links for 2009-03-18

  • "[A] panel at the annual meeting of the Conference on College Composition and Communication considered the question of âEmpty Rhetoric and Academic Bullshit: Strategies for Compositionâs Self-Representation in National Arenas.â In the discussion, participants differed on how much of a problem their language is â and because this is a meeting of language and rhetoric experts, the discussion referenced issues that were personal to scholarsâ work and values."
  • "Sure, pissing about AIGâs bonuses is populist grandstanding on some level. Beneath the momentary gratification of looking for villains, however, there are some more serious principles at stake. If youâre the kind of person who argued that folks who take economic risks should accept the consequences and that labor markets dictate the value of skilled employees, you should be the first person throwing rotten tomatoes at bonus payments to any managers at any of the bailed-out companies. The companies themselves are the front lines where risk and markets are being tested. "
  • "The most charitable way of putting the anti-abortion argument is that a women who gets pregnant via unprotected, consenting sex should have to live with the consequences of the decision she made. I bet youâd get close to fifty percent agreement with that statement if you put it to a nationwide poll. If you phrased it a little differently, you might get a different response: âPregnancy and childbirth are fitting punishments for women who have unprotected sex.â"
  • A circumcision is a pretty intense procedure (Pieter introduced us to the process with a sock, his fist, and a very large wrench, thank you Pieter), especially for a rural clinic. Everything is very complicated relative to the US operating room in which Pieter practiced - sterilization, trained assistants, anesthesia, communication, etc. Despite the complications, all the procedures ended well and I think everyone was happy after the fact.
Tags
Categories

More like this

weir3 / Instant Mentor / Advice / Home - Inside Higher Ed "Unless youâre a botanist or geologist thereâs no pedagogical reason to teach outside. The first gorgeous day of spring semester will bring a clamor to meet underneath the spreading maple students spy from the window. Donât do it! That…
News: Questioning Endowment Losses - Inside Higher Ed "High-risk, high-reward policies heavily influenced by Wall Street helped some college endowments grow to several times their original sizes, but they also did damage to employees, local communities and the global financial system, a new…
A New Spacecraft to Explore on Waves of Light - NYTimes.com "About a year from now, if all goes well, a box about the size of a loaf of bread will pop out of a rocket some 500 miles above the Earth. There in the vacuum it will unfurl four triangular sails as shiny as moonlight and only barely…
Wait, Who Has Sinister Connections to Insiders That Influence Their Reporting? « Easily Distracted "[...]Al-Jazeera! Al-Jazeera, with its mysterious (sinister!) agenda, its undisclosed connections, its desire to influence events! As opposed to what? The New York Times, the Washington Post, the…