I have spent the past several days at orientation meetings at my new place of employment. I am coming in with tenure (just as I did the last time), so I am not concerned about tenure directly. I...
The Department of State Report on "Mutual Assured Stability: Essential Components and Near-Term Actions" (PDF) deserves a thorough analysis.Japanese exports are down, but the country's growth...
William Pesek argues that the recent surge in corn prices might lead to economic disaster. Alisa Neman Hood on Chinese shale gas. Josh Foust argues that Rosa Brooks gets the key story of the NSS, drones, and the Osh crisis wrong: "Sadly, they did turn into a more serious cleavage. But more than the cleavage resulting in atrocities that the U.S. was unwilling to assist with (the U.S. didn’t even send humanitarian aid for the Uzbek refugees who fled the carnage) is the bias inherent to how the NSS was trying to understand the situation. In 2010 there were U.S. government employees either in or...
Andrew Sullivan's blog has been running a series of reader reactions on the subject of the Olympics and nationalism. A recent entry:Gabby Douglas' gold medal is being hailed all over the place as a first for an African-American gymnast. But I believe it's actually much more than that: Gabby is the first black athlete from anywhere to win the title, and one of very few to compete for it. I'm a good liberal, and all for the term "African-American" in its proper context, but in this case it seems to shrink the scale of Ms. Douglas's first - and America's. (Afro.com covers it here.) The fact...
Charles Hill has a storied and impressive career, successful books to his name, and a prestigious position at Yale University. He's also repeating historical tripe:"The way the world through almost all of history has been ordered is through empires. The empire was the normal unit of rule. So it was the Chinese empire, the Mughal empire, the Persian empire, and the Roman empire, the Mayan empire."Â What changed this was the Thirty Years War in Europe in the 17th century. "That was a war between the Holy Roman Empire and states, and states were new. They had come forward in northern Italy in...
Jonathan Martin in the outlet that makes CNN look like The Monkey Cage.The South, like the rest of the country, is a complicated place. It’s at once the heart of the Obama resistance but also a region that is crucial to his reelection hopes. If he loses Florida, North Carolina and Virginia, it’s a virtual certainty that he’ll be a one-term president. Look for no further explanation as to why the Democratic convention is being held in Charlotte, the prototypical New South city, than the importance of North Carolina to the Obama White House.Oh, for the love of Odin, Tyr, and Freyja....
Adam Elkus and Kelsey Atherton discuss strategic studies and speculative fiction.
I think it highly unlikely that I will ever see anything geekier in my entire life (via PM). Former MSFS student Kristina Wong reports on Secretary Clinton's trip to Africa. USIP has a new paper (PDF) on the ingredients for successful democratic revolts. I suspect at least one of my PhD students will find something objectionable content. Greg Jaffe at the Washington Post reports on debates over US warplanning that treats China as a potential foe. Maybe the US could say that it is simply planning against 'non-state threats' in the Asia-Pacific? (via LFC)The ultimate US bomb database (via...
 Given last week's review of Redshirts, I thought I would provide this Comic-con video (shaky, NSFW graphic in the background) that helps to illustrate the humor behind Scalzi's book. It is a skit written and enacted by Scalzi and a sci-fi friend [ed: Patrick Rothfuss, a 'minor' player in the current SF & Fantasy scene, as pointed out by none other than Steve's better half] : And, yes, the shaky video is an essential part of the post-Comic-con experience.
SURVEY: Ladies: Do you like having the option of wearing pants, do you enjoy taking time off after giving birth and do you like that people don't freak out if you have to breast feed in public, is voting something you're glad you can do- what about getting a university education, short hair, tampons, female doctors, bras that don't torture, or working in fields like engineering? Gentlemen: Is it nice to know that the women you may date will likely have an education, opinions, and that if you choose to get married you're not going to be expected to be the sole family earner? Do you like not...