China Breach
The United
States criticized Israel for selling arms to China. The Pentagon urged
Israel to stop delivery of a $250 million airborne radar system that may be
based on advanced American technology. Israel has reportedly sold $5 billion to
$7 billion in military equipment to China in the last 20 years. The nervous
spin: China may have obtained our most valuable secrets . The relaxed spin: They still don't
have the technology to make those secrets useful . The Israeli spin: If this
was such a problem, what took you so long to complain ?
Two banks will bar non-customers from using their Santa Monica
ATMs. Bank of America and Wells Fargo, California's largest banks,
adopted the policy in response to the city's ban on ATM surcharges. Banks are
suing to block a similar law in San Francisco. Banks' spin: We need the fees to
maintain ATMs . Consumers' spin: You need the fees to
pad your wallets . Banks' counterspin: Either way, pricing
decisions should be left up to us.
The Army rated two of its 10 divisions unfit for battle. The
divisions, based in New York and Germany, reportedly have insufficient troops,
equipment, and training for a "major regional war." The evaluations, based on
new, stricter standards, resulted in the lowest ratings in seven years.
Republicans said the findings proved that the Clinton administration
underfunds and overextends American troops. Skeptics
countered that the Army underrated itself in order to get more money.
UnitedHealth Group will stop pre-screening doctors' medical
decisions. The second-largest U.S. HMO said that physicians would no
longer need prior authorization for hospital admissions, tests, or minor
surgeries. The company will monitor and issue "report cards" on individual
doctors' cost-quality performance. Consumer advocates said the change was: 1)
an admission that physicians make better decisions than bureaucrats; and 2) a
signal that HMOs must compete on quality, not just price. The industry
countered that the move will: 1) save the company money ; and 2) reduce
momentum for political reforms of health care.
The government won the first round of its antitrust suit against
Microsoft. In his "findings of fact," Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson
ruled that the company is a monopoly, has abused its monopoly power, and has
harmed consumers. Reporters said the opinion was such a slam-dunk for the
government that Microsoft couldn't spin it. Instead, the company dismissed the
ruling as the first round of a long fight. (
Slate
's
"" explains how Microsoft's rivals are spinning the decision to maximize the
damage; and "" tells what was the real surprise of the trial.)
Catholics are protesting the release of Dogma . The film
features Matt Damon and Ben Affleck as fallen angels who attempt to re-enter
heaven using a loophole in Catholic doctrine. Disney dropped the comedy last
April because of the controversy, but it was picked up by an independent
distributor. Catholics' spin: It's blasphemous "hate mail" to the Catholic
church. The filmmaker's spin: It's a comic ode to religious faith. Critics'
spin: In either case, it's a great film. (
Slate
's "" assesses
reviewers' reactions and read David Edestein's review .)
A "black box" from EgyptAir Flight 990 was recovered
.
Information from the flight data recorder shows that the plane's fall began as
a "controlled descent" with the pilots still in command. The new data
eliminate the possibility that a faulty thrust
reverser induced the crash, but investigators say that they must recover the
cockpit voice recorder to determine the cause. They continue to consider as
possibilities: 1) hijacking; 2) bombing; 3) cabin depressurization; and 4)
mechanical failure.
The
"Bubbleboy" e-mail virus is spreading. The virus--which places
Seinfeld references on a computer's hard drive--is able to infect
machines without the user opening an e-mailed attachment. Users of Microsoft's
Outlook Express can get it simply by highlighting the message's subject line.
The optimistic spin: The virus is "more playful than destructive ." The pessimistic spin: Now
"simply reading e-mails can be dangerous ."
The Director of the International Monetary Fund is resigning.
Frenchman Michel Camdessus will step down in February after 13 years as head of
the multinational lending agency charged with ensuring global economic
stability. The IMF has been criticized for its role in the Asian economic
crisis and the bailout of Russia. Conservatives' spin: Camdessus was
too liberal in disbursing IMF funds. Liberals' spin:
Camdessus was too strict in forcing economic austerity. Camdessus boosters'
spin: Criticism from both sides means he did his job just right.
Germany celebrated the 10 th anniversary of the fall of the
Berlin Wall. George Bush, Mikhail Gorbachev, and Helmut Kohl
participated in the commemoration. President Clinton called it "one of
history's most remarkable triumphs of human freedom." Some former East Germans,
however, complained of ongoing economic
inequities and the "wall in the head" that still divides the country.
But the New York Times observed that despite unification's difficulties,
"few wish to go back."