Peace through victory - the American way.

Tuesday, May 30, 2006

Bonds Passes Ruth.

Mister Americano was at Petco Park on Sunday watching the Padres beat the Cardinals by doing something they've rarely done all year: hitting the damn baseball!

Midway through the game, the scoreboard showed a replay of Barry Bonds hitting number 715 to pass Babe Ruth as baseball's all-time left-handed homerun hitter. What a sad day for baseball.

For the record, the crowd booed. Not the kind of booing you usually hear at a game. This was different. There was muttering and a stirring in the crowd and then the booing started. This was an expression of smoldering anger.

It's too depressing to write about this any more. I've written all I really care to write about this subject before. (Here and here, for example.) So I'll just say again what I've said before.

What's good enough for Shoeless Joe Jackson and Pete Rose is good enough for Barry Bonds.

-tdr

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Wouldn't You Like To Be A Journalist Too?

What's the difference between "legitimate" journalism and online journalism? Not much, according to a recent decision of the California Court of Appeal.

In a sweeping victory for online journalists, three justices of the Sixth District in Northern California unanimously ruled that publishers of websites are entitled to the same legal protections enjoyed by traditional media. (Although the court's opinion is long, for the most part it's not difficult reading, and it can be found here. Unless otherwise indicated, quotes in this post are from the court's opinion.)

The case saw computer giant Apple suing a website, PowerPage, in order to discover the sources who leaked secret information to the website. The website used the information to publish news stories about Apple's secret plans to release a device for creating digital live sound recordings.

The website's publishers argued that California's shield law, and the First Amendment, entitled them to a protective order to protect their sources. The trial court sided with Apple. The Court of Appeal didn't.

The Court of Appeal rejected the idea that there is "legitimate journalism" and instead looked to what the website and the online journalists did. The court ruled that the website publishers were entitled to a protective order because the website is a publication, the people posting information on the site are journalists, and both the site and the online journalists are protected by the same shield laws that protect traditional journalists.

The court's decision involved a website, as opposed to a blog, and the court declined to base its decision on any distinction between the two. (See Opinion, pp. 45-46, fn. 21.) The court's decision is so broad that whatever format distinctions exist between blogs and websites ought to make no legal difference when deciding whether a blog would be entitled to the same protections as traditional media.

The key question in any case involving online news publication will revolve around whether the online publisher is engaged in the gathering and dissemination of news. As the court explained:
"... like any newspaper or magazine, they operated enterprises whose raison d’etre was the dissemination of a particular kind of information to an interested readership. Toward that end, they gathered information by a variety of means including the solicitation of submissions by confidential sources. In no relevant respect do they appear to differ from a reporter or editor for a traditional business-oriented periodical who solicits or otherwise comes into possession of confidential internal information about a company. Disclosure of that information may expose them to liability, but that is not the question immediately of concern; the point here is that such conduct constitutes the gathering and dissemination of news, as that phrase must be understood and applied under our shield law." (Opinion, p. 39, emphasis added.)
No doubt Apple will petition the California Supreme Court to take the case and rule differently. They have their corporate interests to protect. In the meantime, if you are gathering information and disseminating it on the internet, you've got an argument that you are a real journalist, as legitimate as any newspaper or magazine writer. The democratization of the news continues.

-tdr

Here are some choice quotes from the court's opinion:

Rejecting Apple's argument and the trial court's conclusion that the website did not practice "legitimate journalism," the Court of Appeal said this:
"We decline the implicit invitation to embroil ourselves in questions of what constitutes 'legitimate journalis[m].' The shield law is intended to protect the gathering and dissemination of news, and that is what petitioners did here. We can think of no workable test or principle that would distinguish 'legitimate' from 'illegitimate' news. Any attempt by courts to draw such a distinction would imperil a fundamental purpose of the First Amendment, which is to identify the best, most important, and most valuable ideas not by any sociological or economic formula, rule of law, or process of government, but through the rough and tumble competition of the memetic marketplace." (Opinion, p. 36.)
The Court of Appeal also rejected Apple's argument that the website did not do "legitimate journalism" because it simply published secret documents without editing.
"Apple asserts that petitioners merely reprinted 'verbatim copies' of Apple’s internal information while exercising 'no editorial oversight at all.' But this characterization, if accepted, furnishes no basis for denying petitioners the protection of the statute. A reporter who uncovers newsworthy documents cannot rationally be denied the protection of the law because the publication for which he works chooses to publish facsimiles of the documents rather than editorial summaries. The shield exists not only to protect editors but equally if not more to protect newsgatherers. The primacy Apple would grant to editorial function cannot be justified by any rationale known to us."
Now here's the really good part where the Court turns Apple's argument on its head.
"Moreover, an absence of editorial judgment cannot be inferred merely from the fact that some source material is published verbatim. It may once have been unusual to reproduce source materials at length, but that fact appears attributable to the constraints of pre-digital publishing technology, which compelled an editor to decide how to use the limited space afforded by a particular publication. This required decisions not only about what information to include but about how to compress source materials to fit. In short, editors were forced to summarize, paraphrase, and rewrite because there was not room on their pages to do otherwise.
Digital communication and storage, especially when coupled with hypertext linking, make it possible to present readers with an unlimited amount of information in connection with a given subject, story, or report. The only real constraint now is time—the publisher’s and the reader’s. From the reader’s perspective, the ideal presentation probably consists of a top-level summary with the ability to 'drill down' to source materials through hypertext links. The decision whether to take this approach, or to present original information at the top level of an article, is itself an occasion for editorial judgment. Courts ought not to cling too fiercely to traditional preconceptions, especially when they may operate to discourage the seemingly salutary practice of providing readers with source materials rather than subjecting them to the editors’ own 'spin' on a story." (Opinion, p. 37, emphasis added.)
Here's another smackdown:
"Beyond casting aspersions on the legitimacy of petitioners’ enterprise, Apple offers no cogent reason to conclude that they fall outside the shield law’s protection. Certainly it makes no attempt to ground an argument in the language of the law, which, we reiterate, extends to every 'publisher, editor, reporter, or other person connected with or employed upon a newspaper, magazine, or other periodical publication.' (Cal. Const., art. I, § 2, subd. (b).) We can think of no reason to doubt that the operator of a public Web site is a 'publisher' for purposes of this language; the primary and core meaning of 'to publish' is '[t]o make publicly or generally known; to declare or report openly or publicly; to announce; to tell or noise abroad; also, to propagate, disseminate (a creed or system).' (12 Oxford English Dict. (2d ed. 1989) pp. 784-785.) Of course the term 'publisher' also possesses a somewhat narrower sense: 'One whose business is the issuing of books, newspapers, music, engravings, or the like, as the agent of the author or owner; one who undertakes the printing or production of copies of such works, and their distribution to the booksellers and other dealers, or to the public. (Without qualification generally understood to mean a book-publisher or (in the U.S.) also a newspaper proprietor.)' (Id. at p. 785, first italics added.) News-oriented Web sites like petitioners’ are surely 'like' a newspaper or magazine for these purposes. (Opinion, pp. 39-40.)

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What An Outrage! The Senate Wants US To Talk To Mexico!

Here's the amendment that passed the Senate requiring consultation with Mexico before building a fence.
(d) Consultation Requirement.--Federal, State, and local representatives in the United States shall consult with their counterparts in Mexico concerning the construction of additional fencing and related border security structures along the international border between the United States and Mexico, as authorized by this title, before the commencement of any such construction in order to--

(1) solicit the views of affected communities;

(2) lessen tensions; and

(3) foster greater understanding and stronger cooperation on this and other important security issues of mutual concern.
O my God! Now we have to talk to Mexico about our mutual border? Is there any part of America's precious sovereignty that the Senate is willing to protect?

The anti-immigrationists* have latched onto this amendment to claim the Senate is requiring the US to ask Mexico for permission before building a border wall. Of course it doesn't. Consultation is not the same as seeking permission. The amendment is entirely reasonable, unless you view Mexico as an enemy country.

-tdr

* At one time we used the term "anti-illegals" but events have shown that the anti-illegals were lying when they claimed they were only opposed to illegal immigration. One such event occurred when the anti-immigrationists lost their cool after the Heritage Foundation's study claimed millions and millions of new legal immigrants would flood into the country as a result of President Bush's reform proposal. The Foundation's claims were wild exaggerations but they created a huge stir. The anti-immigrationists' opposition to the guest worker program, which would import workers legally, also demonstrates they are against more than illegal immigration. What part of the word illegal have these people forgotten?

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Thursday, May 25, 2006

It's Not Petco Park, It's The Weak Hitting Padres

Since the Padres began playing at Petco Park there have been constant complaints by the players about the difficulty of hitting there. The latest theme is that the ballpark was built for low scoring games, 2-1 or 3-2, scores like that. (Here.)

Well, here are some facts from this season's first 25 games at home:

Padres runs scored: 83 or 3.3 runs per game.
Visitors runs scored: 113 or 4.5 runs per game.

But here's where the Padres really show their weakness.

Padres homeruns: 13 or 1 homerun every 1.9 games.
Visitors homeruns: 30 or 1 homerun every 0.83 game.

It's not the park. It's the team. The Padres are a weak-hitting team. Their strengths are pitching and defense. Those are a good foundation for a winning team because good pitching and defense will keep a team in the game. But it's hitting that wins games. You can't win unless you score more than the other team.

The Padres have trouble doing that. Here are two reasons why. Vinny Castilla, the regular third baseman swings at the first pitch every time he bats. Every time! Does this guy know how to take a pitch? Maybe the coaches should force him to take a pitch once in a while. It couldn't hurt. Who cares if Castilla is a veteran? Who cares if giving him the take sign might insult him? Make the guy take a pitch! Castilla's first-pitch swings almost always end up as weak outs. Why Castilla continues to play as many games as he does is beyond me. He's practically a guaranteed out. Sure he can field, but so can Geoff Blum, and Blum can hit.

Free-swinging Mike Cameron bats second. The second hitter should be a contact hitter. Cameron strikes out way too often to bat second. But Bochy has Cameron hitting second. Who knows why? Maybe because he's a veteran and Bochy loves veterans. I don't know. I can't figure it out. Can anybody? Drop Cameron down in the lineup.

Here's a thought. Why not set the lineup using on-base percentage to decide who bats when? Have the player with the highest OBP bat first down to the lowest batting eighth on the theory that players who get on base more often should bat more often and the players who get on base more often should bat near each other to start a rally and keep it going. Here's how the Padres regular lineup would look.

Giles RF 396
Roberts LF 360
Piazza C 348
Cameron CF 333
Barfield 2B 306
Greene SS 304
Gonzalez 1B 291
Castilla 3B 271

Better yet:

Giles RF 396
Roberts LF 360
Piazza C 348
Cameron CF 333
Blum 3B 320
Barfield 2B 306
Greene SS 304
Gonzalez 1B 291

Too mechanical for you? Fine, flip Roberts and Giles so that Roberts can make things happen with his baserunning.

Here's a typical Bochy lineup.

Roberts LF 360
Cameron CF 333
Giles RF 396
Piazza C 348
Greene SS 304
Gonzalez 1B 291
Castilla 3B 271
Barfield 2B 306

Bochy also mechanically replaces players in the lineup based on when the regular player hits not when the replacment player should hit. For instance, Eric Young usually spells Roberts and bats first. This despite the fact that Young's OBP is a paltry 254 and his batting average is 189. Is there an intelligent thought behind that tactic?

-tdr

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Monday, May 22, 2006

The Vengeance Of Jack Bauer.

Tonight on 24 Jack plays the role of Inigo Montoya of The Princess Bride. My name is Jack Bauer. You killed my friends. Prepare to die.

First on the list: Henderson aka Evil Mr. Robocop, shot dead on the deck of the Russian submarine. Peter Weller's character was as competent a bad guy as Keifer Sutherland's Jack Bauer is as a good guy. Henderson died defeated but unbowed. When it was clear that Jack intended to kill him, his last words weren't a sniveling plea for life. No, instead he answered Jack's accusation that he killed Jack's friends with a contemptuous sneer, "that's the way it's done, Jack." Defiant to the last.

Second on the list: Bad President, who got some action with the First Lady in the hour before his downfall. She hated him by then so presumably she laid back and thought of the Constitution while Bad President was going at it. To get to Bad President, Jack commandeered Marine One and kidnapped him. Jack looked Dukakis-like wearing the helicopter pilot helmet and a bit like Rick Moranis's character in Spaceballs, Dark Helmet. Bad President performed pretty well when Jack put a gun to his head, but he just wasn't as smart as he thought he was, and certainly not smart enough to beat Jack Bauer, especially when Jack is helped by cyberspy extraordinaire Chloe.

It's a real shame that Bad President got caught. He grew into his role as a bad guy and was showing real potential by the finale. This season he acted "for the good of the country." It would have been interesting to see an entire season of him acting without restraint, trying to take over the country, and make himself the first American emperor, acting without pretense .

Instead, this season's bad guys get rolled up and the prospects of a sophisticated political thriller next season vanish. Jack gets kidnapped and beaten by the Chinese, who want him for killing their consul last season. So the producers end the season with a standard cliffhanger and Jack is on his way to China on a freighter named "Shanghai." Get it? Maybe Jackie Chan will rescue him. We can hope.

Frankly, 24 is becoming a bit of a joke. Cyberspy Chloe can do anything by pushing a few buttons on her magic computer. Jack's exploits in the field are starting to resemble those of Saturday serial action heroes who escape every week from impossible situations.

And yet. And yet. It's going to be a long wait until next season.

-tdr

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Shoved To The Back Of The Immigration Queue: So What!

It ought to be obvious but it's not. Immigration policy is not about right and wrong, fairness or unfairness, upholding the law or undermining it, or doing what is best for individual immigrants or even individual Americans. Immigration policy is about the national interest of the United States, and immigration policy should serve the national interest.

John Derbyshire hits on that point on National Review Online's The Corner
"Immigrants, legal and otherwise, are human beings and should be treated fairly and humanely. U.S. govt. policies, however, should be directed towards what is good for America and our citizens, not towards improving the lives of foreigners, least of all foreigners who ignore the established procedures for seeking entry to our country." (Here.)
That immigration policy should be about America's interests and not the interests of foreigners is the reason it doesn't make one bit of difference if the consequence of legalizing the illegal aliens who work in this country already is that some foreigners get shoved to the back of some line for citizenship or Green Cards. Nor does it make a bit of difference that legalizing illegal aliens would be rewarding their flouting our immigration laws.

Like it or not, and many Americans apparently don't, Mexico is our neighbor. Not China, not England. Our immigration policy should at least take into account that fact. It should also take into account that Mexico is not our enemy and that Mexicans come here to work and contribute their labor to increase America's wealth, even the illegals.

-tdr

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Saturday, May 20, 2006

Not A Good Day For Baseball.

Today Barry Bonds tied Babe Ruth for the title of most career homeruns by a left-handed hitter. (Here.) Too bad.

Here's what Bonds had to say about his own accomplishment:

"This is a great accomplishment because of Babe Ruth and what he brought to the game of baseball and his legacy in the game of baseball," Bonds said. "This and a World Series ring to me would be the ultimate. He changed the game of baseball. ... It's just great to be in the same class."

If only he were.

Bonds is a great baseball player who belongs to a small class of great players and the sooner he joins them the better. We'll say it again. What's good enough for Shoeless Joe Jackson and Pete Rose is good enough for Barry Bonds.

-tdr

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Friday, May 19, 2006

Pat Buchanan's Republican Party.

In Peggy Noonan's latest column she wonders what motivates President Bush to challenge his base on illegal immigration. (Here.) She concludes "I continue to believe the administration's problem is not that the base lately doesn't like it, but that the White House has decided it actually doesn't like the base. That's a worse problem. It's hard to fire a base. Hard to get a new one."

Actually, that isn't the problem. The problem for the President isn't that he dislikes his base. The problem is that his base is so completely and utterly wrong on immigration reform.

But there's a larger problem facing the President and the Republican Party. That problem is the conservative base's decision to abandon President Bush.

It's sad really. President Bush has done more for conservatives and Republicans than any President in recent history. More even than Reagan who won two terms as President but who could do nothing about the Democratic Party's stranglehold on Congress. But in their hearts conservatives would rather lose power than further compromise their principles by continuing to support the President's compassionate conservatism.

Hurrican Katrina destroyed the Bush Presidency. First, the live televised government failure ruined the President's standing with nonpartisan Americans. Second, the President's promise to spend whatever it takes to rebuild New Orleans caused conservatives to reexamine their allegiance to the President and decide they made a mistake. He's a big spender, don't you know. Six years of big spending didn't do it. No, it was his promise to rebuild New Orleans that finally led unmodified conservatives to conclude that maybe President Bush is more compassionate than he is conservative.

Since Katrina one event after another has divided conservatives from the President. Illegal immigration is only the latest issue to do so. It shouldn't. The President's comprehensive plan is reasonable and within the tradition of the Republican Party's spiritual grandfather, Ronald Reagan.

But conservatives today have abandoned the positive and inclusive spirit that animated Reagan's politics. Instead conservatives have embraced the negative and divisive spirit of the Republican Party's angry little brother, Patrick Buchanan. Buchanan, for those who only know him as an occasional MSNBC commentator, ran for President more than once on an isolationist, anti-immigrant, and protectionist platform. He lost badly each time.

Things have changed. America finds herself at war abroad in a conflict that seems without end. More and more Americans just want to call it a day and bring the troops home. At home, many Americans have come to view illegal immigrants as an invading army to be repelled at all costs. In the middle of a booming economy, Americans are insecure about their own prospects as Lou Dobbs relentlessly demagogues on TV about a "War on the Middle Class." Buchanan's time has come.

-tdr

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Sunday, May 07, 2006

Padres Living Dead Watch

The Padres have turned their early season around with another winning streak in May. Last year in May the team went 22-8 on the way to winning the National League West. This year is looking like a repeat, with a terrible April followed by a terrific May.

Still, it's way too soon to unfurl the 2006 pennant flags. The Padres are 6-0 in May and on a 7 game winning streak against teams with a combined won-lost record of 42-48 (Dodgers, Giants, Cubs). The Pads are beating up on losers.

So, for the moment the Padres death watch is over and the team has joined the living dead. If they can win against winners, they can join the world of the living.

-tdr

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Wednesday, May 03, 2006

Moussaoui Verdict: It's Up To The Inmates Now.

The federal jury weighing the fate of Zacarias Moussaoui today decided not to execute the Al Qaida terrorist but to send him to prison for life without parole. (Here.) I will not take this occasion to criticize or praise the jury's decision. As a lawyer who does criminal appeals, I know that jury decisions can't reasonably be judged by those who did not hear the evidence or the instructions on the law given in the trial.

Moussaoui and his fellow jihadists consider themselves to be soldiers fighting a war against the United States. The mistake we make is in treating any of them as ordinary criminals subject to criminal prosecution rather than as warriors to be killed or as war criminals to be prosecuted in military court.

It's too late for the United States to backtrack on its decision to try Moussauoi as an ordinary criminal. So Moussaoui will go to federal prison for the rest of his life, however long or short that might be. He'll be serving his time alongside Americans. Perhaps one of them will do what America couldn't bring itself to do and deal with Moussauoi as the enemy soldier he considers himself to be.

-tdr

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Tuesday, May 02, 2006

Walking And Chewing Gum At The Same Time.

So it turns out that last November a top al Qaeda leader was captured in Pakistan and whisked out of the country for interrogation somewhere by somebody. (Here.) He is wanted by Syria and the United States. The source for AP's story appears to be an unidentified American official. Presumably the US has something to do with the terrorist's capture or detention but the government is not saying. Not bad for a country "distracted" by fighting in Iraq.

-tdr

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Monday, May 01, 2006

Uno De Mayo: A Lonely Lunch Hour In San Diego.

Mister Americano's office is half a block away from the Mexican consular office in San Diego. Interestingly, the diplomats were on the job. But the great little taco stand across the street was closed as was the best deli on the block, which is owned and operated by a legal immigrant family from Mexico. Lunch was a sad time today.

Mister Americano blames Lou Dobbs. Today's boycott is a backlash against the politics exemplified and stirred up by his constant and intemperate Mexico bashing. Thanks for nothing, Lou.

-tdr

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