१४ फेब्रुवारी, २००८

The morning fisheye view is so clear-eyed.

DSC_0002.JPG

But last night, I had my night vision:

The BQE

Are you thinking, Althouse, what were you doing that led you into that nightmarish perspective? The answer is: I was walking home after explaining the Eleventh Amendment.

२४ टिप्पण्या:

Chip Ahoy म्हणाले...

*looks up 11th ammendment*

Oh, that one.

Chip Ahoy म्हणाले...

Do you like the way I amended the word amendment?

Publius the Clown म्हणाले...

Yup, trying to explain the 11th Amendment would do that. It's got a through-the-looking-glass history.

George M. Spencer म्हणाले...

Professor, I think you were flattening lard with your red enamel rolling pin when the fishhead broke the window, rubber eye erect and precisely detailed.

Simon म्हणाले...

Ann, how do students generally cope with sovereign immunity? There are some twists and turns in the doctrine - I've asked you before about a particularly difficult wrinkle that I still don't understand - but conceptually it doesn't seem nearly as complex as those who bemoan the court's recent jurisprudence suggest (John Noonan's book on the subject, for example, strikes me as inventing difficulties that I just don't think hold water), and that anecdotally, students find it.

Ann Althouse म्हणाले...

How do students "cope" with it? They learn the doctrine and absorb the critiques. It's not too emotional.

Simon म्हणाले...

Well, what I mean is, do they find it particularly difficult relative to the rest of the course? I don't mean their emotional state about it. The question's prompted by the fact that some students I've talked to have indicated they thought it was a really, really difficult doctrine -- and if the doctrine was as byzantine as Noonan (again, for example, I don't mean to pick on him) makes it out to be, it wouldn't be hard to see why. Maybe I just found it easier because I had the benefit of The Alden Trilogy. ;)

Speaking of which, there was an interesting case on sovereign immunity in the 9th cir last week.

Eric Muller म्हणाले...

This made me laugh, Ann. I just forwarded a link to this post to my Con Law 1Ls, who very recently had to endure a lecture from me on the 11th Amendment.

Ann Althouse म्हणाले...

Thanks, Eric!

Simon, making things sound byzantine is a way of making an argument. It's so weird and complicated it must be wrong. This motivates people who don't like the doctrine to make it seem as nonsensical as possible, which I hurts students at least 2 ways.

chuck b. म्हणाले...

When will we see some of the hundreds of self-portraits you've no doubt taken with it by now?

Also, animals and flowers.

Ann Althouse म्हणाले...

It's been hard to find flowers. Self-portraits? I need to get a remote control or these will be pictures of me with a huge nose.

Bissage म्हणाले...

You say that like it’s a bad thing.

Link1. Link2.

ricpic म्हणाले...

The City

Boiling copper kettle burnishing the night,
Throwing clouds of steam into the sky.
Where did all that tumult go to the next day?
As it waits ignition by the fiery eye.

J. Cricket म्हणाले...

The fish-eye lens is perfect! Your posts about politics are all distorted. And now your pictures are, too!

Eli Blake म्हणाले...
ही टिप्पणी लेखकाना हलविली आहे.
Eli Blake म्हणाले...

The liberal observer:

The southern tip of Manhattan is all too recognizable at the upper right of that picture (though I've not been to New York since I was too young to remember, I can recognize the southern tip of Manhattan for the same reason as any other American can.)

Meanwhile, Mr. 'Dead or Alive' and his Taliban allies are not only at large and apparently very much alive, they are reconsituting their power in Afghanistan and have effective control over large parts of Pakistan, while our army is bogged down a thousand miles away chasing the couple of hundred terrorists they've sent to Iraq to keep our army tied down.

Zachary Sire म्हणाले...

School shootings, House contempt charges, a historical whirlwind of a primary season, Valentine's Day, the winner of the Westminster Dog Show is a Beagle, the terrorist leader of Hezbollah is dead...and all Althouse can seem to do is enjoy her camera lens, Rush Limbaugh, and Season 7 of American Idol.

Love,
Max--I mean, ZPS

Bissage म्हणाले...

Eli; ZPS,

Life is good!

titushuh म्हणाले...

How about a fisheye vlog?


We haven't seen you on camera lately?

Are you hiding?

What's the 11th amendment?

I don't know much about law. Will you teach me professor? Sometimes I may be a bad student though and need to be punished by staying late and cleaning your classroom.

I do know quite a bit about hog though. If you ever need a "guest speaker" to come to your class and identify and describe hogs from all the countries I would be honored.

I will bring my old slides.

Eclecticity म्हणाले...

Awe Some Shot!

Ms. A: Is Su Su's Yum Yum still there in Brooklyn Heights? It was a favorite of ours when we lived there in the 80's.

caplight म्हणाले...

Ann

Do you feel safe walking the streets of NYC at night, Brooklyn though it may be?

Ann Althouse म्हणाले...

Brooklyn Heights feels very safe.

Mr. Forward म्हणाले...

Here you go Eli, engram can get you up to speed.

"Virtually all of the suicide bombers were in Iraq killing many hundreds of innocent civilians every month, whereas virtually none were in Afghanistan. Yet, to these ultra-liberal and mentally inflexible editors, al Qaeda was not in Iraq but was instead in Afghanistan and Pakistan. It's downright creepy that any rational person could think along these lines. It is certainly true that al Qaeda's top leadership is in Pakistan. It is also true that our top leadership is in Washington D.C. But our soldiers are in Iraq, and that's where al Qaeda's soldiers are, too. Anyone who has the slightest curiosity about who the suicide bombers of Iraq are would know this."

http://engram-backtalk.blogspot.com/index.html

अनामित म्हणाले...

Your photos are a great ad for Brooklyn and NYC! I want to go!