Archive for July, 2008

Monday Night: Jaguars Training Camp

Tuesday, July 29th, 2008

Went out to watch the Jags training camp last night with Brandon Dyal and Sean Collins. Sean got there too late to see the Oklahoma drills, which were the highlight of the evening.

Wordpress app for the iPhone 3G released

Thursday, July 24th, 2008

The wordpress app for the iphone is available now, though you can’t seem to access it from the app store.

Unfortunately since I happen to be writing this from my iPhone I can’t copy and paste the link. I also really wish apple would open up the horizontal key pad that you can use in Safari to apps.

The app also has built in support for taking and embedding photos from your iPhone which obviously could come in handy when blogging from an event (example below, the event being me sitting in my living room blogging on my iPhone).

Update: here’s where you can get it http://iphone.wordpress.org/

France Passes Constitutional Reforms

Wednesday, July 23rd, 2008

As widely reported in the news, French President Sarkozy’s reforms to the constitution were passed yesterday by one vote over the two-thirds majority required.

As a young political science undergraduate I was very interested in the structure and distribution of power in the French political system. France is a semi-presidential system, which isn’t exactly unusual but the particular constellation of political power there is unique. It is a system that I, in my more informed days, argued had a number of distinct advantages.

I felt that having a president whose primary responsible for high politics but could effectively dominate domestic politics during phases of united government (where the prime minister is from the same party) and was elected to long terms (seven years) allowed for continuation in foreign policy while providing voters the ability to ‘change direction’ mid-term.

With the changes in the current reforms it seems that Sarkozy want to take the French system closer to the American presidential system by reducing the term length (five years), increasing electoral and political pressures on the president, and also introducing a number of provisions that strengthens the parliament in a manner similar to the US system such as allowing for the French president to annually address the parliament (State of the Union-esque), giving parliament veto power of some key appointments, and giving the parliament further powers to hinder the ability of the president to push through legislation. As someone who admired the French political system from afar, I’d be interested in learning what French citizens thought of it.