to 400LE [maybe exaggerated], 50 seems more realistic) or "forced" to come with the threat of no more paycheck until things return to "normal."

A CNN reporter said that at a pro-Mubarak rally he witnessed earlier today, he was being hassled by people - as a member of the media and as many others have been today - but that also three men approached him independently and told him they worked for the national petrol company/ministry and that they had been ORDERED to come and take part in the rally.

Various state television channels in Egypt have been in full propaganda mode today: one woman interviewed on Mehwar TV, an alleged activist, claimed she was trained by "Jews in America" to topple the Egyptian regime.

Whether it's Mubarak, those around him or broader NDP or Interior Ministry people orchestrating this, all of it pretty clearly demonstrates that this regime is a master of its craft.


Thursday, August 19, 2010

Conservative PC and the "Cordoba House"

Frankly, I just don’t care about "public opinion" in this case. And, I don’t think that the Cordoba Foundation should. Why is it that people do not want it built there? Because it's an Islamic organization? So what? Now 1.57 billion people in the world are representative of a terrorist plot? Or the 5.78 million American Muslims (of whom there are "more than a couple relatives of the deceased", btw). The Cordoba foundation raised the money, they are not a terrorist organization, it doesn't support terrorism, and the very premise of our separation-of-powers and federalist system is to prevent the tyranny of a majority from infringing on one's Constitutionally guaranteed rights, especially one stoked by the delusions of demagogues (Federalist #10). Traditionally, "conservatism" supposedly stood for exactly these principles. Now, it's simply Palin and Gingrich's ilk who use an inverse application of the liberal conception of political correctness. But, now we have to worry about the xenophobes and social conservatives' sensibilities instead of some hippie's. I'm sorry, but if you want to be offended by the construction of buildings in reaction to 9/11, then take a look at this map and the perpetually bloated state of the security-industrial complex before you complain about one moderate group's plans to build essentially a YMCA.

Sunday, July 4, 2010

Explaining Patriotism Through Baseball

Explaining patriotism through the Yankees and Orioles, by Louis Menand and Roger Wilkins (2003):  

LOUIS MENAND: Well, let me answer the question [of what is patriotism] as an English professor would, in a roundabout and oblique way. [laughter] I grew up in New England. And when I was 21 I moved to New York City. So I've lived in New York City for 40 years. But I’ve always been a Red Sox fan. [applause] I take no credit for this, as you’ll see shortly. So I know what it's like to be an illegal alien [laughter] in a hegemonic power. And this is what it's like. You talk to New Yorkers about the Yankees, and they act as though they have something to do, personally, with the Yankees' success. And what you want to say to them is, "You just happened to be born in New York. That's all you have to do with the Yankees." It's owned by a rich guy. He goes out and buys the best player to bring to New York. They become New Yorkers, please, really, it doesn’t have to do with New York. And then you feel loyal to the Yankees. So what I want to suggest is this. Patriotism depends a little bit on a fiction. And the fiction is that we've chosen to be Americans. Now, some of us in this room, and some of us on the panel, have chosen to be Americans when they had other choices. But most of us just happened to be born here. So I want to suggest that patriotism, or love of country, a healthy way to think of it is to think this: when you're born, you're handed certain things. You’re handed your parents, you're handed the color of your skin, you're handed your gender. And you're handed the place you were born, New York City or the United States of America. Those are things that you can do something with. You can do something with those things. And virtue and character comes from choosing to do something with them rather than simply taking credit for something you had nothing to do with. That's patriotism. 

ROGER WILKINS: Well, I hate to disagree with a professor of English. Let’s talk about choice for a minute. I was handed the New York Yankees when I was nine years old, and I lived across the river from Yankee Stadium. And I was a Yankee fan for 41 years until I could no longer stand Steinbrenner. So I resigned as a Yankee fan in an op ed piece in the New York Times. And I declared myself to be a fan of the well managed, well owned Baltimore Orioles. The hardest thing I ever did was to wean myself off the Yankees. But I exercised choice, which is the essence of democracy, right? And I was exercising free will.  

The Baltimore Orioles are now owned by a worse owner than Steinbrenner, and he's destroying the team. So democracy is getting up off the ground after you've made some bad choices and believing that what you do can make the place where you live, and the people around you, a place a little better, the people a little better nurtured. And to keep on going despite getting knocked down sometimes by your choices, sometimes by fate, sometimes by politics. But always exercising the choice to make things better. 

Thursday, June 17, 2010

The Angry Mob as Jilted Lovers

You belong - you belong - you belong to me
Tell her you were fooling
Tell her she don't even know you
Tell her you were fooling
I know you from a long time ago, baby
Don't leave me to go to her now
You belong to me.

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Helluva Snowjob, Foxxie!

Fox genuinely values Michael "Helluva job" Brown's opinion? I mean, really? This is a legitimate opinion?

Monday, May 3, 2010

When the "Free Market" is nothing but a plutarchy...

This is what we get for putting a Randian disciple in charge of our monetary system.

MimeoMimeo Reviews Abearica

A spot-on write-up of Abearica. If you're interested, for a limited edition copy, email me and I'll see what I can do.

The 5 Comment Theory of the Political Blogosphere

I have a 5-comment theory on political internet chatter. The theory goes that (once commenters start a post-article dialogue) somewhere after the first to the fifth comment, the line of argument will either have gone completely off-course or will have devolved into pure id-driven rage or eroticism.

The latter usually happens when commenters can remain anonymous. the former just usually happens.

So, I say, why bother? You won't convince someone to change their core beliefs in an online conversation. So, all you can do is give them the information that you think is important and let them absorb it over time. Eventually, even if you were the catalyst, they will convince themselves over time that this is their own idea or belief and consistent with their past thoughts. And they will also be convinced that any change was completely self-driven and rational, given a propensity of evidence to which they've been exposed.

Here is a network analytic picture of the right/left blogosphere and their connections (via links) to other political sights. As you see, there really isn't a lot of cross-polination going on, or an open debate of ideas. We are all "guilty" of this phenomenon. Daily Kos and Salon are not exactly tapping ideas from Reason or Commentary magazines.

We aren't apt to expose ourselves to information that counters the causal theories of our core moral attitudes and beliefs. And if we do, we need a propensity of evidence and gentle prodding to recognize the validity of it.

I don't propose an end to debate, of course. What I propose is that everyone stop taking their side so seriously without being prepared to defend their arguments in a formally structured debate format.

BP and the Blame Game

When and if there is agency loss, who's to blame--(1) the principal who hires the agent to work in its interest, (2) the agent who may be incentivized to simultaneously increase its own profits while decreasing costs to the principal, or (3) the government who regulates these transactions to prevent negative externalities?

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Happy Anni-vers-a-ry, Mis-ter Pres-i-dent!

Happy anniversary, Mr. President!

We've only confirmed just over half of your appointees, disabling your management capacity, and then blame everything on you for not solving our collective action problems (at least those of us who didn't already blame you from day one). Mwwwaaahhh!

ps- Don't worry, you needn't manage. We've left corporate interests to run your bureaucracy though complex contracting schemes anyway! And as Harold Seidman points out, the public bureaucracy's parallel private bureaucracy--businesses that perform contract work for government--are heavily interested in maintaining the status quo. For the politically astute (but not policy-astute), using private companies also helps reduce the number of civil servants on the public payroll, as Clinton was well aware. Yet as Paul Light has shown, it exponentially increases the number of total workers on the payroll indirectly. The tangible and measurable number of total federal workers is an important consideration for presidents who need to pursue policy under conditions of anti-public-service sentiment from the public. The downside to these arrangements is, of course, loss of accountability and the resistance of private firms to changes in the public bureaucracy. So, good luck with all that, Mr. President!

Brown in MA... whatever.

Dems deserve what they got. An incompetent and complacent campaign lets the Repubs give Obama a male stripper for his anniversary! How nice.


"I'm Scott Brown. And this is my truck."

Can't argue with that platform! :)

And then there's the whole "terror, terror, everwherror" mantra!

Fear and loathing wins every time.

Saturday, January 9, 2010

Opening the Healthcare Debate: Why Obama Didn't "Lie" as much as Told a Constitutionally Uneducated Public What They Wanted to Hear

I think it's curious that anyone would expect these healthcare reform deliberations to be public. I have never seen a bill written from floor debate, have you? I have seen plenty of symbolic, ceremonial, and non-substantive crap come out on the floor though. The idea that Obama has any control over the way our legislature deliberates is a serious misinterpretation of our separation of powers. He can promise he will demand openness in Congress until he's blue in the face. Unless we choose to rewrite the Constitution, there's nothing he can do about it. The problem with most of the media debate is not whether they argue for or against open debate in Congress. It's that they all seem to place the blame on the president as to what Congress chooses to do. This is at least an underestimation of the homogeneity of Democrat preferences, to think they would all congeal to the president's prerogative and ignore their own reelection incentives by engaging in ugly open deliberation. But more importantly, it seems to be a vast misinterpretation of our Constitution. Obama did, in fact, campaign on openness in government. And, in comparison to Bush, he has certainly made executive branch operations more transparent. In my opinion, however, not enough so. His campaign promise to open deliberations on the healthcare debate in Congress, however, is as ludicrous as the fact that anyone thinks he could do anything about it. Finally, and back to my original point, candor and dealmaking is what democracy is all about. Compromise is often ugly. The sausage is not fun to watch being made. No one ends up looking good, except those whose best incentive is to obstruct compromise in the name of a status quo. They would love to open the process to expand conflict to the point of killing compromise. And, that, more than anything is why this criticism is getting so much traction from propagandists like Brietbart.

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Phillip Cooper's "By Order of the President": A Review

Cooper, Phillip J. 2002. By Order of the President: The Use and Abuse of Executive Direct Action. Lawrence, Kansas: The University of Kansas Press.
                              
Background:
Perhaps the most important development in recent American politics has been the increased use of what Cooper terms the “direct tools of presidential action.” Although some of these tools have been employed by presidents since George Washington, the substance, frequency, and importance of these tools has evolved considerably in the last 40 years. These tools include executive orders, presidential proclamations, presidential memoranda, signing statements, and national security directives.
According to Cooper, each of these tools is used, in varying degrees, to assert presidential prerogative, to circumvent the procedural impediments or complexities of government, and to take action in response to international and emergency pressures. This review will serve, largely, as a reduced outline of Cooper’s work. The several direct tools of presidential action will be described in accordance with the basic structure that the author provides. Each tool will be defined, followed by an accounting of how each tool is most frequently used, the contingent value of its use to the president, and the advantages and dangers associated with each.


Executive Orders:
Executive orders (EOs) are instructions that presidents issue to executive officers that demand that they “take an action, stop a certain type of activity, alter policy, change management practices, or accept a delegation of authority [for which they will] be responsible for the implementation of law.” Often these orders derive from outside the EOP and from the agencies themselves. If approved at each stage, the common procedural path for EOs starts with a proposed EO submitted to the director of OMB. From there, the attorney general reviews its legality, then to the Office of the Federal Register for form, and finally to the president to sign. Indeed, its use is often meant to avoid the impediments of seeing a bill through Congress or the procedural requirements of promulgating an agency rule. Although they are mostly required to be published in the Federal Register, many EOs are promulgated without publication or, even, notification to Congress or the public under the auspices of security classification. Other times, they are promulgated without publication or notice and simply slip under the radar. Presidents usually claim “implied statutory authority” or authority under Article 2 when issuing EOs. Many times, presidents have made questionable claims to statutory authority, using statutes that “seem to offer the president a great deal of latitude” and, prima facie, violate the “nondelegation doctrine.” However, nondelegation has not been invoked by the Supreme Court in some time, and has often been replaced with Court’s consideration of perceived congressional acquiescence or indifference to the substance of an EO (e.g., p. 23—25). This does not mean that presidents are “relieved of their constitutional obligation to respect properly enacted statutes,” and presidents have, in fact, lost significant cases (e.g., Youngstown Steel Co v. Sawyer). However, significant hurdles remain for EOs to be challenged in court.
Many EOs are used purely as tools of presidential politics such as generating favorable publicity, sending signals, and to circumvent Congress. EOs are also commonly used to deal with emergencies. But, even then, they can be used for political purposes. As Cooper documents, the U.S. was actually in a state of emergency from 1933 until 1976, in part, because a declaration of emergency can “assist an administration in accomplishing its own goals when Congress might not otherwise be supportive.” For instance, despite the oft-cited Youngstown case, Truman also issued orders “seizing towing operations in New York Harbor, as well as coal mines and railroads” (p. 42). As to the ability to circumvent procedural hurdles in the rulemaking process, “one of the reasons why rulemaking has come to be so cumbersome and time consuming is precisely because of the requirements that have been piled on top of the basic statutory process by EOs” (p. 59). Reagan often issued EOs with the intent of compelling agencies to consider the administration’s political priorities when promulgating rules, and further layered the process with internal oversight mechanisms within OIRA and OMB. Administrators can be put in awkward legal positions by these attempts at executive dominance in the policymaking process because EOs used for these purposes may intentionally contradict congressional mandates. Also, when newly elected presidents issue EOs to agencies, they can many times contradict existing EOs from previous administrations or exert executive powers that are constitutionally questionable (e.g., G.W. Bush’s moratorium on rulemaking).
The advantages of EOs to presidents are that they provide (1) quick, impacting ways to change policy, (2) specific guidelines to agencies that legislation does not address, and (3) low-visibility ways to take significant actions. The potential dangers, however, are many. “In general terms, they include creating or exacerbating interbranch and intergovernmental tensions, inviting external criticism of the White House, weakening cabinet department credibility and effectiveness, undermining the administrative law system, possibly exposing administrators and the government more broadly to liability, and being seen in certain instances as taking the easy way out.” The frequent claim of emergency to excuse the use EOs does much to undermine the credibility of the White House. Also, imposing new requirements on already overworked agencies is essentially equated with an unfunded mandate. Finally, the lack of transparency and questionable claims of authority, or even legality, involved in their issuance leads to conflict, constitutional challenges, and/or a significant loss of credibility.


Presidential Memoranda:
Confounding the complications presented by EOs is the recent rise of presidential memoranda that have been employed as an equivalent of an EO. Whether all EOs are issued according to the process above, most definitely are. Meanwhile, there is “no stated process for developing memoranda and no requirement that they be published in the Federal Register.” While memoranda can be used for symbolic or hortatory purposes, they have increasingly been used interchangeably with EOs. In addition to all the advantages they essentially share with EOs, the most important advantage they have over an EO is that they are more difficult to challenge because of their relative elusiveness from examination from outside pressure groups, media, Congress, or the courts. They are often used for short-term policy initiatives and specific action, while seldom claiming anything new as policy. Rather, the content of memoranda is usually directives that claim to build on existing policy and are directed only to agencies, unless the president wants them to be publicized. Therefore, “legal challenges are all but nonexistent.” Often, memoranda are used in conjunction with EOs to shift the nature of the authority that the president claims. This presents problems, however, as “policies are emerging as patchworks that can be difficult to understand or explain, even for those close to the process.” It may seem like a useful tool to deceive those outside the executive branch by essentially playing a shell game of “Where is the policy coming from?” But, it can often have the effect of confusing even those who are intended to implement the policy.


Presidential Proclamations:
A proclamation “states a condition, declares the law and requires obedience, recognizes an event, or triggers the implementation of a law (by recognizing that the circumstances in law have been realized).” The process for issuing proclamations, as with EOs, is covered by the Federal Register Act and they are published in the Federal Register. Proclamations are most frequently used as hortatory declarations for recognition of individuals or celebration. However, they are also used to “invoke particular statutory or constitutional powers” or as “policy pronouncements issued to those outside government that have the force of law.” According to Cooper, the commonly understood difference between EOs and proclamations is that proclamations are aimed at those outside of government, rather than directives to government officials. This, in effect, limits the president’s authority to issue them. The president cannot claim power through Article 2 for proclamations for this reason. However, while the same methods of judicial review used to assess EOs apply to proclamations, their use is usually upheld in court. This is because the president’s power to issue them is derived from specific authorization within a statute that the president is to proclaim a condition has been met in order that a particular aspect of the statute can be implemented. Presidents may find the same advantages in using proclamations as they do in using proclamations, when they are used for hortatory or celebratory purposes. Also, as mentioned, most proclamations survive legal challenges. However, there are notable instances in which they have not, and implementation of directives issued in proclamations has been found to be capricious and arbitrary. Finally, in perhaps its most infamous use, proclamations granting pardons have brought about conflict and, worse, have served to delegitimize the presidency.




National Security Directives:
National security directives (NSDs) are directives that “establish policy through the National Security Council (NSC) and that are intended to implement and coordinate military policy, foreign policy, or anything else that is defined within the rubric of national security.” NSDs carry the same magnitude of EOs, but they are not published and almost always classified. The power presidents claim in issuing the NSD is his position as Commander in Chief and the National Security Act of 1947. Cooper’s analysis of NSDs begins from the premise that presidents must have “secure means to design, implement, and coordinate foreign and military policy.” However, the increasing numbers of impacting policies directed by classified NSDs, shrouded in secrecy, have resulted in the unaccountable and dangerous misuse of the perceived power of the president, in respect to foreign and military affairs. It’s almost implausible the number of controversies and scandals that have occurred through the implementation of national security directives (e.g., Iran-Contra, U.S.-sponsored coups, countless incidents in the Vietnam War, and Bay of Pigs). However, these directives have had dangerous domestic impacts as well. The uses for NSDs vary from military, intelligence, and foreign policy management and coordination to setting policy toward other countries and coordinating  economic development policy. NSDs are flexible instruments that usually provide more of a framework for action that allows for variability and provides a quick and covert method of dealing with new and evolving threats to national security. Also, “participation in development and implementation of NSDs can be limited to relatively small groups of people”, which provides for quick and coordinated action. However, this lack of transparency and “the danger of group think in a small, closed environment” has often led to teleological ethical considerations (i.e., ends justify means). This redoubles the inclination to limit transparency and increases the tendency toward covert action, when larger groups and cooler heads might have prevailed. When covert actions are revealed, they often have the effect of further delegitimizing the country. Most importantly, as the chair of the Iran-Contra Committee testified:


“The use of secret NSDs to create policy infringes on Congress’ constitutional prerogatives by inhibiting effective oversight and limiting Congress’ policymaking role. NSDs are revealed to Congress only under irregular, arbitrary, or even accidental, circumstances, if at all. Even the Intelligence Committees do not usually receive copies of NSDs.”


Presidential Signing Statements:
Presidential Signing Statements (PSSs) are “announcements made by the president… [which] identify provisions of a statue with which the president has concerns. They also provide the president’s interpretation of the language of the law, announce constitutional limits on the implementation of some of its provisions, or indicate directions to executive branch officials as to how to administer the new law in an acceptable manner.” They have recently been employed as mechanisms to (1) insert the presidency’s preferences within the process of judicial review under the awkward guise of legislative history, or (2) to subsume the constitutional responsibilities of the judicial branch prior to judicial review.
Since Reagan’s Attorney General, Edwin Meese III, reached “an agreement with West Publishing Company to include the [PSSs] in the U.S. Code Congressional and Administrative News legislative histories,” PSSs have been used as a way for presidents to have a “more active and continuing role in judicial interpretation of statutes.” Essentially, the strategy is that the signing statement will hopefully be considered part of the legislative history that a judge considers when deeming a law unconstitutional. They have also been used as a means to direct officials on how to implement legislation, but stepping outside the president’s constitutional responsibilities and infringing on the judiciary by deeming parts of legislation unconstitutional and, in essence, enacting a line-item veto. Again, however, this action should be qualified as unconstitutional, according to Clinton v. New York (1998). The logic of the Office of Legal Counsel for the last four presidents runs as follows: “The Constitution is the supreme law of the land. Therefore, the president is duty-bound not to enforce a statue that violates the Constitution.” So, whenever the president deems a piece of legislation unconstitutional, he can obstruct implementation without vetoing the legislation as a whole. This clearly violates separation of powers and Article 3’s notion that it is the judiciary’s domain to decide what is and what is not unconstitutional. The implications to public administrators are many. If they refuse to implement statutory mandates, their actions can be seen as arbitrary and capricious, in violation of APA.


Conclusion:
The question that should keep coming to mind as one reads Cooper is “From where does the power derive?” The use of each of these direct tools of the presidency often involves broad claims of constitutional or direct statutory authority that are questionable, at best. At worst, they are a blatant usurpation of power that, if left unchecked, teeters on the brink of tyranny and discredits the institutional foundations of each branch in different, but important, ways.
Cooper recommends steps that Congress can take to ensure that its power is not appropriated or undermined by the president, such as requiring publication and codification of any directive in a transparent and public manner, and to have more coordinated and systematic oversight of presidential action than it currently has. Cooper’s other suggestion is that the president view his power through a lens that is more amenable to constitutional law, respecting the institutions for their respective powers and the balance that it provides. However, given the current partisan divide that doesn’t seem to be dissipating, this may be an unrealistic prescription.
It seems Cooper’s resolve is to have a president use his first-mover advantages to spur Congress to action to establish clarity in the limits of the prerogatives of the executive branch, or restrain his or her self in respect to law. Or, the other option is to depend on Congress to overcome its own collective action problems to assert itself through clear and binding legislation and, even, constitutional amendment. But, he gives the power of the Supreme Court short shrift. This may be due to perceived inconsistencies in its approach to executive power that Cooper documents throughout the book. Nonetheless, because it is a matter of constitutional prerogative, the ultimate solution resides with the Court to assert itself in a consistent, clear, and tenable way. In the meantime, it is probably up to the public administrators to (in the most drastic cases) choose between uncertain legal and career standing, when implementing problematic presidential directives.

Let's start the count...

Depending on the outcome of the investigation, it looks as if the latest victim is a part-time census worker...

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Glenn Beck and the Conservative Divide

Peter Wehner laments the possible effects of Beck on the conservative movement: http://www.commentarymagazine.com/blogs/index.php/wehner/100152.

The question that should concern the moderate wing of the Republican party is that conservative leadership is no longer contained to a relatively homogeneous group of elites. In 1997, Samuel Kernell conceptualized our contemporary political universe as more decentralized and diffuse than any in our history. The proliferation of media channels, the increased sophistication and narrowed focus of interest groups, and the postmaterial entitlements of our society made our system more of an individualized--rather than institutional--pluralism. The agenda is no longer determined by the bargaining positions of a select group of institutional actors. Instead, any interest or coalitional leader can dominate the agenda at any given moment. Now that conservatives are composed of increasingly divergent stripes--from the Big Government Conservatism of the neocons to the extreme libertarian views of the Paulites to the Moral Conservatism of the Values Voters--there is less power ceded to a small group of party elites to control their agenda and bargaining positions. As the coalition becomes more loose and the more vocal one particular faction becomes, the less likely a more moderate faction of the party will contend with the dominant faction. Right now, the apparent direction of the party leans to the extreme right, charming the moral crusaders with populist, anti-intellectual rhetoric. The only question that remains is how many moderates and independents will follow them over the cliff because or their anachronistic party-label ties?

Monday, September 21, 2009

More People Have Read My T-Shirt Than My Blog

The title of this initial entry seems appropriate. Maybe some family and friends will follow this, and tell their family and friends about all the crazy stuff they find here, such as links to interesting articles, diatribes about the state of the world, pithy commentary, zany pictures, and all things BLOG. Who knows?
For those who don't know me, I'm a doctoral student in Public Administration and American Politics. My studies focus mainly on careerist-appointee relations, regulatory development and enforcement, the "administrative presidency", and interest participation in the American bureaucracy.

I have many more extracurricular interests that include my wife, my friends, my family, backgammon, traveling (when I can afford it), Baltimore, and classic hip hop music ("there ain't nothin' like"). Policy areas that continue to spark my interest include food (especially GMOs) and water policies, urbanization, infrastructure, and education. I'm also quite interested in the relationship between the behavior of political elites and public opinion, including areas such as issue framing and partisan polarization.

In a second life, I'd like to become the world's leading Camus scholar, as I earnestly believe that "the absurd is the essential concept and the first truth". And, therefore, in my first life (despite my current trajectory) I still fully expect to one day become a rock star.

The purpose of this blog is mainly to provide myself with a kind of notebook to update and summarize things I'm studying. So, there will probably be little linearity to any of this. Nonetheless, I hope you enjoy reading, commenting, and wasting time!

- MOB

Interesting places to go as you are swept through the inter-tubes