Worth reading and watching (1)

Instead of posting links and quotes throughout the day, I'm going to try collecting everything into one post. So here's my collection of what I think's worth taking a look at for May 4, 2010.

(collected from yesterday, I suppose. I wish I could see into the future of what'll be floating around today! Then everyone would really have a reason to look at this.)

Huffington Post: Archbishop Desmond Tutu on Arizona's "Papers, Please" Law (SB 1070)

Abominations such as apartheid do not start with an entire population suddenly becoming inhumane. They start here. They start with generalizing unwanted characteristics across an entire segment of a population. They start with trying to solve a problem by asserting superior force over a population. They start with stripping people of rights and dignity - such as the right to be presumed innocent until proven guilty - that you yourself enjoy. Not because it is right, but because you can. And because somehow, you think this is going to solve a problem.

The New York Times: China, Chinglish, and Fixing Shanghai in Time for the World Expo 2010

Oliver Lutz Radtke, a former German radio reporter who may well be the world’s foremost authority on Chinglish, said he believed that China should embrace the fanciful melding of English and Chinese as the hallmark of a dynamic, living language. As he sees it, Chinglish is an endangered species that deserves preservation.

(For some reason, my first though was, of course it's a German)

The New York Times (again): On the Ending of Bill Moyers Journal

Mr. Moyers has long been a controversial figure. In a column in the May 10 issue of The Nation, the media columnist Eric Alterman called Mr. Moyers the “last unapologetic liberal anywhere in broadcast television.” Conservative critics have long accused Mr. Moyers and his programs of being one-sided.

“To our critics,” he said on Friday’s finale, “I’m glad you paid attention; the second most important thing to journalists is to know we’re not being ignored.” (The only thing more important, he said, is independence.)

(I only recently started listening to the show as a podcast, I've been really enjoying it... sad to see it end.)

Robert Reich: The Rebirth of Regulation

For thirty years, deregulation has been all the rage in Washington. Even where regulations exist, Congress has set such low penalties that disregarding the regulations and risking fines has been treated by firms as a cost of doing business. And for years, enforcement budgets have been slashed, with the result that there are rarely enough inspectors to do the job. The assumption has been markets know best, and when they don’t civil lawsuits and government prosecutions will deter wrongdoing.

Jesse Tyler Ferguson (from Modern Family) Covers Lady Gaga's Alejandro

Funny or Die: White Women's Workout