Showing posts with label The p3 motto. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The p3 motto. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 20, 2016

A quantum of umbrage: What part of "shall make no law" is too complicated for you?


The Second Amendment may be a grammatical dog's breakfast, but the First Amendment couldn't be clearer if it was a buttonhook in the well water.

Which is what is so irritating about this:
The Post and Courier of Charleston reported Tuesday afternoon that state Rep. Mike Pitts (R) had introduced a bill called the “South Carolina Responsible Journalism Registry Law.” Reporter Gavin Jackson posted a summary of the bill — which includes “fines and criminal penalties for violation of the chapter” — on Twitter, but wrote that the full text was not yet available.
Naturally, if Rep. Pitts wanted to register only <airquotes> responsible </airquotes> gun owners, his political career would be over in a New York minute, so to speak.

Once again: Even First Amendment purists like me accept certain reasonable restrictions: Time, place, and manner; libel, slander, and perjury; false advertising; clear and present danger (once again, you Tom Clancy fanboys, a First Amendment trigger, not a Second). The First Amendment brought down Nixon. What has the Second Amendment done for us lately, except makes Starbucks and federal bird sanctuaries a safe haven for gun-totin', Constitution-misquotin'. self-deludin', snack-beggin' yahoos?

Meanwhile, back in the state that fired first on Fort Sumter, they're worrying that unregistered journalists are the existential threat to our nation, not the seditionists who are illegally bunked in at a federal bird sanctuary in Oregon -- and no one will make the latter face justice because they're armed to the teeth.

Coincidence? I think not.

I cite the p3 motto: May the First Amendment always triumph over the Second Amendment.

Thursday, August 7, 2014

Remember when your doctor's communication with you was privileged?

Remember when cell phones were the size of bricks and were called "cell phones?"

In the wake of the Newtown CT school shooting in late 2012 (yes, it has been that long; you could be forgiven for losing track because of all the changes that haven't happened), this blog adopted the p3 motto: May the First Amendment always triumph over the Second.

And this is one of its corrolaries: If the only way your ideas can get any traction is by shutting down public discussion of any alternative, then your ideas probably aren't very good in the first place.

It hasn't been a great year for the motto. Most recently there was this:

Several years ago, the American Medical Association advised doctors to ask their patients about firearms and “educate patients to the dangers of firearms to children” in the name of public health. But doctors in Florida may be suppressed from giving this medical advice, now that a federal appeals court upheld a Florida law that became known as the “physician gag rule” because it punishes doctors for talking about guns.

The ruling could have major implications as policymakers examine gun violence as a public health issue. The National Rifle Association-backed law it upheld imposes severe limits on when doctors can ask their patients about guns or keep records in their patients’ charts about firearm safety. Doctors who are found to have violated the provision risk sanctions or loss of their license.

(Have you noticed that, when something like this happens, you just naturally assume it's either Arizona or Florida? But I digress)

The public health consequences of this gag order on physicians are obvious. Asking about guns in the home is surely as relevant to child safety as asking if there's a safety latch on the cabinet under the sink where the rat poison and bleach are.

Guns and reproductive health: two things that right-wingers don't want doctors talking about. And yet, when it comes to little Johnnies packing on the sidewalk, suddenly they're all about the importance of free and open exchange of ideas. Go figure.

Tbogg has unearthed the logic behind the many right-wing responses to child gun deaths that take the form, again and again, of opposing any restrictions (or even public information) on guns:
There is only one 2nd Amendment, but you can always have another kid.
It's a variant of the Kaspar Gutman principle.

Saturday, May 4, 2013

Oh yeah. And this was 43 years ago today.

Funny how, when guys like this talk about taking up arms to defend themselves against the government, they never seem to be thinking of things like this.


Friday, May 3, 2013

Quote of the day: It is now time, boys and girls


I am very, very tired of hearing any commentary on this issue that begins, "I am a lifetime NRA member, and I support..." etc. etc. I also am very, very tired of hearing about all these millions of NRA members who are deeply disturbed at the radical turn their organization has taken. It is now time, boys and girls. This is your clubhouse. You now have to decide if you still want to belong to it when, in the aftermath of the Newtown massacre and the shameful legislative failure on background checks, the organization selects as its new president a neo-Confederate yahoo who counsels armed sedition and whom, on the issue of race, you don't exactly need the Enigma Machine to decode. Step up, people. Step up or shut up.
- Charlie Pierce, laying down the law, so to speak, for “have-my-cake-and-eat-it-too” NRA members who are simply shocked! – shocked! – at the direction that has been openly taken since 1977 by the organization to which they nevertheless freely continue to pay dues.

Thursday, May 2, 2013

A quantum of umbrage: What's the Second Amendment done for you lately?

(Update: Thanks so much to Batocchio for (1) carrying on the generous Jon Swift tradition of taking a moment at the end of the year to give a shout-out to blogs who are on the dark side of the street, and (2) keeping us here at p3 on the list.

I was only allowed to submit one piece for the honor, but I really liked this one, too: Toward a basic rhetoric for right-wingers.You can decide.

I recommend that you patronize all of the fine blogging operations on Batocchio's list.)



Okay, I'm at least as much of as absolutist about the First Amendment as, oh, say these guys profess to be about the Second Amendment. (Little Johnnies like these are the reason I refer to Indiana as “the state where I was born, but not the state I'm from.”)

Still, I accept limits on my First Amendment rights, for the sake of the greater good – manner, place, and time, libel, slander, false advertising, perjury, clear and present danger (which, Tom Clancy fanboys should be reminded, is a First Amendment trigger, not a Second). And I'm willing to concede that not everyone who disagrees with what I say is trying to censor me or take away my First Amendment freedoms. In fact, as you might well expect, I stand by Nothstine's Law of Free Speech:
If defending free speech doesn't hurt, at least a little, then you're probably not doing it right.
That's why I support the right of people in the Old Confederacy to sport the Confederate battle flag on public buildings, pickup trucks, T-shirts, dorm room walls, and garages: The uglier the sentiment expressed, after all, the more it likely needs First Amendment protection. (“Heritage” justifications be damned. See below.) Plus, there's a sort of public health angle: Confederate flags serve the same useful purpose as Hazmat warning signs: Danger: Toxic Environment Ahead.

So, if even their bete noir the ACLU will accept limitations on the First Amendment for the greater good, why won't the tea-party conservatives, or the NRA, or its hirelings in Congress, accept any limits – any! any at all! – on the Second Amendment?

Speaking as an editor – and a native speaker of American English – it's undoubtedly the worst-written amendment among the original ten.
As passed by the Congress:
A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.
As ratified by the States and authenticated by Thomas Jefferson, Secretary of State:
A well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed

The reason it's such a grammatical dog's breakfast is that it went through some fast and furious last-minute changes:
The real reason the Second Amendment was ratified, and why it says "State" instead of "Country" (the Framers knew the difference - see the 10th Amendment), was to preserve the slave patrol militias in the southern states, which was necessary to get Virginia's vote. Founders Patrick Henry, George Mason, and James Madison were totally clear on that . . . and we all should be too.

In the beginning, there were the militias. In the South, they were also called the "slave patrols," and they were regulated by the states.

In Georgia, for example, a generation before the American Revolution, laws were passed in 1755 and 1757 that required all plantation owners or their male white employees to be members of the Georgia Militia, and for those armed militia members to make monthly inspections of the quarters of all slaves in the state. The law defined which counties had which armed militias and even required armed militia members to keep a keen eye out for slaves who may be planning uprisings. [...] It's the answer to the question raised by the character played by Leonardo DiCaprio in Django Unchained when he asks, "Why don't they just rise up and kill the whites?" If the movie were real, it would have been a purely rhetorical question, because every southerner of the era knew the simple answer: Well regulated militias kept the slaves in chains.
That's the original intent of the Second Amendment as it was finally, lop-earedly phrased. And that's why it has that clunky preface – which, for almost any other part of the Constitution would be taken dead-seriously by the originalists on the Supreme Court, but not here. Antonin Scalia, please pick up the white courtesy phone. Antonin Scalia, the white courtesy phone, please.

So let's review:

The First Amendment helped bring Vietnam War to an end a little sooner. It's protected our freedom to read what we choose to read. (Same for our children. It's always "for the children," isn't it?) It's protected students' rights to express their social and political views. It's protected the right of American Nazis to demonstrate on the streets of Skokie, IL, a Chicago suburb filled with Holocaust survivors. It's protected satirists and parodists from the people whose dignity might be offended by being parodied or satirized. It's protected individuals' right to dissent and to take unpopular opinions. It's protected our right to privacy and anonymity. It's prevented access to public forums and venues being denied simply on the basis of religion.

And what has the Second Amendment done for us lately? Well, it helped Southern whites put down slave rebellions, and it's made it nearly impossible to prevent well-armed whackjobs from shooting up schools.

Congratulations.

About the only thing that the hard-core gun lovers and I have in common is this: I think that the correct response to unpopular speech is more free speech. They think the correct response to gun violence is more guns.

Actually, they think the correct response to anything is more guns.

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Quote of the day: Today in gun rights


I can recall moments during the previous administration in which people's First Amendment rights were curtailed when they wore the wrong T-shirt to an appearance by the president. I can remember Bong Hits 4 Jesus, too. But an estranged spouse has a right to a deadly weapon up until the point when he actually shoots it at the person who has sought legal refuge?
- Charlie Pierce, citing a perfect illustration of this blog's motto: The First Amendment should always triumph over the Second Amendment.

The First Amendment has been the guarantor of our most important rights: to know when our nation is lying to us about a war our people are dying in, to protect our children's right to read freely, to disagree publicly with the politicians we've elected when we think they've gone wrong.

Seriously -- for all the breast-beating of its extremist supporters, what has the Second Amendment ever done for us that can match that?

By the way, the stories CP mentions get the p3 treatment here and here.

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Our new p3 motto

This blog has a new motto:
May the First Amendment always triumph over the Second.
As a corollary* to that:
The proper response to free speech you don't like is more free speech.
And as a corollary to that:
If the only way your ideas can get any traction is by shutting down public discussion of any alternative, then your ideas probably aren't very good.
The inspiration to share this formulation with you was a a Charlie Pierce post this morning, cataloging the various enterprising efforts by Republican state legislators from a very-predictable region of the country to ban discussion of things they don't like, such as gun control, or the notion of sustainability in energy policy.

Nota bene: Not shut down gun control or sustainable energy policy, but even the public discussion of those topics.   

(It goes beyond the reach of Pierce's news round-up today, but we could also add evolution, LGBT rights, and women's right to control their own bodies to the list of topics that conservatives have tried, by hook or by crook, to outlaw from public discussion -- and in the case of women's reproductive health, even from private discussion between a woman and her physician).

Pierce also generously traces the you-aren't-allowed-to-talk-about-this impulse back some 176 years in American political discourse, and the results generally confirm our point: The ideas that need this kind of anti-First Amendment (we may as well say anti-American) protection tend to be the ones that are on the losing side of history to begin with.

Pierce's post goes on the Readings list.


* Yes, yes. Strictly speaking, theorems (not mottoes) have corollaries. A less-dedicated supporter of the First Amendment might say, "Shut up." But precisely because of this corollary, I say instead, "Go start your own blog." See how I did that right there?

Sunday, February 17, 2013

Sunday morning toons: p3 proudly presents The NRA Fourteen!


May the First Amendment always win out over the Second.

Last week I passed along the news that over a third of the people in the Journalist category on the NRA's enemies list were political cartoonists. I didn't have the complete list then, but thanks to Josh Cavna at Comic Riffs I do now:
The NRA Fourteen:

Steve Benson, Tony Auth, Jim Borgman, Stuart Carlson, Mike Lane, Mike Luckovich, Jimmy Margulies, Jim Morin, Mike Peters, Kevin Siers, Ed Stein, Tom Toles, Garry Trudeau, and Don Wright.
And as Association of American Editorial Cartoonists president Matt Wuerker points out:
When Nixon drew up his ‘enemies’ list,’ it included just one cartoonist: Paul Conrad from the Los Angeles Times. I was lucky enough to know Conrad and I remember that he was far prouder of making Nixon's list than his three Pulitzer Prizes.

From one to fourteen in a generation. You could see this as evidence that the whole thing's turning into a free-for-all, or as proof that political cartoonists are even more a force to be reckoned with than they were a generation ago. I go with the latter.

p3's tribute to Paul Conrad is here, by the way. Also, I'm proud to note that p3 has featured all of the artists on the NRA's enemies list in the Sunday toon review except Jim Borgman, who took an early-retirement buyout while the Sunday toon review feature was still in the larval stage.

Also, hey NRA -- no women on your oddly-dated list of enemy cartoonists? What's that about? Figure they all carry cute little pearl-handled revolvers in their purses and think the NRA is just dreamy? Think again, boys.


Oh yes, and the President gave his fifth State of the Union address, which it took about five Republicans to rebut; the Pope gave his two weeks' notice, which may give him time to get the hell out of the Vatican before the second Prada shoe drops; and the meteors and shooting stars around the globe in the last couple of days probably have nothing to do with 2012 DA14 asteroid passing near Earth; and one of the three or four craziest people on the planet who isn't currently representing an Old Confederacy state in the US Congress was testing nuclear weapons this week; and it's official -- without the Fourth and Fifth Amendments we're down to eight in the Bill of Rights.

And oh, how we love Senator Elizabeth Warren.


Today's toons were selected by the same humorless people who complied the NRA's enemies list -- except that we got ones they didn't like, or didn't get, or both -- from the week's pages at GoComics, McClatchyDC.com, Slate, Time, About.com, Daryl Cagle, and other fine sources.

p3 Picks of the Week: Mike Luckovich, Jack Ohman, JIm Morin, Nick Anderson, Adam Zyglis, Lisa Benson, Pat Bagley, R. J. Matson, Joe Heller, John Darkow, Mike Wuerker, Jen Sorenson, and Monte Wolverton.

p3 Best of Show: John Cole.

p3 Certificate of Harmonic Toon Convergence: Joel Pett and Kevin Siers.

p3 Award for Best Adaptation from Another Medium: Adam Zyglis.

p3 World Toon Review: Cam Cardow (Canada).


Ann Telnaes scrapes off the scum.


Mark Fiore watches as Obama unleash his inner Richard Nixon.


Taiwan's Next Media Animation brings you the newest Burger King Challenge. Twenty-five years ago, it was “Where's the beef?” In 2012, it's What's the beef?


Tom Tomorrow celebrates the end of the Fifth Amendment, brought to you by the same man who finalized the end of the Fourth Amendment. Quite a resume-builder.


Keith Knight reflects on what's really worth beong afraid of.


Tom the Dancing Bug presents the (no-doubt relieving) News of the World.


Red Meat's Ted Johnson and Nick get nostalgic.


Who's the most remarkable extra-special kind of fellow?  All of the Popeye theatrical cartoons from Fleischer Studios were called one-reelers (about 7 minutes long) except for three: Popeye Meets Ali Baba's Forty Thieves, Aladdin and his Wonderful Lamp (both of which borrowed from 1001 Arabian Nights), and Popeye the Sailor Meets Sinbad the Sailor. Two-reelers all, and in Technicolor. The latter was directed by Dave Fleisher in 1936, with voice work by Jack Mercer, Mae Questel, and Gus Wickie, and music and lyrics by Sammy Timberg, Sammy Lerner, and Bob Rothberg, plus animation by Willard Bowsky, George Germanetti, Edward Nolan, Lillian Friedman, and the magnificently-named Orestes Calpini. Many of the scenes used modeled sets to create 3-D effects. Popeye meets Sinbad was nominated for a short-subject Oscar, but lost to Disney's forgettable Silly Symphony: The Country Cousin. .

If your browser won't display the embedded version, click here


The p3 Big Oregon Toon Block:

Matt Bors points out one way to reduce the size of government: Let the Exsecutive branch take over the juicier parts of the Judiciary and the Legislative. Seriously -- what could wrong?

Jesse Springer wishes happy skating to Governor Kitzhaber on the PERS reform he needs to make his budget plans work:




Test your toon-captioning skills at The New Yorker's weekly caption-the-cartoon contest. (Rules here.)