Jeremy Harper. Get yours at flagrantdisregard.com/flickr

Archive for September 4th, 2005

New Plugin: Jerome’s Tags

Sunday, September 4th, 2005

This afternoon I installed the Jerome’s Keywords Plugin into WordPress. It lets me tag posts with keywords, in much the same way that you can tag bookmarks with del.icio.us.

I’ll probably say more about it tonight after church.

FoxTrot is funny today.

Sunday, September 4th, 2005

You should read it.

What do you do on your first day at Harvard Law School?

Sunday, September 4th, 2005

You make arts and crafts.

Our first assignment at Harvard Law School was to make a collage. My journal from the time reflects my disgust with this absurd task:

For my First Year Lawyering class (where we learn writing and research methods), we have to make “a collage, a drawing, a crayon rendition, or any form of expression that depicts the qualities of the lawyer you most want to be.”

No joke, people. For my first assignment at Harvard Law School, I have to make a collage. Or bust out the crayons. Either way, it sounds **** silly.

(Follow the link to find a picture of her collage and for a link to a similar story about a high-school pre-calculus class)

Well, scratch Harvard off of the list of potential post-graduate institutions.

(Via Instapundit)

Boileryard: When Everybody Else Is Wrong

Sunday, September 4th, 2005

You ever read something that, although you hadn’t thought about it before, makes total sense? Boileryard Clarke did that for me today.

Ray Nagin is the mayor of New Orleans. In the past two or three days he has been the loudest (and most profane) voice in the country criticizing government agencies for their slow reaction to the disaster in his city. But a question is starting to pop up that kind of informs itself on what we all know about human nature; the best way to deflect blame is to blame somebody else.

So why didn’t the Mayor of New Orleans realize that tens of thousands of his citizens did not have transportation out of town, were essentially stranded, and do something to organize some kind of transportation for at least somebody?

Did he not understand the demographics of his own city?

After telling everyone to get out, serving people who had transportation of their own right nicely, he booked and left his “constituency” stranded. What, exactly, did he expect these people to do? Walk?

Well he’s not exactly Rudy Guliani is he? He sounds more like a street musician who just woke up from a drunk… man.

He is quoted as saying “Get every doggone Greyhound bus line in the country and get it here to New Orleans… I need reinforcements. I need troops, man. I need 500 buses, man. Now get off your ***** and fix this. Let’s do something and let’s fix the biggest ****** crisis in the history of this country.” A great idea - but where was it a week ago?

Aren’t there busses in New Orleans? Do trains come in and out of the city? With long lines of cars trailing out of the city before Katrina hit, did it ever occur to him to think about people who didn’t have cars and use his own resources to get people out before the hurricaine hit? Brains are resources too, don’t you think?

How is it that now he has this great idea about what the federal government is supposed to do to fix the mess he left his own city in, but when he was busy scrambling around trying to save his own neck he just plain forgot about the sick and the needy and the poor and the hospitals? Why didn’t the mayor figure out a way to evacuate the hospitals?

There’s more; go read it.