Tuesday, March 31, 2015

Which is better?

I know... I'm over thinking and taking childhood silliness too far but this is my stage to rant...

It's been a thing lately: Disney Princess drawn to different proportions. I seen this posted at multiple sites - they purportedly show these princesses with 'normal' waistlines. The latest version aims to show 'plus-size' princesses. But Cinderella and Pocahontas would never been plus-size. Cinderella was neglected and most likely underfed so don't expect her to be plumply perfect. Pocahontas is/was a Native American subsisting on either a hunter-gatherer or 'primitive' agriculture diet. Neither of these life styles proffers sufficient calories to become 'plus'-sized.

So which is worst for children...
-unrealistic top heavy princesses with pencil thin waists?
-'normal' princesses?
-'plus'-sized princesses which do not reflect their reality?

One thing I have personally noticed... I do not watch television and not comparing myself against perfect TV bodies has been positive for my self image.

Power corrupts#3

Beware of cops...
"...police routinely hid exculpatory evidence from prosecutors and judges..."

Apparently it was (and possibly is) common for Detroit police to use snitches and informants to prosecute accused murderers in exchange for lighter sentences and other rewards. With a built in incentive to tell the police what they want to hear, informants take advantage of any opportunity to elevate their decidedly poor conditions. The combination of witness testimony and hiding of exculpatory evidence results in accused criminals being convicted of crimes they did not commit.

These actions of the part of the police degrade the trust between police and the public. With each breach of practice, public confidence in the integrity of police work takes another hit. Criminal acts by police makes me wonder if the prison barbed wire restrain the real law breakers.

Saturday, March 28, 2015

Power corrupts #2

There so many instances of police abusing power imbalance that to post about every instance would practically be a full time job... but two recent reports (here and here) really make you wonder who is the criminal. Cops are human; that some are bad is not surprising or unexpected. What's disappointing is good cops overlooking the bad behavior. Bad cops force good cops into a catch-22: treat the bad cops as the criminals they are (arrest and charge them with crimes) or avert their gaze when a colleague in a blue uniform does something illegal. Unfortunately for many people, preserving police culture is a higher priority for most police.

Update:... just hours later... see here for another case.

Sunday, March 22, 2015

How do you get around that...

It would appear Ted Cruz wants to president of the United States... the problem is he was born in Canada, which, as it happens, is not part of the United States. So how will he work around the pesky little problem of Article 2, Section 5 of the Constitution which states:
No Person except a natural born Citizen, or a Citizen of the United States, at the time of the Adoption of this Constitution, shall be eligible to the Office of President; neither shall any person be eligible to that Office who shall not have attained to the Age of thirty five Years, and been fourteen Years a Resident within the United States.
He is by definition not a natural born citizen at the tender age of 44, not "...a Citizen of the United States, at the time of the Adoption of this Constitution..." It doesn't take a fancy law degree to wig out that little nugget.

Update: According to a report at NPR, Ted Cruz is a 'natural born citizen'. His mother was an American citizen at the time of his birth. 'Natural born Citizen' has never been define by the Supreme Court but there seems to include (1) birth on U.S. soil and (2) born to U.S. citizen parent(s) - essentially citizen conferred in utero.

Thursday, March 5, 2015

Trust again, this time police

Most of us would like to think that the police persons are trustworthy and restrict their actions to within the confines of the law and they would not lie under oath! But two recent reports of lying by police bring this into doubt... police in Brooklyn lied about being assaulted by a teenager
and a case of both police and prosecutors lied about witnessing a man assaulting a police officer. It makes me wonder...

-Are police are trained to lie? And further, does their training correspond to the demands of their job?
-How often do police lie and under what circumstances - personal, professional, under oath, white lies? How does this compare to the general population?

With police misconduct high on the public radar, this is the time to discover, reflect and reform if needed.

Not pot, not kettle

I just came across a transcript of Bill O'Reilly implying that Christiane Amanpour's critique of Benjamin Netanyahu's recent speech to Congress is not worthy of 'trust' (after all she 'was raised in Iran until age 11'). When it comes to the issues of journalistic integrity and trustworthiness, Bill O'Reilly could not have chosen a worst time to raise these questions. Considering his less than truthful recounting of his reporting career highlights (see here, here, and here), he's not the pot calling Amanpour's kettle black... that would equate the quality of his work to hers. He's the bits of blacken cooked on debris flaking off the pot calling the kettle black. It's a wonder that his audience is so blind to his Forest Gump tendency to insert his manufactured personality into the historically relevant moments.  Forest Gump is a positive force that Bill O'Reilly could only aspire too.