antimeria

a complete impediment to understanding

Electioneering.

Alex Tabarrok notes that disproportionate representation of rural areas was instrumental in passing Prohibition:

I’d always understood that prohibition was, in part, an attack by rural WASPs against urban, (often) Catholic, immigrants but I had not realized how much the drys were helped by malapportionment in the state legislatures which gave rural voters greater power than their numbers alone would have suggested.

“Statewide wet majorities were rendered irrelevant by the rotten-borough legislatures.  The very same day the citizens of Missouri rejected a dry amendment to the state constitution by a margin of 47 percent dry to 53 percent wet, they elected a legislature that just two months later would ratify the Eighteenth Amendment by a 75 percent to 25 percent margin. In Ohio, the sacred cradle of the ASL, legislative districting and assiduous politicking put ratification over by a combined legislative vote of 105-42; however, when left to their own devices, Ohio voters rejected the very same measure in a referendum.”

Along with often-abused Senate procedures like holds and filibusters, this phenomenon is one of the hidden structural problems that keep gay marriage illegal and climate change unaddressed.

Park place.

Google just released Open Spot, an Android app (public beta, natch) that tells you where there are open parking spots.

Open Spot works by letting people who are leaving parking spots share their spots with people who are searching for parking.

Start helping others find parking, and together we’ll all save time, save gas, and reduce pollution. Like to keep score? The more open spots you mark, the more parking ‘karma points’ you’ll get.

It’s a cool idea, and could be useful if enough people around you use it. Of course, if you know the area well, you probably already know where to park, meaning the app will probably end up mostly helping suburbanites and out-of-towners find city parking. Also, if you really wanted to save gas and reduce pollution, you wouldn’t be driving.

Via Gizmodo.

Tonight, tonight.

Going to see the Smashing Pumpkins. Because EMI is a humorless taintclown and won’t allow Youtube embedding, here’s “1979.”

The Smashing Pumpkins – 1979

Linkwad (updated).

  1. Make your own Android apps (Via Engadget).
  2. Lawsuit over Apple’s AT&T lock-in, App Store moves forward.
  3. Harry Reid and Sharron Angle’s fair-use fight.
  4. Radley Balko interviewed about police-recording arrests.
  5. Update: YouTube now supports 4096p video.

Linkwad.

  1. Comic Sans Dan Gilbert hates LeBron James (who has just replaced Kobe Bryant in the public’s mind as “Biggest Figurative NBA Dick”).
  2. Drowning doesn’t look like drowning (via @Maryvale).
  3. Android gains market share, thanks entirely to awesome circuit board live wallpapers (probably).
  4. Catholic Church vacillates on welcoming drug addicts and drug dealers, still pretty much against gay dudes. (via Andrew Sullivan)
  5. Updated: Nope. A potential AIDS research breakthrough which might also work against the flu (via AS, again).