Links for Tuesday 12 June 2012
- Killing Our Citizens Without Trial by David Cole | The New York Review of Books
- On drone killings: “As long as the Obama administration insists on the power to kill the people it was elected to represent — and to do so in secret, on the basis of secret legal memos — can we really claim that we live in a democracy ruled by law?”
- Escape into Whiteness by Brent Staples | The New York Review of Books
- Some of the details of 19th and early 20th century courts etc deciding whether specific mixed-race individuals count as white or coloured are bizarre, as if part of some kind of epic theatre piece.
- The Brilliant Music of Ravel by Charles Rosen | The New York Review of Books
- As someone who’s only awareness of Ravel is what I think of as the flouncy Torville & Dean ‘Bolero’, I love the descriptions here (especially in section 3) of exactly why Ravel’s music was avant-garde. Unfortunately, subscribers only.
- Predators and Robots at War by Christian Caryl | The New York Review of Books
- “The US Air Force now trains more UAV operators each year than traditional pilots.” “There are already more [military] robots operating on the ground (15,000) than in the air (7,000).” “…a pilotless aircraft … ‘has the same rights as if a person were inside it, … official policy.’”
- The Court: A Talk with Judge Richard Posner by Eric J. Segall | The New York Review of Books
- Interesting (and subscribers only) but saving it for this quote: “We have a political system in which the definition of a gaffe is telling the truth.” Also, for some reason I love reading about the American judicial system.
- What Happened at the Macondo Well? by Peter Maass | The New York Review of Books
- I like the parallels drawn between the oil and banking industries: “lax government regulation, corporate profits despite the risks, a fawning press”, disasters blamed on rogue companies rather than industry-wide problems.
- School ‘Reform’: A Failing Grade by Diane Ravitch | The New York Review of Books
- I suspect much of this angry-making article applies to UK education too. Surely anyone working on, or funding, policies for education really should spend at least a few weeks with a variety of teachers and children.
- Elif Batuman · Diary: Pamuk’s Museum · LRB 7 June 2012
- I hadn’t heard of this. Orhan Pamuk made a museum of objects belonging to characters from his novel ‘The Museum of Innocence’, which he’d originally intended to be written as a museum catalogue. Now he’s writing the catalogue for this museum.