September 14, 2009
Posted by Jay Livingston
Another year. Two hundred posts, which sounds like a lot even to me.
I’ve gone back and selected a sort of top ten. I’m leaving out the culture reviews – a Randy Newman concert, Billy Elliot, Vicki Cristina Barcelona, Rachel Getting Married – even though I like them (and linked them, just in case anyone might be curious) . But most of the posts on the below are based on some quick and dirty data.
1. Godwin’s Law(“As a Usenet discussion grows longer, the probability of a comparison involving Nazis or Hitler approaches 1”) seemed to apply more to the right than the left, so I counted (here). Since then, as you mght guess, the Obama-Hitler hits have doubled.
2. The whole anti-Obama movement struck me as an example fo what Joseph Gusfield called “status politics,” (here) and the Teabaggers and the rest look strikingly like the Temperance movement in Gusfield’s book, though this time around they’ve added gallons of personal vitriol.
3. and 4. The reaction to the Sotomayor nomination provided lots of sociologists with examples for their courses. Mine are here and here .
5. Crime and law enforcement came up, as in this post about racist outcomes without racist attitudes in the LAPD (here) .
6. After I posted on the decline in spouse killings, I found that there was more research on this than I had been aware of (too much and too inconclusive to summarize here).
7. Cop killings connected to drugs might not be all they’re made out to be in the media. But you’ll never convince Peter Moskos of it.
8. The media also got it wrong on clearance rates. A simple graph shows how the press turned good news into bad.
9. The press also found evidence that vouchers in primary education were working wonders. I had a different interpretation.
10. “Keynes from My Father” was just anecdotal evidence, and the allusion to Obama in the title was a bit much. But it’s a personal favorite, maybe because it comes from one of those intersections between what Mills calls biography and history. (The biography is more my father’s than mine.)
Congratulations, Jay! You know, I just didn't have the stamina for blogging. You do really great posts and I have used them in class several times (e.g., I'm planning to use the recent post about "fat bias" in class in the next couple of weeks).
ReplyDeleteI second Andrewska's thoughts. In fact, he's the one who introduced me to your blog.
ReplyDeleteCongratulations! Enjoying your posts-very much.
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