On Re-Making Classic Films, Hubris, and Race for Race’s Sake

Here is news you have all been waiting for, I’m sure. Kenya Barris, the black film and television writer, producer and director, is best known as the creator of the ABC sitcom black-ish as well as for writing or directing a number of mediocre-to-terrible movies like “You People,” “Coming 2 America,” and the “updated” versions of “Shaft,” “White Men Can’t Jump,” “The Witches,” and “Cheaper by the Dozen.” Now he has announced that he will be writing and directing new versions of “The Wizard of Oz” and “It’s A Wonderful Life.”

In a recent interview Barris revealed that his screenplay for “The Wizard of Oz” is completed, with the new Dorothy being black and not in Kansas any more, but rather a girl who lives in the Bottoms, a huge apartment complex located in Inglewood, California. “The original ‘Wizard of Oz’ took place during the Great Depression and it was about self-reliance and what people were going through,” Barris said. “I think this is the perfect time to switch the characters and talk about what someone imagines their life could be. It’s ultimately a hero’s journey, someone thinks something’s better than where they’re at, and they go and realize that where they’re at is where they should be. I want people to be proud and happy about where they’re from. But I want the world to take a look at it and I hope that will come through.” 

I’m so excited.

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The NY Times Promotes Big Lie #4 (“Trump Is A Racist/White Supremacist”) Again

“Nah, there/s no mainstream media bias!’

Despicable.

“Mocking Haley, Trump Adds to His Long History of Racist Attacks—The former president is again focusing on race and background as he campaigns against Nikki Haley in New Hampshire.” crowed the New York Times in what was allegedly a news report. The story is another installment of Big Lie #4 on The Big Lies Of The “Resistance” Directory, “Trump Is A Racist/White Supremacist.”

The fact that the Times is still doing this—that lie is one of the hoariest and most persistent in the whole ugly batch—means, quite simply, that the paper can’t be trusted. Simple as that. Its editorial policy is to lie about Donald Trump, and other things, of course, but if a news organization will lie about anything to forward an agenda, then it should never be trusted.

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“When Ethics Alarms Don’t Ring,” Big Law Firm Edition

One morning, lawyers and other employees at the mega-firm Duane Morris‘s Philadelphia headquarters arrived to see the artwork above hung on a hallway wall. It was not appreciated. What was going on? Apparently it was time to switch out some of the firm’s publicly displayed artwork. One of the firm’s non-legal staff picked something out from the inventory of originals in storage, and efficiently hung one of 20th century African American artist Herbert Singleton’s painting depicting events he says he experienced growing up in the southern U.S. before anyone was troubled by a blank space. A placard explaining the work might have helped, but for some reason none was posted.

This prompted a long, long mea culpa by the firm’s senior partners and management after the painting was removed, presumably with the speed of light. I’ve bolded and numbered appropriate sections.

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In Case You Were Laboring Under The Delusion That Conservatives Are Any Less Inclined To Approve Unfair Attacks On Donald Trump…They Aren’t

The majority of the conservative pundits writing at conservative opinion juggernaut PJ Media are not Trump fans, though they of course will support him over Joe and his aspiring totalitarian party. One would think that the cheap tactics and strategies of misleading the public with assorted Big Lies used by the Left against Trump from at least 2015 on would be anathema to this group, and one would be tragically wrong.

For example, here is often amusing and occasionally trenchant columnist Stephen Kruiser bemoaning the failure of Ron DeSantis to gather any momentum in the primaries, and second guessing his approach:

Ron DeSantis became Public Enemy Number One-and-a-Half (after Trump, of course) largely because of the brilliant way he handled Florida’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic. He essentially gave the finger to Anthony Fauci, Rochelle Walensky, and every other egomaniacal bureaucratic tyrant.

DeSantis’s handling of COVID was his — I have to say it — trump card in his effort to catch Trump. It was Trump who weaponized Fauci, no matter how much he and the MAGA faithful deny it. That alone should have been mentioned by the DeSantis campaign as often as possible.

What DeSantis needed to do was ignore Haley, Vivek, and the rest of the Island of Misfit Republicans and hammer Trump on COVID. I’m pretty sure that’s what Trump and his people thought DeSantis would do because Trump and his online army were rewriting the history of his and DeSantis’s COVID responses from the moment the governor got into the race…

I am not at all positing that DeSantis would have fared better had he gone with a COVID-centric strategy; I’m saying that it was his only real shot.

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Florida Becomes the First Bar to Issue Ethics Guidance on the Use of Artificial Intelligence in the Practice of Law

After seeking comments last fall on a proposed advisory opinion to its members on the ethical use of artificial intelligence by lawyers in the practice of law, the Florida Bar’s review committee has voted unanimously to issue Florida Bar ethics opinion 24-1, the first such opinion by any U.S. jurisdiction about the assuredly revolutionary changes in legal practice and the concomitant perils that lie ahead as a result of AI technology. The advisory opinion’s summary:

“Lawyers may use generative artificial intelligence (“AI”) in the practice of law but must protect the confidentiality of client information, provide accurate and competent services, avoid improper billing practices, and comply with applicable restrictions on lawyer advertising. Lawyers must ensure that the confidentiality of client information is protected when using generative AI by researching the program’s policies on data retention, data sharing, and self- learning. Lawyers remain responsible for their work product and professional judgment and must develop policies and practices to verify that the use of generative AI is consistent with the lawyer’s ethical obligations. Use of generative AI does not permit a lawyer to engage in improper billing practices such as double-billing. Generative AI chatbots that communicate with clients or third parties must comply with restrictions on lawyer advertising and must include a disclaimer indicating that the chatbot is an AI program and not a lawyer or employee of the law firm. Lawyers should be mindful of the duty to maintain technological competence and educate themselves regarding the risks and benefits of new technology.”

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From the “Res Ipsa Loquitur” Files…Ethics Dunces: Parents Who Allow Their Daughters To Be Subjected to THIS

That’s Henry Hanlon, apparently a male basketball player who “identifies” as female. Clearly, it’s good for his ego. (Can’t tell who I’m talking about in the photo? Guess!)

The San Francisco Waldorf high school girls basketball team is on a roll, thanks to its court domination by team captain Henry Hanlon. No, he doesn’t even bother to carry a female name. California’s Interscholastic Federation (CIF) established “Gender Identity Participation” rule in 2013, and it is bats.“All students should have the opportunity to participate in CIF athletics and/or activities in a manner that is consistent with their gender identity,” the policy states. As CIF’s Associate Executive Director Brian Seymour explains, “All of our athletes, all the eligible athletes, are afforded the opportunity to compete with the gender they feel most comfortable with.” Oh. I can see where a high school athlete might be “most comfortable” with a fanciful gender ID that allows him to feel like the Harlem Globetrotters playing against their eternal patsies, the Washington Generals.

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Ethics Observations On The 2023 Gallup “Americans’ Ratings of Honesty and Ethics of Professions”

Not a surprise, but still an ominous trend...

As usual, those polled were asked, “Please tell me how you would rate the honesty and ethical standards of people in these different fields — very high, high, average, low or very low?”

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Look! Here’s a Performing Ethics Dunce Who’s Even More Unprofessional Than Madonna!

Ethics Alarms commented on Madonna’s inexcusable two-hour tardy appearance at her concert (item #4) without realizing that The Grand Ol’ Opry could have said “Hold my beer!” The Nashville shrine to Country Music officially apologized to fans and audience members after four-time Grammy Award nominee Elle King disgraced the venue and herself with a vulgar and drunken performance on an evening last week that was supposed to honor Dolly Parton. “We deeply regret and apologize for the language that was used during last night’s second Opry performance,” the Opry wrote on X/Twitter over the weekend. That was an understatement of what happened.

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State Sec. Blinken’s “Two State ‘Solution'” to the Israel-Palestinians Conflict Is Unethical

[I couldn’t decide between John and Sidney Wang…]

Advocating or worse, insisting upon impossible, impractical “ideal” solutions to ethics problems isn’t just foolish and useless, it is unethical. EA has discussed the phenomenon, which fits into the broad and nauseating category of the “‘Imagine’ Fallacy,” frequently here. Calls for racial “reparations,”to ban fossil fuels to end wars, hunger, racism and the need for police are all in there, making gullible people more stupid still, animating naively idealistic students, and causing trouble.

The most recent and significant outbreak was unveiled this week at the ‘We Are the Woke’—-the World Economic Forum—conference of socialists, world government fans and progressives in Davos last week. Biden Secretary of State Blinken embarrassed himself with his formula for Middle East peace: a Palestinian state. Blinken actually told the assembled that Israel could only attain “genuine security” if it the Palestinians to have a neighboring, self-governing state, because having Gaza next door has turned out so well for the Israelis. “To make this possible, Israel must be a partner to Palestinian leaders who are willing to lead their people in living side by side in peace with Israel and as neighbors. And Israel must stop taking steps that undercut Palestinians’ ability to govern themselves effectively,” Blinken said, repeating what he has blathered in Israel.

Never mind that doing this now, as a response to the war started by the Hamas terror attacks, would reward terrorism, ensuring even more of it. Never mind that the Palestinians have been refusing to compromise on any two statearrangement that includes an Israel since 1947. Never mind that Islam commands that the faithful must “drive out those who drove you out” (2:191) and holds that any land that has ever been ruled under Islam at any time belonged to the Muslims must never be ruled by anyone else.

Naturally, as any idiot could have predicted, Hamas instantly spit on Blinken’s proposal. Its representative said, implicitly thanking America’s campus anti-Semites,

“I believe that the dream and the hope for Palestine from the River to the Sea and from the north to the south has been renewed. This has also become a slogan chanted in the U.S. and in Western capital cities, by the American and Western public. Palestine is free from the River to the Sea–that’s the slogan of the American students and the [students] in European capital cities. The Palestinian consensus–or almost a consensus–is that we will not give up on our right to Palestinian in its entirety, from the [Jordan] river to the [Mediterranean] sea and from Rosh Hanikra to Eilat or the Gulf of Aqaba.”

This is not a new or surprising position, not at all.

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Who Would Be the Most and Least Ethical VP Picks For a Donald Trump Ticket?

It’s all over but the shouting in the GOP race for the 2024 Presidential nomination. Ron DeSantis, dropped out yesterday, endorsing Trump, and Nikki Haley will get her metaphorical clock cleaned in the New Hampshire primary: there will be no Gene McCarthy-style upset. Now all the speculation is settling in on the question of who Trump would choose to be his running mate. He claims he’s already decided, but who knows what goes on in that dark wilderness he calls a mind? He could be trolling, he could decide on someone else. My interest lies in whether he is capable of making an ethical choice.

Keep in mind that almost all Presidential running-mates have been chosen for reasons that have nothing to do with whether they have the qualifications, leadership ability or character to be an effective President. If they do, its a lucky accident. Even Abe Lincoln ran for his second term with a wildly unqualified VP, Andrew Johnson, as the latter quickly proved upon being elected. The objective served by the VP choice is winning the Presidency for the #1 man on the ballot. Lyndon Johnson was one of the rare VP choices who had the chops to be President, but all the Democrats and Kennedy cared about was that he was popular in Texas: nobody dreamed that he would end up in the White House thanks to Oswald’s marksmanship. More recently, all three of the women placed on the national ticket—Ferraro, Palin, and (ugh) Harris, had no business being there and wouldn’t have been, had they not had two X chromosomes. If the main qualification for Vice-President were, as it should be, the proven capability to be President of the United States, every VP nomination should be an experienced and effective executive in a challenging government job: state governor, mayor of a big city, or head of a major federal department like State, Homeland Security or Defense.

That criteria becomes especially important when, as it will be in 2024, the Presidential candidate (make that “candidates“) is too old and inherently betting against the mortality tables. Lousy President though he turned out to be when elected to the job, George H.W. Bush still was easily qualified for the VP job based on his experience. Reagan, an elderly candidate, made an ethical choice for a running mate. One of the worst and most unethical choices was FDR’s pick for second-in-command in 1944, when he knew he was probably dying. Harry Truman was an irresponsible, unethical choice (FDR had only met him once, and briefly at that, before handing him the slot); the U.S., as it so often has been, was lucky. Harry was up to the job.

I’m interested in surveying the various names being mentioned in various articles and pundit pieces a possible Trump VPs,to determine if any stand out as particularly ethical or unethical choices.

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