the breakfast table
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- The Supreme Court Breakfast Table
Should there be a shooting range next to the Supreme Court gift shop?
Walter Dellinger
posted June 27, 2008 - The Supreme Court Breakfast Table
Was it ever Miller time?
Dahlia Lithwick
posted June 26, 2008 - What's the Big Secret?
Continuing the conversation.
Patrick Radden Keefe
posted Aug. 30, 2007 - A Supreme Court Conversation
Everything convservatives should abhor.
Walter Dellinger
posted June 29, 2007 - The Midterm Elections
The blame game, George Allen, and more.
Mark Halperin
posted Nov. 3, 2006 - Search for more the breakfast table articles
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Alfred Gingold and Helen Rogan
The Numbers I Know
Posted Wednesday, Aug. 29, 2001, at 4:50 PM ETAlfie,
This may be discouraging news to you, but I have almost no numbers in my head at all and never have. Too easy to say this is some fuzzy female problem. I blame myself--something to do with algebra. Here are the kinds of numbers that count for me: the THI index and my blood pressure--not that I can exactly remember it now, but I know enough to listen eagerly when the doctor gives me the news. I know how much our house cost, how much we have in the bank, the population of Brooklyn, and how many people died in the Vietnam War and the Oklahoma City bombing. Of course I'm fixated on body weights (both real and desired), and I'll never forget that one Italian sausage in that supermarket we visited in Vermont last week had an astounding 17 grams of fat. ... As for the national debt, mortgage rates, or the speed of Goran Ivanisevic's serve, over to you.
H
The Numbers I Know
Posted Wednesday, Aug. 29, 2001, at 4:50 PM ETReader Comments From The Fray:
[Notes from the Fray Editor: Reparations and museums were the hot topics here. There was news from Tony Adragna that there is an African-American museum in DC. Elusive Fray poster Amyntas started a splendid discussion on reparations and taxcuts here, featuring posts titled "A nonsensical argument" and "Typical disingenuous twaddle." A high moral tone, and criticism of young women, were the common themes in two posts: a most unusual view on the Chandra Levy affair, here, and one on Tea Leoni here.]
The ambiguity of the reparations debate is what I like most about that entire issue. Whether reparations ever get paid or not (I suspect that they won't), to the extent that national attention gets focused on this issue, we'll be talking about basic moral issues.
Any serious discussion of this issue will involve questions of duty and obligation, culpability, history, values, rights and wrongs. In short, it will be (finally!) a public debate worthy of a democratic nation. Whatever conclusions we reach, either individually or as a nation, it seems likely that we will be better for having thought about these matters in depth
--Thrasymachus
(To reply, click here.)
The CD-ROM thing is scary. How's Bloomberg going to top it? Will he try to make his hologram appear in all our living rooms?
--Claude Scales
(To reply, click here.)
(8/28)
Didn't it ever bother anybody else that the Weathermen took their name from a line in "Subterranean Homesick Blues" that implied that a weatherman is superfluous under the circumstances? Is this part and parcel of the Marxist-v.-Leninist- historical-determinist conundrum? (i.e., that if historical/economic forces are pushing toward an inevitable result, why do they need me to help them along? As it is sometimes put, if Marx didn't exist, it would be unnecessary to invent him.) That felt good--somebody call me a jackal, it really brings me back...
--Ex-Fed
(To reply, click here.)
I happened to walk by the site of the Village explosion the morning of the event. The exposed apartments, with their wall clocks and tables precariously clinging to the ordinary around the gaping proof of anti-civic rage; the apartments seemed like a stage set for some kind of apocalyptic Beckett drama. The scene was mute, webbed with the yellow crime scene tapes of the municipal police. A mix of fear and curiosity animated the passers-by. I stood and stared, hearing the news in bits and pieces. Suddenly I noticed a sign, hand lettered, pinned to the police sawhorse. I looked closer and saw a few others, same hand, same posting method. In repeated, and therefore intentional orthography, the phrase "nothning is free" was scrawled in black marker on typing paper.
The phrase burned itself into my subconscious. I have never seen it since, nor heard it mentioned in the context of the Weathermen or other underground groups.
Nothning is free. Even if it has escaped justice. Especially if it has escaped justice.
--Zeitguy
(To reply, click here.)
(8/31)
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