November 7, 2009
New Yorker cover—so often in perfect sync with our times…

New Yorker cover—so often in perfect sync with our times…

Congress’s Brass Knuckles
Another casualty of the lead toy ‘safety’ law.

The wheels on the bus won’t go ‘round and ‘round in many playrooms this year if the Consumer Product Safety Commission has its way. On Wednesday, the Commission voted against a petition to exempt small pieces of brass used in the wheels on toy cars, tractors and buses from draconian lead standards. The fiasco is one more sign that Congress must address the chaos created by its 2008 law regulating lead in toys.
Lead is a typical component of brass but poses minuscule risk to children through toys. As the CPSC’s own staff remarked, “the estimated exposure to lead from children’s contact with the die-cast toys would have little impact on the blood lead level.” But no matter, the language of the law says the Commission can’t consider risk in granting exclusions. Any potential absorption of lead at all is grounds for a ban, despite its presence in other common brass fixtures kids get their hands on regularly, like doorknobs and keys.
Democrats in Congress have insisted that problems with the law they wrote are the fault of the CPSC charged with implementing it. How’s that going? Following the Commission’s 3-2 vote against the brass exemption, CPSC Commissioner Anne Northrop noted that the decision not to grant a brass exemption shows that “the Commission does not believe there is any [flexibility] written into the law.” Without action from Congress to address the chaos it created, Ms. Northrop said, “More small businesses will be forced to shut down.”
CPSC Chairman Inez Tenenbaum has insisted that changing the law would be “premature.” Yet it has already been more than a year of bedlam for manufacturers and retailers negotiating these rules. In February, the CPSC’s one year stay of enforcement on testing will expire, opening the field to more crackdowns on small businesses.
Many of the worst problems were apparent when the bill was written but lawmakers ignored the warnings in order to satisfy Naderite interest groups. Democrats have refused to fix this mess, at great cost to businesses, and further underscoring government’s reputation for unfairness and incompetence.
From the The Wall Street Journal, 8 November 2009.

Congress’s Brass Knuckles

Another casualty of the lead toy ‘safety’ law.

The wheels on the bus won’t go ‘round and ‘round in many playrooms this year if the Consumer Product Safety Commission has its way. On Wednesday, the Commission voted against a petition to exempt small pieces of brass used in the wheels on toy cars, tractors and buses from draconian lead standards. The fiasco is one more sign that Congress must address the chaos created by its 2008 law regulating lead in toys.

Lead is a typical component of brass but poses minuscule risk to children through toys. As the CPSC’s own staff remarked, “the estimated exposure to lead from children’s contact with the die-cast toys would have little impact on the blood lead level.” But no matter, the language of the law says the Commission can’t consider risk in granting exclusions. Any potential absorption of lead at all is grounds for a ban, despite its presence in other common brass fixtures kids get their hands on regularly, like doorknobs and keys.

Democrats in Congress have insisted that problems with the law they wrote are the fault of the CPSC charged with implementing it. How’s that going? Following the Commission’s 3-2 vote against the brass exemption, CPSC Commissioner Anne Northrop noted that the decision not to grant a brass exemption shows that “the Commission does not believe there is any [flexibility] written into the law.” Without action from Congress to address the chaos it created, Ms. Northrop said, “More small businesses will be forced to shut down.”

CPSC Chairman Inez Tenenbaum has insisted that changing the law would be “premature.” Yet it has already been more than a year of bedlam for manufacturers and retailers negotiating these rules. In February, the CPSC’s one year stay of enforcement on testing will expire, opening the field to more crackdowns on small businesses.

Many of the worst problems were apparent when the bill was written but lawmakers ignored the warnings in order to satisfy Naderite interest groups. Democrats have refused to fix this mess, at great cost to businesses, and further underscoring government’s reputation for unfairness and incompetence.

From the The Wall Street Journal, 8 November 2009.

I had a flash of something I hadn’t felt…a mixture of ignorance and a loose, “what the hell” kind of confidence that comes on a man when the wind picks up and he begins to move in a hard straight line toward an unknown horizon.
Hunter S. Thompson
Lunch, in 1960.

Lunch, in 1960.

November 6, 2009
“From a Martian’s perspective, high schools look virtually the same as sixth grade. There’s no recognition, in the structure of school, that these are very different people with different capabilities.”
http://blog.newsweek.com/blogs/nurtureshock/archive/2009/11/05/why-teenagers-are-growing-up-so-slowly-today.aspx

“From a Martian’s perspective, high schools look virtually the same as sixth grade. There’s no recognition, in the structure of school, that these are very different people with different capabilities.”

http://blog.newsweek.com/blogs/nurtureshock/archive/2009/11/05/why-teenagers-are-growing-up-so-slowly-today.aspx

It’s hard to get the news from poetry, but people die everyday for want or lack of what is found there.
William Carlos Williams
suitep:

marjoree:

When the red, red robin comes bob, bob bobbin’ along, along…

suitep:

marjoree:

When the red, red robin comes bob, bob bobbin’ along, along…

The job of the artist is always to deepen the mystery.
Francis Bacon
November 5, 2009
And whenever I get off a good poem, that’s another crutch to keep me going. I don’t know about other people, but when I bend over to put on my shoes in the morning, I think, Christ-oh-mighty, now what? I’m screwed by life, we don’t get along. I have to take little bites out of it, not the whole thing.
Charles Bukowski
My talents are more valuable than yours, so I am paid accordingly, and therefore I am entitled to my bonus.
Jack Donaghy