I’ve moved

June 24, 2006

I decided to register my own domain for this blog, so you can now find me at http://www.thunderdowncountry.com. I've imported all of my posts and comments from this blog, so nothing will be lost in transition. I'll be playing with the layout quite a bit, so don't mind the rough appearance.


Bruuuuuuuuuuuce

June 18, 2006

Last night I saw Bruce Springsteen and the Seeger Sessions Band at Pine Knob. It was an outstanding show, lasting nearly three hours. Give me the E Street Band any day, but the Seeger Sessions Band sure can play. It was pretty amazing to watch Bruce flawlessly work an awful crowd of Oakland County fucks who are totally unfamiliar with the music he's playing. There's no doubt in my mind that he's the greatest performer in the history of rock. The problem is that most people my age are only familiar with him because their parents listened to Born in the USA when they were in college or something. Consequently, they think he sucks and lump him in with other awful acts that ruled the charts circa 1984. Now, I like Born in the USA just fine, but I didn't appreciate it until I had gone back and immersed myself in his 70s work. The Wild, the Innocent, and the E Street Shuffle and Born to Run are two of the greatest albums ever made.

I went to the Vote for Change tour show at Cobo Arena in Detroit back in 2004 to see R.E.M. and to "tolerate" the Boss. It was really the other way around – R.E.M. proved that they're over the hill and Bruce pretty much changed my life. I'll never pass up another opportunity to see him.

Now I just have to hope that Radiohead can put on equally awe-inspiring performances this week. I can't wait.


The University Channel

June 16, 2006

The University Channel, a "A collection of public affairs lectures, panels and events from academic institutions all over the world for you to view, listen to, stream or download", is quickly becoming of my favorite resources on the Internet. I started subscribing to their podcast feed and I can't recommend it enough. The quality of the lectures is incredible and the selection and breadth grow almost daily. Most of the recordings range from 60 to 90 minutes in length and usually include a lecture followed by a question and answer session.

I've listened to about ten of them now and while they've all been very interesting, the one I absolutely implore you to check out is American Gospel: God, the Founding Fathers, and the Making of a Nation, by Jon Meacham. He discusses his book about the relationship between our nation's formative years and religion. He's an interesting character – a devout Episcopalian with a keen sense of humor and eminent respect for both sides of the fight over separation of church and state, in which he rests solidly in the center. I can't wait to read the book.

(Thanks to Thomas for showing me The University Channel)


More on network neutrality

June 14, 2006

I know I haven't been posting lately, and I apologize. I've been extremely busy and sort of out of the loop on current events. Hence I've deemed it better to keep my mouth shut than to talk about issues that I haven't been following. However, this week I have discovered the magic of using the copius amounts of time that I spend sitting in my cubicle at my new job to listen to all sorts of lengthy podcasts. More on my job in a future post, but the idea is that if I can make it look like I'm doing work and simply listening to music, I can really do hardly anything and concentrate on learning great things from recordings of NPR programs or lectures from esteemed university professors, all without having to compromise myself by running up suspicious network logs.

One of the issues that's really captured my interest over the last few months has been network neutrality. It's obvious to anyone who actually uses the internet that network neutrality is absolutely essential to the character of our cherished internet. You probably wouldn't be reading this blog if there was no such things as network neutrality (although in reality, "you" probably aren't reading this blog, because nobody really does read this blog, as indicated by my traffic). There's been lots of ridiculous rhetoric from  right-wingers who are predictably walking the party line of being "pro-business", which in this case means the telecom companies. Now, I'll be damned if there exists a collection of companies on the planet that are more anti-competitive, corrupt, and deeply evil than the Baby Bells (what, all two or so that are left now?). The keyword is anti-competitive. There is nothing "free-market" about the telecom industry. To eliminate network neutrality is to stymie small business and innovation.

And while an appeal to entrepreneurialship alone makes the answer clear, we can go further and ask ourselves if that's even the whole story. All of this treats the internet solely as a gigantic, expanding marketplace. Yeah, it is, and that's great. However, the internet is first and foremost about information. Not a market for information, but the Information Superhighway. The telecoms want to play god and load up certain lanes with extra 18-wheelers as they see fit, and you can guarantee that Wikipedia isn't going to be able to pony up the dough for the fast lane. The efficacy with which the internet distributes vast amount of information to anyone with the curiosity to look has redefined our lives. And getting back to the business argument, it's completely obliterated information asymmetry in more markets than we could even begin to count.
Network neutrality completely turns the conventional wisdom about what constitutes "regulation" on its head. Yes, technically the government requiring that network operators must treat all network traffic equally is a regulation, but what does it actually mean in terms of beauracracy and oversight? Not much. The internet has grown exponentially and ingeniously so far, and this so-called regulation has been in place every step of the way. The federal government has done very little in the way of governing or controlling the internet. This regulation has been the key to the internet being the ultimate free-market, democratic establishment of the planet. "Hands Off" the internet could just as easily apply to Verizon and AT&T.

At the recent WWW2006 conference, Tim Berners-Lee made the excellent point that our economy can only function because of the "regulation" that we can't, for example, print our own money. It sounds pedagogical, but that's just because conservatives have been so successful at demonizing the word "regulation" like only they can do.

If that's the kind of regulation that self-proclaimed "free-market conservatives" are moaning about, then I think it's a clear indication that these people are either completely misinformed or extremely disingenuous as to exactly whose interests they are trying to protect. As with most issues, the average voter falls under the former category and the average Republican lawmaker/power broker falls under the latter – yet another example of the ingenious scam that is the continuing Republican stranglehold on our governement.