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Josh Marshall: “As I’ve noted here before, should Obama be the nominee, we’re going to see a GOP assault very similar to what hit Gore and Kerry — Obama thinks he’s better than you ordinary Joes, and he thinks patriotism is for rubes. Get ready.” (Talking Points Memo)
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Category Archives: Uncategorized
Why the demise of civilisation may be inevitable
Asking a Judge to Save the World, and Maybe a Whole Lot More
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“None of … the grimness on the front page today will matter a bit… if two men pursuing a lawsuit in federal court in Hawaii turn out to be right. They think a giant particle accelerator that will begin smashing protons together outside Geneva this summer might produce a black hole or something else that will spell the end of the Earth — and maybe the universe. Scientists say that is very unlikely — though they have done some checking just to make sure.” (New York Times [thanks, Mark] )
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Deliberate Mispronunciation of Words
Lexicographer Grant Barrett reflects on this apparently widespread phenomenon and its rationales. (The Lexicographer’s Rules via kottke)
Obama would consider Gore for cabinet position
‘I would,’ Obama said. ‘Not only will I, but I will make a commitment that Al Gore will be at the table and play a central part in us figuring out how we solve this problem.'” (The Raw Story)
Red-faced Clinton tirade stuns superdelegates behind closed doors
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“‘It was like someone pulled the pin from a grenade,’ according to San Francisco Chronicle columnists Phillip Matier and Andrew Ross.” (The Raw Story)
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Male rock fans likely to vote Republican: survey
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“The Jacobs Media’s Media/Technology Web Poll IV of more than 27,000 respondents cited stronger than expected interest in the November 2008 election among fans of rock, classic rock, and alternative radio stations.
It also found that John McCain, the Republican candidate for U.S. president, was the top pick for the Oval Office for men and classic rock partisans — those people who tune in to stations playing music from the ‘original classic rock era’ of 1964 to 1975, comprised of bands like Led Zeppelin, The Who and Pink Floyd.” (Yahoo! News) |
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Time and Mind
Vol. 1, no. 1 contents (free downloads) include:
- Archaeological Evidence for Conceptual Metaphors as Enduring Knowledge Structures
Author: Whitley, David S. - Tse’Biinaholts’a Yałti (Curved Rock That Speaks)
Author: Loose, Richard W. - Biblical Entheogens: a Speculative Hypothesis
Author: Shanon, Benny - The Devil on Dartmoor
Author: Harte, Jeremy - Ancient Architectural Acoustic Resonance Patterns and Regional Brain Activity
Authors: Cook, Ian A.; Pajot, Sarah K.; Leuchter, Andrew F.
(Time and Mind)
English Heretic
Whether it be via the transcript of an imaginal ordnance survey, documentary evidence of a psychogeographic derivé, or technical guide on passage through a liminal gateway, we aim to provide a comprehensive set of resources for both novice and experienced inner landscape investigators. With these tools at their disposal we hope to encourage more people to undertake voyages to exciting, uncanny and often terrifying interdimensional spaces.”
Sidewalk Psychiatry
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“While doing some habitual walking and thinking one morning, Candy thought it would be nice to have some help along the way. Pedestrians in the city often find themselves walking in deep thought. A routine trip can prompt reflections on everything from future goals to last night’s dinner conversation. As people sacrifice personal time for hectic schedules, these casual occasions for reflection become all the more important.
Sidewalk Psychiatry encourages self-evaluation in transit by posing critical questions on the pavements of New York City. Now your daily ponderings and emotional problems can be prodded and treated on the go – and, best of all, it’s free of charge!” (candychang.com via boing boing) |
Ex Post Facto Legal Mumbo Jumbo to Justify the Imperial Presidency
Rupert Sheldrake stabbed at conference while talking about thought transference
The attack came when Sheldrake called for a break about 3 p.m. Edwards said he started to leave the room when he heard a commotion. By the time he looked back, he said, an Asian man was being held on the floor by four people while a fifth held a knife in a napkin. Mecham said the knife was a folding type that hunters typically use.
Edwards said Sheldrake had a 2- or 3-inch cut on the front of his left thigh, just above his kneecap…” (Santa Fe New Mexican)
This was as much of the account as was included in Boing Boing, at which point in my reading I assumed that the assailant was probably suffering from schizophrenia. One of the cardinal, terrifying, symptoms of paranoid schizophrenia is thought control or, specifically, thought insertion, the experience that one’s thoughts have been inserted into one’s mind by another, that one is not in control of one’s own thoughts and does not have privacy in their mind. It is often accompanied by the symptoms of thought withdrawal or thought broadcasting. Although there is some dispute about what the cardinal features of schizophrenia are, these symptoms are core in the schema of illustrious German psychiatrist Kurt Schneider, and have come to be known as Schneiderian signs. When I went from the Boing Boing excerpt to the more complete account in the New Mexican, the following illuminated the man’s plight further:
These frightful schizophrenic symptoms are experiences in need of an explanation to the sufferer. Often, the explanations are delusional. Delusions are outlandish, irrational but comforting theories to explain the bewildering and horrifying experiences, since any explanation is better than having none at all. Once hit upon, delusions are rigidly adhered to. A delusion is, in this sense, not a core symptom of schizophrenic experience but a compensatory effort on the sufferer’s part, to my way of thinking.
Someone who claims familiarity with the techniques of thought insertion, claims of which by the psychotic sufferer have usually been scoffed at by listeners, is immediately suspect as responsible for the sufferer’s symptoms.
Occupational Eponymy
| A huge list of aptonyms, names which suit their bearers’ occupations or roles. As readers of FmH will recognize, I am charmed by and have written about aptonyms before here, although I did not know the (dare I say? apt?) term. Again, my favorite was a psychiatric conference on violence I attended several years ago at which the three keynote speakers were Schouten, Swearinigen and Blood. (via Language Log) I am sure FmHers have their own wonderful examples. |
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Pinakothek
Writer Luc Santé has a weblog ‘about pictures’… “Subjectivity is my middle name, a trick memory is my pack mule, and self-contradiction is my trusty old jackknife.” (Pinakothek) [From Wikipedia: “A pinacotheca is a picture gallery in either ancient Greece or ancient Rome. The name is specifically used for the building containing pictures which formed the left wing of the Propylaea on the Acropolis at Athens, Greece…(The word) is used for a public gallery on the continent of Europe, as at Bologna and Turin. At Munich there are three galleries known as the Alte Pinakothek, Neue Pinakothek and Pinakothek der Moderne.”]
Incredibly Poignant
Click over to Open Reading Frame for this striking picture of an ‘athymic mouse’.
Could we hear alien physics experiments?
How to transform your arm into a wing
How to be reincarnated as a queen
‘They’re here’:
We’re right to be terrified, say physicists. Children generate poltergeist activity by channelling energy into the quantum mechanical vacuum.” (New Scientist)
Once Upon a Time in the North
Philip Pullman’s forthcoming prequel to His Dark Materials excerpted in The Guardian.
Are We Really That Ill?
These statistics have sparked a widespread, sometimes rancorous debate about whether people are taking far more medication than is needed for problems that may not even be mental disorders. Studies indicate that 40% of all patients fall short of the diagnoses that doctors and psychiatrists give them, yet 200 million prescriptions are written annually in America to treat depression and anxiety. Those who defend such widespread use of prescription drugs insist that a significant part of the population is under-treated and, by inference, under-medicated. Those opposed to such rampant use of drugs note that diagnostic rates for bipolar disorder, in particular, have skyrocketed by 4,000% and that overmedication is impossible without over-diagnosis…” — Christopher Lane, professor of English at Northwestern University and author of Shyness: How Normal Behavior Became a Sickness (The New York Sun op-ed)
A plea, with which as a practicing psychiatrist (even though I have no desire to be out of a job!)I very much agree, for reining in rampant overdiagnosis, setting the bar higher to qualify for having a mental illness, and “resurrecting the distinction between chronic illness and mild suffering.” Lane quite rightly observes that if everyone is mentally ill then no one is.
Hackers Assault Epilepsy Patients via Computer
Free Copyrighted eBooks
Free Downloads in PDF Format at Wowio: “Want a free ebook copy of a Kurt Vonnegut novel? Free ebook site Wowio has five of them, along with lots of other copyrighted fiction, literature, comics, and other works. The site offers the wares through sponsorships, and only limits your downloads to three books per day, 30 per month. The two caveats are a somewhat limited selection (as you might expect) and that the site’s U.S.-only due to licensing restrictions. Otherwise, it’s not a bad place to check for fresh content for your PDA, cell phone or computer screen. For more free page-turners, try the top ten sites for free books and the 100 best free Project Gutenberg books.” (Lifehacker) Do FmH readers do ebooks? Or do you continue to prefer flesh and blood?
Five Things* You Need to Know to Understand the Latest Violence in Iraq
“The traditional media is incapable of reporting what’s going on in Southern Iraq.” (AlterNet)
*(Only question I cannot for the life of me figure out is whether this, Dubya’s explanation, is one of them:)
Bush: Iraq is Returning to Normal
Pot? Kettle? Black?
American Enterprise Institute’s Fred Kagan:
“The civil war in Iraq is over…” (Salon)
British TV company accused of bringing epidemic to isolated Indians
“A fierce controversy is raging in the Peruvian Amazon over the activities of a film crew working for the British TV company Cicada Films. Local Indians, government officials and independent scientists have accused the film-makers of visiting very isolated Indian communities, despite being warned not to. The isolated Indians reported later that the visit provoked an epidemic of respiratory disease that left four people dead and others seriously ill.” (Survival International)
Iraqi disease Named After Blackwater
“What Iraqis now call Blackwater Fever is really a well-known medical condition, and while it has nothing to do with Blackwater Worldwide, Iraqis in al-Anbar province have decided to make the connection between the disease and the lethal U.S.-based company which has been responsible for the death of countless Iraqis.” (IPSNews)
Five Things* You Need to Know to Understand the Latest Violence in Iraq | War on Iraq
“The traditional media is incapable of reporting what’s going on in Southern Iraq.” (AlterNet)
*(Only question I cannot for the life of me figure out is whether this, Dubya’s explanation, is one of them:)
Bush: Iraq is Returning to Normal
Pot? Kettle? Black?
American Enterprise Institute’s Fred Kagan:
“The civil war in Iraq is over…” (Salon)
Anyone Speak Kurdish?
I’m always on the lookout for obscure references to “gelwan”. Can anyone translate this one? (Scroll down to it): “Di gelwan merc�n dijwar de ew bi d�v gotina kurd�ya resen de geriya , ew gotin di t�rik�xwe de parast
�tov�w�di nav gel de belav kir.” (Kurdistan National Assembly – Kone Res – Bilbil� �iyay�Botan)
A Victim Treats His Mugger Right
As the teen began to walk away, Diaz told him, ‘Hey, wait a minute. You forgot something. If you’re going to be robbing people for the rest of the night, you might as well take my coat to keep you warm.’
The would-be robber looked at his would-be victim, ‘like what’s going on here?’ Diaz says. ‘He asked me, ‘Why are you doing this?”
Diaz replied: ‘If you’re willing to risk your freedom for a few dollars, then I guess you must really need the money. I mean, all I wanted to do was get dinner and if you really want to join me … hey, you’re more than welcome.” (NPR)
MoOM
The Museum of Online Musems (Coudal Partners)
16 Names Of Things…
…You Never Knew Had Names: aglets, bibcocks, brassards, bretelles, duff, piggins, soliduses, tobies, zarfs, etc. (The Land Salmon)
‘Either You Get It Or You Don’t…’
Peggy Noonan: “I think we’ve reached a signal point in the campaign. This is the point where, with Hillary Clinton, either you get it or you don’t. There’s no dodging now. You either understand the problem with her candidacy, or you don’t. You either understand who she is, or not. And if you don’t, after 16 years of watching Clintonian dramas, you probably never will.” (WSJ)
The Hilary Deathwatch
Christopher Beam, Chadwick Matlin, and Chris Wilson: ‘…So the question now is not just “How dead is she?” but “When will she realize it?” ‘ (Slate)
Democratic Race Over?
“Somebody forgot to tell Hillary Clinton the Democratic presidential race is over and Barack Obama won.” (Reuters commentary)
Leahy: Clinton Should Drop Out
“Senator Clinton has every right, but not a very good reason, to remain a candidate for as long as she wants to,” he said… “As far as the delegate count and the interests of a Democratic victory in November go, there is not a very good reason for drawing this out. But as I have said before, that is a decision that only she can make.” (CBS News)
Dodd calls on Democratic leaders to halt battling
“Connecticut Sen. Chris Dodd says the war of words between Senate colleagues Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama is undermining Democrats’ ability to win the presidential election.
… He says that after primaries in Pennsylvania, North Carolina and Indiana, the national leadership needs to push the party to get behind a candidate.” (Newsday)
And:
Approximately 15,900 results from a Google search on ‘”Hilary Clinton” withdraw|”drop out” ‘.
Elephant Paints Self Portrait
I would love to find a way to be skeptical about the reality of this 8-minute video, but I can’t. (YouTube)
Earth Hour
Earth Hour was created by WWF in Sydney, Australia in 2007, and in one year has grown from an event in one city to a global movement. In 2008, millions of people, businesses, governments and civic organizations in nearly 200 cities around the globe will turn out for Earth Hour. More than 100 cities across North America will participate, including the US flagships–Atlanta, Chicago, Phoenix and San Francisco and Ottawa, Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver.
We invite everyone throughout North America and around the world to turn off the lights for an hour starting at 8 p.m. (your own local time)–whether at home or at work, with friends and family or solo, in a big city or a small town.
What will you do when the lights are off? We have lots of ideas.”
A history of the hangover
CHute Find Rekindles Cooper Quandary
13 Essential Talking Points for the Earthquake Enthusiast
Is autism the symptom of an "extreme white brain"?
The Long Defeat
David Brooks:
Five percent.
Let’s take a look at what she’s going to put her party through for the sake of that 5 percent chance…” (New York Times op-ed)
Japan: URL’s Are Totally Out
Search boxes! With recommended search terms!
It makes sense, right? All the good domain names are gone. Getting people to a specific page in a big site is difficult (who’s going to write down anything after the first slash?). And, most tellingly, I see increasingly more users already inadvertently put complete domain names like “gmail” and “netflix” into the Search box of their browsers out of habit — and it doesn’t even register that Google pops up and they have to click to get to their destination.
But, I ask you: could this be done in the USA? Wouldn’t search spammers and/or “optimizers” ruin this within seconds? I did a few tests with major name brands and they’re almost always the top hit on Google (surprisingly, even Panic). But if Nabisco ran a nationwide ad campaign for a hot new product and told users to Google for “Burlap Thins” to learn more, wouldn’t someone sneaky get there before they do?” (cabel.name)
Solution elusive for awaking in surgery
Anesthesia awareness – regaining some level of consciousness during surgery – is thought to occur in perhaps one or two out of 1,000 surgical patients in the United States, a total of 20,000 to 40,000 cases a year. The bulk of them do not feel pain.
Still, for some it is so disturbing that they suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder and must undergo counseling.
For general anesthesia, patients typically are given a mix of drugs – including one to “knock them out” and often another called a paralytic.
This relaxes the muscles to make surgery easier. But in the rare case that a patient starts to wake up – not able to speak – the paralytic effect can be horrifying.” (Philadelphia Inquirer)
Medicine’s Cutting Edge: Re-Growing Organs
Man regrows lost finger with powdered pig bladder. (CBS News via boing boing)
‘Mission Accomplished’ Dept (cont’d)
Overall US death toll in Iraq hits 4,000 (Yahoo! News)
Mickey Edwards: ‘Dick Cheney’s Error’
I do not blame Dick Cheney for George W. Bush’s transgressions; the president needs no prompting to wrap himself in the cloak of a modern-day king. Nor do I believe that the vice president so enthusiastically supports the Iraq war out of a loyalty to the oil industry that his former employer serves. By all accounts, Cheney’s belief in “the military option” and the principle of president-as-decider predates his affiliation with Halliburton.
What, then, is the straw that causes me to finally consign a man I served with in the House Republican leadership to the category of “those about whom we should be greatly concerned”?
It is Cheney’s all-too-revealing conversation this week with ABC News correspondent Martha Raddatz. On Wednesday, reminded of the public’s disapproval of the war in Iraq, now five years old, the vice president shrugged off that fact (and thus, the people themselves) with a one-word answer: “So?”
‘So,’ Mr. Vice President?” (Washington Post op-ed)
Giles Fraser: A funny kind of Christian
Somewhere in the Middle East, Jesus Christ is strapped to a bench, his head wrapped in clingfilm. He furiously sucks against the plastic. A hole is pierced, but only so that a filthy rag can be stuffed back into his mouth. He is turned upside down and water slowly poured into the rag. The torturer whispers religious abuse. If you are God, save yourself you fucking idiot. Fighting to pull in oxygen through the increasingly saturated rag, his lungs start to fill up with water. Someone punches him in the stomach.
Perhaps this is how we ought to be re-telling the story of Christ’s passion. For ever since the cross became a piece of jewellery, it has been drained of its power to sicken. Even before this the Romans had taken their hated instrument of torture and turned it into the logo of a new religion. Few makeovers can have been so historically significant. The very secular cross was transformed into a sort of club badge for Christians, something to be proud of.
Two weeks ago, the most powerful Christian in the world vetoed a bill that would have made it illegal for the CIA to use waterboarding on detainees. “We need to ensure our intelligence officials have all the tools they need to stop the terrorists,” said George Bush in a passable impersonation of Pontius Pilate. “This is no time for Congress to abandon practices that have a proven track record of keeping America safe.”
Throughout his time in office, the president has frequently been photographed in front of the cross. Yet as his support for torture demonstrates, he has understood little of its meaning. For the story of the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus is supremely a moral story about God’s identification with victims.” (Guardian.UK)
Tinfoil Hats, Anal Probes Land at Alien Abduction Fest
Scents and Sensibility:
John Lanchester on what the nose knows:
layers of cedar and raspberry strike a sharp upfront note, while clove and creamy notes add body while contributing an exotic, sumptuous character that conveys luxury in its essence. Might there also be a trace of rubber, though?
And then there’s B, with
its aroma of underripe bananas, and the way the fruitiness opens up on my tongue with a flick of bitterness that quickly fades to reveal lush, grassy tones.
Product C, on the other hand, is
fruity (with a high-profile role for the deliciously garbagey, overripe smell of guava) plus floral (powdery rosy) plus green (neroli and oakmoss).
These are descriptions of, respectively, a chocolate, an olive oil, and a perfume, but you couldn’t possibly guess that. I’ve never caught traces of red fruit in a dark chocolate, I don’t even know what neroli is, and, as for underripe bananas in olive oil, I’m more likely to catch the Sundance Kid in Bolivia. That doesn’t mean that the people who can taste these things are bluffing; rather, they have a vocabulary of specific sense references that I haven’t acquired. (To complicate matters, sometimes these people actually are bluffing.)” (The New Yorker)
Tinfoil Hats, Anal Probes Land at Alien Abduction Fest
Annals of Depravity (cont’d)
Pregnant mother, tortured, dies in Ill. (Yahoo! News)
Naked-eye Gamma Ray Burst…
Onomastic Sobriquets in the Food and Beverage Industry
Clever restaurant and café names: A Paper Presented by
Lynn C. Hattendorf Westney (Associate Professor at The University of Illinois at Chicago)at the 35th Annual Meeting of the Congress of the Social Sciences and Humanities, Quebec 2001. (Dinersoft via kottke)
"Ethical but slightly deceptive"?
Remember that the Journal is set up to disarm its pay gate if it thinks you’re coming from Google News or Digg. In order to get free access, then, you’ve got to convince the Journal that you’ve clicked on a link on one of those sites. How to do that?
The technical name for this is ‘referer spoofing’ (with the misspelling). Spoofing is an easy thing to pull off in Firefox — all you’ve got to do is download this add-on, refspoof.
When you’ve installed that app, you’ll see a new toolbar.
Now follow these steps:
* Go to WSJ.com.
* In the refspoof toolbar’s ‘spoof:’ field, type ‘digg.com.’
* Also in the refspoof toolbar, click the R icon, and select ‘static referrer.’
* That’s it. Click around the site; the WSJ thinks each click is coming from Digg. The WSJ is now yours for free!” [via boing boing]
Kiddie psychopaths?
Pugh is almost certainly talking about children who have what are known as ‘callous-unemotional’ traits, described somewhat less politically correctly as ‘kiddie psychopathy’.
These have indeed been found to weakly predict future antisocial behaviour, but the picture is more complex than it seems and, as we’ll see, they aren’t a good basis on which to base future crime fighting efforts.” (Mind Hacks)
Rainbow iceberg in the Antarctic
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“Resembling a strange creature from the deep, this rare marbled iceberg was spotted in the waters of the Antarctic by a Norwegian sailor.” (Telegraph.UK) |
"…the closest many people will ever get to seeing what large parts of a dinosaur actually looked like, in the flesh…"
Unlike almost every other dinosaur fossil ever found, the Edmontosaurus named Dakota, a duckbilled dinosaur unearthed in southwestern North Dakota in 2004, is covered by fossilized skin that is hard as iron. It’s among just a few mummified dinosaurs in the world, say the researchers who are slowly freeing it from a 65-million-year-old rock tomb. (Discovery News)
Finality over Fairness
The Supreme Court denies right of appeal to a condemned man who may well be innocent, clearing the way for his execution. (He is an African American, of course, convicted of murdering a white police officer.) Most of the non-police eyewitnesses on whose testimony his murder conviction was based have recanted, some filing sworn affidavits saying they were coerced into giving the evidence which corroborated his guilt. One of the remaining witnesses is the principal alternative suspect, and there is considerable sworn testimony implicating him. Yet the Supreme Court is denying Troy Davis further appeals on procedural grounds, because the evidence of police coercion was not introduced soon enough. You can send a letter to the Georgia Board of Pardon and Paroles advocating for fair treatment for Davis, or download a petition from this advocacy site. (Amnesty International)
Mission Accomplished Dept. (cont’d)
E. J. Dionne Jr. :
The Wall Street titans have turned into a bunch of welfare clients. They are desperate to be bailed out by government from their own incompetence, and from the deregulatory regime for which they lobbied so hard.” (Washington Post op-ed)
Whether it is a ‘bailout’ or not has become as much as a charged buzzword as whether it was an ‘invasion’ or not, whether it is an ‘amnesty’, or whether we are in favor of ‘choice’. Whichever side of the debate one is on, one should decry the mind-numbing use of buzzwords to replace nuanced discourse.
Race to the End
So, in the same 24-hour period, Barack Obama argues for the viability of his candidacy on the basis of the US being a post-racial society (Washington Post); and the Supreme Court strikes down by a 7-2 vote the capital murder conviction of a Louisiana man on the grounds that the prosecution’s peremptory jury challenges were blatently racist (New York Times). Oh, and Clarence Thomas writes the dissenting opinion. Could it be that he wants to keep racial bias viable in American society thinking he would not have his job but for affirmative action? [Should I fall on my sword, as Geraldine Ferraro did, for saying that? — FmH]
In Tibet, Protestors ‘Shot Like Dogs’
Calls Mount for Olympic Ceremony Boycott
Moves to punish China for its handling of Tibetan protests gain momentum:
Kouchner said he wants to discuss it with other foreign ministers from the 27-nation European Union next week. His comments opened a crack in what until now had been solid opposition to a full boycott, a stance that Kouchner said remains the official government position.” (AP )
The Magic Is Gone
“Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.” R.I.P. Arthur C. Clarke, 90. The news has emerged in the last half-hour of Clarke’s death In Sri Lanka, his adopted home for many years. I predict that most of the obituaries will tag him primarily in two ways, as the ‘father of the communications satellite’ and the author of 2001. (CNN ) The latter should be much more closely associated with Kubrick, to my way of thinking. True visionary status, however, devolves on Clarke for work like Childhood’s End (always my favorite) and The Foundation trilogy[…just destroyed my science fiction cred in a senior moment. Of course the Foundation books were by that other late classic writer, Asimov. — FmH] and the brilliant short story “The Nine Billion Names of God”.“Well, they believe that when they have listed all His names — and they reckon that there are about nine billion of them — God’s purpose will have been achieved. The human race will have finished what it was created to do, and there won’t be any point in carrying on. Indeed, the very idea is something like blasphemy.”
“Then what do they expect us to do? Commit suicide?”
“There’s no need for that. When the list’s completed, God steps in and simply winds things up . . . bingo!”
“Oh, I get it. When we finish our job, it will be the end of the world.”
Chuck gave a nervous little laugh.
“That’s just what I said to Sam. And do you know what happened? He looked at me in a very queer way, like I’d been stupid in class, and said, ‘It’s nothing as trivial as that’.”Which other of Clarke’s work do readers cherish?
Neal Stephenson’s New Novel Remains Shrouded in Mystery
As an inveterate Stephenson fan, I had been waiting for any breaking news of his next project. I just learned about Anathem last week, and this is about all that is known so far:
Suddenly, a Dangerous Turn
One was the abrupt resignation of the person who has been the biggest obstacle to a U.S. military strike against Iran, Admiral William Fallon, the chief of Central Command which oversees U.S. military operations in the volatile region.
The second is the ugly direction that the Democratic presidential competition has taken, with Hillary Clinton’s campaign intensifying its harsh rhetoric against Barack Obama, reducing the likelihood that he can win the presidency – and thus raising the odds that the next president will be either John McCain or Sen. Clinton, both hawks on Iran.
Throughout the campaign, Clinton has mocked Obama as inexperienced for his desire to engage in presidential-level diplomacy with Iran and other adversarial states. And she recently judged him as unqualified to serve as Commander in Chief, while declaring that both she and Sen. McCain have crossed that “threshold.”
The cumulative effect of Clinton’s attacks on Obama’s qualifications – combined with her campaign’s efforts to turn many white voters against him as the “black candidate” – has buoyed Republican hopes for November.” (Consortium News)
Spitzer and America’s Perverse Ethics
Suddenly, a Dangerous Turn
One was the abrupt resignation of the person who has been the biggest obstacle to a U.S. military strike against Iran, Admiral William Fallon, the chief of Central Command which oversees U.S. military operations in the volatile region.
The second is the ugly direction that the Democratic presidential competition has taken, with Hillary Clinton’s campaign intensifying its harsh rhetoric against Barack Obama, reducing the likelihood that he can win the presidency – and thus raising the odds that the next president will be either John McCain or Sen. Clinton, both hawks on Iran.
Throughout the campaign, Clinton has mocked Obama as inexperienced for his desire to engage in presidential-level diplomacy with Iran and other adversarial states. And she recently judged him as unqualified to serve as Commander in Chief, while declaring that both she and Sen. McCain have crossed that “threshold.”
The cumulative effect of Clinton’s attacks on Obama’s qualifications – combined with her campaign’s efforts to turn many white voters against him as the “black candidate” – has buoyed Republican hopes for November.” (Consortium News)
Obama Denounces His Pastor’s Statements
Earlier in the week, several television stations played clips in which Mr. Wright, of Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago, referred to the United States as the ‘U.S. of K.K.K. A.’ and said the Sept. 11 attacks were a result of corrupt American foreign policy.” (New York Times )
Does Gen. Petraeus think the occupation is succeeding?
In an interview with The Washington Post,
Enthroned
‘And her reply would be, `Maybe tomorrow,” Whipple said. ‘According to him, she did not want to leave the bathroom.’
The boyfriend called police on Feb. 27 to report that ‘there was something wrong with his girlfriend,’ Whipple said, adding that he never explained why it took him two years to call.” (Yahoo! News)
Mark Potok: Hate Rises
Today’s depressing campaign news
Of course it’s well documented that there are already a number of right-wing smear campaigns underway to promote this idea. But I think these numbers are evidence of the success that members of his own party have had in injecting questions about his race and religious beliefs (and tying the two together) into the primary. The Clinton camp has repeatedly and unsubtly pushed his race to the center of the campaign, and is doing their best to paint him as guilty of being a white-people-hating, Louis-Farrakhan-loving, militant by association.” (The American Prospect)
Olbermann to Clinton:
Amy Ephron On Women Wronged
South by Southwest, Shot by Shot
Obama Denounces His Pastor’s Statements
Earlier in the week, several television stations played clips in which Mr. Wright, of Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago, referred to the United States as the ‘U.S. of K.K.K. A.’ and said the Sept. 11 attacks were a result of corrupt American foreign policy.” (New York Times )
Is dark matter mystery about to be solved?
Anyone seen fido lately?
“The giant Burmese python has established itself in Southern Florida, after people released their pet reptiles, which had taken to squashing things larger than rats, before sucking them face first into their heads. They can grow up to 20 feet long, and can survive over huge tracts of the US.” (Barista)
R.I.P. Buddy Miles
Hendrix Drummer Dies at 60. I still go back to the Band of Gypsys‘ ‘Machine Gun’ for an energy lift. But, even apart from his work with Hendrix,I also cherish the late lamented Electric Flag, of which he was a founder. Jon Pareles eulogizes Miles in The New York Times.
How Kids Learn to Lie
Anyone seen fido lately?
“The giant Burmese python has established itself in Southern Florida, after people released their pet reptiles, which had taken to squashing things larger than rats, before sucking them face first into their heads. They can grow up to 20 feet long, and can survive over huge tracts of the US.” (Barista)
Yellow License Plates for DUI Offenders?
The furry Freakonomics brothers report on a Washington State proposal to mandate fluorescent yellow license plates for a year for those convicted of DUI offenses. (Ohio, readers report, already has such a system in place.) The argument is that it would alert traffic enforcement officials to the need for closer scrutiny and warn other drivers. The preponderance of responding readers think it is a bad idea. Some object to “scarlet letter” public shaming as an ineffective deterrent, others argue that family members driving the tagged vehicle should not be inconvenienced or humiliated, or that the offender can just refrain from registering a vehicle in her/his name. What about vehicles the offender rents or drives at work? License plates do not go with individuals, they go with vehicles, so why not tattoo the offender instead? Or, as one reader facetiously (I hope) suggests, put them to death or keep them preventively detained? Readers bridle at continuing to exact a penalty from an offender who has already “paid their debt to society”, to put it in clichéd terms. Parallels in this regard are drawn to the sex offender registry system, which some readers feel also exacts continued punishment, humiliation or at least inconvenience after a penal sentence has been served.
I must say that I am mixed on this issue. We are obviously headed down a very slippery slope here — one we are already way down. But, as threats to public safety go, driving under the influence and sexual offenses against minors are viewed as some of the most dramatic ways to harm or kill innocents in our society. They are, in particular, seen as moral failures, abnegations of personal responsibility and the social contract. To varying extents, these behaviors are targets of public frustration over the “I-can’t-help-myself” application of a disease model to behavior. Related to this is the compulsive quality of both behaviors. It is considered likely that, once having offended, one is likely to re-offend, which fans the flames of demand for preventive measures after punitive ones have ended. If these behaviors arise from medical conditions rather than moral failings, frustration arises at the evident failure of treatment or rehab approaches.
I am certainty discouraged about the minimal success rate and dramatic recidivism I see as someone who frequently treats alcohol dependence and abuse (although rarely sexual predation) in my hospital practice. It is an area of practice in which I have the greatest degree of difficulty with the disease model, especially with offenses committed under the influence of alcohol. FmH readers know of my objections to the medicalization of behavior, especially as it pertains to legal defenses in criminal cases. But in mental health practice it is also a struggle to keep moralistic judgments out of our work with our patients.
Because treatment works so rarely and because the public safety implications are so great, I think prevention must be the main goal of our interventions, and I do think the state is the proper instrument for this. Any objections I have about the yellow license plate approach are practical, not moralistic.
What do readers think?
Who is a failure?
Google Search top results, if you cannot guess…
And the New Six-Word Motto for the U.S. Is…
The winner of the Freakonomics contest is: “Our Worst Critics Prefer to Stay.” All of the leading entries cling to such a naive faith in an ideal of democracy which, to my way of thinking, is little more .than a fairy tale. And, yet, yes, most of the time I prefer to stay.
Mission Accomplished Dept (cont’d)
Kabul government controls just a third of Afghanistan (Wired Dispatch)
Obama and The Wire
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“In a recent story in The Nation, Chris Hayes used 2,200-plus words to argue why progressives should back Sen. Barack Obama. I’ll use only seven: Obama’s favorite TV show is The Wire. It’s certainly true, as Hayes noted, that Obama, like every presidential candidate, won’t be saying one word about the prison-industrial complex or the disastrous consequences of the ‘war on drugs.’ But it’s heartening to think that at least he’s tuning in to one of the few public forums that fiercely drags such issues into our consciousness.” — Brian Cook (In These Times)
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"One thing I’ve demonstrated often in 16 years is you can do this job without asking a single question…"
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Thomas silent as Supreme Court talks on and on: “Two years and 142 cases have passed since Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas last spoke up at oral arguments. It is a period of unbroken silence that contrasts with the rest of the court’s unceasing inquiries.” (CNN)
I have long thought that Clarence Thomas is one of the most monumental embarrassments of our judicial system, and I certainly hope his demeanor is not mistaken for that of an impressive silent deliberator. |
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Mortgage Note Issues Help Debtors Avoid Foreclosure
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Want to keep your home? How about stopping paying your mortgage? If, as is increasingly common, your mortgage has been sold many times since you took the loan, it is possible, as this homeowner found, that the current noteholder can’t actually find the documentation of your debt. If that’s the case they may not be able to foreclose on you. [via boing boing] |
Susan Blackmore
Mark Frauenfelder’s summary of what Blackmore, the author of The Meme Machine, said at TED 2008:
Language is a parasite we’ve adapted to. It may have started out being harmful, but we’ve developed a symbiotic relationship with it.
First replicators were genes. Then memes. We now have temes (tech memes) are a third repliciator on our planet.
Don’t think of intelligence, thinnk of replicators.
New Drake equation. Start with number of planets — what fraction of those get a first replicator, a 2nd replicator, a 3rd?
Getting a new replicator is dangerous. We need to pull through each time. The 2nd replicator (memes) was dangerous -= big brains are painful: kills a lot of mothers and babies. Brains uses 20% of body energy for 2% of body weight; it may have nearly killed us off.
temes are just information — they use humans to suck up planet’s resources. Don’t think we created the internet to benefit us; we are being being used by temes. It convenient for temes to piggyback on us because we replicate. But when temes can replicate without us, they will carry on without us.” [via boing boing]
WorldWideTelescope
WorldWide Telescope, created with Microsoft’s high-performance Visual Experience Engine™, enables seamless panning and zooming across the night sky blending terabytes of images, data, and stories from multiple sources over the Internet into a media-rich, immersive experience.” (Microsoft Research)
Coming this spring. [Lest you think this sounds like an ad for Micro$oft, it is just that this seems charming.]
20th Debate: Reality Show or a Spinoff?
Iraq vs.Afghanistan
A long thoughtful piece in one of my new favorite foreign policy analysis weblogs, Just World News, contrasts the position of McCain and other Republican ideologues on the simultaneous winnability of the Iraq and Afghani wars with the Democratic candidates’ tradeoff model.
The Myth of the Surge
Women Who Kill Their Children
Also:
Maternal Infanticide Associated With Mental Illness: Prevention and the Promise of Saved Lives
Psychiatrist Margaret Spinelli’s 2004 academic review of the topic from the American Journal of Psychiatry (full text available freely).
Welcome to the World
ACM, fellow weblogger, FmH reader, and web friend, celebrates an addition to the family. My heartiest wishes. All happiness to you and yours.
And:
Ms. Medley is expecting too, in June. All the best!
Yesterday was the tenth anniversary of my daughter’s arrival on the planet. How soon the two of you will be looking back on ten years! Carpe diem.
Nader to Run Again
“He ruled out the possibility that he would prevent a Democratic victory in 2008. ‘Not a chance,’ he said. ‘If the Democrats can’t landslide the Republicans this year, they ought to just wrap up, close down, and emerge in a different form.'” (New York Times ) Misguided, pitiful, arrogant man…
Women Who Kill Their Children
Also:
Maternal Infanticide Associated With Mental Illness: Prevention and the Promise of Saved Lives
Psychiatrist Margaret Spinelli’s 2004 academic review of the topic from the American Journal of Psychiatry (full text available freely).
The miracle of melancholia
And aren’t we merely trying to slice away what is most probably an essential part of our hearts, that part that can reconcile us to facts, no matter how harsh, and that also can inspire us to imagine new and more creative ways to engage with the world?” (LA Times)
Is There Anything Else to Say?
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She refuses to buy into the Obama hype…
I went to the Library of Congress Website. The FACTS of what each did in the Senate last year sure surprised me. I’m sure they will surprise you, too. Whether you love or hate Hillary, you will be surprised. Whether you think Obama is the second coming of JFK or an inexperienced lightweight, you will surprised. Go check out the Library of Congress Website. After spending some time there, it will be clear that there is really only one candidate would is ready to be the next president…” (Daily Kos)
No the surge is not a success
But we needn’t quarrel about all this, or deny the reality of the good news, to say that the surge has not worked yet. The test is simple, and built into the concept of a surge: Has it allowed us to reduce troop levels to below where they were when it started? The answer is no.” — Michael Kinsley (Slate)
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