Greatest Presidential Mistakes

The University of Louisville in Kentucky recently surveyed a panel of presidential scholars and asked for their opinions on the worst presidential mistakes. To be sure, they also surveyed members of the general public to get their take, but I respected their decision to focus on experts in the field.

Now, before anyone gets dismayed (or excited, depending on your point of view), I’ll reveal that George Bush isn’t on the list (neither “W” nor “H.W.”). As it turns out, the most recent president on their is Clinton, and he’s down at number 10 (for the Lewinsky thing).

History wasn’t really my strong suit in school, but I got by. All the same, some of the “great mistakes” that they mentioned were only on my periphery of knowledge. Take this one, for example:

#7: Thomas Jefferson: Embargo Act of 1807

“His embargo almost destroyed the American economy, and in attempting to enforce it he was the only president ever to use the US army against the American people. The embargo's effect was that of a flea trying to stop a dog-fight by threatening suicide.”

— Forrest McDonald

[…]

Um, there was an embargo in 1807? Ooh-kay — so noted. (Then again, maybe that partly explains why scholars placed that event at #7, while the public placed it at #9.) In all, the list and the accompanying commentary made for an interesting read.

Belgians: Good for Beer, Not for Dancing

Via Metafilter Projects, I’ve discovered the Belgian Anti-Defamation Institute which helps to dispel some common misconceptions of Belgians. For instance:

  • BELGIANS MAKE GOOD BEER

    Our research has shown that this stereotype is:

    +TRUE

    […]

  • BELGIANS ARE GOOD DANCERS

    Our research has shown that this stereotype is:

    -FALSE

    […]

It’s a good thing I ran across this useful resource — I wouldn’t want to be misinformed about such things. Well, to be sure, satire ensues :).

Prototype/Script.aculo.us IRC Channel on Freenode

I was pleased to discover the #CSS IRC channel the other day and I’ve just learned that there’s a #Prototype IRC channel for discussing the Prototype JavaScript framework and the script.aculo.us effects library. (Sweet!)

For what it’s worth, I was actually looking for a general DOM Scripting IRC channel at the time, but I was delighted to run across this once since Prototype & Script.aculo.us are the two libraries that I’m actually using at the moment. Anyhow, the channel is #prototype on irc.freenode.net; or, if you want to try connecting to a different server, Freenode has several others from which to choose.

Some Tough SXSW Decisions

SXSW is loads of fun, but, invariably, there’re some tough decisions on which panels to go to — this year is no different. I've managed to figure most of them out, but there’re some for which I’m still a bit torn. So, for these guys, I’m open to suggestions :).

Saturday, March 11th — 3:30 pm - 4:30 pm

The DOM panel would normally be a shoo-in for me, but I remember hearing from a few people last year that the similarly-titled panel “How to Bluff Your Way Through CSS” wasn’t merely a snarky title, but literally a panel on how to pretend that you’re knowledgeable about CSS. If that’s the case with this DOM iteration, I’m not so sure I’d be as interested.

Monday, March 13th — 11:30 am - 12:30 pm

Eric Meyer or Tantek Çelik? That’s a tough one. On one hand, I dig web standards; on the other hand, I always end up missing Çelik’s panels on microformats (due to conflicts like this one) and people tell me that they’re very good.

Monday, March 13th — 3:30 pm - 4:30 pm

And, in this case, Morville’s presentation sounds really interesting, but I don’t really want to miss out on the accessibility bits either :-/.