Blog | Admin | Archives

Constitutional FUD?

I recieved the following email in my inbox earlier tonight:

Dear student,

We look forward to your participation in the University of Washington
community during autumn 2006. UW offers a wide variety of learning
opportunities. We hope you will pursue many of them.

As a recipient of Federal financial support, the University is required by
Public Law 108-447 to make available an educational program on the U.S.
Constitution as part of Constitution Day on September 17. Since the
University is not in session on the 17th, we are making available to you a
website on the Constitution from September 12 to 22, 2006. The site is
available now at http://depts.washington.edu/constday .

The site provides an overview of the history of the Constitution and a brief
discussion of current constitutional debates, as well as links to other
pages that provide additional information and resources. There is also a
bibliography of popular references and a list of courses at the University
of Washington that address the Constitution. In addition, the UW site
contains links to a number of webcasts on the Constitution:

1. A Conversation on the Constitution: Judicial Independence
2. Key Constitutional Concepts
3. The Roberts Court: What Can This Term Tell Us About the Future of the
Court?
4. Domestic Spying: What are the Checks on Presidential Power?

For you crossword puzzle enthusiasts, look for the Constitution Day puzzle
at our site and test your knowledge.

We encourage you to kick-off your autumn quarter studies early and visit the
University’s Constitution Day website at
http://depts.washington.edu/constday .

Thank you,

UW Constitution Day

Being the part-time constitutional scholar that I am, I decided to check it out and, perhaps, learn something along the way. The description of the drafting and signing of the Constitution was sparse and routine, but an essay entitled “Some Current Constitutional Controversies” contained some interesting (if expected) bias. For example (emphasis added):

…the Court’s conservative majority has struck down or limited the reach of key provisions in the Gun Free School Zones Act, the Violence Against Women Act, the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, and the Americans with Disabilities Act.

Last I checked, these decisions were made with four “liberal” justices, four “conservative” justices, and one decidedly moderate justice. Of course, those on the farther right or left think that Jutice O’Conner (and now Kennedy) was/is on “the other side,” but to them I’m either an anarchist or a facist, so I don’t really care what they might think in this case.

Now, get this:

Many people speculate whether the new conservative justices will vote to overturn Roe and thus make abortion illegal in the United States.

When I read this, my reaction was to begin writing this post. I thought, “this is outright, undeniable FUD. Overturning Roe v. Wade does not, I repeat, does not make abortion illegal in the United States. What overturning Roe v. Wade does do is make it legal once again for states to determine if abortion is legal in each state, which in my humble opinion is the way it should be. To suggest otherwise, as the (uncredited) writers of this web page did, is either the mistake of someone poorly informed (I did not get the impression from the website that the writer was poorly informed) or the intentional distortion of truth by an idealogue.”

Of course, then I read the next couple of sentences:

However, the impact of a Court ruling formally overturning Roe is quite difficult to predict. Such a ruling would not make abortion illegal.

Wait, what? “Such a ruling would not make abortion illegal” versus “and thus make abortion illegal in the United States.” I quickly reformed my opinion of the writer from “advesary” to “verysorry.”

While there is still (in my conservative-leaning libertarian mind) a decidedly “liberal” bent to the whole web page, I don’t think it was the work of a liberal mastermind trying to sway the minds of impressionable students. Rather, it was likely just the work of a well-meaning, though still left-of-center writer who, perhaps up against a deadline, didn’t read that paragraph too carefully.

Can’t Get Much Closer

Two-week group project

8/11/2206 12:20am e-submit deadline

Document submitted on: 8/11/2006 12:19:58 AM

W00t

Fighting Email Repression

James D. Bryers wrote:
> Can we “mace” any Bush Supporters ?
> +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
> James D. Bryers, Ph.D.
> Professor
> Department of Bioengineering
> NOTE: NEW ADDRESS !
> Mailing Address:
> PO Box 355061, Foege N310C
> 1750 N.E. Pacific Street
> University of Washington
> Seattle, WA 98195-5061
> TEL: 206.221.58.76.
> FAX: 206.616.97.63. (Shared Facility)

Sure!

Lets meet somewhere; I’ll wear my Bush/Cheney T-shirt and you can “mace” me. Sounds fun!

When is a good time for you?

~Ryan

Physics Nightmare

I drempt this morning in the murky twilight of my sleep that I has missed my Physics 123 final, causing me to flunk the class. I was even ready to declare that now I knew what I would be taking with that final open slot left in my two-year schedule, until my mind cleared and I realized that I wasn’t taking Physics 123 this quarter, and that I’ve had credit for it since my first quarter here at the UW. Funny how the real and imagined can blend together so flawlessly in dream.

Spring 2006 Grades

I find the result somewhat interesting — I would have guessed the reverse in the grades between BioE 301 and CSE 321. I’m not complaining though.

Course Course Title Credits Grade Grade
Points
BIOEN 301 BIOEN SYST ANALSYS 4.0 3.8 15.20
CSE 321 DISCRETE STRUCTURES 4.0 3.6 14.40
CSE 341 PROGRAMMING LANGS 4.0 3.9 15.60
MATH 390 PROB STAT ENG SCI 4.0 2.4 9.60

Finally Finals Finished

This morning, I walked out of the CSE 341 final a little bit early. I was done. Free. It was strangely devoid of the giddiness I was expecting. I suspect that the fires of freedom were tempered by another sub par performance in too many of my classes.

On the other hand, I did finish strong — among others receiving the same grade as me in my Statistics class, I had the highest final score, by far (and, accordingly the lowest homework score). Those who got the same grade as me on the final earned grades ranging from a high of 3.9 to a low of 2.4 (me). What a difference a little bit of homework can make.

I am not one to decry the grading system. While I did not find this professor’s lectures partcularly useful, nor did I find the book a particularly good reference, grades still ultimately are very good measures of a student’s ability and willingness to conform to the system imposed by various teachers — and thereby are a very good indication of a student’s versatility, as well as decent measures of a student’s dedication and intelligence. I am not about to believe that I lack the ability, so it must be the willingness. This is something that I will work on. Mark these words.

Three Down, One to Go

All was going well on the Bioengineering midterm this morning until another page showed up, half way thorugh the test. Literally. Among our three teachers, one of them had missed a page, which for me happened to be the hardest. I didn’t quite finish that last page, but the rest I feel pretty good about. with it out of the way, all that stands between me and freedom (for a week) is one more 8:30 am Final; this one on ML, Scheme, and Squeak. Then I get to go back to work. Yay.