More Tech Hiring Ahead

. . . in Asia:

Technology companies are seeing a rebound in business, but top executives this week said any jobs added to meet growing demand will likely be in countries where labor is cheaper than the United States.
Executives speaking at the Reuters Technology, Media and Telecommunications Summit in New York said they see increased hiring in countries like India and China, but few jobs will be added in the United States.
. . .
U.S. technology employment fell 4 percent last year to just below 6 million, the American Electronics Association estimates, the lowest level since 1999. The unemployment rate for electrical and electronics engineers rose to a record 6.2 percent, the Institute for Electrical and Electronics Engineers said.
Ron Hira, a professor at Rochester Institute of Technology who analyzes manpower for the IEEE, said a recent decrease in the U.S. government’s outlook for employment growth reflects the move to send U.S. technology jobs abroad.

This exporting of jobs abroad could become a significant campaign issue this fall.

Zoo Killer

Another sick person (plural?) surfaces:

Nearly 60 animals have been killed at the Sao Paulo Zoo since last month and police expect to track down the suspected killers soon, a Brazilian official said on Friday.
Laboratory tests have shown the animals were killed with a rat poison banned in Brazil.
Joao Carlos Meirelles, a Sao Paulo state minister, said investigators had ruled out the deaths being an accident, mainly because the dose was so high in most of the dead animals.
The 59 victims so far include an elephant, dromedaries, monkeys and porcupines.

Why?

Shameful

By now you’re probably aware of Speaker of the House Hastert’s crass political decision to prevent the 9/11 Commission from finishing its investigation. According to the Speaker’s spokesman, there are two reasons for this:

“One, if there are recommendations that need action, we need them sooner than later,” Feehery said. “Two, he does not want this to be delayed any further and become a political football in the middle of the campaign.”

CNN’s Aaron Brown displayed a rare moment of journalistic courage last night and called Hastert’s hideousness:

We admit we don’t do causes very well on the program. And I don’t do outrage well at all, yet, tonight, a cause and an outrage. The decision by the speaker of the House to deny the independent commission investigating the 9/11 attack on America a 60-day extension — that’s all, 60 days — to complete its work is unconscionable and indefensible, which, no doubt, explains why neither the speaker, nor any member of the House leadership, nor none of their press secretaries would come on the program to talk about it, despite repeated requests.
The commission itself has gone about its work quietly. It’s had to fight tooth and nail to get necessary information. And now this, an arbitrary decision to deny not just the commission — that’s the least of it — but the country the chance to know all of what happened, how it happened, and how best to prevent it from happening again.
Perhaps, the speaker and his team assume you do not care. I hope they’re wrong. I hope you care enough to write them and e-mail them and call them until they relent. Do that. Do it for the victims and their families. Do it for the country that was attacked and for history.

Great idea. Tell Hastert where he can go:

Congressman J. Dennis Hastert
D.C. Office
235 Cannon House Office Building
Washington, DC 20515
Phone: 202-225-2976
Fax: 202-225-0697

Speaking of politicizing 9/11, The Hill is hardly a tabloid magazine, so I doubt it pulled this tidbit out of thin air. According to Albert Eisele and Jeff Dufour, someone at the GOP central has been contemplating using Ground Sero as a convention prop:

According to sources privy to convention planners’ discussions, the 2004 GOP conclave at New York’s Madison Square Garden will be unlike any previous quadrennial gathering of either party. In fact, not all of the main events will be held at the Garden, sources involved in planning the Aug. 31-Sept. 2 convention said.
“The entire format and actual physical setup could be radically different,” one GOP insider commented. “They might not even have a podium, or maybe a rotating podium or even a stage that comes up from underground. It would be like a theater in the round, with off-site events that are part of the convention.”
The source, a veteran official of past GOP conventions, said the 50,000 delegates, dignitaries and guests would watch off-site events on giant TV screens. “Now, we’ll go to the deck of the USS Intrepid as the U.S. Marine Corps Band plays the national anthem,” he said, pretending that he was playing the part of the convention chairman.
“Or, and this is a real possibility, we could see President Bush giving his acceptance speech at Ground Zero,” he added. “It’s clearly a venue they�re considering.”

This must be a low-level aide firing off wild ideas. There is no way that even this White House bunch is stupid enough to attempt to that . . . is there? The backlash in the NYC streets would make the 1968 Democratic Convention protests seem like a prayer meeting in comparison.

Bush Administration Supports Quotas!

. . . in Iraq. The administration has sent so-called “American democracy trainers” into Iraq to “show the people what democracy is and that it is for their own good.”
What lessons are these “democracy trainers” teaching?

[T]he United States has had to lay down the law on some issues, such as getting the men to include women, which means setting quotas for them. Some of the men don’t like that. And in one particular nomination process � to form a finance committee � even some of the women argued for a lower number of slots to be set aside for them.
“Quotas are something that, by and large, we don’t like the sound of in the United States,” said Chuck Costello, who represents a firm of consultants to which the United States is paying $167 million. “But a lot of countries use them, and if you want to push harder to try to make forward progress, sometimes, especially in a temporary situation, quotas are not a bad idea.”

Oh, the irony. Next thing you know we’ll be providing government-funded health care in Baghdad.

Debates

Can’t these big media organizations come up with people to host a decent debate?

  • Candidate A, you recently said that you are the best man for the job. Are you trying to say that Candidate B isn’t a man?
  • Candidate A, which of Candidate B’s personal characteristics do you wish you had?
  • Candidate A, which of these other candidates would you vote for?
  • To all the candidates: since you’re all American citizens, do you think a foreigner should be allowed here to debate you?

Sheesh. I think the best debates we’ve had so far were the ones where the local people in Iowa and New Hampshire were calling the shots.