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Address your e-mail to
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the editors to [email protected]. Please include your address and daytime phone
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number (for confirmation only).
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A Nation
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Divided
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In addition to reading the
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inner workings of my heart as it relates to tax rates for married couples, Rob
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McIntyre ("E-Mail to
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the Editors," May 7) takes issue with my arithmetic. While he is sadly
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mistaken in the former instance--all marriage penalties are, like God's
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children, equally dear to my heart--he may be right for all I know in the
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latter. I do know, however, that my numbers have a source that has nothing to
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do with my admittedly arthritic arithmetic skills. If McIntyre has a problem,
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he should consult the December 2, 1996, "Taxing Issues" column in
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Barron's titled "Marry in Haste," by the noted tax lawyer Joseph
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Gelband. In other words, consider it fact checked.
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As for
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Andrew Sullivan's and Katha Pollitt's comments ("The Breakfast
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Table"), given Sullivan's tenure at TNR , including but not limited
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to his brilliant editing there of Stephen Glass, I will take his comments as a
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compliment. I will resist the urge to reply to my Nation colleague Katha
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Pollitt's comments about me and the mother of my daughter, whom she so
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knowledgeably characterizes without ever having been introduced.
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Slate
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is not the place to air intra- Nation feuds, despite
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Katha's verbal incontinence. I find it sad, moreover, to read the same tired
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tripe over and over from the pen of a writer who once appeared on her way to
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being a great poet and gave it all up to write a single column, over and over,
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for the past 15 years.
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-- Eric Alterman
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Tale of
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the Tape
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Regarding
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the May 21 "Today's Papers": If Richard Nixon's "but it would be wrong" is
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really the classic example of what Safire calls "tickling the wire," how do you
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explain the fact that no hush money was raised or paid as a result of the March
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1973 Watergate-era tape to which you refer? Nixon detractors say the desultory
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comments about raising money were the operative (as they used to say) part of
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the conversation; Nixon defenders (of which I, as director of the Nixon
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library, of course am one) stress that the president said it would be wrong and
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that (if memory serves) "the White House can't do it." Seems that the only way
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to resolve such ambiguity is to see what actually happened as a result of the
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taped conversation. Ditto, one imagines, with Hubbell.
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-- John Taylor
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Affirmative Track-tion
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As a
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former track wannabe and somebody with several postgraduate degrees, I took
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exception to this egregious statement in the May 21 Today's Papers:
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Letting slower white
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American runners into races just because they're white Americans is precisely
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analogous to letting blacks and Latinos with poor SATs and low grades into
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colleges just because they're blacks or Latinos.
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There is
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only one criterion on which to judge road racing: time posted. You
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cannot argue about home field advantage, equipment differences, or help from
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teammates. You are arguing there is only one criterion (because it is
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precisely analogous) for determining a good college student: SAT scores. In a
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road race you look to see who finished first, and in determining who is
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eligible for race entry, you go by the unbiased clock.
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-- Clay
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Craighead
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Viagravation
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I have this overwhelming need
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to respond to a remark you made in the May 20 edition of Today's Papers. The remark was in response to the Washington
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Post front-page story about a possible bias by insurance companies with
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regard to payment for Viagra vs. oral contraceptives. You state that, since the
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second paragraph "says that more than half of Viagra prescriptions are being
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subsidized by health plans, and the sixth paragraph says that slightly more
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than half of all birth control pills are," there isn't really any bias, and
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"why do we need this story?"
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I submit
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to you that you are overlooking a key fact in this statistic and that is the
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amount of time it took to get each of those plans to subsidize the drug in
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question. How long have birth control pills been available by prescription? 20
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years? 25 years? Yet only slightly more than half of all birth control pills
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are subsidized by health plans, according to the Post . By comparison,
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how long has Viagra been available--a month? How wonderful for impotent men
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that in that short space of time, it has already reached approximately the same
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level of subsidization by health plans.
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-- Michele
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Harvey Centreville, Va.
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Antitrust and the Law
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In his piece "Microsuits," Jacob Weisberg shows he knows more about current
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politics than about legal history. He states, "The question whether regulation
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of commerce is a state or national affair was supposed to have been settled in
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1789."
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Of course, this question was
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by no means "settled" with either the Constitution (1787) or the Bill of Rights
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(1789). As there were few firms large enough to cross state lines into federal
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jurisdiction in the 18 th century, the nation's founders generally
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assumed the states would govern the economy. Nineteenth century common law
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restraint-of-trade prosecutions fell to the state courts, as did the earliest
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antitrust cases. Federal antitrust suits could not exist until Congress enacted
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a federal antitrust law in 1890 and, even after, the question of jurisdiction
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remained. Since the Constitution only permitted the national government to
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regulate "commerce," whole areas of economic life were outside federal
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jurisdiction. This was the essence of the 1905 E.C. Knight case, which
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held manufacturing beyond the authority of federal courts. The U.S.
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Supreme Court did not enable wholesale federal intervention by defining
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"commerce" more broadly until the New Deal cases such as NLRB vs. Jones and
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Laughlin (1937).
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Of
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course, the fact that state prosecutions have a long history does not mean they
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are desirable. On the other hand, on the basis of Weisberg's article, I'm not
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certain why he finds diverse legal climates so disturbing. Are we to discount
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such antitrust prosecutions because the attorneys general are ambitious? This
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seems a mighty high standard for any policy. Though it may be inefficient, I
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think it reasonable that each locality can set the legal conditions of its own
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economic life, as American states do with regard to taxation, infrastructure,
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and a thousand other economic issues.
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-- Andrew Wender
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Cohen Legal history fellowUniversity of Wisconsin-Madison
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Address your e-mail to
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the editors to [email protected]. Please include your address and daytime phone
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number (for confirmation only).
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