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Gentrification, The Middle East and More: A Weekend's Worth of Opinion

Weekend and Monday Opinion from the LA Times:

Eric Franceschi: Lured Virtually Into the Real Finland
Why I've spent three years staring down Rovakatu Street.

Niall Ferguson: Look! Up in the sky! It's America!
Tony Blair doesn't share Europe's vision of American power, and he's right.

Zama Coursen-Neff: The Taliban's War on Education
Schoolgirls are still under fire in Afghanistan.

Ernest W. Lefever: There Once Was a Man Who Loved Limericks
An ode to the humble, and often vulgar, poetic form.

Editorials

Playground Reform of the LAUSD
Politicians are acting childish while arguing over a bad plan.

How the West Was Sold
Auctioning off government land and giving the money to communities robs the federal treasury and could waste natural resources.

No Free Metro Rides
The mayor's idea for free transit for a day would be costly and ineffective.

Selected Weekend Commentary:

Tom Slater: The Downside of Upscale
The battle over skid row is part of a long war between the poor and those who would displace them.

Caleb Carr: Why Good Countries Fight Dirty Wars
Think democracies wage clean wars? Think again.

Douglas Johnson: Where a Porn Palace Stood
Down-at-the-heels neighborhoods are spiffing up for success.

Judith Yaphe: Iraq Isn't About Us Anymore
The U.S. has few options in Iraq.

Diane Ravitch: Bill Gates, the Nation's Superintendent of Schools
His foundation has big clout in American education. How will it wield its power?

Gregory Rodruigez: Resilence Among the Ruins
How do people cope with life in a war zone? Through a delicate balance of memory and denial.

Tamar Jacoby: Amnesty Is Not a Four-Letter Word
Voters don't like amnesty, but they'll swallow some form of it to fix immigration.

Meghan Daum: Sweating Your Way to Enlightenment
The social politics of climate control.

Israel, Immigrants and More: Wednesday's Page

Wednesday’s dispatches from the editorial pages:

Michael B. Oren:Israel: One Nation Under Attack
In 1982, many Israelis protested their military's involvement in Lebanon. This time they're united.

Max Boot: Bush Didn't Start the Mideast Fire
Forget the pundits. You can't blame every conflagration on Washington.

Erin Aubry Kaplan: Fed Up With Ghettotainment
Blacks and Hollywood need a fresh vision.

Mike Armstrong: These Plots Weren't Revealed
Newspapers can keep a secret. Remember "The Crying Game"?

Editorials

Nobody Wants Free Trade
WTO collapse shows that there is no leadership on -- or constituency for -- erasing trade barriers.

DWP Overheats
Power company needs to do a better job avoiding transformer meltdowns.

When Immigrants Become Humans
Cable documentary shows that illegal immigrants and Minutemen are people, too.

Sex and Exit Exams on the Same Page? You bet

Tuesday’s musings:

Joel Stein:Secret Bible Verse Foretells Housing Crash, Spawns New Diet Craze and Scares a Porn Star Straight
This column is made for the web. Come on, you know you want to e-mail it to your mom.

Reza Aslan: Hezbollah Is Nobody's Puppet
If the Bush administration thinks this is a proxy war, it's making a tragic mistake.

Richard J. Riordan: Don't Give Exit Exam a Pass
Letting California high schoolers off the hook sets them up for failure, says L.A.'s former mayor.

Anne Taylor Fleming: Sex With the Boss? Honey, You Know Better
A 19-year-old's high-profile affair with the husband of model Christie Brinkley is typical, and so is her kiss-and-tell approach.

Editorials

Rice's High-Wire Diplomacy
Secretary of State should act, but not just for action's sake.

Do City Politicos Understand Shame?
Campaign violations should be treated as serious business, not as another excuse to raise money.

Evading the Exit Exam
Neither court case nor community college end-arounds should be allowed to weaken the exit exam.

Global Warming, the Middle East and Immigration: A Selection of Weekend Opinion

Weekend and Monday Opinion from the LA Times:

Naomi Oreskes: Global Warming -- Signed, Sealed and Delivered
Scientists agree: The Earth is warming, and human activities are the principal cause.

Niall Ferguson: It's Not World War III, but It Could Be Almost as Bad
Nations may not face off, but embittered ethnic groups probably will.

Bernard Haisch: Why Wiki Can Drive You Wacky
When free-form information gets it wrong, watch out.

Editorials

The Worst Deadbeat Dad
California takes belated steps to fix its broken foster care system.

High Skill, Low Priority
Though it's making fewer headlines, reform of high-skilled immigration is also urgently needed.

Global Warming on Trial
The Supreme Court is right to weigh in on the globe's hottest issue.

Selected Weekend Commentary:

David Bosco: Could This Be the Start of World War III?
As the Middle East erupts, there are plenty of scenarios for global conflagration.

Zev Chafets: I Want Falwell in My Foxhole
At the end of the day -- or at the End of Days -- Israel has plenty of time for anybody who wants to help the Jews.

Heather MacDonald: LAPD's Gangster Cops Are Gone
The city's police have changed. Why haven't its critics?

Joel Stein: Back Off, Buddy, Beirut's My Sister
Angelenos, let's step in and break up the fight between our sister cities in Lebanon and Israel. We're all family.

Mark P. Petracca: Term Limits Work Just Fine, Thank You
Experience isn't squandered just because politicians have to do the elected-office shuffle.

Gregory Rodruigez: Korea's Cross-Border Romance Curdles
South Koreans are rethinking their "sunshine" policy with the north, thanks to Kim Jong Il's bluster.

Jonathan Chait: Who Says War Has to Be Proportional?
No country meets agression with an equal amount of force.

Meghan Daum: Can't Get Enough Baby Talk
From Presidents to Celebrities, Toddlers Prove Adorable and Useful.

Alan Dershowitz: 'Civilian Casualty'? It Depends
Those who supports terrorists are not entirely innocent.

Hetch Hetchy, 424, and More: A Prelude to the Weekend

Friday’s page:

Rosa Brooks:Bush's Burned Bridges
The Middle East cataclysm is the last gasp of America's wasted post-9/11 opportunity.

Jennifer Washburn: Universities for Sale
Academics are exploiting weak conflict-of-interest policies and cashing in on their research.

Chris Ayres: The Area-Code Plot to Kill L.A.'s Housing Market
The Fed's interest-rate hikes couldn't do it, but three little digits might. Would you pay L.A. prices to live in the 424?

Irshad Manji: Moderate Islam on the March
Intolerance is grabbing the Middle East spotlight, but there's good news from Muslim reformers too.

Editorials

Keep Hetch Hetchy Underwater
Price is too high to restore Yosemite valley to its 19th-century state.

Bush Makes Nice With the NAACP
If that's all he had to say, what took so long?

Googling the Feds
Make the federal bureaucracy searchable and transparent.

Beirut, Vetos and Gambling: Thursday's Page

Thursday's musings:

Brian Winter:Beirut's Party Goes Poof
Just a few weeks ago, Lebanon's capital was a post-apocalyptic playground for rappers and ravers. So long, 50 Cent.

Daniel Pipes: Israel Has a War to Win
White House needs to help its ally take a hard line against Hezbollah, Palestinians and Iran.

Patt Morrison: Tourist Photos? Get Me Security!
Taking pictures of public spaces is becoming illegal in downtown L.A.

Jonah Goldberg: The Great U.N. Delusion
Find another false idol to worship, multilateral fetishists -- the U.N. is a failure.

Editorials

A First Veto for This?
After six-plus years, the president finally finds his pen. Too bad it was for a good bill.

Europeans' Same Old Tune on Mergers
There really is nothing much to fear in the Sony-BMG marriage.

All Bets Are Off(line)
Instead of hassling offshore gambling CEOs at airports, the feds should legalize online betting.

From Beirut to City Hall: Wednesday's Opinion

Wednesday’s thoughts:

Max Boot:Let Israel Take Off the Gloves
The true sources of terrorism need to be confronted; Syria would be a good start.

Erin Aubry Kaplan: Like the Police, Not the Cops
The Rampart report is an incentive to bridge L.A.'s divided view of law enforcement.

Saree Makdisi: Israel's Outrageous Attacks
Its blanket bombardment of Lebanon amounts to collective guilt.

Quang X. Pham: Stranded Americans Face a Second Saigon
Bungled evacuation from Lebanon brings back bad memories.

Amos Oz: Hezbollah Attacks Unite Israelis
The usual domestic divide dissolves in the face of rockets.

Editorials

Why They Fight
Israel isn't the only state that might benefit from escalating violence.

Sticks and Stones and L.A. Politics
Everyone comes off looking childish in the Bratton-Parks tiff.

Middle East, Terrorists, The School Board and the G8: Tuesdsay's Opinion

Tuesday’s thoughts and commentary:

David Grossman:Middle East: Shaken Awake by War
Israel is fighting two-headed enemies, one preaching moderation, the other hate.

Joel Stein: The Terrorists Hate Our Baby Animals
Why are the evildoers targeting America's petting zoos?

Duncan Black: Why the Left Is Furious at Lieberman
A blogger's blast at the embattled Connecticut senator. Hint: It's not just Iraq.

Editorials

Building a Better School Board
If it must continue existing as is, at least give board members a raise.

An Unsatisfying G-8 Summit
The world's poor come away disappointed yet again.

Science, Not Politics, for Stem Cells
Senate has a chance to right the right's wrong.

Weekend Opinion Roundup

Weekend and Monday Opinion from the LA Times:

W. Hodding Carter: Why we're flush with success
It's difficult to plumb the depths of the debt the civilized world owes to the brains behind our drains.

Niall Ferguson: Young, Desperate and Hot -- It's a Volatile Mix
Forget the '60s and 'Make Love, Not War.' Today's world is facing a Summer of Rage, especially in the Middle East.

David P. Barash: When Man Mated Monkey
Icky as it sounds, we mingled across species in the past, which could help us win evolution wars in the future.

Dave Fratello: Jail Won't Cure Drug Users
Proposition 36 mandated treatment to overcome addiction. A new law turns that notion on its head.

Editorials

Middle East: Response and Responsibility
Hezbollah, along with its Syrian and Iranian backers, bear the blame for the Israel-Lebanon crisis.

Hooray for Media Consolidation
It might sound counterintuitive, but Time Warner controlling 98% of L.A.'s cable market is good for consumers.

Doha's Hope for Africa
Lowering tariffs on medicine could save millions.

Selected Weekend Commentary:

William Powers: Breaking news
Shrinking circulation! Fact-checking goofs! Partisan reporting! Despite the scare headlines, journalism's sob story may still have a happy ending.

Kyle Pope: The Critics Hated 'Pirates of the Caribbean.' So What?
In movies, books, TV and theater, audiences know what they like, no matter what mainstream critics say.

Constance L. Rice: The LAPD: Back From Scandal
Police and city leaders are on the right track to changing the department's image.

Charles L. Linder: Arrest Immigrants, Flood the Courts
Congress is blind to what a border crackdown would do to the overworked judiciary.

Morton H. Halperin: Bush: Worse Than Nixon
The writer was on Richard Nixon's "enemies list," but Bush's power grab has him really worried.

Michael Skube: We're Not Soccer Suckers
Media scolds want Americans to join the global party, but we're not buying it.

Gary Hufbauer: Confronting the 'Dear Leader'
Economic sanctions coupled with offers of aid aren't much, but they're all we have in our standoff with North Korea.

Meghan Daum: Behind Batwoman's Gayness
Today's women are pigeonholed as either girly girls or lesbians.

You Really Like Us!

Here's a little slice o' love that the Times' critics and readers have been dishing our way this past week, presented in (mostly) reverse chronological order:

Ken Reich: "Hezbollah Is Controlled by Syria and Iran, Regardless What L.A. Times Says."

Mickey Kaus:

Here's a question: Is [George] Skelton such a fool that he actually believed the Democrats would pass a redistricting reform once they'd defeated Schwarzenegger's? Or was he swayed by a not-so-subtle not-so-subconscious anti-Schwarzenegger bias--perhaps a desire to deny the governor a victory, or to see him humbled, or to please layoff-prone LAT bosses who might entertain those anti-Arnold impulses?

Hugh Hewitt: "For the agenda-'journalists' at the Times, if the Bush Adminsitration is blaming Syria and Iran, Syria and Iran must be blameless."

Mark, at NewsCorpse: "In his most recent op-ed for the Los Angeles Times, Jonah Goldberg demonstrates again what a lousy trade the Times made when they picked up Goldberg in place of Robert Scheer."

Media Matters:

A Los Angeles Times article echoed the claim -- frequently advanced by conservatives -- that special counsel Patrick J. Fitzgerald's investigation into the leak of then-CIA operative Valerie Plame's identity "concluded that the disclosure did not violate a federal law protecting the identity of covert operatives." In fact, Fitzgerald has stated that he was unable to determine whether any laws were violated in the leaking of Plame's identity because his investigation was impeded by former vice presidential chief of staff I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, whom he charged with perjury and obstructing the grand jury investigation.

Patrick Frey:

I am especially interested in the parts [of an interview with Times Editor Dean Baquet] where he claims that what happened to [Michael] Hiltzik was in part a result of the paper’s failure to “push back” effectively (!). That is an odd statement that I hadn’t noticed in Luke [Ford]’s description. Also, he believes that part of the reason for the paper’s declining circulation is “cheap criticism” of the paper. (And he sounds plenty angry when he says it, too!)

This could be the real reason he won’t let me interview him after all: maybe he thinks my blog is an example of the “cheap criticism” that is costing him readers — and that cost him a business columnist. (He didn’t say any of this; I’m speculating here.)

Mary Katharine Ham: "LAT: Beyond Parody."

Rob McMillin:

The world hasn't been subjected to the incompetent typings of Times hack journo Bill Plaschke in over a month, and yet what do we read today but another inane hatchet job on the trade that brought one of the Dodgers' two best pitchers into town. As usual, it's riddled with easily verifiable errors and readily dismissed claims.

Joe McDonnell:

I know I said I wasn’t going to write…but my pal Bill Plaschke has lost his mind. His column on Brad Penny and Paul LoDuca was loony. Would you trade a 34 year old catcher who fades in the second half of every season for a 28 year old ace who throws nearly 100 MPH? I didn’t think so…..

Ernest, at Dodgers Blue Heaven: "Plaschke... You Ding Bat."

Paul Horwitz:

[Erin Aubry] Kaplan writes that these regulations send the message that "[i]f blacks want to have a chance in the increasingly unforgiving corporate world, they will have to shave off their rough edges -- starting with their hair." I suspect she's wrong to say that the corporate world is increasingly unforgiving, especially on questions of appearance. She does raise a valid point about the effects of appearance norms. But does the fact that the regulations she cites (aside from the egregious example of the Louisiana sheriff) come from black institutions complicate the picture?

Jacob Weisberg:

[L]et me depart from the liberal consensus and argue that the New York Times, while acting in good faith, made the wrong call by printing the SWIFT story. Editors there and at the Los Angeles Times and Wall Street Journal who also had pieces of the scoop should have waited to publish it, at least until they could be more certain that the snooping program was no longer useful.

Gal Beckerman:

The unfortunate bit about this episode is that there is actually an interesting and crucial conversation to be had over this issue - one that [New York Times Editor Bill] Keller himself, along with his Los Angeles Times counterpart, Dean Baquet, tried to initiate last week, and one that was then picked up by a number of prominent journalism school deans, writing by committee on the Washington Post's op-ed page.

But how is Keller, or anyone, supposed to have a reasoned debate when your opponent on the other side is producing little more than spittle and bile?

Hugh Hewitt, interviewing Times op-ed columnist Jonathan Chait:

HH: He's really sort of the superego of the Los Angeles Times, in my view, sort of the uber-columnist for the Los Angeles Times. Jonathan…

JC: What an odd position for me to have attained, despite never having set foot in their newsroom.

HH: I know. That's why it's such an interesting newspaper. They've totally absorbed you without you even having been there.

Hugh Hewitt:

An examination of the leadership lineage of the four major dailies that are widely and correctly understood to be very left of center in this country –the New York Times, the Washington Post, the Boston Globe and the Los Angeles Times—reveals that much of the dysfunction of these newsrooms may fairly be traced to inbreeding among their elites.

The cloistered word of big papers breeds its own peculiar type of leader, always selected from within the world of the big papers, always carrying forward to the top the same assumptions of importance and privilege, the same world view and indeed the same unusual combination of arrogance and limited experience that defines big journalism.

Ken Reich: "Sonni Efron's Basayev Column On LAT Op-Ed Page A Masterpiece."

Hugh Hewitt:

When the death scene of Bombay --and London, Madrid, Beslan, Jerusalem, Egypt,Jordan, Bali etc-- is recreated here, then will people look back at the recklessness of Bill Keller, Dean Baquet and other Bush-hating hyper-partisans and demand an accounting.

It may take a decade, or a generation, or even longer, but if these papers survive (and there is great doubt on that score at least as regards the Los Angeles Times) a day will come when their editors issue an apology for the fecklessness. It will be too late for some future victims, but like Walter Duranty, Keller and Baquet will eventually be discredited and their papers shamed.

Kent, of RightFromLeft: "Bill Keller and Dean Baquet have failed miserably to do their jobs."

David Limbaugh:

[T]heir previous good deeds do nothing to undo the damage they deliberately inflicted on the national interest and American lives by exposing details of a live-saving program. A first-time murderer is still a murderer. His formerly pristine record will not make his victim any less dead.

Gitmo, Movies, Basayev and Doped Up Cyclers

Tuesday’s interesting opinions and ideas:

Sonni Efron:The twisted saga of Chechnya's Che
Shamil Basayev started out as a rebel but turned into a monster in his desperate struggle against Moscow.

Joel Stein: Doped-up cyclers don't bug me
What's so wrong with performance-enhancing drugs if everyone's doing them?

Ricardo Pollack: Deadly homeboys make a new home in El Salvador
The country once again becomes a killing field thanks to U.S. deportees.

Editorials

New rules for Gitmo
The Supreme Court's Hamdan ruling gives Congress an opportunity to do its job on military tribunals.

How clean do we want politics to be?
Publicly financed elections sound nice, but political campaigns usually find ways to evade the rules.

You can't cut the sex and violence
A Colorado judge rightly rules that companies can't sell or rent sanitized versions of movies.

Sprawl, Inflation and More: A Weekend's Worth of Opinion

Weekend and Monday Opinion from the LA Times:

Tyler Green: The Air and Space Museum is falling
Why is Congress ignoring neglect at the Smithsonian Institution?

Kenneth S. Baer and Andrei Cherny: Wake up, Democrats: Ideas and vision do matter
Just waiting for the Republicans to self-destruct is a losing strategy.

Niall Ferguson: When will China pull the plug on North Korea?
The communist empire has the goods on its saber-rattling tin-pot neighbor.

Richard M. Mosk: Americans could use a Muslim pen pal
An old tradition could help bridge the cultural divide.

Editorials

We aren't all pirates
Anti-piracy proposals before Congress could limit innovation and legal uses of technology.

Setback for marriage justice
New York and Georgia courts will be on the wrong side of history of gay marriage.

DWP drips cash
Utility rate hike could be worse. But that doesn't mean we're pleased.

Selected Weekend Commentary:

Robert Bruegmann: Gridlock, schmidlock
L.A. traffic isn't as bad as you think. Try driving 60 mph through the center of Paris.

Joel Kotkin: Don't feed downtown L.A.'s white elephant
Convention Center giveaways line developers' pockets at the expense of the rest of the city.

Douglas Rogers: Where a beer costs $150,000
Inflation is strangling Zimbabwe.

Gregory Rodriguez When populism goes too far
Mexican presidential loser's attacks on the nation's electoral system threatens its fledgling democracy.

Jonathan Turley: Bush: 60 and still a ramblin' man
A journey inside the birthday boy's mind.

Meghan Daum: I'm with Google
Search engines are seeing our inner shopper, but are we selling ourselves short?

Douglas W. Kmiec: Who really rules the Supreme Court?
In Kennedy's swing vote vs. Roberts' consensus-building, the chief justice holds sway.

Robert A. Pastor: Mexico's election lesson to U.S.
The country's democracy looks messy on the outside, but its transparent system could teach us a few things.

Court Decisions, North Korea, Mexico and a Bullet Train

Friday’s wonderful opinion:

John Yoo:The high court's Hamdan power grab
The justices are hampering the president's ability to fight terrorists, says an architect of Bush's legal strategy.

Edward N. Luttwak: North Korea's clown provocateur
Kim Jong Il uses crises to maintain power. We should not rise to the latest bait.

Michael S. Dukakis and Arthur H. Purcell: L.A.-S.F. train is a quick traffic fix
High-speed rail can crack the two cities' desperate congestion cycle, says Michael Dukakis.

Rosa Brooks: That's the GOP's big gun?
Republicans running on their anti-terror exploits are just plain nutty.

Editorials

Mexico, the day after
Lopez Obrador is right to challenge the vote but wrong to impugn a system that's working.

Laguna's lost day-labor politics
Closing down a worker center may hurt the problem it aims to fix.

Sexual history now fair game
California's Supreme Court rightly decides that high-risk partners have disease-transmission liability before they know they're infected.

In Gaza's Blast Zone, Superman vs. Lone Ranger

Today’s opinon:

Mona Elfarra:In Gaza's rocket rain
A Palestinian blogger on life in the blast zone.

Patt Morrison: Dude, where's Bandit's car?
High gas prices would have grounded our famous road warriors.

Jonah Goldberg: Superman vs. the Lone Ranger
Why are cosmopolitans embarrassed by the American way?

Alan Kaufman: Hamas can't let Israel go
Ten months after the Gaza withdrawal, the terror group still devours Israeli soldiers to fuel its hate.

Editorials

Give us your poor, but not your sick
Schwarzenegger and Democrats put budget-compromising over insuring 3-year-old immigrants.

North Korea's impotent blast
Kim Jong Il's missile test is worrisome, but might succeed in rallying international opposition to his madness.

Purging antiwar Democrats
Activists are trying to make a smaller party tent by targeting Joe Lieberman, as the Connecticut senator lives down to their expectations.

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