Cathy Reisenwitz on the Dangerous E-Verify Mandate in Immigration Reform

E-VerifyWith the
clock ticking on the legislative session, President Obama held a
Roosevelt Room meeting on immigration reform, even as House Speaker
John Boehner dismissed the idea, at least for this year. At issue
is the Senate’s “Gang of Eight” bill. It offers many of America’s
11 million undocumented immigrants a path to citizenship while
still requiring them to pay back taxes. It’s also designed to make
legal immigration easier and illegal immigration more difficult.
Importantly, writes Cathy Reisenwitz, it mandates the use of the
federal government’s intrusive and unreliable E-Verify system,
aimed at cracking down on employers who hire unauthorized
workers.

View this article.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/17/cathy-reisenwitz-on-the-dangerous-e-veri
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US Drone Strikes Navy Ship By Mistake

While hardly as dramatic as last week’s revelation that Syrian Al-Qaeda cannibals apologized after chopping off the head of one of their CIA-funded “rebels” by mistake, the news that a US drone struck a US missile cruiser during training off Southern California, causing two minor injuries is maybe even more embarrassing. After all, with Al-Qaeda one can at least make a legitimate case of a friendly fire, er, beheading incident. When it comes to the coast off SoCal, it will be difficult to suggest the Chinese (or Russian) navies were running sorties next to the surfers off Point Mugu.

From AP:

The Navy says an aerial target drone malfunctioned and struck a guided missile cruiser during training off Southern California, causing two minor injuries.

 

Lt. Lenaya (luh-NEY-yah) Rotklein of the U.S. Third Fleet said the accident on the USS Chancellorsville happened Saturday afternoon while the ship was testing its combat weapons system off Point Mugu.

 

She said two sailors were treated for minor burns after the ship was struck. She said the ship was heading back to Naval Base San Diego so that officials can assess the damage.

 

Rotklein said the drone was being used to test the ship’s radar. She had no immediate information on whether the drone has malfunctioned before.

 

About 300 crew members were aboard the ship.

 

The Navy was investigating the cause of the drone malfunction.

Syrian “hackers” to be blamed shortly (just like in the case of healthcare.gov), as the time for Obama’s internet kill swtich “put option” is long overue.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/iVnZvwcgOOE/story01.htm Tyler Durden

J.D. Tuccille Talks Bogus TSA Spidey Senses and Security Theater on RT


There’s no evidence that the Transportation Security
Administration’s Screening of Passengers by Observation Techniques
program actually works
, the Government Accountability Office
reported last week—for the third time. The GAO asked, given the
lack of scientific support for the approach, why the TSA is
deploying thousands of behavior detection officers, at a cost of
$200 million dollars per year, to exercise their spidey senses in
airport terminals.

Just days later, independent security researcher Evan Booth, of
Terminal Cornucopia, demonstrated that
you can build a grenade with materials purchased at the airport

after you pass through the TSA checkpoint. In the past,
he’s built incendiaries, crossbows, and other weapons on the same
principle.

As you can imagine, this provided the basis for an interesting
conversation about airport security with RT’s Ameera David.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/17/jd-tuccille-talks-bogus-tsa-spidey-sense
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Buy America's Longest War: A Film About Drug Prohibition

 

I’m happy to let Reason readers know that the feature-length
documentary America’s
Longest War: A Film About Drug Prohibition
is on sale at
Amazon. Made by Paul Feine and Alex Manning – the team that brought
you the award-winning Reason Saves Cleveland with Drew Carey
 America’s Longest War is an unflinching and
deeply disturbing analysis of how the drug war destroys lives and
causes untold suffering and waste.

There are many
victims of the drug war, and AMERICA’S LONGEST WAR tells some of
their stories.

In 2001, Cory Maye, a black man in Mississippi, shot and killed
an intruder while protecting his 18-month old daughter. The
intruder turned out to be a white police officer conducting a raid,
and Maye was sent to prison for murder. Maye was ultimately
released in the Summer of 2011.

Jose Guerena is a retired Marine who served two tours in Iraq.
In the Spring of 2011, Guerena heard people breaking into his
Arizona home, told his wife and son to hide in the closet, and
grabbed his military weapon. Police broke in the door and fired 71
bullets, hitting Guerena 22 times. Guerena bled to death alone,
inside his home. The police found nothing incriminating inside the
house.

In 1991, Robert Moss and his wife had a one-year old and a baby
on the way when Moss was convicted of conspiracy to violate
marijuana laws. Because of federal sentencing guidelines passed in
the mid-80s, Moss was sentenced to more than 20 years in federal
prison. Moss returned to his family in Seattle in the Fall of
2011.

Sandra Rodriguez is a reporter at El Diario, a newspaper in
Ciudad Juarez, Mexico. Over the past few years, Rodriguez has been
a first-hand witness to an astounding escalation in drug war
related violence and the executions of two of her colleagues.
Neither case has been solved, but that’s no surprise. Fewer than 3%
of the murders in Juarez are investigated.

In 2012, Aaron Sandusky, a medical marijuana dispensary owner in
California, was found guilty of conspiracy to violate federal
marijuana laws. Sandusky is now in prison serving a 10-year
sentence.

AMERICA’S LONGEST WAR features interviews with presidential
candidate Gary Johnson, Harvard economist Jeffrey Miron, Huffington
Post investigative reporter Radley Balko, Alice Huffman of the
NAACP, Alison Holcomb of the ACLU, Ethan Nadelmann of the Drug
Policy Alliance, author John Gibler, El Diario de Juarez reporter
Sandra Rodriguez Nieto, UTEP professor Tony Payan, El Paso city
representative Suzie Byrd, federal public defender Guy Iversen,
former cop Neill Franklin, Judge James P. Gray and former DEA
Administrator Robert Bonner. Original score by Doug de Forest.

America’s Longest War includes a succinct history of
the racist roots of drug policy, an update on the story of Corey
Maye (who was placed on death row after defending himself and his
child in a no-knock drug raid), a report of drug-prohibition-fueled
violence in Mexico, a disturbing tally of Barack Obama’s awful
record, and more. 

For more information and to buy the DVD for just $11.95,
go here now.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/17/buy-americas-longest-war-a-film-about-dr
via IFTTT

Buy America’s Longest War: A Film About Drug Prohibition

 

I’m happy to let Reason readers know that the feature-length
documentary America’s
Longest War: A Film About Drug Prohibition
is on sale at
Amazon. Made by Paul Feine and Alex Manning – the team that brought
you the award-winning Reason Saves Cleveland with Drew Carey
 America’s Longest War is an unflinching and
deeply disturbing analysis of how the drug war destroys lives and
causes untold suffering and waste.

There are many
victims of the drug war, and AMERICA’S LONGEST WAR tells some of
their stories.

In 2001, Cory Maye, a black man in Mississippi, shot and killed
an intruder while protecting his 18-month old daughter. The
intruder turned out to be a white police officer conducting a raid,
and Maye was sent to prison for murder. Maye was ultimately
released in the Summer of 2011.

Jose Guerena is a retired Marine who served two tours in Iraq.
In the Spring of 2011, Guerena heard people breaking into his
Arizona home, told his wife and son to hide in the closet, and
grabbed his military weapon. Police broke in the door and fired 71
bullets, hitting Guerena 22 times. Guerena bled to death alone,
inside his home. The police found nothing incriminating inside the
house.

In 1991, Robert Moss and his wife had a one-year old and a baby
on the way when Moss was convicted of conspiracy to violate
marijuana laws. Because of federal sentencing guidelines passed in
the mid-80s, Moss was sentenced to more than 20 years in federal
prison. Moss returned to his family in Seattle in the Fall of
2011.

Sandra Rodriguez is a reporter at El Diario, a newspaper in
Ciudad Juarez, Mexico. Over the past few years, Rodriguez has been
a first-hand witness to an astounding escalation in drug war
related violence and the executions of two of her colleagues.
Neither case has been solved, but that’s no surprise. Fewer than 3%
of the murders in Juarez are investigated.

In 2012, Aaron Sandusky, a medical marijuana dispensary owner in
California, was found guilty of conspiracy to violate federal
marijuana laws. Sandusky is now in prison serving a 10-year
sentence.

AMERICA’S LONGEST WAR features interviews with presidential
candidate Gary Johnson, Harvard economist Jeffrey Miron, Huffington
Post investigative reporter Radley Balko, Alice Huffman of the
NAACP, Alison Holcomb of the ACLU, Ethan Nadelmann of the Drug
Policy Alliance, author John Gibler, El Diario de Juarez reporter
Sandra Rodriguez Nieto, UTEP professor Tony Payan, El Paso city
representative Suzie Byrd, federal public defender Guy Iversen,
former cop Neill Franklin, Judge James P. Gray and former DEA
Administrator Robert Bonner. Original score by Doug de Forest.

America’s Longest War includes a succinct history of
the racist roots of drug policy, an update on the story of Corey
Maye (who was placed on death row after defending himself and his
child in a no-knock drug raid), a report of drug-prohibition-fueled
violence in Mexico, a disturbing tally of Barack Obama’s awful
record, and more. 

For more information and to buy the DVD for just $11.95,
go here now.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/17/buy-americas-longest-war-a-film-about-dr
via IFTTT

Israel Working With Saudi Arabia On Iran "Contingency" Attack

When last week’s Iran nuclear talks were blocked by France, it provided a useful glimpse into just who it was that would benefit politically from a continuation of the regional confrontation. But while the French sabotage was an amusing distraction, it revealed a curious shift in middle-east alliances, namely old “enemies” Israel and Saudi Arabia, both feeling shunned by Big Brother, suddenly becoming the best of buddies. It was only a matter of time before this novel alliance moved beyond just paper and tested how far it could go in real life. Said test may come far sooner than expected: according to the Sunday Times, Israel’s Mossad and Saudi Arabia are planning an attack against Iran if negotiations and talks don’t come to an agreement, and that Saudia Arabia will permit Israel to use their air space for an attack on Iran including full technical support.

According to the Sunday Times, the Saudis would assist an Israeli attack by cooperating with the use of drones, rescue helicopters, and tanker planes. “Once the Geneva agreement is signed, the military option will be back on the table. The Saudis are furious and are willing to give Israel all the help it needs,” said the paper citing an unnamed official.

The flipside is that by pursuing an outright attack of Iran, the new Israel-Saudi axis would implicitly go against the wishes of not only Russia but, if John Kerry’s detente posture is to be believed, that of the US itself.

Israel’s PM Natanyahu naturally knows this, so instead he is merely lobbying for even more political support starting in the one country, France, which has aligned itself with the new Middle East axis, even as Israel’s old allies appear to have foresaken it. Jerusalem Post reports:

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu said in an interview with French daily Le Figaro on Saturday that there is a “meeting of the minds” between Israel and the “leading states in the Arab world” on the Iran issue – “one of the few cases in memory, if not the first case in modern times.”

 

“We all think that Iran should not be allowed to have the capacities to make nuclear weapons,” he said. “We all think that a tougher stance should be taken by the international community. We all believe that if Iran were to have nuclear weapons, this could lead to a nuclear arms race in the Middle East, making the Middle East a nuclear tinderbox.”

 

Saying that an Iran with nuclear arms would be the most dangerous development for the world since the mid-20th century, and stressing that the “stakes are amazing,” Netanyahu urged the world’s leaders to pay attention “when Israel and the Arabs see eye-to-eye.”

 

“We live here,” he said. “We know something about this region. We know a great deal about Iran and its plans. It’s worthwhile to pay attention to what we say.”

 

Netanyahu made the comments as French President Francois Hollande was set to arrive in Israel for talks on Iran on Sunday.

In the meantime, Iran which suddenly finds itself the creme of the international diplomatic circle and is in full compliance with what the US demands, is explaining – via RT – just why a joint attack on its by supposedly former enemies will not happen:

 Iranian political analyst Seyed Mohammad Marandi told RT that an imminent joint attack on Iran was unlikely given the serious ramifications it could provoke for the region.

 

“It is highly unlikely that the Saudis and Israelis would want to attack Iran because at the end of the day both countries would be losers, they would be seen as aggressors and obviously the Iranians would retaliate,” Marandi told RT.

 

Although he consented that the Saudis and Israelis have been moving closer together lately, neither of them stood to gain from attacking Iran.

 

“It would create an economic catastrophe for the world and only the Saudis and the Israelis would be to blame,” said Marandi.

Then again, considering a GDP-boosting economic catastrophe (recall the main reason the US wanted war with Syria is to boost the defense spending budget which lately has been in freefall) is precisely what the Fed and the Congressional muppetmasters want, we wouldn’t sleep too soundly if we were in the Ayatollah’s shoes. Especially now that thanks to Reuters the entire world, and certainly the NSA, know just where all his rainy day funds are located. Because while it is true that neither Israel nor Saudi would gain from attacking Iran, the US most certainly would. And now it has not one but two proxy countries in the region doing its bidding.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/D7ADUvE8SOI/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Israel Working With Saudi Arabia On Iran “Contingency” Attack

When last week’s Iran nuclear talks were blocked by France, it provided a useful glimpse into just who it was that would benefit politically from a continuation of the regional confrontation. But while the French sabotage was an amusing distraction, it revealed a curious shift in middle-east alliances, namely old “enemies” Israel and Saudi Arabia, both feeling shunned by Big Brother, suddenly becoming the best of buddies. It was only a matter of time before this novel alliance moved beyond just paper and tested how far it could go in real life. Said test may come far sooner than expected: according to the Sunday Times, Israel’s Mossad and Saudi Arabia are planning an attack against Iran if negotiations and talks don’t come to an agreement, and that Saudia Arabia will permit Israel to use their air space for an attack on Iran including full technical support.

According to the Sunday Times, the Saudis would assist an Israeli attack by cooperating with the use of drones, rescue helicopters, and tanker planes. “Once the Geneva agreement is signed, the military option will be back on the table. The Saudis are furious and are willing to give Israel all the help it needs,” said the paper citing an unnamed official.

The flipside is that by pursuing an outright attack of Iran, the new Israel-Saudi axis would implicitly go against the wishes of not only Russia but, if John Kerry’s detente posture is to be believed, that of the US itself.

Israel’s PM Natanyahu naturally knows this, so instead he is merely lobbying for even more political support starting in the one country, France, which has aligned itself with the new Middle East axis, even as Israel’s old allies appear to have foresaken it. Jerusalem Post reports:

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu said in an interview with French daily Le Figaro on Saturday that there is a “meeting of the minds” between Israel and the “leading states in the Arab world” on the Iran issue – “one of the few cases in memory, if not the first case in modern times.”

 

“We all think that Iran should not be allowed to have the capacities to make nuclear weapons,” he said. “We all think that a tougher stance should be taken by the international community. We all believe that if Iran were to have nuclear weapons, this could lead to a nuclear arms race in the Middle East, making the Middle East a nuclear tinderbox.”

 

Saying that an Iran with nuclear arms would be the most dangerous development for the world since the mid-20th century, and stressing that the “stakes are amazing,” Netanyahu urged the world’s leaders to pay attention “when Israel and the Arabs see eye-to-eye.”

 

“We live here,” he said. “We know something about this region. We know a great deal about Iran and its plans. It’s worthwhile to pay attention to what we say.”

 

Netanyahu made the comments as French President Francois Hollande was set to arrive in Israel for talks on Iran on Sunday.

In the meantime, Iran which suddenly finds itself the creme of the international diplomatic circle and is in full compliance with what the US demands, is explaining – via RT – just why a joint attack on its by supposedly former enemies will not happen:

 Iranian political analyst Seyed Mohammad Marandi told RT that an imminent joint attack on Iran was unlikely given the serious ramifications it could provoke for the region.

 

“It is highly unlikely that the Saudis and Israelis would want to attack Iran because at the end of the day both countries would be losers, they would be seen as aggressors and obviously the Iranians would retaliate,” Marandi told RT.

 

Although he consented that the Saudis and Israelis have been moving closer together lately, neither of them stood to gain from attacking Iran.

 

“It would create an economic catastrophe for the world and only the Saudis and the Israelis would be to blame,” said Marandi.

Then again, considering a GDP-boosting economic catastrophe (recall the main reason the US wanted war with Syria is to boost the defense spending budget which lately has been in freefall) is precisely what the Fed and the Congressional muppetmasters want, we wouldn’t sleep too soundly if we were in the Ayatollah’s shoes. Especially now that thanks to Reuters the entire world, and certainly the NSA, know just where all his rainy day funds are located. Because while it is true that neither Israel nor Saudi would gain from attacking Iran, the US most certainly would. And now it has not one but two proxy countries in the region doing its bidding.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/D7ADUvE8SOI/story01.htm Tyler Durden

The Banality of Red Tape: North Carolina Hospitals Barred From Buying PET Scanners

PET scanners are pretty cool. They give a
3-dimensional glimpse of the body’s internal processes, allowing
physicians to diagnose and observe the progress of health
conditions like cancer, heart disease, epilepsy, and Alzheimer’s.
Hospitals are known for wanting to diagnose such things, so it’s
not uncommon for them to purchase PET scanners.

But 19 states and the District of Columbia require health
providers to seek permission from state bureaucrats before buying a
PET scanner. Obtaining this permission can take years and cost
hundreds of thousands of dollars in application and attorney’s
fees—to say nothing of opportunity cost. After all that time and
expense, there is no guarantee that permission, in the form of a
“certificate of need,” will be forthcoming.

North Carolina is one such state that forces health providers to
submit to this kind of micromanagement. In May, two
Winston-Salem-based hospital systems filed PET scanner
applications. Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center already owns a
scanner and uses it for medical research—and needs permission to
convert it to clinical use. Novant Health meanwhile wants to build
a new cancer center. Applications denied.

From the
Triad Business Journal
:

The state Division of Health Services Regulation rejected both
proposals, saying that while both properly identified the areas
that could benefit from the new scanner, there was not sufficient
need to justify the cost of either proposal.

The purchase of PET scanners and other high-dollar diagnostic
and treatment equipment is governed by the state’s certificate of
need law, which is designed to reduce the duplication of expensive
medical equipment in an attempt to control health care costs.

The law may be intended to reduce costs. But does it? The
evidence
suggests it does not
. Many states have repealed their
certificate-of-need laws, but health expenditures have not
skyrocketed in those states, as certificate-of-need proponents
predicted.

Certificate-of-need rules do, however, keep regulators busy.
Each year, North Carolina health planners produce a state health
plan that purports to assess the need for PET scans, among other
services. This year, the planners divined that the Winston-Salem
area needed one more scanner, hence the two applications.

Novant and Wake Forest Baptist each argued that the other didn’t
really need a PET scanner. Apparently, they were both so convincing
that neither application was accepted. If they were located in any
of the over 30 states that do not restrict the purchase of PET
scanners, the two hospitals could focus on competing for customers
instead of competing for state favors. Alas, freedom does not reign
in North Carolina.   

Both providers may appeal the decision, but neither has
indicated if it plans to do so.


Click here
for coverage of Virginia’s certificate-of-need
program, which limits access to CT scanners and potentially
lifesaving innovation.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/17/the-banality-of-red-tape-north-carolina
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Whining for Wine

In a few years’ time we might all be whining because there is no more water left in the world apparently. That’s because according to the World Economic Forum “we are now on the verge of water bankruptcy in many places around the world, with no clear way of repaying the debt”. But, if there’s one thing that the world will not be able to put up with, it’s the growing fear that we will actually run out of wine! Whatever will the banksters do then to celebrate their earnings and what will the traders be drinking to jubilate over their growing bubble on the stock exchanges around the world? We could all be whining over the shortage of wine in the years to come. How are we going to drown our sorrows when the bubbles burst yet again? Turning to drink takes on a whole new meaning, doesn’t it with the price of wines set to increase like never before?

Shortage of wine in the world is getting worse according to a survey carried out by Morgan Stanley Research. If we compare 2012’s figures for supply and demand, then there was only just enough wine to cover demand for that year. The report stated: “Data suggests there may be insufficient supply to meet demand in coming years, as current vintages are released”.

Global wine production has been on the up since the late 1990s and there was only a very short period at the start of the financial crisis when consumption fell (between 2008 and 2009). Otherwise it has always been on the increase.

Global Wine Consumption

Global Wine Consumption
  • The US and China are to blame as they have increased their consumption over recent years.
  • The US now accounts for 12% of global consumption.
  • The US has doubled consumption within the last decade.
  • China has doubled consumption every two and a half years over the past five years.
  • China is the 5th importer in the world in terms of wine.
  • Wine consumption has increased by almost 4% since 2007 around the world.
  • The wine sector will have a total value of $306.6 billion by the year 2016.
  • This alone represents an increase of 17.9% by comparison with figures of 2011.
  • The US will consume 400 million cases of wine in 2016 and China will be doing exactly the same.
  • Global wine production is hardly able to keep pace with the growing demand that is being experienced in the sector.
  • France has decreased its land that is dedicated to wine-growing (from 11.6% (2001) of world total to 10.6% in 2012) since it was largely unprofitable. That looks set to change however.
  • Global Wine Production

Global Wine Production

All of that could be good news for the EU since 60% of the world’s wine is still produced there. They could do with gaining the benefits from their wine, rather than just drowning their sorrows, downing a swift one morning, noon and night and three times on Sundays.

Wine might just be the place to invest in the coming years. Or at least, get the bottle in why you can. They might not be around much longer. Can you imagine we would have wine queues and people would be on the wineline?Breadlines? Never heard of them!

Wine - A thing of the past?

Wine – A thing of the past?

Glorifying and extolling the benefits of drinking wine in hallowed ritualization will become a thing of the past, won’t it if we run out of wine in the world? Painting the town red and kick up one’s heels will be what people did in yesteryears. Drinking a pint of milk down the pub with your colleagues just isn’t going have the same ring about it, is it? Well, probably wouldn’t be able to do that either. Milk is too expensive, these days.

Crack open a bottle of whatever you can get your hands on!


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/YCNTBYWqK-U/story01.htm Pivotfarm

Skip the Sunday Yak Shows and Watch Virginia Postrel Talk About Glamour!

If it’s Sunday, it used to mean the ritual self-flagellation of
watching Meet the Press, Face the Nation, This Week, or some other
routinely tedious yakfest in which Team Red spokespeople faced off
against Team Blue spokespeople for some of the least engaging
theater since Anyone Can Whistle hit Broadway for
all of nine performances
.

So instead of cozying up with David Gregory, Bob Scheiffer,
Chris Wallace or George Stephanopoulos, take a look at this truly
fascinating conversation with former Reason Editor in Chief
Virginia Postrel about her excellent new book, The Power of
Glamour.

It’s about an hour long and covers more territory than a Christo
installation!

Here’s the original writeup:

“If you acknowledge that you find something glamorous it makes
you vulnerable because it says something about who you are,” says
Virginia Postrel, author of the new book, The
Power of Glamour: Longing and the Art of Visual
Persuasion
. “But I want people to think about what they
find glamorous and learn from that.”

Postrel, who served as the editor in
chief
 of Reason Magazine from 1989 to
2000, is an internationally acclaimed writer, a regular
columnist
 for Bloomberg View, and the author
of two previous books, The
Future and its Enemies: The Growing Conflict Over Creativity,
Enterprise, and Progress
 (1999) and The
Substance of Style: How the Rise of Aesthetic Value is Remaking
Commerce, Culture, and Consciousness
 (2004).

She sat down with Reason TV’s Nick Gillespie for an hour-long
conversation about her new book, which is a meditation on how our
perception of glamour shapes our culture, determines the choices we
make, and reveals our inner-selves. The book is an entertaining
romp, analyzing the deeper significance of the glamorous people and
places that have shaped the last century of American
culture.|||

Gillespie and Postrel discuss the glamour of the Tuskegee airmen
(6:45); the glamour of California (9:30); the distinction between
glamour and charisma (14:45); Obama’s glamour vs. Bill Clinton’s
charisma (16:45); Marxist art critic John Berger’s “desiccated”
take on glamour (20:30); Joan Crawford role in “defining the modern
woman to the general public” (25:20); how a “ridiculously
glamorous” image inspired dancer Michaela DePrince (27:30); how
Naomi Wolfe’s projected her “single mother chic” image on Angelina
Jolie (30:45); Oprah Winfrey’s infatuation with the Mary Tyler
Moore Show (32:15); David Bowie’s ever-changing personas (36:30);
how glamour “tells the truth about desire” (38:45); the
democratization of glamour (40:45); the proliferation of glamour in
a capitalist society (45:20); how Postrel’s libertarianism informs
her work (48:30); the “intense glamour” of planning in the early
twentieth century (51:20); how understanding glamour provides
insights into human behavior (56:15); and how the breast cancer
drug Herceptin saved Postrel’s life (57:30).

For more on Postrel’s tenure at Reason, watch a
recent discussion she participated in celebrating the 45th
anniversary of the magazine, and read
Brian Doherty’s oral history
 of the magazine, on the
occasion of its 40th anniversary.

Approximately 1 hour.

Camera by Jim Epstein and Anthony Fisher, and edited by
Epstein.

This originally ran at Reason.com on Friday, November 15,
2013.

For downloadable versions, more links, and other resources,

go here
.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/17/skip-the-sunday-yak-shows-and-watch-virg
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