Archive for July, 2008

30
Jul

Henry Morgentaler: Devil or Angel?

In an essay I wrote a few months ago I said that abortion was no longer a “hot topic” in Canada. I’ve recently been forced to retract this statement, however. The reason: Dr. Henry Morgentaler, a family physician, abortion provider, and leading pro-choice advocate in this country, has received the Order of Canada for his contributions to Canadian society.

The decision – by Governor General Michaelle Jean – to bestow this honour upon Dr. Morgentaler created a firestorm of controversy unseen since the 1980s. That was the decade in which articles on abortion appeared in major Canadian newspapers on literally a weekly if not daily basis. At the time, under Canadian law women who wished to end their pregnancies had to obtain permission from a hospital-based committee consisting of three doctors who determined whether the woman in question possessed adequate grounds to do so. These grounds included medical as well as social reasons. Dr. Morgentaler on the other hand ran freestanding clinics where a woman could undergo the procedure for no other reason than she wanted it. For setting up these clinics he was imprisoned, put on trial, and acquitted on at least three occasions. Finally things came to a head in 1988 when the Supreme Court of Canada, in a case entitled R. vs. Morgentaler, effectively legalized so-called abortion on demand by removing any reference to the procedure from the Criminal Code. Morgentaler, and any other abortionists for that matter, were free to set up shop without restriction.

As expected, different groups have reacted differently to Morgentaler’s reception of the award. Feminist Judy Rebick, for example, described it as a “victory for Canadian women” in the generally conservative National Post. For Rebick and other pro-choice activists, Morgentaler’s work has made it possible for women to control their own bodies without fear of having to resort to a dangerous illegal abortion. At the other end of the spectrum, pro-life individuals and organizations, such as the Roman Catholic Church, were up in arms at Dr. Morgentaler’s nomination to the Order of Canada. They hold him responsible for the death of thousands of unborn babies. The minister at a church near my home invited his parishioners to sign an on-line petition opposing the nomination. Some past recipients of the Order, including Lucien Larre, a British Columbia priest who founded a home for drug-addicted youths, have returned their award in protest. Even people not necessarily affiliated with the anti-abortion movement have expressed reservations about the decision to grant Henry Morgentaler the Order of Canada. Prime Minister Stephen Harper, who despite the presence of pro-lifers in his party has denied any intention to change Canada’s current abortion law, claims he would have preferred to see the award go to someone who united rather than divided the nation. Some White Supremacists have denounced Morgentaler as the Jew who kills White babies (I must admit to being a bit perplexed not only by the White Supremacists’ view that Jews are not White but by their portrayal of abortion as an anti-White genocidal plot, as White women actually terminate their pregnancies at a lower per capita rate than minority women do).

I myself lack strong feelings either way on Morgentaler’s reception of the Order. First, awards like the Order of Canada don’t really mean much to me. In addition, I’m fairly apolitical about abortion in general. A candidate’s position on the matter, for instance, won’t make or break my vote. I suppose I’m part of the so-called “mushy middle,” i.e. support legal abortion in the first few months of pregnancy, later for medical reasons, all the while conceding that the procedure is not the moral equivalent of having a tooth pulled. I’d even concur with the pro-lifers that abortions done for social reasons shouldn’t be paid for with public money. In these respects I think I’m like the majority of Canadians, who veer from either extreme on the issue.

Ironically, perhaps both the pro-life and pro-choice sides are guilty of according Henry Morgentaler more importance than he is actually due. To paraphrase Voltaire, if Morgentaler did not exist, we would have had to invent him. Abortion on demand, de facto or de jure, would in all likelihood have become a reality in Canada with or without him, just as it did in most other industrialized nations at a time when legislation on issues like abortion, divorce and homosexuality were being liberalized. Even before the 1988 Supreme Court decision, the much-maligned abortion committees probably didn’t stop too many women from ending their pregnancies. Many of them simply obtained permission to do so by claiming bearing a child would threaten their “health,” as in psychological health. Though anti-abortionists lay the death of thousands of what they consider unborn children at Morgentaler’s feet, in his absence someone else would have almost certainly stepped up to the plate, so to speak, and offered the same service. Just as animals will continue to be butchered as long as people eat meat, abortion will always occur if there is a demand for it.

The key to reducing the demand for abortion and resolving the debate lies in providing accessible and effective birth control so that women can avoid pregnancies they do not want. Unfortunately many members of the pro-life movement oppose not only abortion but contraception as well. Indeed one abortion provider in the Netherlands, a country with a low abortion rate despite very liberal laws, told an interviewer that by providing birth control information to his patients he has probably “prevented more abortions than the Pope.” My own hope is to see abortion one day become, in the words of former US President Bill Clinton, safe, legal and rare.

Sphere: Related Content

29
Jul

Cuil Runnings Part 2

Part 1 of Cuil Runnings described the self-proclaimed Google-beating search engine and summarized industry’s initial response after launch. Their reception was … frosty, to say the least. Was the response justified? Several tests were performed using common search types to determine whether Cuil is fit to replace Google on discerning desktops.

Test 1: Music Group

For engineers, these ex-Googlers did a poor job of estimating the initial server load but let’s not be petty – it’s only day one. The search results matter most and in particular page 1 of the search results (which is where most people look). Total number of search results, while often used as a selling point, mean very little in practical terms since most surfers only look at the top 10 or 20.

Cuil Search Engine Test 1: 4Hero

My first test was done using a moderately popular music group, the British RnB / Drum n Bass outfit 4Hero. Cuil really showed its best side for this example: firstly, the results displayed in a three-column magazine style (two-column displays are selectable). To the right are a series of categories related to the group 4Hero, including albums from the group and related artists. If you were to click on the link titled “Goldie” (another Drum n Bass artist) Cuil would search for “4Hero Goldie”. This accessible drill down display will be indispensable for people doing actual research.

Test 2: Ancient Civilization

Cuil Search Engine Test 2: Nubia

Inspired by the implications from the first test, I keyed in an ancient civilization –Nubia- to determine how easily research could be accomplished. Again, the category drill down was available on the right but this time a result filter was available above the search results. Since Nubia is a pretty broad topic, Cuil gave the option to filter the existing results on major subtopics like Ancient Nubia and Rhadopis of Nubia. Cuil’s interface is closer to an interactive encyclopedia than a straight search engine.

Test 3: Direct Website Reference

cuil4.jpg

Cuil really fails when it comes to identifying name of actual websites. This is important because a worrying number of people still find websites by entering the English name in a search engine and clicking on the first link they see. I tried that with Jack’s NewsWatch and no link to the site root exists on the front page. In fact, the first link on the list is to Jack’s new-found nemesis at StageLeft. The average site-owner probably doesn’t want a large % of potential search traffic going to his detractors. A significant % of the search results were also coming from third-party services like HaloScan and blog aggregators. Conversely, Google’s first link went directly to the front of Jack’s site, with lesser quantities of the parasitic sites in later links. The same test was performed with other blog sites (Cynics Unlimited, Crux of the Matter, Blue Like You) and only Google linked to the root of the actual site within the first page. The first search result for Small Dead Animals links to a site attacking the blog owner. The first search for Blink 7 links to Blink 182’s band site.

Cuil was much better at identifying major websites like CNN, but that’s hardly an indication of a search engine’s ability to determine link relevance.

Test 4: Recent News Articles

Cuil Search Engine Test 4: Recent News ArticleTesting Cuil’s ability to retrieve the latest news stories involved writing two tests per article. First, the full title of the article entered verbatim into the browser to determine whether a link to the actual article or reprint of the article appeared on the first page. The second test was completed using key words. The tests are listed below (key words in brackets)

  • Associated Press: Bush OKs execution of Army death row prisoner (keywords: Bush Ronald Gray Execution)
  • Reuters: Zimbabwe crisis negotiations deadlocked (keywords: Zimbabwe negotiations)
  • Canadian Press: Bell Canada to cut 2,500 jobs to lower operating costs ahead of takeover (keywords: Bell Canada job cuts)

Cuil returned no results for the title of the AP or CP articles. The Reuters subject line returned an excerpt from a Zimbabwe site unrelated to the article in question. Amazingly, Cuil had no results at all for they keywords related to the AP article, meaning not even info on traditional websites. The CP keywords returned several Wikipedia pages about Bell and one WSWS article about Bell cutting jobs … in 1999. Conversely, Google found all of the articles by title and keywords within the first page. Cuil may be indexing more pages than Google but surely aren’t doing so with great speed.

Conclusion

Cuil’s interface is beautiful and intuitive. General-purpose researchers and students will quickly take to its OLAP-style interface and numerous search refinement options. The search engine itself needs help, however. Cuil was not intuitive enough to recognize all by the most ubiquitous site names while third party sites and junk aggregators pushed actual site content out of the top listings. Cuil performed abysmally at retrieving current events or recently-updated sites, which is unacceptable in a 24-hour news environment. As of now, Google has little to fear.

Sphere: Related Content

29
Jul

Cuil Runnings Part 1

Cuil Search Engine

Cuil (pronounced “cool”) is the creation of Google alumnus Anna Patterson, who is working in conjunction with her husband (former IBM employee Tom Costello) and two other ex Google engineers. Patterson’s last major search engine effort was purchased by the mighty Google in 2004. Costello’s previous efforts include a 1990’s search engine called Xift and IBM’s WebFountain technology. Monier is the former Chief Technology officer of AltaVista – considered by many to be the best search engine in the pre-Google webverse. This group has credentials. They also have funding, to the tune of $33 million in venture capital investments.

Cuil’s self-purported advantages over the competition (read: Google) are as follows

  • More Links. The Cuil search engine claims an index spanning 120 billion web pages, dwarfing both Google’s most recently reported figure of 8.2 billion web pages and the industry’s estimate of 40 billion pages
  • More privacy. Cuil promises not to track the habits of individual users, purporting to track general web trends instead. This feature seems designed to appeal to the privacy experts who have complained about Google’s invasive data gathering efforts.
  • Content-based rankings. Cuil’s engine reportedly places more emphasis on the content of the page than which pages link to it. This is a potential advantage to both users more interested in research than buzz and content providers who concentrate on quality rather than social networking to build their sites.

Survey Says …

Alas, many engines have come and faltered in light of Google’s massive 62% market share (USA). How well did Cuil hold up on its opening day? Not too well, judging by reports in the IT media:

“If you are going to roll out a new search engine, please try to make one that has more going for it than a silly name and cheap, misleading PR. Thus we have Cuil, the search engine rolled out this last week by some ex-Google folks who see a market opportunity. While all the people involved seem competent and have great resumes, the site itself out-and-out stinks”
-John C. Dvorak

“Cuil went live last night and then went down after only a couple of hours of operation due to an apparently overwhelming response which lead to a server melt down. At the time of writing this article they were back up again, but you’d have thought that with all the hype around their launch they would have been better prepared?”
-New Zealand Herald

“What’s the first thing people check in a new, more-powerful Internet search? Their own name, of course. The SAI staff ran our own names through Cuil’s search. It hadn’t heard of some of us, while for others it returned our bylines next to pictures of… other people.
SAI’s commenters noted that searches for terms like “penguins” or “failure” returned zero results.”

-Silicon Valley Insider

Cuil’s lackluster performance is explained briefly in an equally critical CNET article

“Cuil isn’t set up as a massively parallel search network the way, say, Google is. Tom Costello had explained this to me a bit when we talked last week. Each of Cuil’s search appliances is specialized to a particular subcategory of results. There are machines that understand and index sports; others are experts on medicine, etc. As these search machines get overloaded, Sollitto said, they drop offline for some queries, and the machines left online return less-than-relevant results that then appear at the top of users’ pages.”
-WebWare

Overall, it can be said Cuil’s launch was one of the least successful in recent tech history. Is the criticism fair, however? Proceed to part 2 to find out!

Sphere: Related Content

19
Jul

Born Again Christians

A few weeks ago I was watching a program on kangaroos. When baby kangaroos (called “joeys”) are first born, they are tiny, almost embryonic. Their forelimbs however are powerful enough to allow them to crawl up their mother’s bellies into her pouch and onto her nipple. They remain attached to the teat for several months, maturing in the pouch as placental mammals, such as cats, dogs, horses and even humans, would in the womb. Eventually the joeys start sticking their little heads outside of the pouch. They ultimately jump out of the pouch and start hopping around on the ground, although they return to their mother for warmth and nourishment. On leaving the pouch for the first time, the young kangaroo is described as a “born again joey” because he or she is then at the same stage of development a placental mammal would be at the moment of birth.

Of course the phrase “born again joey” is a play on words on the expression “born again Christian,” which in its turn comes from Jesus’ declaration to the Jewish ruler Nicodemus in John 3:3: “Except a man be born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God.” In popular usage, though, the term “born again Christian” refers to a person who has explicitly stated that he or she has accepted Jesus as his or her personal saviour. While this definition is fairly simple, the “born again” phenomenon has a number of social, theological and other implications worth examining in more detail.

I first became aware of this phenomenon in my hometown of Windsor, Ontario, a small mainly working-class city on the border with the United States. When I left Windsor in the late ‘80s to go to college, the town seemed to be literally teeming with born again Christians. Two of my high school teachers, for instance, claimed to have been born again. However, the born again trend began in fact around the 1970s and continues until this day. “Born again” celebrities include Jewish-born folk singer Bob Dylan; Larry Flynt, editor of the pornographic magazine Hustler; Norma McCorvey, the woman who was “Roe” in the case legalizing abortion in the United States and who later became a pro-life activist; and actor Kirk Cameron. Perhaps the most famous “born again” is current US President George W. Bush, who said he “found Jesus” and proceeded to break his heavy drinking habit. Though born again Christians are not associated with any one particular denomination, they tend to belong to fundamentalist groups such as the Baptists, Pentecostals and Church of Christ rather than liturgical churches like the Lutheran, Anglican, Catholic and Eastern Orthodox ones.

I was always intrigued by why people became “born again.” One recurrent pattern that struck me was that many, though not all, of them had found Jesus at a time of crisis in their lives (example: George W. Bush). In other cases, they embraced born again Christianity because they felt they were “missing” something from the religion in which they were raised, typically the Catholic or a mainline Protestant Church (a phenomenon I mentioned in my previous article on why some people were drawn to the New Age movement). For instance, a Catholic friend of mine in high school confided to me that she wasn’t “getting anything out of” her weekly Mass and thought being a born again Christian might help brighten up the spiritual lacklustre in her life. Ironically, a Catholic nun once told me that perhaps some Catholics left their Church because it no longer offered things like processions, pilgrimages, etcetera that in the past made their religious practice more meaningful.

For some individuals, getting “born again” motivates them to make changes for the better in their lives. Some have managed to break free of alcohol or drug abuse. Norma McCorvey now counsels women faced with crisis pregnancies. On the other hand, at times it appears that the born again experience is a bit like a spiritual “high” that relies a great deal on emotions and day-to-day feelings – like falling in love. And while I think spiritual intensity is positive in many ways, if one’s relationship with Jesus depends on one’s mood at the moment, there is a danger that this relationship may deteriorate once the “high” wears off. Some born again Christians may end up questioning or even renouncing their faith after the initial bliss fades. Bob Dylan, for example, returned to Judaism. Norma McCorvey eventually joined the Roman Catholic Church. Larry Flynt became an atheist and described his former conversion as a “bipolar condition” (“bipolar” refers to the disease once known as manic depression). As a practising Christian myself, I prefer a more “even-keel” relationship with Jesus to one punctuated by manic ups and downs, just as I think a good but not always exciting marriage has greater promise of lasting than a head-over-heels love affair.

Members of liturgical churches believe the “born again” experience occurs through baptism. Indeed, shortly after John 3:3 Jesus tells Nicodemus, “Except a man be born of water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter the kingdom of God.” The sacrament of baptism as a new birth is prefigured in Ezekiel 36:25: “Then will I sprinkle clean water upon you, and ye shall be clean.” The idea of baptism as a rebirth is strengthened by the fact that both physical birth and baptism involve water: in the first case, the amniotic fluid from the womb and in the second the sprinkling by a priest or minister.

It might be interesting to contrast the liturgical view of baptism to that held by people who actually call themselves born again Christians. First of all, while the former believe in infant baptism, most of the latter do not (one “born again” girl I knew who had been baptized a Catholic as an infant was later rechristened). Most born again Christians would probably not see the baptism of a baby as proof of him or her being born again. In addition, born again Christians often speak of being saved, which they usually associate with the moment they accepted Jesus Christ as their personal saviour. However, the Apostle Peter explicitly declares that “Baptism doth save us” (1 Peter 3:21). One Lutheran Missouri Synod website adds to this distinction by explaining that “Lutherans do not direct people to subjective personal experiences (i.e. being born again as a personal experience) for assurance of salvation, but to God’s objective Word and Sacraments.” Baptism, as opposed to an emotionally-driven personal experience such as “finding Jesus” all of a sudden, provides a concrete sign of a child’s (or occasionally adult’s) membership in the family of God.

Going back to the subject at the beginning of my essay – kangaroos – I must say that I nicknamed my fourteen-month-old daughter the joey because like a baby kangaroo she is always at the breast and because I carry her in a “pouch” (Baby Bjorn). She was baptized in August of last year. She is now starting to walk around outside of the pouch. So I suppose she is both a born again Christian and a born again joey!

Sphere: Related Content

16
Jul

Podcasting: Toronto News on ITunes

Thanks to the Internet, waiting for the latest news is a thing of the past. Most credible web news sites provide RSS feeds and are updated 24 hours per day, allowing important stories to propagate across the entire web in mere minutes. The resulting consumer desire for immediacy and the wide availability of internet connections has presented a challenge for traditional media like newspapers (which are forever condemned to slow periodic releases) and television (which precludes fast searches for specific content). Many major news services in Canada have attempted to bridge the gap between old and new media via podcasting, releasing creating just-in-time audio and/or video broadcasts of news content for download onto IPods and alternative MP3 Players. Apple’s Itunes contains one of the largest collections of free audio and video news content – perfect for making that daily trip to work just a little more pleasant.

CBC leads the way for Toronto and Canada with a comprehensive selection of weekly, daily and even hourly news podcasts. Provincial, national and international programs are available for download as well as specialty programs like Quirks & Quarks and The Hour (the latter provided in video format) Music fans will be happy to hear that several Classical, Jazz and Pop music programs from Radio 2 and Radio 3 are also available for download, though some require a modest fee (most likely to keep CIRA quiet).

CanWest Global provides a worthy alternative to CBC for more conservative listeners. Its Global TV news station provides a daily video podcast of the 6:00 news. The catch is that the news segments are posted the morning after the TV broadcast, so avid watchers may not gain from this content. For editorial content, CanWest’s National Post newspaper offers two podcasts – Full Comment and Posted Toronto. Full comment topics are usually political and patterned around editorials on the Full Comment section of the NP website. Posted Toronto deals strictly with GTA matters and uses an informal talk radio format. Both NP podcasts are approximately weekly.

CityNews provides a daily web-only podcast with rotating news presenters. Unfortunately, the podcast is rarely longer than five minutes and contains no sports, weather or entertainment.

The Toronto Star provides several weekly special-interest podcasts. John Sakomoto’s Anti-Hit List takes on added relevance when one can actually hear the music being described, while Linwood Barclay manages to be more entertaining audibly than in print. YouDoc podcasts are less than two minutes long and offer quick health tips that straddle between info and advertisement. The auto racing podcast features decent speculation and debate but probably would have packed more punch in video format. Strangely, the Star doesn’t offer any news or editorial content, despite being Canada’s most prominent newspaper.

At the rear the pack, Sun Media appears to have no ITunes presence at all, while a search for the Globe and Mail revealed only one discontinued tech podcast. This is surprising considering the Globe was one of the first newspapers to allow user comments on its web content while the Toronto Sun’s columnists excel more than any other paper at covering local issues. Hopefully these two entities join the podcast party soon.

Sphere: Related Content

15
Jul

Empty Controversies

The New Yorker, known for its satire in both words and illustration, seems to have crossed a critical line with a recent issue’s illustration of Barack Obama and his wife Michelle.

The illustration shows Obama clad in the traditional Muslim garb giving a fist tap to a rifle slinging Michelle New Yorker Illustration of Barack Obama(presumably dressed to look like a member of the Black Panther Party). The couple smiles devilishly while an American flag burns in a nearby fireplace underneath a portrait of Osama Bin Laden. Titled “The Politics of Fear”, the controversial magazine cover has ignited debates across the nation concerning what’s in poor taste. Both Obama’s camp and Republican rival John McCain’s camp denounced the sketch as offensive.

It must be asked – why the outrage? Surely, with a title like “The Politics of Fear” it should be clear that The New Yorker’s real target is the ignorance among Obama’s detractors rather then the politician himself. Animated TV shows like South Park and Family Guy have thrived making similar light of human prejudices, mostly without incident. Moreover, a president Obama would surely expect to be targeted by unflattering cartoons likely to attack everything from his inexperience to his unusually large ears – without any context belittling the intelligence of his detractors.

Got Milk?

The second Obama-related controversy this week concerned comments by archaic political pundit John McLaughlin:

On the edition of the syndicated program The McLaughlin Group that aired the weekend of July 11-13, while discussing recent comments made by the Rev. Jesse Jackson about Sen. Barack Obama, host John McLaughlin said: “Question: Does it frost Jackson, Jesse Jackson, that someone like Obama, who fits the stereotype blacks once labeled as an Oreo — a black on the outside, a white on the inside — that an Oreo should be the beneficiary of the long civil rights struggle which Jesse Jackson spent his lifetime fighting for?”

Again, controversy erupted over McLaughlin’s use of a slur against blacks accused of acting white. Once again, the context of the question is lost amid the concentration on the words – McLaughlin was indirectly referring to Jesse Jackson’s recent off-air-yet-on-air tirade at Fox News where he berated Obama for “talking down to blacks” and states the desire to “rip his nuts off”.

If you happen to be black and have done more than one of the following…

  1. Enjoyed music not found in the “Urban” section of the record store
  2. Written an essay in proper English that did not deal with oppression or slavery
  3. Spoken several consecutive sentences deemed coherent by the average Kiwanis Club member
  4. Refused to beatify any black poorer than yourself as the epitome of cultural legitimacy

then there’s a strong chance someone has called you can oreo and/or sellout behind your back, if not to your face. Blacker-than-thou hyperbole is a staple in black intraracial political debates (one poster at black political blog Booker Rising made quite a reputation for himself by referring to myself and anyone else to the right of Stokely Carmichael as boot-licking uncle toms ready to re-sell ourselves into slavery to win the affections of the massa’). John McLaughlin was simply stating in plain words what is frequently implied of the half-white Obama’s refined persona and his propensity to appeal to white audiences rather than demonize them.

The Easiest Route to Presidency – Martyrdom

Both of these so-called controversies are mostly noise and the Obama camp knows it. Their swift reaction, along with the terse reaction from high-profile supporters seems designed to draw his opponent into a losing debate. The McCain camp -often expected to deal in race identity politics to energize to their southern and Evangelical base- were wise to quickly distance themselves from the New Yorker image, which could be taken literally by the less intelligent among our southern neighbors to be literal commentary. Had the Republicans not distanced themselves from the implications, swing voters could revolt via voting for Obama just to prove America is not a nation of knuckle-draggers.

Alas McCain did not take the bait and will make every effort to avoid being drawn into a racial debate. Most of the sniping seem so far has come from conservative partisans and entertainers, with most of it being no more serious than harping on Obama’s highly cosmetic relationship with Rev. Jeremiah Wright (who was summarily dismissed once Obama needed to appeal to a different audience) and constant iterations of his full name: Barrack HUSSEIN Obama. Get it? Hussein? Like Saddam! Obama’s middle name proves his ties to radical Islam and points to a secret vendetta against America!

Sadly enough, some people actually buy that reasoning. Thus, one can’t blame Obama for attempting martyrdom.

Sphere: Related Content

08
Jul

Nova Scotia – Dixie Digby

That pesky word that activists like -alienation- comes to mind:

Nathaniel Fells, 19, and William Drummond, 20, claim they were leaving a bar after closing time when Fells noticed a group of men beside a large vehicle.

The van was filled with off-duty officers from out-of-town RCMP detachments, Halifax Regional Police and other Nova Scotia police forces who were in town for a charity golf tournament.

But Fells said he didn’t know that.

He said when he and Drummond looked toward the van they heard someone yell a racial slur.

“I heard someone say ‘What are you looking at, n……?’ “

Recall Nova Scotia is the home of Africville, that black settlement that was legislated and underserviced out of existence by the fine people of Nova Scotia. Old habits die hard. Acknowledging that this post may get me into trouble with a few good friends in blue (who hopefully remain so going forward) …

Observations:

  • It’s futile to complain about lack of respect for the law when the law chooses to show no respect for civilians. I’ve seen this first-hand in Central America and the United States – once the police prove themselves untrustworthy and unprofessional they simply become another group of combatants in the eyes of most civilians.
  • This is hardly a convincing argument for black youth to put down the guns – in fact some clever activist may attempt to legitimize the practice as a form of 60′s-style self-defense. Given the higher volume of native/police incidents, it’s surprising that native youth haven’t armed themselves more. Perhaps these “politically correct” efforts to diversify police forces aren’t quite as useless as some would have us believe?
Sphere: Related Content




Further Research


RSSQuick Shots




Categories


Archives