Archive for November, 2008


Now listening:

Freeway – Aimee Mann: I like this song, but it feels incomplete–it’s got a good idea, but only one. I feel like it needs to be sampled/medleyed into a larger song. Possibly about the foreclosure epidemic.

People C’mon – Delta Spirit

Shake! Shake! – The Subways: Yeah, just another upbeat pop rock song, but I’m highly attached to the automotiveness of the part where the guitar enters the chorus. With a good set of speakers, the roar reminds me of driving stick-shift.

Sirens in the Deep Sea – Longwave: Nothing insightful to say about the lyrics here. Just something that’s been in the Current’s rotation that I rather like. The guitar’s a bit more metal than what I usually listen to, but the high, ethereal vocals lead me through it like Virgil through Hell. (Yes, I am proud of that simile. :p)

2080 – Yeasayer: I am head over heels for this song. First, it’s just beautiful–”Peter Gabriel meets Animal Collective,” in the words of one review. But it also fits my feelings about this moment in history exquisitely. Go read the lyrics and I’ll explain why.

Our generation’s past Fukuyama’s “end of history”–the Berlin Wall fell before I even knew what communism was. But history didn’t really end, now did it? For better and for worse, there’s a lot to come.

On the one hand, with Obama’s election I can’t help but feel incredibly optimistic. We made history on November 4; even though I disagree with Obama on not a small number of issues (the auto bailout, for starters), I’m nevertheless extremely excited to have a competent, tech-savvy administration with interesting ideas. I believe he’s going to make America and the world a better place for me and my hypothetical children to live. “It’s a new day…”

On the other hand, I’m also extremely pessimistic. I think the economy’s gonna get worse–possibly much worse–before it gets better. At the same time, short of some major, European-sized tax hikes or the mysterious disappearance of the Baby Boomer generation, the national debt/deficit is going to bankrupt us in the next forty years. Not to mention global warming, peak oil, infrastructure problems, obesity, and a host of other looming, potentially-crippling threats that the country has been procrastinating on for decades. Nelson and I have been considering interning at an orchard/veggie farm to learn how to grow our own food in case the white collar economy collapses. Every generation rebels against the one before it. The Boomers were collectively selfish, short-sighted, and entitled. I can see self-sufficiency, frugality, and nouveau pauvre becoming the big thing among my generation. You can already see it in the crafters, the Makers, the Green and organic/local/slow food movements. “We can all grab at the chance to be handsome farmers…”

But even in that case, perhaps it’s an adjustment that had to come, y’know? It might not be all that bad. We’re smart. So long as Instructables and Wikipedia stay up, we’ll figure it out.

Here’s a minimalist, post-show version of the song (gets going around 1:24). The post-chorus bridge thing is pretty much the best musical thing ever.

So yeah. I like it a lot.

Kids – MGMT

Horizon’s Homecoming – Kevin Fleming: Hosting myself because you won’t find it anywhere else–not even Kevin’s LJ anymore. Hope he doesn’t mind my “piracy.” maahahaha.

Six months after graduation, the calls for cash have started. Scripps wants me to give $100 to the general fund. I said no. For one thing, I just spent way too much money on app fees for law school. For another, I have basically zero confidence of the Scripps administration. I’m not giving a single discretionary cent until Dean Wood and Rhonda Risser are gone and I have some confidence that their replacements aren’t cloying, paternalistic Umbridges. I know a number of fellow alumnae who feel the same way.

So I was perusing the Scripps website, seeing what opportunities there were for targeted giving. The online form allows you to give to various vague categories (“student/faculty scholarship”); the most specific it gets is it allows you to give to a specific CLORG. But, unless I’m close to campus and talk with current students, how am I supposed to know which of my favorite CLORGS needs investment? And what if there are specific projects that aren’t CLORG-based but worth funding? Fundraising works best when the outcome of the money is tangible and exciting. That’s what makes special campaigns for new buildings (assuming the building is expected to be useful) work. But you shouldn’t just be harnessing that assignment for buildings–there should be a list of smaller (say, < $10,000) projects that alumnae can read about, give to, and propose. Large, wealthy donors can productively give toward specific projects because they can give enough to accomplish the goal all by themselves. (One senior-now-alumnae told me that if she became wealthy and Dean Wood were still in charge, she'd offer to leave all her money to the school if Wood would wear a red clown nose at all college functions. For example.) Less wealthy (especially recent) alumnae need an infrastructure to enable the same. It both bolsters enthusiasm for giving generally and brings those of us who distrust the Scripps administration into the fold.

Basically, the alumnae office needs to start using Fundable, or something like it. Seriously. Obama got elected by harnessing microdonations. Scripps should do the same.

Berkeley is the obvious choice. #1 for intellectual property law, well ranked overall, and near lots of nerdy potential employers. It’s not that expensive for a law school, since getting residency is easy. Like half my friends live in the area, and Nelson liked it when he lived there. We could maybe even achieve Nelson’s dream of having orange grove, if we lived inland, at least.

But. I’m not confident I can get in, for one thing. It’s one of those where there’s no guarantees, no matter how good your grades are. But I’m also unsure about going back to California. Granted, it’s not LA, thank goodness. But California is an alien, if generally agreeable, culture. I don’t think I want to settle down there. Having your own orchard would probably be considered settling down. How long can I safely reside in California before “You can check out any time you want, but you can never leave” kicks in?

So to the other end of the geographic spectrum. The U of M. Also cheap, thanks to in-state tuition from the get-go and a Midwestern standard of living. Good for international law, with an exchange program with the University of Uppsala. Located in sweet home Minneapolis (and a cool neighborhood thereof) in the beautiful state of Minnesota, near family and some of my high school friends. Familiarity.

But. While the U isn’t ranked *badly*, on US News it’s at #22 after slipping a few spots. While I think the US News rankings are an easily-gamed crock of shit, it’s our crock of shit. Biglaw only interviews at top schools, public interest law is even more selective (!), and law professors apparently only come out of Yale. The legal profession is basically a bunch of snobs. So even if I and all my fellow students agree that the rankings are stupid and say little about the strength of a lawyer, we cannot avoid taking the snobbish reality into account. I’d definitely be able to get a job out of the U in the Twin Cities or Chicago–but would it be good enough for firms outside the Midwest? Not going somewhere in the top ten seems to close (if not lock) a lot of doors.

Also, the new UMlaw dean seems to be taking the school in a very practical, practice-oriented direction; the school has a higher clinic-to-student ratio than like everybody. Normally, that would be a positive in my mind, except: 1.) I *like* theory and am considering an academic career path and 2.) none of those zillions of clinics is in IP or anything related. The U *has* IP classes and such, but it is definitely not an IP school.

Harvard: Zittrain! The Berkman Center! Unimpeachable credentials that can travel anywhere! What’s not to like?

Well…

First, Harvard has a reputation for having lots of highly competitive assholes. I’d rather not get my throat ripped out. I like it where it is.

Second, so far as I’ve been there, Cambridge/Harvard Square gives me hives. It’s just so…commercial, much more than I expected. And the cost of living is ridiculous. Boston seemed alright, though, so long as you don’t ever drive and can tolerate ridiculous accents.

Third, hella expensive. Though Harvard’s LRAP’s the second-best I’ve seen, it’s still public interest-only.

On to Michigan, my other probable top choice. While it’s not in Minnesota, it is the Midwest, and Ann Arbor sounds like a wonderful, livable city. Michigan isn’t known as an intellectual property star, though it’s very well ranked overall, but its dual degree with the School of Information pretty much looks like the most perfect course of study ever for a free culture-minded high-tech fangirl like me. I like their interdisciplinary approach and friendly, humane academic environment.

But: Ann Arbor is not that large a city. Detroit is an hour away, but it’s mostly abandoned and on fire. Would Nelson be able to find a job there? Michigan (like any place that’s not an in-state state school) is also hella expensive.

Next, UPenn. Well-ranked, interdisciplinary, intellectually curious. It’s also in Philadelphia, a city I’ve always felt comfortable in. I dunno what it is–maybe the high concentration of Lutherans and Quakers–but I’ve always liked Pennsylvania. It’s like a little piece of Midwest transplanted east. Having grown up in New Jersey and gone to Swat, Nelson’s also got plenty of connections in the area.

Downsides: Not particularly intellectual property or techlaw-oriented. Rumors that it has been slipping in the rankings. Expensive, and their LRAP isn’t all that good.

If UPenn is expensive, Yale is downright extortionist. However, Yale also has the best loan repayment program I’ve seen. Anyone making less than $80K (even in a non-public interest job) qualifies, with few restrictions. By the rankings, Yale is the #1 law school in the country. It’s a small, close-knit, and extremely selective. It also hosts the annual RebLaw conference, which sounds about as fun and debaucherous as law school gets.

But. Do I really want to live in New Haven? Does anyone really want to live there? And could Nelson get a job there (especially competing with Yalies)? The nearest large city, where most grads end up, is New York. I still don’t like New York.

Yale doesn’t have grades–they have one of those HP-P-NP systems. I can appreciate that for defusing the hypercompetitiveness that would probably otherwise result. But, at the same time, I dislike the potentially-associated attitude that because one got into Yale one can just rest on one’s laurels. Not everyone who gets into Yale is a wunderkind; see: George W. Bush.

My understanding is that UChicago has the complete opposite approach; instead of “Welcome, you’ve made it!” it’s “Abandon all hope, ye who enter here!” They work you like a dog. They have you pay crazy expensive tuition. And, again, while it’s a well-ranked school overall it isn’t particularly strong in IP or techlaw so far as I can tell.

What attracts me to UChicago, though, is just the whole Hyde Park atmosphere. UChicago sounds like a really cool place to be intellectually. You’ve got the Friedman libertarians, thinkers like Cass Sunstein, a very centrist, pragmatic ethos alongside idealists from both ends of the political spectrum. And it’s another Midwestern school, in a big city with plenty of law offices.

University of Virginia has Siva Vaidhyanathan (though he’s undergrad, not at the law school) and is relatively cheap (by the time I would be attending, I could probably get residency). I mostly applied there, though because it was free. Outside of Siva, it doesn’t seem to be a huge IP powerhouse. And Charlottesville not only is a small town (with accordingly fewer legal jobs, especially in something as specialized as IP/techlaw public interest), it’s particularly non-Nelson-compliant; very few vegetarian-friendly restaurants and no Asian supermarkets as far as I can tell.

Duke‘s also in the South, but the Research Triangle seems to be fairly culture-compatible. Vegetarian restaurants, Asian groceries, tech companies, and general blueness–it’s kind of pathetic, but the fact that North Carolina went for Obama this year makes me significantly more open to living there. Duke is well-ranked both generally and in IP; Jamie Boyle, Jennifer Jenkins, and the Center for the Public Domain are there. They have a study abroad program with the University of Copenhagen.

But still. North Carolina? Really?

I should be rooting for Stanford more than I am. Home of Lessig, the Samuelson clinic, the Center for Internet and Society, it’s the other (more expensive) Bay Area law school with all the advantages that locale entails. Stanford’s #2 for IP, and Silicon Valley’s right there. By reputation and practice area, it would totally be an excellent place to go. I think my creeping lukewarmness isn’t because of the school itself but rather a reflection of my belief that I have little chance of getting in. Not only is it (like most of the other schools on this list) an extremely competitive school, where my stats only put me at the median for the 2007 class, apparently Stanford “recommends” (though doesn’t require) three recommendation letters. I only have two–the requirement for all the other schools–and I’m not sure who I’d ask for a third even if it wasn’t so late in the game. So I fear that might rule me out. Those feelings of inadequacy shouldn’t affect my actual chances, though. We’ll see what happens if I do get in.

Finally, Georgetown. I applied mostly because I got an app fee waiver, it’s well ranked overall, and to provide for the case where I decide to stay in DC for some reason. Extremely strong in constitutional law/civil liberties and international law; not as much in IP/techlaw. I REALLY hope the hack who testified in front of Congress that the NIH mandate violates copyright law (*insert baffled noises here*) isn’t representative of the GU IP faculty, either politically or intellectually. That really did not improve my opinion of Georgetown.

So I’ve got some first choices, and some less-than-first choices. I think I’ll just have to accept that there’s no perfect choice; the geographic distribution of my friends and family alone guarantees that. The roll of the dice, where I get in and where I don’t, will trim some of my options off, so some of these considerations will likely no longer be relevant.

Still, though, it’s worth considering them as if I got into every one. Since I’m applying a year in advance, if I only get into my less-than-first choices I’ll have to decide whether to settle for what I got or to try again next year (at the price of uncertainty for Nelson’s job search). The very fact that I am applying early will count against me in the admissions progress–meaning that it is reasonable to believe that I could reverse some of my inevitable rejection letters if I tried again.

November 4

I was completely unable to focus on work yesterday. All the time, refreshing blogs, reading voting stories, worrying that, somehow, this was gonna get screwed up.

When they called Pennsylvania for Obama, a McCain win was nearly impossible. When they called Ohio for Obama, it was done. At that point, Obama could lose Virginia, Indiana, North Carolina, Florida, Colorado, New Mexico, AND Nevada–and, short of all the Democratic ballots in Iowa, Minnesota, or the West Coast spontaneously combusting, still get to 270.

Of course, at that point all the news networks just talked about how a Republican has never won without Ohio, it’s looking rather bad for McCain, blah blah blah. Only the friggin’ mathematician was willing to actually call it. Of course, the media has an interest in making a race close, or appear to be close-it keeps people watching longer. Or maybe the news networks were charitably trying to encourage voting on the West Coast, so all the Californian Obama folks wouldn’t go home and let Proposition 8 pass. (Unfortunately, it looks like it did anyway. California! What the hell is wrong with you?)

In any case, at that point I walked to the grocery store to buy a box of chocolates, a bottle of wine, and some broccoli (don’t ask) and updated the cashier on the results. As a young black dude, I figured he had about a 93% chance of being an Obama supporter. Yep. He was.

DC went nuts at the news, as you’ve probably heard. My roommate went downtown to join in and asked me and Nelson to join him. I almost wished I was still unemployed, so that I could have spent the night screaming and dancing and hugging random people in a fully historic fashion. But we didn’t. Instead we sat in the exercise room of the condo building (we don’t have a TV, and I was having a hard time getting the news outlets’ online streams to work) and watched McCain’s concession and Obama’s acceptance over a glass of wine.

Last night in part of his speech, Obama reprised New Hampshire, and I was reminded of when I first saw him speak. I was at a hole-in-the-wall Mexican place with Elaine, getting food before attending an acapella concert at USC. They had a tiny TV on the wall, tuned to Obama’s speech after losing New Hampshire. When I say I “saw” Obama speak, I mean it literally. The TV’s sound was off, so I didn’t actually hear what he said that evening until later when I ran across the ‘Yes We Can’ video. But I just looked at him, addressing the crowd, and I knew–this is the next president of the United States of America.

Obama’s right, that the struggle has just begun. The two most recent movies I’ve seen are An Inconvenient Truth (finally) and the short version of I.O.U.S.A. They’re kind of frightening. This country has hella problems. They’re gonna be challenging to fix. Right now there is no goddamn way the government can afford to support all the programs I wish it would, even if Obama supported all of them (he’s significantly closer to the center than I am–still mad about FISA) and could get them passed (Democratic congress, yes, but many close victories and centrists there too). Our country is neither solvent nor sustainable at this juncture. But I think that Obama’s the guy to tackle these things. He won’t be able to fix things right away, or ever without grassroots commitment and support. But I trust him to talk to experts instead of industry hacks, to cross party lines, and to present some very interesting ideas. I can’t wait to see what’s to come.

Crossing my fingers: Bruce Schneier for Homeland Security chief and Lawrence Lessig for FCC head/IP czar, anyone?

One more day…

On the one hand, to be fair, as someone who tends to cheer for the Democrats, the party is exceptional at pulling defeat from the jaws of victory. I can’t help but feel like Charlie Brown waiting for Lucy to pull the football away again. You never know how many percentage points to subtract for incompetent and/or fraudulent election administration. You never know when a candidate’s gonna die in a plane crash. I’ve been doing a lot of knocking on wood.

On the other hand, the small dose of CNN I have seen recently makes me want to set the exercise room television on fire. With C4. And plutonium. For mostly the same reasons as this comic.

Is Obama a noncitizen Muslim terrorist who never graduated from Columbia? No! Is he the anti-Christ? No! Does McCain have a chance of winning Pennsylvania? No, unless Obama devours a live puppy on live TV today–and even then, like a third of voters have already voted! Yet the mere utterance of these things is apparently enough to obligate the media to dignify and amplify them with coverage…

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