May Weekend

Some words from YC.

So, it’s apparently true – J. Souter’s retiring, giving the president the task of picking a person (not an easy task, considering the various options and considerations) and planning to go home to New Hampshire.

Tons of interesting reading material out there: Kermit Roosevelt, former Souter clerk, on Souter. I liked Dahlia Lithwick’s analysis on Souter. Linda Greenhouse also puts two cents on Souter. I do tend to think of him as the man we keep underestimating.

In an alternative universe, I think Pres. Obama could be on the US Supreme Court (or maybe in a distant future? Hey, it happened to Pres. (and Ch. J.) Taft!). At any rate, as David Brooks noted on Friday’s Lehrer Newshour, noted, “This is something we’re actually used to, and it will probably unfold in a pretty predictable way,” i.e., that at least S.Ct. selections are something we’re awfully familiar with (the controversies, the debates and ultimate confirmations). I think that it’s pretty cool that this time, it’s a Constitutional Law prof who’s doing the selection and that he knows so much about the process and the substance.

Speaking of selections, Alma Mater’s Engineering School has selected a new dean – a man of Dominican ancestry and an MIT alumnus.

Lessons about the flu: NYC’s health commissioner’s having a cool head saved us in 1918. NY Times’ Jim Dwyer on how ignorance and bigotry are the side of effects of the H1N1 flu – no doubt about that; that was the first thing that came to my mind when the news broke about something we knew so little about. I do wonder whether we New Yorkers are losing our ability to be rational – but then again, law school kind of taught us that the idea of a rational person is just that – an idea.

Meanwhile Slate reminds us about how soap – even a dirty bar of soap – is useful stuff, and how those masks aren’t that useful (that’s right – it just doesn’t do all that much good, so how reasonable is it to walk around with those masks on anyway?) – stuff we should have learned from SARS in the first place. NY Times’ Elizabeth Rosenthal also recalls the same her experience with SARS about the ineffectiveness of masks and the better use of hand-washing and just walking away from people with symptoms.

I completely forgot it was Law Day on May 1 – the day to celebrate rule of law (not lawyers).

May 1 was also the first day of the summer blockbusters, with “X-Men Origins: Wolverine.” A Slate article to explain the fascination with Wolverine; oh, and he’s Canadian (well, a certain kind of Canadian – apparently, not the East Coast liberal Canadian, but probably more like West Coast libertarian Canadian; he sure never seemed to have the Canadian accent in the cartoons though).

And, cherry blossoms in Brooklyn (sadly, I missed the festival this year, but the pictures on the NY Times website are lovely).

And with May, it’s APA Heritage Month. PBS/Channel 13 has been putting up its schedule for APA items for viewing. May 3, 2009, was the 30th APA Heritage Festival – unfortunately, the rainy weather made it less than fun, but the show went on. Henry Chang, writer of the Detective Jack Yu series, was there and I said hello (coincidentally, I had finished reading Year of the Dog, sequel to Chinatown Beat, last week; I had read Chinatown Beat some time last year; the series is good stuff).

In case you were wondering what happened to those “Top Chef” contestants, NY Times checks out what happened to some of them who are in the NY metro area.

An interesting FYI column in the Sunday Times’ City Section – about the “Essex” sign and how it’s been grandfathered in despite its – uh – garishness.

Good stuff in Time Out New York’s Great Walks issue – even a Staten Island walk. Now, if only I actually would be doing these walks…

Last but not least: the passing Jack Kemp; they don’t make Republicans quite like him anymore.

Chiming in from HK

It’s been a very long while since I last visited/posted here.  I’m sorry to have missed out on the musings here.  Life certainly has been extremely hectic and too many little things compete for my spare time.  Anyways, it’s the Labor Day holiday here in HK and much of Asia.  So it’s been good downtime and the weather is good too.

3 days of my team in HK and we had a lot of productive discussions/meetings on what the rest of 2009 is going to look like.  Also started getting back into my personal blog again and enjoying it.  I do need to resist falling off the wagon and try at least once a week to post something.  Once a day is probably too much.  I recently mentioned how interesting my blog stats were and even more so that a lot of people searching star trek find my blog.  Not exactly what I had intended but cool.  And the readership is really spread all over the place.

Anyways, enjoy all and Monday is an anniversary for me and B-, our first date which was @ Yankee stadium.  Time does fly.  Take care of it and enjoy it while it lasts!

100 Days of the Obama Administration

… and counting. Being president ain’t an easy job, when you’re talking about how you’re taking on a dizzying array of problems. You wear a lot of hats while standing behind that podium – giving legal advice, keeping us calm, and telling us to use our common sense and wash our hands and things like that.

Plus, maybe – just maybe – you have to select a US Supreme Court justice. Are the rumors and/or reports true regarding Justice Souter? We’ll see.

Oh, and I liked how President Obama answered NY Times’ Jeff Zeleny’s four part question (what’s been most surprising/enchanting/humbling/troubling in the past 100 days). Zeleny kind of cheated though – you might think you only have question, but the fact that it was a four part one made it more like four questions!

But, seriously – 100 days is ridiculously arbitrary; there’s still a long way to go and this has only been a beginning.

“Lost” – umm, the one really good thing about the president’s press conference was that it ended on time for “Lost,” for the 100th episode (weird how the number “100” kept cropping up). It seemed like a solid but sad episode. I’m confused as ever; this is “Lost,” after all.

Swine flu – aka 2009 H1N1 flu – don’t blame the pig; don’t blame Mexico; blame science (or evolution, specifically).

And, maybe people shouldn’t overreact about it. Really. It’s not healthy to go nuts over something that isn’t nuts yet (in the USA anyway).

A profile on Dr. Richard Besser, CDC’s acting director, whose calmness and rational presentation on the whole H1N1 flu has been pretty solid, I think.

And there’s also the profile on Dr. Thomas Friedan, commissioner of NYC’s own Dept. of Health and Mental Hygiene (although everyone just calls it Dept. of Health, because “and Mental Hygiene” is a mouthful). He’s sort of a public scold sometimes (his campaign against transfat and putting calories everywhere can be a bit irritating), but I don’t question the sincerity of keeping us all healthy. Kind of interesting that he’s been suggested as a permanent CDC director (political appointee position, I think, serving at the pleasure of the President), considering that the agency was an old stomping ground of his. Not sure what the selection of a permanent CDC director may mean for Dr. Besser, but it’s not a bad thing at all that the USA has some good doctors, nurses, and other health care providers and administrators dealing with this.

David Letterman‘s been strange of late with his sore throat. But on 4/30/09 – kind of cool that he had the cast from the latest “Hair” – a recall to how the original “Hair” cast had been in the Ed Sullivan Theater back on the Ed Sullivan show. History repeats itself, apparently.

Ah, and yes, as I said I would do, here’s an embed of one of Craig Ferguson’s pig puppet monologue… too funny…