Not so fast, Mr. Eisenstat

yukos-houston2.jpgAs noted in a number of these previous posts, the Russian government’s dismemberment and effective nationalization of the assets of OAO Yukos last year has dire implications generally for Western business interests hoping to engage in reasonably free commercial investment in Russia, the recent Rosneft IPO notwithstanding.
In this WSJ ($) op-ed, former Carter and Clinton admnistration official Stuart Eizenstat observes that the Yukos affair has had broad and negative implications to the world economy, and contends that the Bush Administration and other free-market governments’ failure to call Russian Prime Minister Putin to task for his trashing of free-market business interests has contributed substantially to that negative impact. Eisenstat makes a number of good points, including the following:

Mr. Putin should also be put on notice that . . . the continued incarceration of Messrs. [former Yukos CEO Michael] Khodorkovsky and [Russian financier Platon] Lebedev, who is ill and suffering unnecessarily in a prison north of the Artic Circle, limits Russia’s prospects of being viewed as a member in good standing of the world’s group of leading nations.

Unfortunately, based on this and this, Mr. Putin could quite appropriately respond “say what?” to such a notice.

Nice gesture, but what about these folks?

hempleaf-746083.gifThis NY Times article reports on Utah Senator Orrin G. Hatch’s intervention recently on behalf of Dallas Austin, a 35-year-old, black record producer who had been arrested, convicted and sentenced to four years in prison in Dubai for possession of about a gram of cocaine. Kudos to Senator Hatch for helping prevent a talented man from enduring an injustice over a victimless crime.
But as noted in this previous post, the American criminalization of drug possession is a costly nightmare on many fronts. Currently, over 350,000 people languish in American prisons for drug possession. Commenting on Senator Hatch’s intervention on behalf of Austin, David Boaz over at the Cato @ Liberty blog observes:

Surely Hatch thinks regular old Americans are due the same consideration as a Grammy-winning singer. Heíd advocate the release of any American convicted of possessing 1.26 grams of cocaine, right?
Or are politicians hypocrites? Could it be that they think average Americans like Richard Paey should go to jail for using large amounts of painkillers, but not celebrities like Rush Limbaugh? Could it be that they laugh about their own past drug use while supporting a policy that arrests 1.5 million Americans a year, as a classic John Stossel ìGive Me a Breakî segment showed? (Not online, unfortunately, but you can read a commentary here.)
Putting people in jail for using drugs is bad enough. Putting the little people in jail while politicians chortle over their own drug use and pull strings to get celebrities out of jail is hypocrisy on a grand scale.

Dolphins and Capers scam Texans

capers_dom.jpgIn this previous post, I speculated that former Houston Texans head coach and current Miami Dolphins defensive coordinator Dom Capers will be particularly incentivized to have his Dolphins defensive unit ready for the Dolphins’ game with the Texans this coming October.
Well, the following blurb in this MiamiHerald.com article indicates that Texans owner Bob McNair has reason to have his troops reciprocate with some spirited play in the upcoming game:

Dom Capers won’t have the defensive coordinator title, but that essentially is his job. ”Maybe some day he’ll be that, but not this year,” coach Nick Saban said. Miami is saving a bundle by withholding that title. Now Houston, which fired him as head coach, must pay Capers $2 million in 2006, and Miami only $300,000.