Blog

  • Read Etgar Keret this July Fourth

    In his story “Throwdown at the Playground,” Etgar Keret tells about a visit to Ezekiel Park in Tel Aviv with Lev, his 3-year-old son.

    There a question from a mother of another boy surprises Keret. “Tell me something,” asks Orit, the mother. “Will Lev go to the army when he grows up?”

    Keret replies that he and his wife haven’t talked about it. “We still have time,” he adds. “He’s three years old.”

    That night, Keret relays the incident to his wife.

    “Isn’t that weird,” he asks her. “Talking about recruiting a kid who still can’t put on his underpants by himself?

    No, she answers. “All the mothers in the park talk to me about it. I’ve been dealing with it from the day Lev was born. And if we’re already discussing it now, I don’t want him to go into the army.”

    “I think it’s very controlling to say something like that,” Keret replies.

    “I’d rather be controlling than have to take part in a military funeral on the Mount of Olives fifteen years from now,” she counters.

    The exchange edges toward an argument.

    “You’re talking as if serving in the army is an extreme sport,” Keret says. “But what can we do? We live in part of the world where our lives depend on it. So what you’re actually saying is that you’d rather have other people’s children go into the army and sacrifice their lives, while Lev enjoys his life here without taking any risks or shouldering the obligations the situation calls for.”

    “No,” he wife says. “I’m saying that we could have reached a powerful solution a long time ago, and we still can. And that our leaders allow themselves not to do that because they know that most people are like you: they won’t hesitate to put their children’s lives into the government’s irresponsible hands.”

    Keret is about to answer when Lev appears. “Daddy, why are you and Mommy fighting?” the boy asks.

    “It’s not a real fight,” Keret tells him. “It’s just a drill.”

    Keret and his wife manage to end their argument. Keret suggests that when Lev is 18, Lev can decide for himself whether to serve in the army. But his wife disagreees, contending that Lev would be unable to make a free choice with all the social pressure that would surround him.

    “In the end,” writes Keret, “out of exhaustion, and in the absence of any other solution, we decided to compromise on the only principle we both truly agreed on: to spend the next fifteen years working toward family and regional peace.”

  • News quiz, week ending July 1

    The U.S. Supreme Court struck down parts of a law in what state that imposed limits on abortion providers?

    What automaker agreed to pay $15 billion to settle claims stemming from a diesel emissions cheating scandal?

    Pat Summitt died Tuesday at 64. What record did she hold?

    On July 4, a NASA spacecraft is expected to complete its journey to what planet?

    Following Brexit how many countries will remain in the European Union?

    What leaders attended the summit of the three amigos?

    What furniture retailer recalled 29 million dressers sold in the U.S. since 1989?

    What country lifted its ban on transgender members of the armed forces?

    Which former London mayor bowed out of the race to become the U.K.’s next prime minister?

    Friday marked the 100th anniversary of which battle from World War I?

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Answers

    Texas

    Volkswagen

    She won more national basketball championships than any other Division I college coach

    Jupiter

    27

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of Canada, President Enrique Peña Nieto of Mexico and President Barack Obama

    IKEA

    The U.S.

    Boris Johnson

    The Battle of the Somme

  • News quiz, week ending June 24

    Who won golf’s U.S. Open?

    Who is Aiden Clinton Mezvinsky?

    How many astronauts returned from the International Space Station?

    What country is home to the world’s fastest supercomputer?

    How many refugees, asylum seekers and internally displaced persons were there around the world at the end of last year, according to the United Nations refugee agency?

    Tesla offered to buy what company?

    Why did Democrats in the U.S. House of Representatives stage a sit-in?

    Why did British Prime Minister David Cameron announce his intention to step down this October?

    Which of the following issues did the U.S. Supreme Court not rule on this week?

    a) Immigration policy

    b) Press freedom

    c) The Fourth Amendment

    d) The use of race in university admissions

    What team won the NBA Championship?

     

     

     

     

    Answers

    Dustin Johnson

    The son of Chelsea Clinton and Marc Mezvinsky and granddaughter of President Bill and Hillary Clinton

    Three

    China

    65 million

    SolarCity, which designs and installs solar power systems

    To force a vote on gun control

    Because the U.K. voted to leave the European Union

    Press freedom

    The Cleveland Cavaliers

  • News quiz, week ending June 17

    How many Tony Awards did “Hamilton” win?

    Microsoft announced a deal to buy which social-networking company?

    What is the E3 expo ?

    What member of Britain’s royal family posed for the cover of a gay magazine?

    What phrase did President Barack Obama call “a political talking point”?

    Hackers reportedly stole data about whom from the Democratic National Committee?

    Where did Disney open its latest theme park?

    According to a top Facebook executive, your news feed on that social network will be all what in the next five years?

    How is the Broadway revival of “She Loves Me” set to make history on June 30?

    What’s the only thing that Steven Spielberg is telling us about the Indiana Jones movie slated for release in 2019?

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Answers

    11

    LinkedIn

    The world’s premier video gaming convention, which began Tuesday in Los Angeles

    Prince William, who posed for the cover of Attitude as part of an interview to raise awareness of anti-LGBT bullying

    “radical Islam”

    Donald Trump

    Shanghai

    video

    It will be the first time a Broadway show has been streamed live

    That he won’t be killing off Harrison Ford at the end of it

  • The Gawker-Hulk Hogan matchup reveals as much about paying for lawsuits as it does about winning them

    The battle between Gawker Media and Hulk Hogan may say as much as about paying for lawsuits as it does about winning them.

    The company filed on Friday for Chapter 11 bankruptcy as part of a move to finance its appeal of a verdict in March that awarded the former pro wrestler $140 million for Gawker’s allegedly violating his privacy when it published a sex tape of him.

    Peter Thiel, a billionaire co-founder of PayPal, bankrolled the lawsuit. Nine years ago, Gawker reported that Thiel is gay before – Thiel maintains – he had declared his sexuality publicly. The report continues to rankle, based on Thiel’s funding lawsuits against Gawker. Thiel says he’s “fighting back” on behalf of himself and others whom Gawker allegedly attacked. For its part, Gawker maintains that Thiel was out to his friends already by the time of Gawker’s piece.

    The bankruptcy gives Gawker a mechanism to pay its legal bills, though it may result in the company’s managing partners relinquishing their ownership. The filing begins a court-supervised auction of Gawker’s assets, which include seven websites – among them Deadspin, Gizmodo and Lifehacker – that together had 44.4 million unique visitors in April. Ziff-Davis, a media company, has started the bidding at $90 million.

    Both Thiel’s backing and Gawker’s filing shed light on some of the ways to raise capital for claims, though Thiel’s paying the Hulkster’s legal bills has produced consternation among commenters who see in the sponsorship an effort to punish the press.

    “It’s a terrifying development for those of us who value a free, democratic media,” wrote Caterina Fake, a co-founder of the photo-sharing site Flickr, wrote on Quartz, referring to Thiel’s backing Hogan. “The laws of capitalism allow—and encourage!—the destruction of one company by another,” wrote Politico’s Jack Shafer, “But the proper jousting grounds for this sort of battle is the marketplace, not the courts.”

    Ken Doctor, who analyzes the business of media, told the Financial Times that the financial pressures that led Gawker to file for bankruptcy will “make it even harder for the news media to grow, be profitable, and hold the powerful accountable.”

    Still, as a matter of law or journalism there may be little to worry about. Despite the dustup over Thiel’s backing Hogan, the practice of financing other people’s lawsuits is completely legal. Litigants have long funded their claims with other people’s money, which can help to ensure your day in court when the stakes warrant pursuing a claim that exceeds the limits of your pocketbook.

    In a story last fall for the Times’ magazine, Mattathias Schwartz chronicled the litigation-finance industry. He reported:

    While the amount of litigation funded by outside financiers is still relatively small, the industry — which barely existed outside personal-injury cases until the mid-2000s — is growing rapidly, driven by increasingly permissive laws, the promise of high returns and hourly billing rates that run $500 or more for the largest and most sophisticated law firms.

    As Eugene Kontorovich, who teaches law at Northwestern, wrote in The Washington Post following the revelation that Thiel financed Hogan, common law doctrines that prohibited recruiting or sponsoring others for litigation have drifted away over time. “Anyone who donates to the ACLU or a Legal Aid fund is basically underwriting third-party litigation,” he noted.

    The chill that some commenters worry could come over newsrooms following the brushback by Thiel seems unlikely to materialize. Kontorovich reminds readers that regardless who pays the legal bill, “a court must also find the defendant liable, award damages and have it sustained on appeal.”

    In short, you still have to prevail on the merits. And this battle is far from over.

    “For all… the furor over Hogan’s case, there’s nothing especially novel about courts balancing privacy and First Amendment interests,” Alison Frankel at Reuters wrote in March. “Generally, the U.S. Supreme Court has concluded that in matters of public importance, the First Amendment trumps privacy.”

    The “judgment was totally out of the range of any normal judgments of the last few years,” George Freeman, executive director of the Media Law Resource Center, told the FT.

    In January, Gawker sold a minority stake to investment firm Columbus Nova as part of a plan to capitalize itself to defend against Hogan’s lawsuit. If Gawker prevails, the company’s owners could in theory buy back all or part of the company, depending on what they negotiate with the winning bidder in bankruptcy.

    “To those who have offered support, thank you,” Gawker CEO Nick Denton wrote in a post published on Wednesday. “Gawker will be just fine, both in business and in spirit.”

  • News quiz, week ending June 10

     

    Who won the French Open men’s and women’s titles?

    Ramadan began on Monday for most of the world’s Muslims. What does the holiday celebrate?

    What two teams are competing in the Stanley Cup finals?

    Bernie Sanders said he would continue his presidential campaign until the last primary this Tuesday. Where will the last primary be held?

    Why are some people outraged by a screenwriter’s wanting Leonardo DiCaprio to play Rumi, the 13th-century Persian poet, in an upcoming biopic?

    What tennis star was suspended from competition for two years after testing positive for a performance-enhancing substance?

    At least four people died and several others were injured in a shooting at a market in which Israeli city?

    What country has the world’s longest-serving monarch?

    What head of state addressed the U.S. Congress?

    Name at least three of the eulogists at the memorial service for Muhammad Ali?

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Answers

    Novak Djokovic, Garbine Muguruza

    God’s revealing the Quran

    The Pittsburgh Penguins and San Jose Sharks

    Washington, D.C.

    Rumi wasn’t white

    Maria Sharapova

    Tel Aviv

    Thailand, where on Thursday King Bhumibol Adulyadej marked 70 years on the throne

    Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi

    Lonnie Ali, Maryum Ali, Rasheda Ali-Walsh, Natasha Mundkur, John Ramsey, Billy Crystal, Bryant Gumbel, President William J. Clinton

  • News quiz, week ending June 3

    How many times was Muhammad Ali the world heavyweight boxing champion?

    The World Health Organization said last Saturday there was “no public health justification” for doing what?

    President Francoise Hollande of France and German Chancellor Angela Merkel traveled on Sunday to eastern France to commemorate the 100th anniversary of which battle of World War I?

    What is “Rolling Thunder”?

    Whom did the U.S. Libertarian Party select as its presidential and vice presidential nominees?

    Who won the Indianapolis 500?

    Iraqi forces are battling with the Islamic State to retake what city?

    Who was Harambe?

    Where did the world’s longest and deepest rail tunnel open?

    What caused Prince’s death?

     

     

     

     

     

    Answers

    Three

    Postponing or canceling the Rio de Janeiro Olympics because of the Zika outbreak

    The Battle of Verdun

    An annual motorcycle rally that takes over the National Mall in Washington each Memorial Day weekend

    Former New Mexico Governor Gary Johnson and former Massachusetts Governor William Weld

    Alexander Rossi, a 24-year-old American rookie

    Fallujah

    A 17-year-old gorilla at the Cincinnati Zoo who was killed by zoo officials last Saturday to protect a child who had climbed through a public barrier and entered the gorillas’ enclosure

    Switzerland

    An accidental overdose of fentanyl, a synthetic opiate

  • How the end of campaign finance limits paved the way for Donald Trump’s presidential bid

    The presidential campaign now underway is making history for at least one reason besides the prospect of the first woman or a star of reality TV becoming the nation’s chief executive.

    The campaign also marks the coming online of a series of rulings by the Supreme Court, beginning with the court’s decision in Citizens United six years ago, that enable groups aligned with candidates to accept unlimited donations.

    Hillary Clinton has raised a total of $296 million, of which 29% has come from super PACs allied with her, as of March 31. For all her financial fortitude, the money impairs Clinton’s inability to gain traction among Democrats (and, possibly, in a general election, among independents) who harbor antipathy toward the establishment, which all those super PAC dollars represent.

    Bernie Sanders, Clinton’s Democratic rival, disavows support from super PACs, though some outside groups still support him. Donald Trump, the GOP nominee, also has criticized candidates who get support from super PACs though he has said that Republicans will need to raise $1 billion to compete against Clinton.

    Writing in February in The Atlantic, Ron Brownstein noted that both Trump and Sanders address the yearnings of those who feel shut out of the political process. Among people who were likely to vote in the Republican primary, nearly 87% preferred Trump if they agreed with the statement that people like them have no say about what the government does, according to a survey in December and January by the RAND Corporation.

    That brings us back to the Supreme Court, and specifically to a ruling two years ago in McCutcheon v. Federal Election Commission. The case came before the court on an appeal by Shaun McCutcheon, a businessman and electrical engineer from Alabama, who in the 2011-2012 election cycle contributed a total of $33,088 to 16 different federal candidates as permitted by law.

    McCutcheon alleged on appeal that he wished to contribute $1,776 to each of a dozen additional candidates but was barred from doing so by an aggregate limit of $48,600 that he challenged as unconstitutional under the First Amendment.

    He also asserted that he contributed a total of $27,328 to several political committees not associated with any particular candidate and that he wished to contribute additional amounts to the Republican National Committee and other groups but was blocked by an aggregate limit on contributions to political committees, again, McCutcheon charged, in violation of the First Amendment.

    The RNC and McCutcheon filed suit in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, challenging the constitutionality of the aggregate limits.

    There a three-judge panel rejected the contention, characterizing the base limits and the aggregate limits “as a coherent system rather than merely a collection of individual limits stacking prophylaxis upon prophylaxis.”

    Assuming that the base limits served the government’s interest in preventing corruption – an interest that could survive scrutiny under the First Amendment – the aggregate limits also survived scrutiny because they prevented an end-around of the base limits.

    A majority of the Supreme Court, where McCutcheon and the RNC appealed next (federal law allows for direct appeals in such cases) disagreed. Chief Justice John Roberts, writing for the majority, reasoned that the decision by Congress to limit to $5,200 contributions to any one candidate made sense because it reflected a judgment by legislators that giving a candidate more might risk corruption, as in giving or receiving something in return for something else.

    But the aggregate limit served no such purpose, according to the majority. “If there is no corruption concern in giving nine candidates up to $5,200 each, it is difficult to understand how a tenth candidate can be regarded as corruptible if given $1,801, and all others corruptible if given a dime,” asserted Roberts, who continued:

    The Government has a strong interest, no less critical to our democratic system, in combatting corruption and its appearance. We have, however, held that this interest must be limited to a specific kind of corruption – quid pro quo corruption – in order to ensure that the Government’s efforts do not have the effect of restricting the First Amendment right of citizens to choose who shall govern them.

    But the majority defined corruption too narrowly, argued Justice Breyer, who filed a dissenting opinion on behalf of himself and Justices Ginsburg, Sotomayor and Kagan. The First Amendment, he explained, “advances not only the individual’s right to engage in political speech, but also the public’s interest in preserving a democratic order in which collective speech matters.” (emphasis in original)

    Viewed that way, corruption “breaks the constitutionally necessary ‘chain of communication’ between the people and their representatives,” Justice Breyer wrote. “Where enough money calls the tune, the general public will not be heard.”

    And then the dissent anticipated the phenomenon of voters feeling shut out of their democracy that can give rise to a figure like Trump. According to Justice Breyer:

    “The ‘appearance of corruption’ can make matters worse. It can lead the public to believe that its efforts to communicate with its representatives or to help sway public opinion have little purpose. And a cynical public can lose interest in political participation altogether.”

    As the minority saw it, regulation of campaign finance rests on a rationale that’s broader than the majority’s concern with public officials who might be tempted to sell their votes. Such laws “are rooted in the constitutional effort to create a democracy responsive to the people – a government where laws reflect the very thoughts, views, ideas, and sentiments, the expression of which the First Amendment protects,” Justice Breyer wrote.

    In short, the First Amendment protects speech but it protects democracy, too. By constraining its view of the amendment, the majority legalized the idea that democracy yields to money which, if you accept the premise, is a form of speech. From there draw a line directly to voters who feel disenfranchised. Trump is not the only candidate who speaks to such voters – Sanders does, too, from the left – but Trump got to many of them first.

    Writing on Scotusblog a day after the decision in McCutcheon, Burt Neuborne, a professor of civil liberties at NYU, asserted that promotion of political equality can justify some limits on spending by the very rich.

    Preventing corruption, wrote Neuborne, “means the preservation of a democracy where the governed can expect their representatives to decide issues independently, free from economic serfdom to their paymasters. The road to 2016 starts here.”

  • News quiz, week ending May 27

    Who won the Preakness Stakes?

    Who is the new manager of Manchester United?

    Who was Mullah Mansour?

    The U.S. lifted its decades-old arms embargo on what country?

    A strike by oil refinery workers in what country led to shortages at gas stations?

    Baltimore police officer Edward Nero was found not guilty of criminal charges in who’s death?

    What musical was the top-grossing show on Broadway last season?

    Which member of the European Union reached an agreement with creditors?

    President Obama became the first sitting U.S. president to visit which Japanese city?

    Who bankrolled Hulk Hogan’s lawsuit against Gawker Media?

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Answers

    Exaggerator
    José Mourinho
    The leader of the Afghan Taliban, who was killed by the U.S. in a drone strike last Saturday
    Vietnam
    France
    Freddie Gray, a 25-year-old Baltimore man who died last year after suffering a spinal cord injury in police custody
    “The Lion King”
    Greece
    Hiroshima, where the U.S. dropped an atomic bomb on Aug. 6, 1945
    Peter Thiel, a billionaire co-founder of PayPal who asserted that he was outed as being gay by Gawker in an article published in 2007

  • News quiz, week ending May 20

    Which country won this year’s Eurovision song contest?

    Who won the Man Booker Prize?

    In what company did Warren Buffett invest $1 billion?

    Who is the embattled president of Venezuela?

    Who is the new president of Taiwan?

    To what city was EgyptAir Flight 804 headed when it disappeared over the Mediteranean Sea?

    Which medical testing company reportedly voided two years of test results?

    CBS’s chief executive said the following this week about whom: “He broke ground in war reporting and made a name that will forever be synonymous with 60 Minutes?”

    How many words (to the nearest billion) does Google translate a day, according to a presentation by the company at its IO 2016 conference this week?

    The price of milk in the U.S. fell to a six-year low. How much, on average, does a gallon of whole milk in the U.S. cost?

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Answers

    Ukraine

    South Korean author Han Kang and her translator Deborah Smith for “The Vegetarian,” a three-part novel

    Apple

    Nicolás Maduro

    Tsai Ing-wen

    Cairo

    Theranos

    Morley Safer, the newsman and 60 Minutes correspondent who died on Thursday

    143,280,496,726

    $3.15