Jeffrey D. Sadow is an associate professor of political science at Louisiana State University Shreveport. If you're an elected official, political operative or anyone else upset at his views, don't go bothering LSUS or LSU System officials about that because these are his own views solely. This publishes five days weekly with the exception of 7 holidays. Also check out his Louisiana Legislature Log especially during legislative sessions (in "Louisiana Politics Blog Roll" below).
9.2.17
Editor can't fix problem unless acknowledging it
Last week, in a futile gesture, the New Orleans Times-Picayune (or NOLA.com,
or whatever Advance Digital calls the outlet now) suffered a defensive wound
regarding the publication’s ideological leanings.
Its editor Mark Lorando had written a column
inviting reader comment about the newspaper’s performance. He followed it up
with one addressing the comment, by far, most commonly made: that the paper has
a liberal bias. Predictably, the headline read “Yes,
we have an agenda. But it's not a liberal one.”
It’s always humorous to see newspapers try to deny
the elephant in the room for most of them. A few actually have some balance,
and a few others such as the New York
Times admit they come
off, if not actually, having a liberal bias to them. But the vast majority
like Lorando insist over and over that they don’t – even when it’s painfully obvious
that they do.
8.2.17
Bradberry letter adds to troubling report questions
If belatedly, the biggest scalded dog of them all,
Louisiana’s Coastal Protection and
Restoration Authority Chairman Johnny Bradberry, wrote a letter
to the editor regarding my Jan. 29 column
in the Baton Rouge Advocate that
noted apparently politicized decision-making in constructing scenarios for the
agency’s draft 2017
Coastal Master Plan. Rather than refute the column, it only raises more troubling
questions about the quality of the decision-making process.
Bradberry’s letter largely stayed away from the
inadequate argumentation, as already
noted, made by previous letter writers defending the change in scenarios
regarding sea level rise (SLR). In 2012,
the team responsible for calculating SLR came up with essentially the 2017
range (31 to 198 cm), yet the CPRA postulated scenarios (100, 150, and 200 cm) where
the highest SLR level of 2012 (100 cm) became the lowest of 2017 and the
highest of 2017 doubled the highest of 2012. The science (as unreliable as SLR
calculations are historically) had not changed, yet the CPRA chose dramatically
higher SLR assumptions, which would indicate politics interceded to explain the
change.
Instead, Bradberry’s effort started off with a
straw man, incorrectly claiming the column said that “increased sea-level rise
predictions for Louisiana’s coast are somehow motivated by election of Gov.
John Bel Edwards and not by science.” He either needs to work on his reading comprehension
or take off his partisan blinders: the column only stated that the Edwards
Administration brought an ethos more supportive of big government that would
lend itself to a more alarmist view on significant anthropogenic climate change
and that Edwards had appointed the majority of members to the CPRA (among them
Bradberry). It never stated that SLR forecasts used did not have a basis in
science, as unreliable as those have been.
7.2.17
LA religious leaders opine unwisely on order
Religious leaders face a central challenge in
converting articles of faith to everyday practice in politics. Unfortunately, some
of these individuals in Louisiana recently flunked that test in evaluating
travel restrictions ordered by Pres. Donald Trump.
The executive
order temporarily halts refugee admissions for 120 days to improve the
vetting process, then caps refugee admissions at 50,000 per year; imposes a
temporary, 90-day ban on people entering the U.S. from Iraq, Syria, Iran,
Libya, Somalia, Sudan, and Yemen – “countries of concern”
identified by the former Pres. Barack Obama
Administration as threats to attempt to export terrorism to the U.S.; and puts
an indefinite hold on admitting Syrian refugees to the United States until the
Trump Administration confirms that refugee admission procedures do not threaten
U.S. security. It applies no religious test and allows significant exceptions
for individuals from religious sects undergoing persecution and for individuals
who entry would serve the national interest.
In substance, even as in details some significant differences
exist, policy promulgated by the order differs
little from Obama Administration policy until two years ago. Before 2015,
almost no Syrian refugees came into the U.S. annually, large numbers of
refugees did not attempt to come to the U.S. after spending extended periods in
countries with jihadist conflict zones, and the number of refugees admitted per
year was around the 50,000 level. In 2016, enhanced vetting began regarding the
seven countries.
6.2.17
Critics fail to exonerate report from politicization
Stuck pigs squeal, scalded dogs yelp, or insert another folksy phrase to describe the reaction to
my Jan. 29 column
in the Baton Rouge Advocate, with
arguments made from the unconvincing to the incomprehensible.
The column took issue with the validity and
reliability of the science behind some estimates used of sea level rise (SLR),
which actually served as ancillary to the larger point – despite very similar forecasts
in the 2012
and 2017
versions of its Coastal Master Plan, Louisiana’s Coastal Protection and
Restoration Authority accepted drastically higher levels of SLR in the report’s
formulation. The piece briefly noted problems in some of the studies used to assume
those levels that would occur by 2100. Notably, it pointed out that the panel’s
composition has changed dramatically in the interim, with Democrat Gov. John Bel Edwards appointing
a majority of its members.
This piqued the interest of the lead author, outgoing head of the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science Donald
Boesch, of one of the studies used. In a letter
to the editor, he agreed that the 198 cm SLR maximum in the report was “unlikely,
at least during this century, based on my appraisal of the latest science,”
although opining that lower estimates on which the report based conclusions
seemed serious enough.
5.2.17
The Advocate column, Feb. 5, 2016
Lawmakers have good bargaining hand
http://www.theadvocate.com/baton_rouge/opinion/jeff_sadow/article_dabd442a-e977-11e6-a4cb-d3c48d397b1e.html
Links:
http://www.theadvocate.com/baton_rouge/news/politics/article_947d20bc-324c-5d7b-abe7-0317a1f440b3.html
http://www.nola.com/politics/index.ssf/2016/06/louisiana_budget_fallout.html
http://gov.la.gov/news/gov-edwards-special-address-to-the-state
http://www.legis.la.gov/legis/ViewDocument.aspx?d=997207
http://www.legis.la.gov/legis/ViewDocument.aspx?d=992327
http://www.theadvocate.com/baton_rouge/opinion/jeff_sadow/article_dabd442a-e977-11e6-a4cb-d3c48d397b1e.html
Links:
http://www.theadvocate.com/baton_rouge/news/politics/article_947d20bc-324c-5d7b-abe7-0317a1f440b3.html
http://www.nola.com/politics/index.ssf/2016/06/louisiana_budget_fallout.html
http://gov.la.gov/news/gov-edwards-special-address-to-the-state
http://www.legis.la.gov/legis/ViewDocument.aspx?d=997207
http://www.legis.la.gov/legis/ViewDocument.aspx?d=992327