The Music of Todd Lerner

The Detroit Free Press has published a favorable review of Atlasphere member Todd Lerner‘s new album:

What happens when an advertising writer-designer forsakes his computer keyboard for the kind found in a recording studio? In Todd Lerner’s case, it’s something like you’d expect: kind of self-conscious and not at all shy about touting itself.
But that’s about the worst that can be said about “If Right Now Played Guitar,” a half-hour collection of 11 finely polished pop-rock tunes that showcase Lerner’s ear for subtle melody, drier-than-wry sense of humor and exacting studio skills. At its best, the quirky-and-proud-of-it “Right Now” brings to mind Alex Chilton in his druggy phase, or maybe They Might Be Giants trying to tone down the zaniness. Whether or not you’re enamored of the vibe, there’s no denying that Lerner has a distinctive vision, and knows how to bring it off.

Read the full review for more information, or head over to Todd’s “Song for Free” site to listen to the actual music.
PS: If anyone is interested in writing a formal review of the album for the Atlasphere, send us a note.

The Flight That Fought Back

Bob Hessen points us to Arthur Chrenkoff’s review of “The Flight That Fought Back.” It begins:

The story of Flight 93 is extraordinary. “The Flight That Fought Back” is an extraordinary documentary.
On September 11, at 9 PM (ET/PT), Discovery Channel will screen this documentary in the United States, with other countries to follow soon (please check you local TV guides for details). Thanks to the show’s creators, I got a sneak preview and just finished watching it.
I cannot recommend it highly enough.
You simply cannot miss it. I never type in capitals to make a point, but you can take it that I am now. Extensively researched and drawing on some previously unpublished information, “The Flight That Fought Back” provides the most complete and comprehensive recreation of events onboard Flight 93. It’s a stunning, immensely moving production.

Keep reading…

In Praise of Price Gouging

John Stossel has a terrific new article titled “In Praise of Price Gouging.” It begins:

Politicians and the media are furious about price increases in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. They want gas stations and water sellers punished.
If you want to score points cracking down on mean, greedy profiteers, pushing anti-“gouging” rules is a very good thing.
But if you’re one of the people the law “protects” from “price gouging,” you won’t fare as well.
Consider this scenario: You are thirsty — worried that your baby is going to become dehydrated. You find a store that’s open, and the storeowner thinks it’s immoral to take advantage of your distress, so he won’t charge you a dime more than he charged last week. But you can’t buy water from him. It’s sold out.
You continue on your quest, and finally find that dreaded monster, the price gouger. He offers a bottle of water that cost $1 last week at an “outrageous” price — say $20. You pay it to survive the disaster.
You resent the price gouger. But if he hadn’t demanded $20, he’d have been out of water. It was the price gouger’s “exploitation” that saved your child.
It saved her because people look out for their own interests. Before you got to the water seller, other people did. At $1 a bottle, they stocked up. At $20 a bottle, they bought more cautiously. By charging $20, the price gouger makes sure his water goes to those who really need it.

Read the full article for more.

The Next Chief Justice

In a new article for The Objectivist Center‘s The New Individualist, David Mayer—a Constitutional scholar and Professor of Law and History at Capital University—sets out the criteria by which the next chief justice should be judged. Written before Chief Justice William Rehnquist’s death, Mayer lays out the legacy of the Rehnquist Court:

Although the Rehnquist Court has fallen short of a consistent application of originalist principles to constitutional law—and indeed has fallen far short of following anything like a true contextualist approach to the Constitution—it has, in many respects, reacted against the left-liberal judicial activism of its predecessors, the Warren and Burger Courts. In doing so, the Rehnquist Court has challenged both sides of the post-1937 “revolution” in constitutional law, beginning the process of restoring an older jurisprudence more faithful to the Constitution.

Mayer also sets out the path that the next Court should take in order to restore “the Constitution to its proper place in the American system of government.” Mayer writes:

Ideally, however, Bush will nominate someone who is not an ordinary conservative, in the mold of Rehnquist: someone who adheres to constitutional principles such as federalism out of mere devotion to American constitutional tradition. Rather, Bush ought to nominate someone who grounds his or her jurisprudence in something more objective: in originalism, rightly understood, or better yet, in a contextual understanding of the Constitution. In other words, the next chief justice of the Supreme Court ought to be someone capable of leading the Court in a principled reaction against the “New Deal Revolution” of 1937 and the damage it wrought on the Constitution as an effective limit on the powers of government, particularly the federal government.

Read the full article…

'Muslim Opinion' Be Damned

In an astute new op-ed for the Ayn Rand Institute, Alex Epstein writes:

To listen to most of our foreign-policy commentators, the biggest problem facing America today–four years after Sept. 11th–is the fact that many Muslims are mad at us.
â??Whatever one’s views on the [Iraq] war,â? writes a New York Times columnist, â??thoughtful Americans need to consider . . . the bitter anger that it has provoked among Muslims around the world.â? In response to Abu Ghraib, Ted Kennedy lamented, â??We have become the most hated nation in the world, as a result of this disastrous policy in the prisons.â? Muslim anger over Americaâ??s support of Israel, we are told, is a major cause of anti-American terrorism.
We face, these commentators say, a crisis of â??Muslim opinion.â? We must, they say, win the â??hearts and mindsâ? of angry Muslims by heaping public affection on Islam, by shutting down Guantanamo, by being more â??evenhandedâ? between free Israel and the terrorist Palestinian Authority–and certainly by avoiding any new military action in the Muslim world. If we fail to win over â??Muslim opinion,â? we are told, we will drive even more to become terrorists.
All of this evades one blatant truth: the hatred being heaped on America is irrational and undeserved. Consider the issue of treatment of POWs. Many Muslims are up in arms about the treatment of prisoners of war in Iraq and at Guantanamo–many of whom were captured on battlefields trying to kill Americans. Yet these same Muslims are silent about the summary convictions and torture–real torture, with electric drills and vats of acid–that are official policy and daily practice throughout the Middle East.
Or consider â??Muslim opinionâ? over the U.S. handling of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, in which the United States is accused of not being â??hard enoughâ? on Israel–a free nation with laws that protect all citizens, Jew and Arab alike–for Israelâ??s supposed mistreatment of Palestinians. Yet â??Muslim opinionâ? reveres the Palestinian Authority, a brutal dictatorship that deprives Palestinians of every basic freedom, keeps them in unspeakable poverty, and routinely tortures and executes peaceful dissenters.

See the full article for more.

Robert Tracinski on the New Orleans Disaster

Robert Tracinski has written a terrific article for The Intellectual Activist about what is taking place in New Orleans. It begins:

It has taken four long days for state and federal officials to figure out how to deal with the disaster in New Orleans. I can’t blame them, because it has also taken me four long days to figure out what is going on there. The reason is that the events there make no sense if you think that we are confronting a natural disaster.
If this is just a natural disaster, the response for public officials is obvious: you bring in food, water, and doctors; you send transportation to evacuate refugees to temporary shelters; you send engineers to stop the flooding and rebuild the city’s infrastructure. For journalists, natural disasters also have a familiar pattern: the heroism of ordinary people pulling together to survive; the hard work and dedication of doctors, nurses, and rescue workers; the steps being taken to clean up and rebuild.
Public officials did not expect that the first thing they would have to do is to send thousands of armed troops in armored vehicle, as if they are suppressing an enemy insurgency. And journalists–myself included–did not expect that the story would not be about rain, wind, and flooding, but about rape, murder, and looting.
But this is not a natural disaster. It is a man-made disaster.

Read the full article to find out why.

Inside 9/11 – National Geographic Documentary

The National Geographic Channel will broadcast a four-hour documentary tracking the events leading up to the terror attacks on 9/11 four years ago. The documentary, Inside 9/11, is in the form of a timeline and is divided into two parts. The first, “War on America”, tracks terrorist activities aimed at U.S. targets throughout the 1990s and charts the response of the U.S. intelligence community to these attacks and to the evidence about the imminent 9/11 plot. The second part, “Zero Hour”, captures the horror and the heroism witnessed on 9/11/2001. The documentary will air on September 8 at 7pm EST and at 11pm EST, and on September 11 at 1pm EST.
From the show’s description:

With each successful attack, al Qaeda becomes more emboldened. With each failure of the U.S. government to respond or stop their activities, the organization and the legend of Osama bin Laden grow… Inside 9/11 follows the footsteps of the terrorists as they formulated their plans, infiltrated our country and executed their suicide missions.

The documentary goes back to the Soviet defeat in Afghanistan at the hands of the Mujahadeen, who were led by Osama Bin Laden among others, and shows how their victory led to a new euphoria, suggesting that any Western superpower could be undone by bands of well-organized martyrs. The documentary also brings up early evidence of what would become radical Islamic cells, such as the 1990 murder of Rabbi Meir Kahane, which was dismissed as a dead-end dispute between the radical ends of two religions.
A commending review of the documentary in the New York Times states: “The National Geographic Channel honors the fourth anniversary of the terror attacks with a rational approach to what is usually treated with poetry and ceremony. Instead, the two-part Inside 9/11 is a four-hour compendium of the facts of the matter.”

Lisa VanDamme on C-SPAN Radio, Sun 4 Sept

From the Ayn Rand Institute:

On Sunday, September 4, 2005, at 10 AM Eastern Time, C-SPAN Radio is scheduled to broadcast a talk given by Lisa VanDamme at Objectivist Summer Conference 2005, “Reclaiming Education, Part 2.” Please consult your local listings for broadcast times in your area.
C-SPAN Radio is currently available on XM Satellite Radio and Sirius Satellite Radio. For other information on C-SPAN radio broadcasts go to: http://www.c-span.org/listen/satellite.asp

BB&T Donates $1 Million to UNC Charlotte

From an announcement on UNC’s Belk College of Business web site:

BB&T donates $1 million to UNC Charlotte
Gift will create programs focused on moral foundations of capitalism
The Belk College of Business has received a $1 million contribution from the BB&T Charitable Foundation to create a program for the study of the moral foundations of capitalism.
The donation was spearheaded by BB&T Chairman and CEO John A. Allison IV (left), who found common interests with Claude Lilly, dean of the Belk College.
“During a dinner meeting last year, our conversation turned from ethics and leadership to metaphysics, Objectivism and Ayn Rand,� Lilly said. �John and I discovered that we share an interest in how business schools discuss capitalism in their courses, as well as the importance of teaching ethics and values in business.�
The contribution is payable over five years and will be used to support the development of a course on ethics and morals in capitalism for advanced business undergraduates and MBA students. Lilly will be the first instructor for the course, which will be offered as a business elective in the spring 2006 semester. Additionally, the gift will fund faculty research on the philosophical underpinnings of capitalism; create a speakers series focusing on ethical and core values in business; support the Center for Applied Ethics at UNC Charlotte; and establish an Ayn Rand reading room on campus.

See their full announcement for more information.
Incidentally, this is the same BB&T who we noted last year made a $1 million grant to the University of South Carolina to promote the study of capitalism.