Tuesday, January 31, 2012
Voices from the past
I recently wrote a blog about the children of some of my
former colleagues living until 2100.
Today I want to look backwards.
Recently, sound technicians recovered the contents of some recordingsmade on wax cylinders in Europe in 1889.
The voices of famous German leaders were preserved and with new
technology can be taken from the old wax cylinders without the necessity of
actually playing them on their original machines. This is completely amazing to me. At the library exhibit I talked about in yesterday's blog they displayed one of Edison's wax cylinder recording devices.
The men recorded, former chancellor Otto von Bismarck and
General Helmut von Moltke were old at the time they put their voices on
wax. Von Moltke was born in 1800, and yet we can
still hear his voice today. And not just
in some museum. Go to the New York Times
website and you can listen to these recordings from the comfort of your own
home (or in my case, discomfort). Again,
amazing.
Think about the world von Moltke was born into. Their homes were lit at night, if at all, by
candles or maybe oil lanterns. Travel
was only by foot or horse. Advanced
communication was by post road carrying letters written with a sturdy quill
pen. Rifles were still in the
future. An ocean crossing took
weeks. America had 16 states. Twenty signers of the Declaration of Independence
were still alive. George Washington was
president. Napoleon ruled France. Beethoven wrote his first symphony. People could only sit for portraits to
preserve their likeness.
By the time von Moltke spoke to Edison’s employee he could
turn on electric lights, talk on the telephone and take a steamship across the
Atlantic in a week or so. He could ride
to the dock in a motorcar, and document his journey with a camera. I suppose the idea of recording sound was to
him just another incredible invention of which he had seen so many in his
lifetime.
And we can listen to him speak anytime we want merely by
pressing a button. (Well, in addition to paying way too much for internet
service, a router, a computer, etc.) We
have come to take for granted the technology we rely on, but to those born when
von Moltke was their world was changed in far more dramatic ways than we can
imagine.
Monday, January 30, 2012
New York weekend
I spent the past weekend in New York City and had a really
good time. I went to a Broadway show, and
a museums and the public library. One of
the most amazing things about New York is the incredible attraction the city
contains.
On Saturday we went to the Museum of Modern Art. I had forgotten how much world-famous and
historic art MOMA contains. First and foremost
is the huge, and breathtakingly beautiful, painting of water lilies by
Monet. He painted it on three gigantic
canvasses, each about six and a half feet tall by almost 14 feet long. Merely describing it can give no real sense
of how big this painting is. Even photographs
cannot come close to the visceral effect one has upon seeing this work. It is unclear to me how Monet could have
painted such a gorgeous work on this scale.
Truly, the word “masterpiece” is insufficient. This painting, along with another by Monet—smaller,
but sill big—share a single room (along with a painting by another artist whose
name escapes me).
When you walk into the room, the magnitude of what you are
seeing makes you stop and stare for a few seconds. Your mind is just not accustomed to art like
this. Sure, you have just walked through
a gallery containing other masterpieces, but the sheer size of Monet’s vision,
and the subtle but powerful beauty of his impressionist representation of
something as mundane as flowers in a pond, sends your senses into temporary
tilt. When you finally take in all you
are seeing, you are compelled to get closer; in part, I think, to assure your
mind that what it is seeing really exists.
Of course, standing next to the canvas (it is not behind glass or even a
rope) you can’t visualize the entire work, but you can take in the vibrancy of
the colors, even 100 years after it was painted. Like most visitors to this gallery I sat down
on the bench in the middle of the room, just to let Monet’s genius wash over
me. Seriously, a trip to New York is worth
it just to see works of art like this.
Of course, Monet is not the only great artist displayed at
MOMA. Picasso, whose works are
everywhere it seems, is well-represented.
What is possibly Van Gogh’s most famous painting, “Starry Night,” has a
prominent spot, and is surrounded by picture-taking tourists. Still, seeing the work right there (this one
is behind perhaps the cleanest piece of glass in the world, so that when you
stand in front of the painting you cannot see the glass) makes you stare. I love impressionism, and post-impressionism,
so I spent a lot of time in that gallery.
Seurat, Chagall, Calder, Pollock, Braque, all the greats have at least
one piece on display. The sheer quantity
of the art is imposing.
MOMA, of course, displays lots of other art, including some
contemporary pieces. While many current
artists display incredible skill and creativity, other artwork I think is just
a scam. I will, maybe, grant you that a
customized bag of kitty litter is art, but I fail to see how taking a canvas,
putting on a coat of whitewash and then sticking it in a frame constitutes art,
no matter what “statement” the artist is trying to make. Or how about the guy who wakes up every day,
paints the date, and then sells those canvasses. I bet he is laughing hysterically at the “experts”
who put one of these date paintings in a world-class museum.
But the one that took the cake for me was something that is so
vacuous and lacking in any technical skill or creativity that I am convinced
the museum was trying to put one over on us to see who is stupid enough to call
this art. They had on display a 100
gallon fish tank about two-thirds filled with water. Floating in the water were three basketballs,
two Dr. J brands and one Wilson. Thatwas it. No description, picture,
nothing. No drawings on the balls nor fish
swimming in the tank. No castle on the
bottom of the tank, nor a deep sea diver.
Nothing. Basketballs and water. Seriously!
Monet painted his masterpiece 100 years ago. Do you think people 100
years from now will write home that they saw three basketballs floating in a
tank of water (which I assume has to be replenished every day)?
We also went to the main building of the New York Public
Library. The building itself is
historic. Built 100 years ago it
contains detail which is unheard-of today.
Painted and carved ceilings and massive marble staircases. The entry is a massive marble rotunda. The main reading room on the third floor is
perhaps my favorite place in New York.
The library is celebrating the building’s 100-year anniversary
with a display of some of its most historic artifacts. This display is free. You just walk into the gallery on the first
floor. There is no security screening
(as indeed there is not for any museum).
The first case contains a copy of perhaps the most important book in
history—a Gutenberg bible.
Throughout the exhibit are unbelievable items to be in
possession of the library: Jack Kerouac’s
journal of his experiences which he drew on extensively to write “On the Road,” also his eyeglasses and harmonica; Beatles
trading cards from the early 60s, signed by the band members and containing the
only picture I have ever seen of the four of them with crewcuts; typewriter e.e.
cummings’s typewriter; illustrations from the “Wizard of Oz;” and a full Ku
Klux Klan robe.
The library is displaying a handwritten score by
Beethoven. You can see his composition
in his handwriting. Wow. A few feet away
rests George Washington’s final draft of his farewell address. This is the actual paper he held in his hand
while he read this famous speech.
Were this a traveling display, cities across America would by
vying for a chance to show this exhibition.
They would charge $25 or more, and people would willingly pay it and not
feel ripped off. Yet there it is on the
first floor of the library.
Susan and I were talking about the value of everything we
saw. We realize that is no way to
evaluate art, history, or culture. But
when you stop and think about how incredibly valuable these items were it is
mind-blowing. A Gutenberg bible is worth
about $25 million, I read on the internet. In 2006 a Jackson Pollock painting sold for
$140 million. In 1990 a Van Gogh went
for $82.5 million. What is “Starry Night”
worth? Can a value be put on “Water
Lillies?” $200 million? More?
We figured between the artwork and the library exhibit, what we saw had
to be worth $1 billion. Can you
imagine?
I don’t think the three basketballs in the fish tank accounted
for a large percentage of that total.
Thursday, January 26, 2012
Anti-Semitism
When I was a child I continually heard this joke: “You know
the difference between a Jew and a pizza?
A pizza doesn’t scream when you put it in the oven.”
Around 1990 I was in another deputy district attorney’s office
when the chief investigator came in and told us this bit of humor: “What did the Jewish pervert say to the
little girl? Hey, little girl, want to
buy a piece of candy?” They both
laughed. The joke was repeated again in
my presence to a chief deputy who also laughed.
(None of these people are still with the office.)
It is easy, in the America of 2011, to forget that there are large segments of the population who still hate Jews, or at a minimum accept age-old stereotypes. Before you do forget consider these recent events.
- Today’s New York Times carried an article about the publication of Adolf Hitler’s book “Mein Kampf” in Germany. Publication is illegal there, in large part to prevent Germans from again adopting Hitler’s beliefs. “This week the government released the results of a two-year study showing that one in five Germans still harbored anti-Semitic beliefs, despite decades spent educating school about Judaism and tolerance, and a firm rejection of anti-Semitism by the governing political establishment.”
- From Tuesday’s New York Times: “A man who the authorities said was driven by hatred of Jews was charged Tuesday with firebombing two Bergen County synagogues. The man, Anthony Graziano, 19, of Lodi, was arrested in the Jan. 11 attack on a Rutherford synagogue and the Jan. 3 firebombing of a Paramus synagogue. He was being held in $5 million bail. The charges include nine counts of attempted murder, bias intimidation, arson and aggravated arson.”
- From the January 19 New York Times: “Swastikas, as well as the words ‘Die Jew,’ had been painted on a garage in Midwood and on the stairs of a Jewish school, part of a recent spate of anti-Semitic crimes in Brooklyn, Manhattan and New Jersey and on Long Island.”
- From January 10(ynetnews.com): “The Simon Wiesenthal Center on Monday denounced anti-Semitic remarks Keith Hudson, an evangelical minister and the father of pop star Katy Perry, made during a sermon at Church On The Rise in Westlake, Ohio. ‘You know how to make the Jew jealous? Have some money, honey,’ Hudson allegedly said to the congregants. He added that ‘you go to LA and they own all the Rolex and diamond places. Walk down a part of LA where we live and it is so rich it smells….You ever smell rich? They are all Jews, hallelujah. Amen.’” (Hudson later apologized and claimed he is not anti-Semitic. Whether he is or isn’t the remarks speak for themselves, and he said them.)
These are not wackos who blame 9/11 on the Elders of Zion, or
Islamic extremists who are sword to Jihad against Jews. Perhaps these are isolated incidents, but all
of these articles are from a single month.
I think about these comments, actions, crimes and beliefs at
times. While I no longer practice
Judaism, my ethnic background is still that of a Jew. I cannot avoid at times feeling that this
undercurrent of anti-Semitism can still perhaps blossom into something more
dangerous. A nightmare scenario was
imagined by Phillip Roth in his book “The Plot Against America” where a
pro-Nazi Charles Lindburgh gets elected president in 1940 while World War II
rages in Europe and turns America into a virulently anti-Semitic nation. The story is fiction, but Lindburgh’s
admiration for the Nazis was not.
As someone from a Jewish background, I feel the sting of these
things, even though I no longer practice my parents’ religion. I am a Jew, both in the eyes of the world and
inside my head. Judiasm is as much ethnicity
as religion. My family were reform Jews—not
keeping kosher, working on Saturday, services predominantly in English—but nevertheless
my family on both sides comes from East European Jews. Had I lived during the Holocaust, I would
have gone to the camps. Certainly I am
not one who would have survived.
I cannot say I have been subject to discrimination to any
significant degree. I am sure most Jews
have not. Still, when influential people
where you work are willing to tell a joke in your presence, demonstrating a
bias against your ethnicity (and they did know I was Jewish), it gives you
pause. Harmless insensitivity? Perhaps.
But what if I decided to ask for a raise? Would I be seen as just another
money-grubbing Jew?
It is difficult for me to write this blog, because I am not
sure exactly the point I am trying to make.
I guess I just wanted to make people aware that even though it is easy
to forget some of the hate, it is still out there.
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
Meg
As everyone knows, I am extremely proud of my daughter
Megan. She has been working hard to make
it as a professional dancer in New York, and now we have something to
celebrate. Meg has been selected to be a
member of the Trisha Brown Dance Company.
This is a major achievement.
Trisha Brown is one of the most acclaimed modern dance choreographers in
the world. Her company tours the world
and performs at some of dance’s greatest venues.
To get an idea of the caliber of this company, check out the
art auction they are having for their annual fund raiser. The tickets to attend start at $500. (No, I will not be going, but Meg will attend
as a member of the company.) Artists
include the world-famous Robert Rauschenberg and Roy Lichtenstein, and pieces
are valued at thousands of dollars.
Meg leaves next month to perform in Phoenix and Tucson. A nice jaunt for the middle of February. Looking at the calendar, they are scheduled to
perform in the first half of 2012 in Chile, Scotland, and Ireland. Wow.
Good thing Meg likes to travel, having spent an extensive amount of time
in Europe. What great experiences she
has to look forward to.
Hopefully there will be a performance in New York City at some
point so I can see her. Watching the
videos of this company it looks like the kind of dancing I enjoy. That has not always been true of the work Meg
has been in, so I am really glad she has been accepted into this company.
I can’t help but reflect on Meg’s journey to this place. How she decided at age 12 that she wanted to
take dance lessons, an age when most people who become professional dancers
have already been through years of lessons and dozens of shows. Only a short time later she auditioned for
the Denver School for the Arts, and I was convinced she had insufficient
experience. The dance teacher saw
something more. At first she was put in
the back while more experienced dancers got bigger parts, but by her senior
year Meg was the best dancer there.
Still, I wondered about her future. I was not sure if dance was a good choice for
a major in college. Meg is smart and
could have majored in lots of subjects.
But she told us she wanted to be a dance major and set her sights on New
York University. We went to visit NYU
when Meg was a junior and the performance we saw was terrific. The dancers were so good, and the dancing was
so fast compared to what Meg was doing in high school, I doubted whether she
had the talent to be accepted into such a program. I will never forget running into the DSA
dance teacher in the bathroom after we returned from New York, and asking him
whether he thought Meg was good enough to be accepted to NYU. “Yeah,” he said, “I think she is.” That was the first time it dawned on me that
Meg was really talented.
Still, the audition process was stressful. Meg and I went to Florida State together
where she auditioned with dozens of others in one of a series of
auditions. She was not asked to perform
a solo, which was problematic. They said
solos were not asked of those who either were not being considered or who were
so good such an additional performance was deemed unnecessary. The questions were answered two weeks later
when Florida State accepted Meg before their audition process was even
finished. But NYU remained.
Meg auditioned for other schools, but NYU was always her first
choice. From our visit the year before
Meg felt comfortable in the building and with the people. Her mother was with her for the
audition. She called me from the
bathroom to tell me Meg had gotten a callback, for NYU a required step to
acceptance. Meg said she felt good about
her audition. The letter of acceptance
triggered a celebration.
NYU was no picnic. Meg
worked hard, but so did most everyone there.
Watching her on stage I was always impressed with her skill, but I was
with everyone else, too. Obviously, the
old man has no eye for dance talent. Meg
had spent a summer at a dance program in Austria as an exchange student, and
opted to spend a year there post-graduate.
It was not a degree program, and she does not have a master’s, but the
year in Austria really helped Meg a lot.
She worked hard on her dancing, and had a chance to travel around
Europe. She made connections with people
from all over the world, and she gained a lot of confidence.
When she returned she entered the life of a professional
dancer. Classes, odd jobs, dance work
where she could find it, often for little or no pay. But she continued to work hard, and try to
improve.
The audition for Trisha Brown was a grueling, three-week
process, starting with about 100 women (the men audition sepately), and going
through a series of cut-downs, each stage cause for trepidation. But Meg stayed strong and confident. She concentrated on being in the moment,
enjoying the movement, and having a good time.
Fortunately Meg knows some members of the company so she could see familiar
faces, which helped calm her down.
When Meg called to tell me she was offered the full time
position (there were two apprenticeships also available) we were
overjoyed. Meg will be doing movement
she loves all over the world with people she really enjoys. And really, who could ask for a better job
than that?
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
Search and seizure
A little while ago I blogged about my disagreement with the
way the war on drugs is fought, mostly because it is ineffective. The United States Supreme Court yesterday
reminded us of another problem—drug investigation is driving search and seizure
law. In a drug prosecution the Court found
that a warrant is required before the police can place a tracking device on a
vehicle. (I have not read the opinion and
don’t plan to. Why not? I don’t have to.)
I am not surprised. The
prior cases that said a warrant was not necessary to place a tracking device made
no sense to me. (Colorado law always
required warrants for these so this won’t affect my prior employment, but this
can have a major impact nationally.) From the newspaper reports it seems clear the
Court is in no mood to split constitutional hairs about what is or is not
protected based upon tortured legal theories and outdated precedent. Obviously, a person has an expectation of
privacy in his car. Trying to say
tracking the car with a beeper is no different than following it on the street
with surveillance is just absurd.
I expect the court will look at privacy interests from the
point of view of the defendant. The cops
and aggressive prosecutors want to look at it in much more limited terms. For example, that a customer of a cell phone
company has no reasonable expectation of privacy in his cell phone
records. Judges have always been much
more protective of privacy than the executive branch has wanted. I expect that in the 21st century
they will continue to protect privacy rights.
I doubt this will present an overwhelming problem for investigation of
violent crimes, although certainly it will have some impact. But it will cause problems for drug
investigators.
Regulatory prosecutions have driven search and seizure law for
a long time. The case which created the
exclusionary rule, Weeks v. United States was a gambling prosecution. Mapp v. Ohio which applied it to the states
was a pornography case. Katz v. United
States, establishing “reasonable expectation of privacy” as the standard for
application of the law was another gambling case. Those cases all went against the
government.
I have always been convinced that one of the reasons is that
judges are much more likely to suppress drugs or gambling receipts than the
murder weapon. However, I don’t think
that affects the US Supreme Court much.
The main reason is the manner in which regulatory crimes are
investigated, rather than other crimes.
Most crimes are investigated following their occurrence, so detectives
seek to find already-existing evidence. There
is always probable cause a crime has been committed, for example. Regulatory crime investigations, however, are
very difficult to investigate after they happen. They occur in secret with only the
participants involved, leaving virtually no reliable witnesses and almost no
evidence. The police seek to prevent
these crimes from happening, or often allow them to happen with themselves as
witnesses. This requires them to be
proactive in seeking out information. So
they need to intercept phone calls and track offenders. Narcotics officers are the most aggressive in
trying to intercept drugs.
Possessory crimes like drugs will always create search and
seizure nightmares because by definition the thing is the crime. This leaves most defendants with little
defense on the facts. Suppression of the
evidence ends the case, giving defense counsel great incentive to contest
searches. Finally, police officers are
always searching for things. Much of the
time it is for their own protection, to make sure the person they are dealing
with is not armed, but sometimes it is just because that is what they do. Often on the street an officer either
forgets, misunderstands, or chooses to disregard his training about searches.
I used to always say when I was a prosecutor that we should
never appeal the suppression of drugs, that drug cases make bad law. I am uncomfortable with the search and
seizure law being dictated by drug cases.
I think the issues would be clearer and the precedents cleaner if
violent crimes were the subject of these cases.
Monday, January 23, 2012
Phobias
Sometimes when I can’t think of what to blog about I turn to
the internet, the repository of all the world’s information. I use a website called “stumbleupon.com”
which brings up random websites based upon interests of mine which I put in
when I signed up. Today, I found this fascinating
website that purports to have a list of phobias. I have no idea if these are real phobias or
just some words some moron dug up, but it is pretty interesting if they really
exist.
·
Agliophobia – Fear of pain. Yeah, don’t we all
have that?
·
Atomosophobia- Fear of atomic explosions. See above.
·
Barophobia- Fear of gravity.
You can only live in the space station?
·
Catagelophobia- Fear of being ridiculed. Obviously I do not suffer
from this one or else I would not write this blog, or at least not post it.
·
Coitophobia- Fear of coitus. Obviously, not hereditary.
·
Counterphobia- The preference by a phobic for fearful situations. Explain this one. I mean really, this sounds like just straight
mental illness to me.
·
Dentophobia- Fear of dentists. See the first two.
·
Dikephobia- Fear of justice. Maybe we should rename this to “The Public Defenders’ Disease.”
·
Ephebiphobia- Fear of teenagers.
Or pretty much the state of anyone with teenage children.
·
Euphobia- Fear of hearing good news. No way. This does not exist. Strangely, there is no phobia for hearing bad
news.
·
Kathisophobia- Fear of sitting down. Useful when getting tickets to sold out events, but very difficult when you have to go to the
bathroom. However, if you also suffer
from Scatophobia- Fear of fecal matter maybe you can figure out a solution.
·
Medomalacuphobia- Fear of losing an erection. Or what we call “Viagra syndrome”
·
Neopharmaphobia- Fear of new drugs. Which makes this one very difficult to treat.
·
Octophobia - Fear of the figure 8. 13 and 666 also have
phobias.
·
Peccatophobia- Fear of sinning or imaginary crimes. Imaginary
crimes?
·
Pteronophobia- Fear of being tickled by feathers. Apparently other types of tickling is ok.
·
Rhytiphobia- Fear of getting wrinkles. This must be pretty common
as there is an entire industry fighting wrinkles.
·
Venustraphobia- Fear of beautiful women. Based upon my experience, this is not a
phobia, just self defense.
·
Walloonphobia- Fear of the Walloons. Walloons?
I had to look it up. They are a
French-speaking people who live in Belgium.
They seemed to be pretty active in the Belgian revolution, which must
have put some fear into the royal family.
·
Zemmiphobia- Fear of the great mole rat. See the first entry on
the list.
If this list is freaking you out you might have phobophobia- fear of
phobias.
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