July 28, 2010
July 23, 2010
When Metal Bands named after Sweet Little Birds and Monty Python Sketches Walked the Earth
It appears that King Dork is responsible for introducing this guy to the New Wave of British Heavy Metal. You're quite welcome, sir.
July 21, 2010
The Red Menace
Every report I've seen on this "hidden" tax code amendment spins it as primarily a burden on Glenn Beck and his gold-dealing paymasters, but what it actually is is an attack on all self-employed people.
Added: closing comments because of spam, not because I don't want to talk about the tax code and Glenn Beck and such.
July 19, 2010
July 18, 2010
June 25, 2010
Thinking Twice about Dialing 911
If the complaint summarized here is to be believed, ten El Reno, Oklahoma police officers, responding to a 911 call, used tasers on an 87-year-old bed-ridden woman because she "took a more aggressive posture in her bed" when they entered her room. The call was made by her grandson, who couldn't tell whether she had taken her medication and was worried about her condition. He was threatened with tasers as well, handcuffed, and detained in a police car while the police, er, dealt with the old lady.
That's just the plaintiff's complaint in a lawsuit, of course, so there may be more to the story. I can't imagine what it might be, but maybe there's a good reason why ten armed, able-bodied officers felt threatened enough by an elderly invalid that they had to resort to such dangerous, and in this case possibly life-threatening, tactics. That bit about the "aggressive posture" does appear to be quoted from the police report, showing that, whatever is going on, the police don't feel they have to try all that hard to make a convincing case that getting out the taser was the right way to go in this situation.
I have had only one experience with 911 myself, but it was a doozy. (Though as doozies go, it doesn't begin to reach the level of dooziness of the one described in the first part of this post. But you take your doozies as you find them.)
My girlfriend and I had just moved into a new place. The kitchen wasn't equipped yet, so I was cutting some vegetables with a pocket knife rather than a real one, and had an unfortunate accident: the knife unexpectedly closed on my finger. Like a lot of such wounds, it looked much worse than it turned out to be. But seeing the blood spurting rhythmically with each heartbeat and spattering all over the counter and floor had a powerful effect on my emotional state. I wrapped it in a towel and stumbled into the living room in a daze. I felt a little dizzy and strange, but it seemed as though the worst was over.
"I cut my hand, but I'm okay," I announced. It was at this point that the blood, temporarily obstructed by the dish towel, found a way to resume its pulsing flow. And it was the sight of these spurts forcing their way through the makeshift bandage that pushed me over the edge.
The next thing I knew I was surrounded by candles, and each dancing flame was screaming my name. These soon morphed into the single face and voice of my girlfriend looking down at me, and I realized I'd passed out and was lying crumpled on the floor, blood still gushing and my head throbbing from something it had hit on the way down.
I wasn't sure the situation warranted a call to 911, and in retrospect it almost certainly did not. But, for good or ill, a call to 911 was placed.
Now, when you dial this number, it's supposed to contact local emergency services, and when things work properly the people at the other end are able to tell your location. In our case, however, there was some technical mix up with the routing, and the 911 people at the other end when my girlfriend called them believed that our call originated from Dublin rather than Oakland.
I wish I could say that either of us had had the presence of mind to make some kind of James Joyce-related joke, since such ideal occasions for James Joyce jokes rarely present themselves in medical emergencies. There was, sadly, no such joke, at least as far as I can recall, not a "yes I said yes I will yes," nor even a "Frosted Lucky Charms, they're magically delicious." What actually happened was, the operator refused to believe the call wasn't from Dublin, and there ensued a lengthy, and I must say, slightly hysterical, argument about the difference between Oakland, CA and Dublin, CA that ended in a slammed-down phone and what I imagine was a rather confused and resentful 911 operator. And me: there I was, lying in my own blood, thinking how strange life is and other fuzzy sentiments of that general nature.
The next few hours were spent in a nearby emergency room. At some point, while we were away, the 911 people realized the error and sent around four or five fire trucks, a couple of ambulances, and half a dozen police cars. The cops got the guy upstairs, whom we had never met, to let them into the building and forced their way into the apartment. All that blood must have looked pretty suspicious. They asked if anyone had heard gun shots, but eventually seemed to reach the conclusion that it had been a stabbing. We had a lot of explaining to do when we arrived, I with my index finger bandaged and my face a little shamed, but otherwise perfectly intact.
So that's how we met our neighbors, Walter, Phoebe, and the other lady who smelled like juice.
Back then, I thought the moral of the story was: when you move into a new place, test out your 911 to make sure it doesn't go to Dublin. Now, however, I'd really have to advise avoiding 911 altogether, unless you want to run the risk of having your grandma tased in bed and your pets shot. Things have changed, or I have.
Telephone Line
If you'd like to hear me doing "Goody Goody Gumdrops" and "Checkers Speech" over the phone as part of an interview-article about my career as a writer, head on over to The Switchboard Sessions.
June 21, 2010
Roddy Doyle
on the "worst review he's ever had"
An Irish Times review of a reading I gave of one of my children's books, Rover Saves Christmas, in Dublin. The reviewer referred to 'the stench of celebrity vanity'. I've seen him many times since. I've even said hello to him. But I will, eventually, kill him.
June 20, 2010
June 07, 2010
June 03, 2010
Postcards from the Earth
Somehow these two blank postcards addressed to Ronald Reagan and Yuri Andropov found their way into the jacket of my Gang of Four LP, unnoticed by me for thirty years or so till now. (Or did they all come that way?)
May 25, 2010
May 20, 2010
May 17, 2010
"...it was determined that it would be in the best interest of public safety..."
Detroit SWAT team shoots seven year old girl dead while executing search warrant.
"As is common in these types of situations, the officers deployed a distractionary device commonly known as a flash bang," [Assistant Chief Ralph Godbee] said in the statement. "The purpose of the device is to temporarily disorient occupants of the house to make it easier for officers to safely gain control of anyone inside and secure the premise.
More here. Just awful.
May 14, 2010
May 12, 2010
Quote of the Day
"I hate the internet."-- Columbia, MO Police Chief Ken Burton in his second press conference on Corgi-gate.
Ceremonial
Here's Radley Balko's update on the Columbia, MO SWAT raid video, including the story of how the video came to light and bits of a heartbreaking email from the adult female victim in the targeted household.
As he points out, this is not just a case of misconduct by the Columbia Police: it is a national problem. "Odds are pretty good," he writes, "that your local police department is doing the same thing." And he adds: “calling for the heads of the Columbia SWAT team isn’t going to stop these raids.”
He's right that America's misguided drug policy is ultimately to blame for the militarization of police and excrescences like the Columbia raid. A change in national policy is long overdue, obviously. I do think, though, that one step in the right direction would be to hold police departments and the offending officers responsible in cases of clear abuse. Rolling heads can be a deterrent to the most aberrant behavior in the short term, while the long term (and frankly, long-shot) goal of nationwide reform could be worked on. I'd like local police chiefs and those comprising their departmental apparatus to think twice before authorizing such harsh treatment of people suspected of trivial transgressions, and it's hard to see how that works if no one ever loses his job.
Another important point is that, in practice, the difference between "no-knock" and "knock-and-announce" raids is largely ceremonial. (The Columbia raid was not "no knock," but you could have fooled me.) I'm no expert, but I do know that a great deal of legal verbiage and effort and argument has been expended on specifying the standards that demarcate these different types of "entry." If it makes no difference in practice, what's the point? Maybe a police chief who truly believed his job depended on not screwing up, honoring citizens' rights, and ensuring their safety would instruct his officers to give the guy more than 3 seconds to answer the door at 2 AM before busting in and shooting up the place. Seems worth a try, anyway.
Finally, let me quote one of Megan McArdle's commenters:
Do we really want to live in a country where when someone busts into your house at night you're supposed to assume they might be cops? There are countries like that, of course, and a lot of people have moved from them to America for that reason.Their bad, I guess. We are one of those countries. We've got to do better than this.
