Leaving TLS

Times [of London] Literary Supplement, that is, once unique, now run by a newspaper editor. Cancelling long-time subscription, I said this without being asked:

It’s the new editor, by the way. He is making TLS just another journal. Review after review I can take or leave. Before him, I couldn’t get through an issue, continually stopping to read about things I’d had no interest in previously. New man is a news man, whatever his student pedigree. Has mass market in mind, can’t help himself.

So it goes in the wild and woolly world of cultural leadership.

Obama, butt out, says a fellow president

Spunky fellow, vs. our professorial disapprover.

“Who does he think he is? I am no American puppet. I am the president of a sovereign country and I am not answerable to anyone except the Filipino people,” Duterte scoffed in a speech Monday. “Son of a bitch, I will swear at you.”

Hmm. Look out, spunky fellow, he will draw a red line in the sand about you.

Source: Philippines leader curses Obama; meeting canceled – CNNPolitics.com

Chi Trib worries and worries over a social problem

It’s about “youth” being un-hireable because they have been so put upon.

Front page stuff in hard copy, 2,700+ words (!), way down the “breaking news” screen on the web.

It’s the bland entertaining the bland.

Has stuff like:

* “a failure to invest in its low-income neighborhoods and the people who live there”

* “The system has pushed them to the back of the hiring line.”

* “The problem is not new, but it has taken on renewed urgency as violence surges in some of the city’s neighborhoods, often claiming people — as victims and perpetrators — in their teen and young adult years” — that old demon violence, in this case “claiming” perps. Murderers are victims too!

* “executive director of the Chicagoland Workforce Funder Alliance” is first-quoted source, is followed by dozen or so non-profit quotes or citings or references. Not an economist among them. This is a puff piece, folks — no, a public service announcement. You are warned. Feel-good copy.

* “neglect of low-income neighborhoods,” tried and true OK phrase.

more more more

Do immigrants who are in the U.S. illegally commit more crimes?

Writer says no, presenting statistics.

Reader Ted Ternes rebuts. Go to the Sacramento Bee piece to check on what he rebuts, argument by argument. Three rebuttals seem relevant to overall understanding of the issue:

“Immigration and crime have had an inverse relationship over the years”

implies that an increase in immigrants reduces crime. That is absurd since the reduction in crime is a function of numerous factors, the economy being chief among them. . . .

Immigrants are less likely to be incarcerated in California than U.S.-born adults are”

. . . ignores the fact that many illegal immigrants that commit crimes . . . are deported, rather than incarcerated. . . .

Immigration offenses, not violent crimes, account for most federal immigrant convictions, at 31 percent”

 is. . .  flawed because it only deals with convictions; again, many illegal immigrants are deported for committing crime, and as such are never convicted. . . .

The Ternes comments, here edited for relevance, serve to outline the argument.

via Do immigrants who are in the U.S. illegally commit more crimes? | The Sacramento Bee