Michael McDaniel’s Dawning Awareness

the noise -is- the signal

Archive for February, 2008

Time for some impeachment, people!

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I know, why bother, right? Because — otherwise, future madmen will pull crap like this, too:

This evening Attorney General Michael Mukasey, as expected, refused to prosecute the contempt of Congress resolutions against Josh Bolten and Harriet Miers for their refusal to testify in the U.S. attorneys scandal.

[via TPM]

Written by michael

February 29th, 2008 at 5:12 pm

Posted in Politics

Jury Selection

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I got selected to a jury panel yesterday. Fifty jurors were pulled for a 13-person jury; I was #28. The jury is made up of the 13 lowest-numbered jurors who aren’t excused or challenged. You can be excused for hardship (being on the jury imposes an undue burden) or via a challenge from the prosecution or defense lawyers (they get 7 challenges each, and can dismiss a juror for no reason). “Challenge” sounds so adversarial, but that’s the term they use.

After the judge told us what was going to happen, she explained the likely trial schedule and dismissed people who had conflicts which would cost them significantly. Next, she asked us questions to ferret out biases for or against the legal system itself (example: “have you had a bad experience with law enforcement officers that might influence your interpretation of police testimony?”). After about 20 such questions, she turned things over to the lawyers for voir dire.

In turn, each side had two 15 minute periods to talk to the jury and ask questions to help their side identify who would be good jurors for them. This was a domestic violence case, so there were questions like “why might a victim lie on the stand?” and “if you had to deliberate right now, what would your verdict HAVE to be?” As they asked questions, they’d watch for general reaction (heads nodding, etc) and sometimes would ask an individual juror to comment. I was never asked a question directly, and didn’t volunteer an answer to any questions as I’d just have been duplicating other jurors.

Then, the lawyers began to dismiss jurors from the box. As they left, those of us sitting in the gallery would fill in the box as our numbers were called. When my number was called, I was dismissed by the prosecutor, using her 6th challenge.

I’ve been thinking about why I was dismissed. The prosecutor had only two things to go on to dismiss me. The first was my demeanor in the court. Maybe I didn’t nod my head enough. Maybe I didn’t seem severe enough. Hard to know. The second thing the prosecutor had was my biography, a sheet of paper listing my name, city, age, how long I’ve lived in King County, the city and state of my birth, the number and ages of my children, my occupation, and my experience as a juror (none), a felon (none), and a litigant (none). Oh, and my years of education (17). I should think all of that would make me a good juror for the prosecution, but maybe what she was really looking for was swayability, and she decided I wasn’t easily convinced.

I suppose that, as with the number of licks it takes to get to the center of a tootsie-roll pop, the world will never know.

Written by michael

February 14th, 2008 at 10:58 am

Posted in Random Thoughts

Another Lessig talk

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A TED talk combining John Philip Sousa, land ownership, and music royalty payments. Awesome style, just enough information, inspiration, and fun. Go watch it.

[thanks, Nick!]

Written by michael

February 13th, 2008 at 10:28 am

Posted in Politics

Obama vs. Clinton vs. McCain

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[thanks, Nick]

Written by michael

February 13th, 2008 at 10:04 am

Posted in Politics

The New Jury Duty

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I was called to jury duty for King County Superior Court today. I served two years ago, and things have improved markedly since then. The facility has been completely upgraded with comfortable, modern chairs, a well-lit, comfortable environment, and incredibly speedy wifi access (17Mbits/2Mbits unloaded, 11Mbits/2Mbits with about 75 computers in use).

We were directed to report at 8am, and I was here at 7:55. After checking in, I found a seat. At 8:45, they started the introductory video (didn’t have one of those two years ago). It’s really quite informative, and was complete without being tiresome. 20 minutes.

Jurors have to be residents of King County, US citizens, fluent in English, and non-felons (or felons with fully-restored rights).

So here we sit in the jury selection room. I got selected to a jury two years ago, but the defendant plead guilty before Voir Dire was complete. Of course, one thing that hasn’t changed is that there’s a lot of waiting involved (the wifi makes that much more tolerable). I hope they haven’t called too many more people than they need. I think they’re trying to do better.

Written by michael

February 13th, 2008 at 9:19 am

Posted in Random Thoughts

Caucus, caucus, caucus!

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Went to my first party caucuses today, and was really quite pleasantly surprised by the level of discourse, the range of issues discussed, and (most of all) by the dedication to hearing all voices. I had a very nice time, got to connect with my neighbors a little, and am a little more confident in my choice of candidate.

Feels great to be participating in the process.

Written by michael

February 9th, 2008 at 8:03 pm

Posted in Politics

Bush has been picking your pocket

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via alternet:

The voodoo economics the Bushies have sold America obscure their systematic fleecing of the nation’s public wealth.

Written by michael

February 6th, 2008 at 10:32 am

Posted in Politics

iTunes rental timeouts

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MacWorld claims iTunes rentals don’t expire the same way that Unbox videos do. With Unbox/TiVo, you can’t watch any more after the 24 hours. With iTunes, you can actually pause the video and resume it again even after the expiration, as long as you don’t switch away from the video.

Excellent, if true. Can’t wait to try this out.

Written by michael

February 5th, 2008 at 1:37 pm

Posted in Tech