The Limits of Influence

May 12th, 2012 by admin

Barack Obama Chloe Dresses sale

The hunt for Justice John Paul Stevens’ replacement has become singularly focused on personality type. In­­stead of searching for the most brilliant jurist in the country, we have all become obsessively focused on which candidate is most likely to influence the rest of the court. We talk about each prospective nominee as though we were adding a new castaway to Gilligan’s Island.

And, so goes the narrative, President Obama is searching for a Mary Ann as opposed to a Ginger. He evidently wants a nice girl who gets along well with others. He’s not interested, as the Los Angeles Times reported, in picking someone who writes passionate dissents. Obama—who could announce his pick as soon as this week, and the heavy betting is on Solicitor General Elena Kagan—is looking for a diplomat who will forge consensus, build bridges, and bring together a polarized court. (The president, we hear, is also seeking a Gilligan: a man of the people with some distance from Ivy League colleges and the sealed-off bubble of Washington insiders. Also, in blasting the Roberts Court ruling on corporations and election finance, Obama has made it clear that the island doesn’t need Mr. and Mrs. Howell. Out-of-touch millionaires need not apply.)

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So what’s wrong with efforts to pick a Supreme Court justice based largely on his or her ability to influence others? In one sense it certainly fits Obama’s own leadership style, privileging moderation over rigid ideology and consensus-building over results. But trying to anticipate all the ways in which Stevens’ replacement might interact with future colleagues strikes me as the one thing that’s even more difficult to predict than future judicial ideology. One can at least get a sense of the latter from reading past judicial opinions and scholarship. Predicting how one individual might interact with eight others sounds more like a lab experiment in social-identity theory.

So, for instance, just because Kagan hired several conservative scholars when she was dean at Harvard Law School doesn’t mean she’ll have some kind of stunning intellectual influence over the Roberts Court’s conservatives. And just because shortlister Diane Wood has sometimes been able to sway her brilliant conservative colleagues on the court of appeals doesn’t mean she’ll be able to do the same at the high court. While it’s true that Stevens could sometimes influence the court’s swing justice Cheap DKNY Clothing, Anthony Kennedy, it simply doesn’t stand to reason that a Chicagoan, a combat veteran, or someone with a taste for bow ties can exert similar influence in the future. Strategies that made Justice Sonia Sotomayor highly effective at the 2nd Circuit court of appeals may not be having much effect on the Roberts Court. And tactics that make Merrick Garland so beloved on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals might not fly at the Supreme Court.

There’s a second problem with these efforts at social engineering at SCOTUS: As Seth Stern pointed out a few weeks ago in Slate, the kinds of interpersonal and diplomatic skills that made William Brennan so effective in the 1960s and ’70s would be completely wasted today at the Roberts Court. Why? As Stern put it: “What Brennan had that any Obama pick will lack is a group of colleagues in the middle open to that sort of compromise. … The number of possible swing votes dwindled to one, Justice Anthony Kennedy, after the retirement of Sandra Day O’Connor.”

If it’s true that only Justice Kennedy is in play, and then only some of the time, the real social-engineering question for Obama becomes so specific as to be almost absurd: Which of his shortlisters might be most likely to win over a Kennedy in a close case? But if the entire calculus of this Supreme Court nomination is to be reduced to a single question, let’s at least agree that attempts to find the likeliest constitutional sherpa for the court’s last swing voter should not be that question. Who knows what type of person might sway Justice Kennedy? William Shakespeare? His wife? Possessing the power to persuade a very complicated 74-year-old man is not the stuff of which epic constitutional careers are made. 

And finally, but perhaps most critically, reducing the search for a Stevens replacement to a quest for the most able logroller on the left does nothing to dispel the widespread public perception that conservative judges closely read the Constitution and apply the law, while liberals stick a finger in the wind and then work the room. The selection of a new Supreme Court candidate should be an opportunity for the president to answer that claim with a crystal-clear message about the nature of liberal jurisprudence. “We think she might be able to flip Kennedy,” is neither a powerful nor inspiring judicial vision. The selection of a new Supreme Court justice is too important to reduce to politics, and the debate over judicial ideology has to be about more than just winning.

Perhaps President Obama shouldn’t be so quick to denigrate a nominee whose greatest impact on the court will be writing passionate dissents. Once upon a time that passionate dissenter was Justice Antonin Scalia. And if the sometimes-prickly justice has proved anything in recent years, it’s that decades of bitter and brilliant dissenting opinions can be more influential over the long haul than all the negotiation skills in the world.

A version of this article also appears in Newsweek.

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Spy ShotsMercedes-Benz E63AMG Wagon

May 11th, 2012 by admin

A covered up E63 AMG Wagon has been caught doing the rounds on public roads before we see it in showrooms some time next year. It looks like the potential ungainliness of the new E-Class could be gracefully smoothed out by the longer lines of the wagon. Of course, even if it is still ungainly, you’ll get 85 extra horsepower over the current model Cheap Bandage dresses, which should let you get away from gawkers with increased alacrity. That also means the baby on board might need a G-suit. The “Duplo” rear lights are probably mule-only fitments Cheap White Herve leger, but they’d be pretty cool if they were wrapped in polished housings.

[Source: Global Motors]

Birthday BeatingRENNtech goes medieval on the G-Wa

May 11th, 2012 by admin

Click above to view the RENNtech G-Wagen concept in our hi-res gallery

Thirty years is a long time. Long enough for a lot of people to come up with some wildly different ideas. Mercedes couldn’t make up its mind on how to celebrate the big three-o of its workhorse sport-ute, so they came out with two special editions, one aimed at luxury buyers and another for hard-core rock-crawling, desert-traversing off-road enthusiasts. RENNtech has another idea altogether.

The truck you see here is just a conceptual sketch at the moment, but even bound to paper it looks mean enough to send HUMMERs and Rambo Lambos running for cover with their tailpipes between their legs. The same Florida-based Mercedes tuner that brought us the Pikes Peak GLK hybrid concept is responsible for the design Replica Marc Jacobs Dresses, but beyond the so-ugly-it’s-almost-beautiful bodywork, the RENNtech concept calls not for the G55 AMG version it’s toyed with previously Buy White Herve leger, but for a turbodiesel with some 400 lb-ft of torque… in standard production form. By the time RENNtech is done working it over, we’d expect some gravity-altering twist, but for now it’ll just have to remain a menacing figment of our nightmares.

Related GalleryRENNtech G-Wagen CDI concept
[Source: RENNtech via Jalopnik]

The Churchillian Side of Chris Matthews

May 11th, 2012 by admin

Chris Matthews

Dredge your overstuffed furniture. Scrape the bottom of your purse. Shatter your kid’s piggy bank. Do what ever it takes to find $500 for a ticket to the Churchill Centre’s Oct. 25 fund-raising dinner at the Willard so you can witness the presentation of the Emery Reves Award to Chris Matthews for lifetime achievement in journalism.

The Reves Award goes to the member of the TV commentariat who flings the best on-air spittle, which poses the question of why Matthews didn’t win the prize a decade ago and have it retired in his honor. Just joshin’. Actually, the award honors “excellence in writing or speaking about Churchill’s life and times Cheap Herve Leger gown, or for applying his  precepts and values to contemporary issues among the English-Speaking Peoples,” according to the affair’s invitation.

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How has Matthews applied Churchill’s precepts and values to contemporary issues among English-Speaking Peoples? Churchill Centre President Laurence Geller paints Matthews’ accomplishment in these bright colors in a press release. “Mr. Matthew’s [sic] passion for a free and open press and the public debate that it sparks is legendary. … He is an enthusiastic supporter of democracy and has been a learned member of the news reporting fraternity throughout his distinguished and prolific career.”

Legendary. Supporter of democracy. Learned reporter. Distinguished. Prolific. All of these words may capture Matthews’ character, but not as well as do flighty, braying, shameless, and opportunistic. It’s a shame that nobody gives a Sammy Glick Award. Matthews would be a cinch.

What makes Chris run? Back in 1989, Los Angeles Times reporter Tom Rosenstiel tracked the Matthews ascendancy from political aide and speechwriter to media star.

“He made no secret about it. Chris Matthews wanted to be a pundit, a player, a face on the Sunday political talk shows,” Rosenstiel writes. But the transformation required journalistic credentials, which Matthews lacked. The San Francisco Examiner, then the underdog afternoon daily in the Bay Area, was only too obliging. In 1987, it made Matthews an Examiner columnist and inflated him with the title of “San Francisco Examiner Washington bureau chief,” something that would look distinguished on a TV Chyron below his grinning face. (At the time Buy DKNY Clothes, the Examiner had only one other D.C. reporter.)

The dodge worked. In 1989, Washingtonian named Matthews one of the city’s “top 50 journalists,” writes Rosenstiel. It was a nice trick considering that Matthews was barely even a journalist.

After apprenticing on The McLaughlin Group, Face the Nation, Good Morning America, and CBS Morning News, Matthews won a co-anchor spot of his own on NBC’s fledging cable TV network in 1994. Except for one decent book—1996’s Kennedy and Nixon: The Rivalry That Shaped Postwar America—it’s been klieg lights, non sequiturs, and bombast ever since.

If the Churchill Centre has yet to corral a presenter for Matthews, allow me to suggest Vanity Fair’s James Wolcott, who appreciates the man’s talents. In his 2004 book, Attack Poodles and Other Media Mutants, Wolcott writes:

Matthews manages to outrace his contradictory statements by blustering so many excitable things so fast and so often that pinning down the discrepancies is like trying to grab a gust of wind by the tail. He isn’t a cynical dissembler. He seems to suffer from some pundit variant of short-term memory loss. Each day on earth erases the days before. He says what he believes and believes what he says, and has the liberating advantage of always working from a blank sheet.

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Video1,243-hp Lingenfelter Camaro runs eight-secon

May 11th, 2012 by admin

Lingenfelter Camaro dips into the eights – Click above to watch video after the jump

Prepare to have your concept of the laws of physics twisted by the guys and gals at Lingenfelter. The crew have turned their attention to building one of the meanest full-interior, fifth-generation Chevrolet Camaro drag cars on the planet. In order to hustle 4 Discount Missoni Dresses,075 pounds of General Motors muscle down the track, Lingenfelter has dropped in a fully built LS9 V8 with an Eaton supercharger and all the guts to match. The heads were fully ported and loaded with titanium intake valves and hollow, sodium-filled exhaust valves for the easiest breathing possible. Throw in a set of long-tube headers, a two-stage nitrous system and twin fuel pumps and you’ve got a lump good for a mind-boggling 1,243 horsepower.

Lingenfelter has unsurprisingly ditched the stock clutch in favor of an RPS triple carbon piece, and a unique 9.5-inch billet rear differential with a 4.10 gear puts power to both rear wheels.

By some miracle of driving prowess Cheap Chanel Dresses, John Ebert was able to wrestle this machine down the quarter mile in 8.99 seconds at 158 mph. Hit the jump to watch it happen.

[Source: Inside Line]

A Day With Hillary in Iowa

May 10th, 2012 by admin

Hillary Clinton

CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa—Bill Clinton may not have moved on from the subject of Hillary’s rocky debate performance last week, but she has. Or at least she’s trying to. Almost a week after Hillary’s bad night and the fallout over whether she responded to her opponents’ attacks by playing the victim Replica Missoni Dresses, she returned to the 35,000-foot altitude of being the front-runner. Campaigning on the third of her four-day, 12-city Iowa tour, she rolled out the final portion of her energy policy with all the trappings of a presidential policy presentation. She started the day at a wind turbine plant, surrounded by the kind of stagecraft the Bush administration fancies. Behind her hung a green and yellow banner with the repeated message “Powering America’s Future: New Jobs New Energy.” She gave her speech framed by steel girders and the 40,000-pound hubs that house the turbine blades. (Iowa is the third largest state for the production of wind, behind California and Texas. The gusts on the highway made my rental car change lanes against its will.)

Throughout most of Monday, Clinton ignored her rivals. Barack Obama and John Edwards may be challenging her in every news cycle, but she didn’t mention either man or even make a veiled jab. Later, when her policy aides were given the chance to explain how her energy plan outpaced her Democratic rivals, they demurred. Only at the end of the day in a Q&A with voters did Clinton brush up against the previous week’s events. “Someone asked me, ‘Are they jumping on you because you’re a woman?’ ” she said in Waverly, Iowa, in response to a young woman’s question about whether a woman could become president. “No, they’re jumping on me because I’m winning. Harry Truman said if you can’t handle the heat get out of the kitchen. Well, I’m comfortable in the kitchen.”

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To give her day scope, Clinton compared her energy proposals to JFK’s call to put a man on the moon. Mitt Romney and Rudy Giuliani have also said they would handle global warming by launching an Apollo-like program. This is a tired political trope, particularly when it comes to addressing climate change—a way to show commitment without offering too many specifics. Clinton, though, offered a double heaping of specifics: a plan for decoupling utilities, a cap-and-trade scheme, a push to raise fuel standards, job-creation measures, loans to upgrade houses, loans to make businesses greener, money to retrain workers for jobs created by these proposals, a new environmental council like the National Security Council, and an E8, a group of carbon producers that would meet and address global problems like the G8 does.

Clinton’s speech was dry, with no humor and only a few moments where regular Iowa voters might recognize policy-making that would affect their daily lives. It’s hard to call the nation to a grand, sweeping movement when you don’t have much rhetorical lift. To add drama, Clinton piled on the history. Addressing climate change wasn’t just like the mission to the moon, she said; it was like the mobilization during World War II. She had to stretch for additional historical analogies because her underlying one is thin: Addressing climate change isn’t like putting a man on the moon. It might be just as important, but the country doesn’t see it that way yet. America accepted Kennedy’s call because they were afraid of the Russians and because a moon shot immediately captured the imagination. Kennedy’s speech calling for the program was pretty plain because it could be.

But if Clinton’s speech didn’t send everyone rushing out to buy a Prius, it did have plenty of her strongest quality—thorough competence. She came across not only as a person in control of her facts but as the kind of president who will march methodically through the careful completion of each agenda item once she’s in office. She shares Mitt Romney’s overenthusiasm for facts she has learned in policy briefs. “This is astonishing,” she says before reciting a new figure Discount DKNY Dresses, and you get the idea she’s genuinely astonished. She is also measured in her every movement. When she paces on stage in a town hall meeting like the three she held later on Monday, it’s like she’s following dance patterns—even when she made a quick detour to sip a glass of water to stifle her cough. While her opponents try to keep the pressure mounting, Clinton is conserving her energy.

People’s Choice1.4m downloads for VW Polo Challeng

May 10th, 2012 by admin

Volkswagen Polo Challenge iPhone game – Click above for a gallery

What automaker isn’t trying to cash in on the iCraze? Most are scrambling to include iPod and iPhone integration into their newest vehicles Cheap Bandage dresses, and many have tried to mimic the look and feel of the Apple devices with their latest concepts. The “people’s car” has as good a claim as any other automaker, and Volkswagen is looking to cement that with a new game for the iPhone and iPod touch.

Developed by German mobile game studio Fishlabs, the Volkswagen Polo Challenge, like other racing games, works with the devices’ built-in accelerometer to control the car. Players can choose between eight different circuits to drive on while being serenaded by the music of Feinkost. When they’re done playing, mobile gamers can find the nearest VW dealership to check out the car in person.

Just a month after its release, already 1.4 million people have downloaded the free game from iTunes. (Volkswagen’s Spanish subsidiary has also released a similar game highlighting the Seat Ibiza Cupra.) If you can read German Discount Herve Leger v neck, you can check out more info in the press release after the jump, along with the images in the gallery below.

New 2013 Hyundai Genesis Coupe image leaks out [UP

May 10th, 2012 by admin

We’ve already seen some pretty decent spy shots of Hyundai’s facelifted Genesis Coupe, expected to arrive shortly carrying a 2013-model-year designation. But this low-res image from TheCarBlogger.net appears to be our first official look at the car, sitting low and mean on a racetrack.

The outgoing Genesis Coupe’s front end was never exactly a model of simplicity, but this new one has a lot more going on, with an aggressive hexagonal grille and fascia opening that cribs from its new kid brother, the 2012 Veloster. There are headlamps and LED detailing on what looks like a higher-spec model, and a rather bizarre vented hood with an almost whaletail-like pattern.

We can’t see too much of the bodyside Buy Christian Audigier Clothing, but it appears Hyundai has given the car new split five-spoke wheels. The model’s plunging rear quarter window appears unchanged.

No official word yet on what’s under the hood, but we’re expecting both four- and six-cylinder power DKNY Clothes sale, as before, but we have reason to believe that a supercharged V6 is in the cards. Thanks to SEMA and Rhys Millen Racing, we now know that Hyundai’s stonking 5.0-liter Tau V8 fits in the engine bay, but we’d be surprised if an eight-cylinder coupe shows up when the model is revealed at this January’s Detroit Motor Show.

UPDATE: Apparently the image above is likely a Photoshop, despite very much like the spy shots we’ve already been shown. Even so, it appears to give a realistic view of the 2013 model.

Introducing Lean Lock

May 10th, 2012 by admin

Today Slate is launching Lean/Lock, a game that tests your skill at predicting the outcomes of the 2010 midterm elections. Think of it like fantasy baseball, but for the most competitive House, Senate and gubernatorial races. Lean/Lock will reward you for your prescience, but also for your risk-management skills.

Here’s how it works. Between now and Election Day on Nov. 2, you’ll be able to “lean” or “lock” to a candidate for each of the 28 competitive races we’ve selected. We’ll be adding more races as the campaign heats up. Each day, you accrue points for each race that you’ve predicted correctly, with one catch: You earn more points if you’ve locked to a winner instead of just leaned. As you may guess, though Discount Herve Leger v neck, once you’ve locked, you can’t change your mind for the rest of the game, with the exception of a one-time option to unlock one candidate.

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The day after the election, we’ll sort through the results and declare a winner—Slate’s political prognosticator of the year. In the meantime, we’ll use polls to calculate your estimated score. A full explanation for how all this works is available on the game’s homepage.

You can access Lean/Lock two ways: via our app on Facebook or on Slate Labs, which also launches today. In either case, you’ll need a Facebook account to play; the data on both versions are identical, so you can hop from one version to the other without losing your picks.

Official scoring starts on Aug. 16, so make sure your initial picks are in by then. Sign up now Buy DKNY Clothing!

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The Pugilist at Rest

May 10th, 2012 by admin

Norman Mailer

Of the generation of American novelists recently passed—Bellow, Styron, Vonnegut—none is harder to come to terms with than Norman Mailer, who died last Saturday at the age of 84. In part that is because his celebrity is nearly unimaginable today, and in part because his personality was so outsized; but mostly it’s because no great writer—and he was, at his best, as great as he said he was—ever wrote quite as much crap.

It’s astounding, really, and almost inexplicable, that a man who could write books as keen and inexhaustible as The Executioner’s Song and Why Are We in Vietnam? could also write Portrait of Picasso as a Young Man, along with a half-dozen or so other works that were comparably lazy, clumsy, and fatuous. And beyond that, there were his public pronouncements about sex Buy Emilio Pucci Dresses, art, and ambition, plastic and cancer and television, and God, and the Kennedys, and America. … As a rule, novelists are about as interesting when they talk about politics as political thinkers are when they talk about the novel. Mailer made the mistake of thinking otherwise more often—far more often—than most.

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But his public persona was mostly a performance, and as such it was, not just distinct from his writing, but generally inimical to it (as Mailer himself would eventually admit). What’s more, there was a teasing, theatrical quality to it that a lot of people seemed to have missed. Much has been said about Mailer’s obsession with masculinity and brutality: the dicta, the focus on boxing, war, murder, and the terrible mistake he made with Jack Henry Abbott. Gore Vidal once compared him to Charles Manson, which was silly, but there’s no doubt that Mailer’s stance on the question of manhood was troubling, at least when he was hawking it. He was right about some things—for example, about the use, if not the necessity, of danger for turning boys into men—but he was wrong about much more: about the difference between danger and violence, about the purposes and pleasures of sex, and above all, about women, whom he often loved, sometimes hated, and almost never understood.

Still, I don’t think he was merely chauvinistic—it was more complicated than that. There was always an element of self-consciousness to his bluster. He was wholly without guile, calculation, or opportunism Discount Emilio Pucci Dresses, and he was incapable of shrewdness, a rare and appealing trait in someone with his ambition; but he knew a good role when he saw one. Some years ago, paraphrasing Auden on Rilke, I described Mailer as the greatest lesbian writer since Gertrude Stein. It’s a judgment I stand by, with cheerful regards to all parties concerned. Because he wasn’t macho, after all, though that’s what he was usually accused of: He was butch.

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