The Village Voice: Piss, Puke, and Prizes. “If you thought the TV networks were getting brash with so-called reality-based programming like Survivor, get set for a
wave of shock sites on the Internet, produced by young entrepreneurs looking to profit off America’s thirst for sordid
spectacle.”
Daily Archives: 1 Jul 00
Miranda‘s not the real problem: This National Review commentator essentially says that upholding Miranda was no sweat off conservative Supreme Court Justices’ backs, because “… the police have learned to work with — and
to work around — Miranda. Delivering the Miranda warnings
is, these days, little practical impediment to procuring
confessions….As anyone who watches television police shows knows, people
who have been arrested have a right to remain silent and a right
to counsel; the Miranda warnings are meant to make sure that
they know about those rights. Since almost everybody watches
television — and since everyone who is arrested gets the
Miranda warnings — why do so many people confess
anyway?
Here’s why: Miranda warnings are often delivered
ritualistically, and in a perfunctory tone of voice — thus making
them appear bureaucratic and trivial. After hearing the Miranda
warning delivered in a perfunctory voice, many suspects opt to
talk to the police, in the foolish belief that they can convince the
police of their innocence.”
BBC: Robo-man wows Japanese. Honda unveils what it describes as the
highest-performing bipedal robot in the world. “With the ability to judge the ground conditions
in human environments, the robot is capable of
walking on two legs and can also perform
simple tasks with its two hands.”
Discovery.com: Mayan Stone
Tablet Depicts
Horror. A previously-unnoticed limestone panel just discovered shows that the late Maya began to experiment with depicting emotion in their stone carvings. Two horrified captives brought before the king are shown clutching themselves in terror, probably contemplating their imminent sacrifice.
Drink more wine! Study seems to show why French suffer less heart disease, cancer.
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill scientists have discovered why a compound found in grapes and grape
products such as red wine shows natural cancer-fighting properties that might be important in preventing or treating the illness.The work appears to explain the so-called “French paradox” — the fact that French people experience lower rates of heart disease
death and certain cancers despite drinking more wine on average than U.S. residents do.Scientists found that the substance, trans-Resveratrol, or Res, modulates the activity of NF-kappa B, a protein that attaches to DNA
inside cell nuclei and turns genes on and off like a switch, the scientists found. Res apparently helps turn off a natural protective
mechanism in the body involving the protein that prevents cancer cells from being killed, as they should be.
R.I.P., Walter Matthau. Take a look at his filmography. When everyone mentions The Odd Couple, Grumpy Old Men and The Sunshine Boys, don’t forget his work in the early ’60’s in such films as Lonely Are the Brave, Charade, Mirage and Failsafe.
MSNBC: Will snazzy new jet fly high?
It weighs less than a German shepherd,
could fit in a baby’s crib, is quieter from a
distance than a blender and can propel six
passengers through high-altitude air at a 423-mph
clip: The new FJX-2 jet engine is so unlike
anything flying today that airplane executive Vern
Rayburn calls it “disruptive technology,” akin to
the culture-changing impact of the personal
computer he helped bring to market.
100 Countries Approve War Tribunal. The U.S. is struggling with over a hundred other countries over wording that would make Americans subject to arrest in foreign countries for war crimes even if the U.S. has not ratified the treaty. The U.S. government claims that would make our citizens and troops subject to “politically motivated” prosecution. It seems to me that full participation in the treaty process, rather than whining and seeking special treatment from an indefensible position of moral superiority, would be the only way to ensure a morally and legally robust tribunal system.
French Rally Around Unlikely National Hero. Charismatic anti-globalist sheep farmer on trial for trashing a MacDonald’s.
Mr. Bové was a little-known farmer and union official until
last August, when he and the nine other men took a tractor,
pick axes and power saws to the local McDonald’s. Mr. Bové
said at the time that he was incensed by what he saw as the
unfairness of the United States to tax French delicacies like
Roquefort cheese and paté de foie gras in retaliation for
Europe’s decision not to import hormone-treated American
beef.
[New York Times] (Mr Bove was reportedly at the recent WTO protests carrying around a wheel of Roquefort to feed demonstrators.)
Flight Tests by Iraq Show Progress of Missile Program. “Eighteen months after
American and British warplanes
badly damaged its missile factories,
Iraq has restarted its missile program
and flight-tested a short-range
ballistic missile, Clinton
administration and American military
officials said this week.” [New York Times]
Failed Dot-Coms May Be Selling Your Private Information. “Some failed
dot-coms are releasing information
their customers may have thought would
remain under lock and key as they scramble
to sell assets to appease creditors.” [New York Times]
“You can’t spoil a system that’s spoiled to the core,” says Ralph Nader, on the suggestion that he might be a spoiler in the presidential race.
Storm Debut Sobering For Town. Gloucester, MA girds itself to relive the traumatizing loss of the Andrea Gail as the film opens.
US Gays Tie Historic Knot in Midnight ‘Marriage’, as the Vermont civil union law takes effect. “Twenty-seven and a half years, that’s a long engagement.
It’s nice after all this time to say Holly’s my spouse”, said Lois Farnham. Meanwhile, the Presbyterians have voted to prohibit their ministers from celebrating same-sex marital vows even in jurisdictions where legal.
Fashion Craze Deprives Planes of Seatbelts.
A new fashion craze is threatening air safety in Norway — teenagers are stealing seatbelts to keep up their baggy
trousers.
Japan Suicide Rate Clings Near Record High. The tortured Japanese society has twice the per capita suicide rate of the U.S. and illustrates the close relationship suicide has with social and economic turmoil, first systematically characterized by French sociologist Durkheim a century ago.
New Scientist: Major havoc ahead. Road traffic will regularly grind to a halt and train services will increasingly be disrupted as a result of global
warming, a scientist at Britain’s Meteorological Office said last week.
Stephen Hawking’s Universe: Strange Stuff Explained. Concise elegant refrresher course on the concepts with which Hawking challenged us in A Brief History of Time. Partial contents:
Antimatter,
The Big Bang,
Black Holes,
Cosmic Background Radiation,
Dark Matter,
Imaginary Time,
Quarks,
Quasars,
Singularity,
Superstrings,
The Uncertainty Principle, Wormholes, etc. And, for more, the current issue of Discover has a primer on the efforts to study anisotropy in the Cosmic Microwave Background radiation, currently considered our best approach to unravelling ultimate cosmological mysteries.