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David W

Published Letters: 363
Editor's Choice: 46

Friday, August 29, 2008 02:29 AM
Original article: Ask the pilot

Patrick

You're right: most of us take flying for granted these days. Sad but true. There IS no romance or mystique in spending hours crammed in a cattle truck, fighting for elbow room on the armrest, screaming children, horrible airline food.

My ideal would be a Tardis-like plane that looked like Concorde on the outside and an A380 on the inside. But, in the real world, give me function over form any day. (And, call me a Philistine, but I don't get why the 747 - a big plane with a fat nose - is so aesthetically pleasing either.)

Anyway, how often does your average flier actually see an aircraft? I mean really see like you do in photographs? At major airports, for example, you might just glimpse the bulk of your plane outside the departure lounge window before you're sucked down a tube directly into its innards and then vomited up again at your destination.

Saturday, September 6, 2008 01:53 PM
Original article: Britain to ban sexist ads?

Dog bites man

And your point is?

Firstly: in Britain, Parliament's call for "zero-tolerance" of sexist advertising has generated negligible debate in the media. However, it is the dog days of August so the gutter press have picked the story up and made a day or two's news out of it which will have been completely forgotten by this time tomorrow. But, judging by your comments, you nevertheless are offended by the press's take on this non-story.

Secondly: you report the European Parliament's non-binding report recommending sexist advertising be prohibited. (This also has been largely ignored in Britain and the rest of Europe.) You might think this would help neutralise the press's behaviour that you complain about, yet you council us it would be unwise to go down that road (and I think you'd be right).

So what's it to be? Is there a point here or not? I admire your zeal in scouring the world's press for traces of sexism but but there's no story here. Nothing.

Dog bites man.

Thursday, September 11, 2008 03:09 AM

US policy is completely wrong

The US has no business trying to reshape the world according to its designs, whether it's about "democracy" (i.e. killing people) in the Middle East today, or "stability" (i.e. propping up tyrants who kill people) yesterday.

Its policy is the reverse of what it should be: in Israel where the US could definitely do some good, it doesn't; in other places that would rather sort out their own problems (messy and bloody and unhelpful to the US though that may be) it crashes in with guns blazing, turning a bad situation into a worse one.

Friday, September 12, 2008 02:08 AM
Original article: Ask the pilot

I think you got away with it

You need to wear your hard hat when writing about male/female issues on Salon, but I don't think even Rebecca Traister with a microscope could have discerned any sexism in your article. Whew!

Monday, September 15, 2008 08:09 AM

"Ewa Strusinska became the first female assistant conductor in the U.K. earlier this year"

It's not quite as bad as that - I can think of 3 female conductors in the UK before Ewa Strusinska: Marin Alsop was principal conductor of the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra from 2002 to 2008, Jane Glover has been a professional conductor since 1975 (London Mozart Players, Glyndebourne, etc), and Sian Edwards since 1986.

Wednesday, September 17, 2008 08:40 AM

What I want to know is...

...why anybody thinks it's a good idea to stop Ahmadinejad being present at the UN. He's there to talk - inflammatory though it may be - not throw bombs.

He has every right to be heard.

Monday, September 22, 2008 02:45 AM
Original article: My candidate, myself

Nice ideas

I like the idea that prospective presidents should undergo tests of their cognitive reasoning. Of course, it's never going to happen, but it's a sound idea that contenders for high public office should demonstrate the ability to think rationally, weigh the evidence before acting, and be able to change their minds if necessary - why would anybody not want that in a president?

My own rule of thumb for knowing when a policy is wrong is when the best argument a politician can come up with is to say it is 'right' to do such a thing without providing any further justification. This happens a lot and sets off my bullshit alarm instantly.

In particular, faith should play no part in decision making. Having a philosophy, vision, ideals, etc, is fine, but not blind faith. My own view is that publicly expressed beliefs in the supernatural should count against the candidate and not, as now in American politics, be a necessity.

Friday, September 26, 2008 02:39 AM
Original article: Playing the doctor card

I'm surprised it was a surprise

Doctors obviously see things from a different perspective than patients but surely the whole experience shouldn't come as such a surprise when the doctor finds himself on the other side of things?

The whole process of illness and hospitalization is very stressful and doctors play an integral part in that process. If a doctor is not empathetic with his patients and does not have at least some feeling for what the patient, and his or her relatives, are going through then, in my view, he's deficient as a doctor.

Monday, September 29, 2008 09:28 AM

Just do it, and do it now!

The bailout is a bad idea but it's just got to be done, and done quickly, otherwise we're headed for financial meltdown.

When the dust has settled, then is the time to go after the guilty and change the rules so that this doesn't happen again. But the longer we wait before acting the bigger the price to pay will be, and it'll be you and me that pay, not the Wall street fat cats.

Tuesday, September 30, 2008 01:22 PM
Original article: World to U.S.: You suck

The world is right

I can see why the bailout was rejected - it stinks. But it's got to happen, and happen very, very soon.

The time for recriminations and changes to the rules of capitalism is when things have stabilized, and NOT NOW. It is NOT the time for Congress to suddenly discover its spine and prevaricate while the US economy sinks, dragging the rest of the world with it.

Sort it!

Friday, October 3, 2008 06:20 AM

Not my style

Anne Lamott may be right about Molly Ivins but I'm afraid I can't cope with the writing style. A thought emerges, it's briefly coated with schmalz, then before it takes shape we flit to the next one.

And are the short. Staccato sentences. Really necessary?

Maybe it's just me.

Sorry.

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