“Making it hard to go on eating fast food in blissful ignorance”: a review of Eric Schlosser’s Fast Food Nation: “The aim of his
book, developed from articles written for Rolling Stone, is
to force his readers to stop and consider the consequences
of McDonald’s and its ilk having become inescapable features
of the American (and, increasingly, global) landscape — to
contemplate ”the dark side of the all-American meal.”

This sounds kind of frivolous. After all, practically everyone
in the country has at least dabbled in fast food at one time
or another. So what’s the big deal? Readers who have grown
weary of attempts to locate the DNA of the contemporary
American soul within the history of video games or tennis
shoes or whatever might also feel a wave of fatigue when
Schlosser announces his interest in fast food ”as a metaphor.”

But the good news is that
this isn’t a frivolous book at
all.” New York Times via Looka! I previously pointed to Schlosser’s Atlantic article on “the flavor industry”.

Too Clever by Half: Metafiler pointed to this transcript of Bill Maher’s Jan. 11th Politically Incorrect show in which he crosses the line in demeaning the less able. That’s guest Martin Short concluding that Maher is a “hideous, cold person.” Excerpts:

Bill: What? Dogs are like retarded children.

Jay: The show is living up to its name.

[ Scattered boos]

Sarah: Boo.

Bill: But they’re not a regular person.

Sarah: Well, they are regular people.
They have a heart and a soul.

Cynthia: Limitations.

Bill: They have a heart and a soul and a brain that’s
retarded.
That’s a fact, people! Excuse me!

Sarah: No, because you can’t say that.
Do you know their brain is retarded —
this word retarded? They could just be lacking in the
ability.

Bill: That’s what we call retarded.

[ Laughter ]

I mean, people, are you all retarded? I mean —

[ Laughter ]

That’s a fact.

Martin: I’m not gonna comment.
You’re a hideous, cold person.

Bill: I’m a truthful person.

Thanks to Dan Hartung at Lake Effect for pointing to this update on the health of Dr. Jerri Nielsen, the scientist whose drama (as she was stranded at the South Pole with a breast cancer diagnosis) we watched unfolding last year. She’s doing fine, it appears.

Constantine’s Sword, by James Carroll, argues that the Church’s relationship with Jews has not only been a problem but, in a sense, the problem throughout its two thousand year history.

The Church’s failure to protest the Holocaust — the infamous
“silence” of Pius XII — is only part of the story: the death
camps, Carroll shows, are the culmination of a long,
entrenched tradition of anti-Judaism. From Gospel accounts
of the death of Jesus on the cross, to Constantine’s
transformation of the cross into a sword, to the rise of blood
libels, scapegoating, and modern antisemitism, Carroll
reconstructs the dramatic story of the Church’s conflict not
only with Jews but with itself.

As a troubled practicing Catholic himself, Carroll calls for Vatican III to address the problem in a multifold way: (a) a reexamination of and distancing from anti-Semitic thought in the New Testament, in essence turning it on its head as exemplary of how not to be a good Christian; (b) grappling earnestly and openly with the way in which power has corrupted the message of the Gospels; (c) [this is the conceptually challenging suggestion, IMHO] a subtle shift in portraying Jesus’ role which would recast the concept of the Jewish God against whom he ‘plays’ — from a vengeful, wrathful one (which Carroll feels inherently fuels and reflects anti-Semitism) against whom Jesus has to interpose himself as salvator, toward a more benificent and merciful one, of which nature Jesus’ role was more as the revelator; and (d) an attitude of repentance for the wrongs done to the Jews in the name of the Church through the ages, starting with the silence of the Holocaust. Carroll recognizes, of course, that the doctrine of Infallibility has to fall for this to occur, but argues that understanding the two-thousand-year arc of this troubling history makes that contingent.

Here’s a Drug Czar for Bush. ‘Before he appoints a drug czar, President-elect Bush should reflect on
the legacy of President Clinton and current czar Barry McCaffrey’s drug
policy… He
should remember the official goal of our drug
policy — “educate and enable America’s
youth to reject illegal drugs as well as alcohol
and tobacco” — when he selects his drug
czar.’ Tompaine.com

”You can’t blur the lines between fact and fiction if you don’t
have fact,” and a new computer game does just that. Majestic, named for the supposed shadowy covert group headed by Truman in the ’50’s, collects real-life information from participants then later begins blurring the boundaries between fact and fiction, intruding into their lives with, for example, threatening telephone calls. It will inevitably draw comparisons to the film of several years ago, The Game, in which Michael Douglas is driven crazy by the incursion of a similar live-action game, in which he had been enrolled as a birthday present, into his life. Boston Globe

Girl Scouts curbed protesters at the inaugural ceremonies. They cordoned off a group of demonstrators who had occupied a large set of bleachers along the parade route. By the way, what do you make of the by-line on this article? Boston Globe

The Foibles of Leadership: A New York Times editorial holds up to our examination A German Metamorphosis: “Despite the publication of photos of
him beating up a policeman at a 1973
demonstration, Foreign Minister
Joschka Fischer of Germany should be
allowed to continue serving his
country.” And a New York Times op-ed piece suggests that Moral Leaders Need Not Be Flawless. “Mr. Jackson’s situation illustrates the need to acknowledge
that our leaders will occasionally disappoint themselves and
us. If we demand that they be perfect, we risk
disillusionment when their shortcomings surface. The
underlying flaw of our unwritten compact with leaders is the
desperate need to believe that they must be pure to be
effective. The best leaders concede their flawed humanity
even as they aspire to lofty goals.

” This does not mean that we should not hold leaders
accountable for their actions. To his credit, Mr. Jackson
acknowledged his failure, sought the forgiveness of his
family and followers, and provided for his infant daughter.
He is willing to practice the same moral accountability he
preaches.” The author, Michael Eric Dyson, a professor of religious studies at
DePaul University, wrote the controversial I May Not Get There With
You: The True Martin Luther King Jr.
, in which he chose not to shy away from discussing King’s moral flaws.

The New York Times reviewer of Nega Mezlekia’s Notes From the Hyena’s Belly extolls “the author’s fine storytelling
instincts and the value of getting these stories told,” calling it “the most riveting book about Ethiopia since
Ryszard Kapuscinski’s literary allegory The Emperor and the
most distinguished African literary memoir since Soyinka’s
Ake appeared 20 years ago”. The review does not mention the controversy brewing around a Canadian government investigation of Mezlekia’s alleged plot to kill his former thesis advisor and other faculty of his doctoral program in Canada, to which I blinked several months ago.

A friend pointed me to this troubling story. Eric Weisstein’s Mathworld website, a virtual encyclopedia of mathematics, has been yanked off the web after a preliminary injunction granted to CRC Press, which charged copyright infringement. More than three years ago, Weisstein had signed a book deal giving CRC page images of his website; CRC published “Eric Weisstein’s CRC Concise Encylopedia of Mathematics” in November 1998. Now CRC claims he sold the rights to the website, not just a printed book; a court found the contract ambiguous on this point and granted CRC’s injunction.

Although I realize your eyes glaze over with dry discussions of mathematics, the issues have broader applicability to the relationship between publishing on the web and in print. The question comes down to whether the standard book contract clause granting the publisher the “right to reproduce in all media” is applicable to a preexisting website from which the book is derivative. If you’ve signed a book deal involving reproduction of any portions of a website you’ve authored (caveat Jorn Barger, for example, in the weblogging world, who has been talking about a Robot Wisdom book), make sure you explicitly specify what rights your book contract signs over!

This blink points to answers from Weisstein’s perspective to frequently asked questions about the dispute, and contains links to news coverage of the issues. Programmer and author John MacDonald’s comments at oreilly.com (of course, a publisher spanning the web and printed media) are interesting. [from Abby]

A friend pointed me to this troubling story. Eric Weisstein’s Mathworld website, a virtual encyclopedia of mathematics, has been yanked off the web after a preliminary injunction granted to CRC Press, which charged copyright infringement. More than three years ago, Weisstein had signed a book deal giving CRC page images of his website; CRC published “Eric Weisstein’s CRC Concise Encylopedia of Mathematics” in November 1998. Now CRC claims he sold the rights to the website, not just a printed book; a court found the contract ambiguous on this point and granted CRC’s injunction.

Although I realize your eyes glaze over with dry discussions of mathematics, the issues have broader applicability to the relationship between publishing on the web and in print. The question comes down to whether the standard book contract clause granting the publisher the “right to reproduce in all media” is applicable to a preexisting website from which the book is derivative. If you’ve signed a book deal involving reproduction of any portions of a website you’ve authored (caveat Jorn Barger, for example, in the weblogging world, who has been talking about a Robot Wisdom book), make sure you explicitly specify what rights your book contract signs over!

This blink points to answers from Weisstein’s perspective to frequently asked questions about the dispute, and contains links to news coverage of the issues. Programmer and author John MacDonald’s comments at oreilly.com (of course, a publisher spanning the web and printed media) are interesting. [from Abby]

A friend pointed me to this troubling story. Eric Weisstein’s Mathworld website, a virtual encyclopedia of mathematics, has been yanked off the web after a preliminary injunction granted to CRC Press, which charged copyright infringement. More than three years ago, Weisstein had signed a book deal giving CRC page images of his website; CRC published “Eric Weisstein’s CRC Concise Encylopedia of Mathematics” in November 1998. Now CRC claims he sold the rights to the website, not just a printed book; a court found the contract ambiguous on this point and granted CRC’s injunction.

Although I realize your eyes glaze over with dry discussions of mathematics, the issues have broader applicability to the relationship between publishing on the web and in print. The question comes down to whether the standard book contract clause granting the publisher the “right to reproduce in all media” is applicable to a preexisting website from which the book is derivative. If you’ve signed a book deal involving reproduction of any portions of a website you’ve authored (caveat Jorn Barger, for example, in the weblogging world, who has been talking about a Robot Wisdom book), make sure you explicitly specify what rights your book contract signs over!

This blink points to answers from Weisstein’s perspective to frequently asked questions about the dispute, and contains links to news coverage of the issues. Programmer and author John MacDonald’s comments at oreilly.com (of course, a publisher spanning the web and printed media) are interesting. [from Abby]

A Death Sentence on page A5? Speculation at Plastic that the Justice Dept. has arranged for the New York Times to publicize details of an unsuccessful plea bargain by Mohamed Rashed Daoud al-‘Owhali, one of four defendants in the imminent trial for the bombing of the US Embassy in Nairobi in August 1998, in which he tipped authorities to what might subsequently turn out to be the bombing of the U.S.S. Cole in Yemen. That way, if his prosecution for the Embassy bombing is not successful, he’ll be extremely unpopular with his jihadist former comrades. In receiving Mr. al-‘Owhali’s tip, the FBI reportedly assured him the information would not be ‘used against him’, of course. The New York Times reporting doesn’t flesh out this prosecutorial blackmail, focusing instead on whether the information might have prevented the attack on the Cole, whihc resulted in 17 U.S. deaths.

Cool Things To Put on Your J20 Protest Sign. “Mr. Bad
feels your pain, so he’s given you this list of fine angry things to scribble in
magic marker on your picket sign. So now you don’t have an excuse to stay home!” Some of the better ones:

  • EX-Cocaine User? Nobody Likes a Quitter, George.
  • I Drive Drunk Better Than W Governs Sober
  • Maybe He Can Hold Down THIS Job
  • Illiterate Cokehead Mama’s Boys For Bush:
    Finally, Our Voice Will Be Heard

    Pigdog Journal

  • Fish Rots From the Head. The overthrow of the old Pacifica continues; after cleaning house at KPFA last year, the new order completes takeover of New York’s WBAI. And more coverage of the attempted creation of “NPR Lite” on the New York airwaves.

    For the uninitiated, trying to sort fact from spin in the long-running Pacifica battles is rather like trying to
    unravel a murky family feud in which the elders don’t deign to come to the table. In the past, squabbles
    within Pacifica have always been between progressive visions, says Steve Rendall of Fairness and
    Accuracy in Reporting, the media watchdog in New York. “What’s different now is that there is one group
    that has no interest in radio, community, or progressive politics.”

    For you New York progressive communitarian radio listeners, here’s how to join the fight. Village Voice

    In other radio news, why has Rush Limbaugh alone on the right not crucified Ronnie White? “Maybe he knows White is no more pro-criminal than his
    own cousin, Missouri Supreme Court Justice Stephen
    Limbaugh Jr.” Salon

    Annals from the Age of Dubya: Welcome to Surrendered Wife.com. An innovation in the reform of sex roles, a way to achieve true intimacy through spiritual transformation of your marriage, especially for those wives with, as the LA Times put it, an “inability to cope with the pressures of trying to be superwomen.” Among other things, this new movement teaches you to apologize to your husband if you ever anger him by saying something “disrespectful.” No, really.

    The Reader’s Digest Theory of the Web: This kind of unattributed snippet circulating by email (I get loads of these things sent to me; how about you?) reminds me of the “Humor — the Best Medicine” or “Life in These United States” fluff I remember from reading my mothers’ Reader’s Digests as a child:

    During taxi, the crew of a US AIR departure flight to Ft. Lauderdale made a wrong turn and came nose to nose with a United 727. The irate ground controller (a female) screamed, “US Air 2771, where are you going? I told you to turn right on “Charlie” taxiway; you turned right on “Delta. Stop right there! I know it’s difficult to tell the difference between C’s & D’s, but get it right!” Continuing her lashing to the embarrassed crew, she was now shouting hysterically, “God, you’ve messed everything up; it’ll take forever to sort this out. You stay right there and don’t move until I tell you to! Then, I want you to go exactly where I tell you, when I tell you, and how I tell you. You got that, US Air 2771?” The humbled crew responded, “Yes, Ma’am.” The ground control frequency went terribly silent; no one wanted to engage the irate ground controller in her current state. Tension in every cockpit at LGA was running high. Then an unknown male pilot broke the silence and asked, “Wasn’t I married to you once?”

    A friend pointed me to this troubling story. Eric Weisstein’s Mathworld website, a virtual encyclopedia of mathematics, has been yanked off the web after a preliminary injunction granted to CRC Press, which charged copyright infringement. More than three years ago, Weisstein had signed a book deal giving CRC page images of his website; CRC published “Eric Weisstein’s CRC Concise Encylopedia of Mathematics” in November 1998. Now CRC claims he sold the rights to the website, not just a printed book; a court found the contract ambiguous on this point and granted CRC’s injunction.

    Although I realize your eyes glaze over with dry discussions of mathematics, the issues have broader applicability to the relationship between publishing on the web and in print. The question comes down to whether the standard book contract clause granting the publisher the “right to reproduce in all media” is applicable to a preexisting website from which the book is derivative. If you’ve signed a book deal involving reproduction of any portions of a website you’ve authored (caveat Jorn Barger, for example, in the weblogging world, who has been talking about a Robot Wisdom book), make sure you explicitly specify what rights your book contract signs over!

    This blink points to answers from Weisstein’s perspective to frequently asked questions about the dispute, and contains links to news coverage of the issues. Programmer and author John MacDonald’s comments at oreilly.com (of course, a publisher spanning the web and printed media) are interesting. [from Abby]

    Harry Potter hanky-panky. Close readers of the fourth novel, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, noticed a plot discrepancy…or was it a deliberate twist? Speculation abounded, until the mistake (as it turned out to be) was corrected, clumsily and with no public announcement, in subsequent printings. Fans criticize inordinate deadline pressures and inadequate prepublication editing, and wonder whether J.K. Rowling was involved in the inept correction at all. [My son and I had gotten a first printing of Goblet on the day of its release too, but we never noticed the error.]

    My Untold Story. Ralph Nader explains how he tried to engage the media during his Green Party run for the Presidency, and how it didn’t work. Brill’s Content

    New police powers unveiled, further erosion of civil liberties in the UK: ‘Jack Straw today unveiled new measures to crack down on
    antisocial behaviour, including a version of Tony Blair’s
    controversial “instant fines for louts” proposal. The criminal justice
    and police bill introduces fixed fines for being drunk and abusive
    and grants powers to extend curfews. Civil liberties groups
    condemned the bill for expanding the national DNA database by
    allowing police to retain samples indefinitely.’ BBC

    The disease of bipartisanship: Will it infect the
    environment?

    Representative Jesse Jackson, Jr., says George W. Bush
    plans his bipartisanship around compromise-prone
    conservative Democrats. “It is this conservative bipartisan
    coalition that allows Ralph Nader to say we have one
    corporate party with two different names,” says Jackson.
    He adds, “If Democrats go down this bipartisan path it
    will only strengthen Nader and the Greens for 2002 and
    2004.”

    With Bush appointees such as Gale Norton, and a Bush
    agenda so unfriendly to the environment and civil
    liberties, we need an opposition party to the Republicans.
    I would like to see the Democrats rise to the occasion.
    Jackson and certain Progressive Caucus members have
    their fingers on the electorate’s pulse. Conservative,
    compromise-prone Democrats would be wise to remove
    their fingers from their ears and feel that pulse, too.

    Online Journal

    Say It Ain’t So, Van: a distraught counter-culturalist’s open letter to Van Morrison responding to reports that he had accepted an invitation to play at Dubya’s inauguration festivities. ‘I can understand why groups like ZZ Top or The Kentucky
    Headhunters would be invited to appear at this so-called gala;
    on the face of it, they fit right in with a crowd that I’m told likes
    to munch on a delicacy called “Bull Balls” (I’ll spare you the
    gory details).’ Back in March, the Guardian did report that Van the Man is among Dubya’s favorite musicians and Moondance among his favorite discs. (But Travis Tritt did Moondance too…)

    Outsider Art Fair: Art So Out It’s Almost In. For fifteen years, ever since I spent a day at Dubuffet’s Muse´e de l’Art Brut in Lausanne, I’ve been getting mailings announcing their new shows and wishing I had the chance to go back. Now it’s in New York in a major way (and apparently has been on an annual basis, at the Outsider Art Fair in Soho each January). Although as a psychiatrist I have been particularly interested in the works of art brut produced by those suffering mental illnesses, it is less a matter of who produced it than its spontaneity, drivenness and untutored nonconformity to any artistic formalities or conventions that defines the genre. New York Times And a self-proclaimed outsider artist (which, before the term was “in”, would have been a contradiction in terms) Max Podstolski contributes some <a href=”http://www.spark-online.com/january01/miscing/podstolski.html
    “>”insights: to Spark which show how far the term has degraded.

    United Bush Front Running Into Early Challenge; it’s especially convoluted on abortion policy: “Mr. Bush’s choice for attorney general, John Ashcroft, also
    seems to have staked out a slightly different position from
    the president-elect on an element of the highly charged
    debate over abortion.

    On Thursday, a day after Mr. Ashcroft told the Senate
    Judiciary Committee that he would not seek opportunities to
    challenge Roe v. Wade, the Supreme Court’s landmark ruling
    on abortion rights, Mr. Bush said in an interview with Fox
    News that he would not rule out having his Justice
    Department argue for a change in the law.

    Further muddling the incoming administration’s position,
    Laura Bush, the president-elect’s wife, told NBC News in an
    interview broadcast today that she did not think the
    Supreme Court decision should be overturned.” New York Times

    Evidence grows for safety of mobile phones. Although they do not fully put the issue to risk because of the need for surveillance for longer induction periods, two new studies that together encompass more than 1250 patients with brain tumors and an equal number of healthy individuals found “no increased risk of cancers among those who used the devices more frequently.” British Medical Journal

    My friend Jim Higgins, the journalist I first met when he profiled FmH in a July, 2000 Milwaukee
    Journal Sentinel
    feature and who shares with me being an adoptive father, sent me several blinks about Cambodia that might be of interest. His son is from Cambodia:

    Closer to Trial: Cambodia’s National Assembly approved guidelines to set up a tribunal to try the leaders of the Khmer Rouge movement. AsiaSource sums up the latest news and provides extensive links to related articles, opinion pieces and Cambodian-related Web sites, including the excellent Cambodia Genocide Program at Yale University.

    “The Khmer Rouge ruled Cambodia from 1975 until their overthrow by Vietnam in 1979. During that time, an estimated 1.7 million Cambodians died from starvation, execution, overwork and disease. In April 1998, Pol Pot, the group’s leader, died under Khmer Rouge house arrest in the Cambodian jungle. Most of the other leaders defected to the government between 1995 and 1998 in exchange for an informal amnesty.

    “My colleague Catherine Fitzpatrick interviewed Loung Ung, a child survivor of the Khmer Rouge genocide, when she was visiting Milwaukee on a book tour. Today she is national spokeswoman for the Campaign for a Landmine-Free World, sponsored by the Vietnam Veterans of America in Washington, D.C.” Thank you, Jim. [I added the blink (above) to an outpouring of feeling I had upon learning of Pol Pot’s death, which persists on the web in an archive of the defunct Fringeware mailing list to which I contributed in the old days before weblogging.]

    Electricians Less Suicidal Than Thought. “Electricians are less suicidal than other
    men in Sweden, according to a study launched after U.S. reports that power-line workers
    exposed to strong electromagnetic fields were at higher risk of suicide.” [When I read the headline, I thought it was referring to the habit, which every electrician I’ve ever had in to do work in my house has demonstrated, of declining to shut off the power before they work on the wiring.]

    ‘Mad Deer Disease’ No Threat Yet to U.S. – Panel. There’s a prion disease which causes a spongiform encephalopathy in Western U.S. populations of deer and elk; but is it a “transmissible spongiform encephalopathy” (TSE)? i.e. transmissible to humans, as is ‘Mad Cow Disease’ (bovine spongiform encephalopathy [BSE], the human expression of which causes a variant of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease [CJD]). Do you think you should risk eating any elk meat or venison until we know for sure? Reuters

    Instinctive sleeping and resting postures: an anthropological
    and zoological approach to treatment of low back and joint
    pain
    . “If you are a medical professional and have been trained in a “civilised” country you probably
    know next to nothing about the primate Homo sapiens and how they survive in the wild. You
    probably do not know that nature has provided an automatic manipulator to correct most spinal
    and peripheral joint lesions in primates. In common with millions of other so called civilised
    people you suffer unnecessarily from musculoskeletal problems and are discouraged about how to treat the exponential rise in low back
    pain throughout the developed world. Humans are one of 200 species of primates. All primates suffer from musculoskeletal problems;
    nature, recognising this fact, has given primates a way to correct them.” British Medical Journal

    “President Clinton admitted Friday for the first time
    that he made false statements in the Monica Lewinsky case and entered
    into a deal with prosecutors to avert an indictment. He surrendered his
    law license for five years….Clinton will have immunity from further prosecution under the deal with (the) Independent Counsel…” AP

    Empathy with the devil: “The
    Adversary
    is not just an account of a murder in the ‘true crime’
    genre. Carrère had initially planned to write it like that, to
    construct his own In Cold Blood out of this minor news item. But
    he found that to ‘erase’ himself from the narrative as Truman
    Capote had done was ‘dishonest’. He had to deal with his
    obsession with the murder, and give an account, as he puts it,
    ‘of my relationship to this story – my impressions, my
    hypotheses, my doubts, my anxieties’. In order to be truly
    honest, in other words, he had to implicate himself.

    ‘On the morning of Saturday January 9,
    1993,’ the book begins, ‘while Jean-Claude Romand was killing
    his wife and children, I was with mine in a parent-teacher
    meeting at the school attended by Gabriel, our eldest son. He
    was five years old, the same age as Antoine Romand. Then we
    went to have lunch with my parents, as Jean-Claude Romand
    did with his, whom he killed after the meal.’ ” Guardian/Observer booksunlimited

    Beat Poet Gregory Corso Dies at 70. Crusty, irreverent friend of Allen Ginsberg, discovered by Ginsberg through his prison writings. Some selections from Corso’s poetry may be found here, and this tribute page includes one of my favorite of his pieces:

    Gregory Corso

    …Like the jester who blew out candles

    tip-toeing in toe-bell feet

    that his master dream victories

    –so I creep and blow

    that the cat and canary sleep.

    I’ve no plumed helmet, no blue-white raiment;

    and no jester of-old comes wish me on.

    I myself am my own happy fool…

    “Clown”

    From my continuing coverage of the “underground”: Tunnel Vision: Using Sociological Radar to Snare a Seat — everyday applications of ethnic savvy in subway hand-to-hand combat. Next, the extraordinary portrait of the impostor subway motorman, a favorite of the Spike Report. New York Times And online and underground: “Thanks to the Web, the sport of
    infiltration — creeping through
    abandoned buildings and unused
    subway tunnels — is thriving as
    never before.” Salon This article points to the entertaining Infiltration site, “the zine about going places you’re not supposed to go”: utility and subway tunnels, drains and catacombs, abandoned buildings and other edifices and institutions. Here‘s a list of the sites in the Urban Exploration webring. “We don’t break locks or
    bolts or climb over fences; what we’re really overcoming is
    imaginary barriers that are just understood but barely
    questioned.” And this, from Salon as well, on Subway Love: “With much of its crime and grime
    wiped clean, or at least swept into the corners, the subway has
    become a blank slate for our sexual fantasies. It has become a
    place for flirtation, self-invention, play.”

    Bay Area Bug Eating Society: “No one can resist the toe tappin’, hand clappin’, exoskeleton snappin’ satisfaction of Entomophagy.” With anecdotes, pictures, recipes, frequently asked questions, and links to other bug-eating sites.

    The virginity hoax: ‘Toss out words like “sexual behavior of teenagers,”
    “virginity” and “highly effective” and the parents of adolescents
    claw their way to newsstand and keyboard in a panicky search
    for enlightenment, looking, always, for relief from the kind of
    angst they heaped on their own elders just long enough ago not
    to remember.

    So what did they — we — learn from the study of “virginity
    pledges” by the National Institute of Child Health and Human
    Development?’ That they don’t work, in short. When pledgers break their vows (and they do) they tend to have unsafe sex. As the study points out, it’s hard to imagine how someone could both pledge chastity until marriage and carry a condom whle unmarried. Furthermore, they tend not to think of anal or oral sex as violating their commitment to chastity. Salon

    Diamond trade fuels bloody wars. “It is the poorest country in the world and it is
    conceivable that the diamond ring being enjoyed by a young woman in the
    richest part of the world could have resulted in the dismemberment of a young
    woman in Sierra Leone.” CNN [via Medley]

    Lower Pneumonia Risk in Some With AIDS. “Researchers
    are offering additional evidence
    that people infected with the AIDS
    virus can safely stop taking drugs
    designed to prevent a deadly
    pneumonia as long as their immune
    systems are relatively healthy.” The risk of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia, an opportunistic infection that was one of the early causes of devastation in HIV-infected patients, has consigned a generation of AIDS sufferers to preventive therapy. This new finding is important both because of the possibility they do not have to take pneumocystis-preventing meds but also as a paradigm. If the immune system with modern AIDS treatment can be kept vigorous enough to prevent this infection, patients may be at lower risk than commonly thought from other infections that prey on immune-compromised hosts. New York Times

    Britney Spears guide to Semiconductor Physics:

    Radiative and non-radiative transitions! “It is a little known fact, that Ms Spears is an
    expert in semiconductor physics. Not
    content with just singing, in the following
    pages, she will guide you in the
    fundamentals of the vital laser components
    that have made it possible to hear her super
    music in a digital format.”

    “It’s really remarkable. The 21st Century comes to a Vermont boy!”
    Parkinson’s Sufferer Improves After Surgery. The procedure implanted a pacemaker-like device in the 37 year-old man’s chest, to electrically stimulate parts of the brain and block the impulses causing his tremors. WCVB Boston

    A collection of articles in the latest issue of New Scientist takes a look at what the illegitimate son is likely to do as commander-in-chief of the world’s largest scientific research budget:

  • Ronald Reagan’s Star Wars Project is Back

  • <a href=”http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns22747
    “>Environmentalists Fear the Worst
  • <a href=”http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns22748
    “>Big Science Gets the Silent Treatment
  • Will Embryonic Stem Cell Research Grind to a Halt?
  • California in State of Emergency Over Power, Hundreds of thousands of people in a swath from the Oregon border to Bakersfield had their power cut temporarily in rolling blackouts; frantic efforts to buy power from the Northwest grid were unsuccessful as other utility companies refused to sell, citing the near-bankruptcy of California’s two largest utility companies. Traffic lights and ATM machines stopped functioning.

    When I read Samuel Delaney’s Dhalgren — which someone has neatly described as the first novel of “ambiguous heterotopia” — several decades ago, it burned itself into my consciousness as an archetype — chaotic life in the ruins of the metropolis after some vague, unnamed apocalypse. Nothing as specific as those (often clumsy) novels explicitly posing the aftermath of nuclear war, which was the only apocalyptic referent I had in those days, so it never seemed possible we’d actually live it during my lifetime. But if I were living in California right now, I might think I was on the doorstep… “…not with a bang but a whimper”?

    The power of e-mail. Six degrees of separation revised for the connected world. Update: 115,000 responses from all seven continents to date. The teacher regrets that he didn’t put a stop date on the original request.

    As an adoptive parent, I find this particularly outrageous. Washington Post [via Rebecca’s Pocket]

    A bland antidote for Bill ‘n’ Al fatigue: George W.. Camille Paglia’s postgame analysis on the election and the current status of the Democratic and Republican parties; on the Linda Chavez flap; and the bankruptcy of current literary criticism. In passing, she declares her crankiness at the “low level of play” in last weekend’s NFL championship games. But everyday concerns pale in the face of her recent trip to immerse herself in Mesoamerican ruins in Mexico, she reports. Salon

    Jews in Bush’s Cabinet? Don’t Hold Your Breath.

    “George Bush has put every kind of American in his cabinet
    except Jews, and no one has complained about this, even
    though everyone knows it’s nuts. Remaking the American
    power structure without Jews is like remaking sports without
    blacks. At least when it comes to blacks in sports, you can talk
    about it; you can say that blacks changed sports. But no one is
    allowed to speak up about something we all quietly know: Jews
    changed America.”

    What follows in this essay by a Jewish writer is a discussion about whether Jewish paranoia is justified, e.g. in discerning anti-Semitic indicators in Dubya’s actions.

    “So long as Jews continue to see themselves as powerless, they fail to recognize the
    effect they have had on society and, worse, fail to move outside a privileged
    position of wounded self-regard and come to terms with their real spot: big winners
    in the new order. It looks like the next chapter in the democratic discourse is going
    to be about winners and losers in the globalist pursuit of excellence. Liberal Jews
    owe it to themselves and to American ideals to take an honest part in that
    conversation. Doing so might begin with asking the President-elect bluntly what’s in
    his heart.” New York Observer [via Robot Wisdom]

    McVeigh Execution Date Set “Federal officials set a May 16 execution date Tuesday for Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh, who was convicted of murder and conspiracy for the bombing that killed 168 people in the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building…

    The 32-year-old McVeigh, who is on death row at a federal prison in Terre Haute, Ind., has said he doesn’t want any more appeals, but he has reserved the right to seek executive clemency.” Martyrdom awaits; at least the killing isn’t going to be on the anniversary of the April 19, 1995 bombing. AP

    A reader wrote to say that the “[discuss]” button doesn’t work; Java errors. After I installed the feature, I clicked on it and it was trouble-free for me. Anyone else care to try?

    Fight for future of dance ideal is taking shape “Fredrika vs. the (SF) Ballet is the latest round in the high-profile
    battle between politics and art, where aesthetic standards and
    business realities often clash with notions of liberty, diversity,
    and self-esteem.

    But this case has earned a heightened sense of importance
    because of the death of ballerina Heidi Guenther, whose
    mother has filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Boston
    Ballet. Guenther was 22 years old, 5 feet 3 inches tall, and
    weighed 93 pounds when she died of heart arrhythmia in
    1997. The suit contends that Guenther starved herself to a
    state of ill health after the ballet pressured her to lose
    weight. And her death has prompted a broad debate about
    who is at fault when people harm themselves in pursuit of
    someone else’s physical standards.” Boston Globe

    Stars quit charity in corruption scandal: “Luciano Pavarotti has walked out of the high-profile overseas aid
    charity, War Child UK, with five other celebrity patrons after
    discovering that its co-founder had taken a bribe from contractors
    building a prestigious music centre named after him in Bosnia.

    The opera maestro – who along with the rock musician Brian Eno persuaded
    other stars like Elton John, Bono and Eric Clapton to perform in
    concerts and donate royalties to raise millions of pounds for the
    charity – quit after discovering that two people involved with the
    organisation had taken bribes and that there were concerns over
    financial and management controls. Pavarotti himself has raised more
    than $10m (£6.6m).

    High profile patrons of the charity included the playwright Sir Tom
    Stoppard, film and Royal Shakespeare Company actress Juliet Stevenson,
    pop star David Bowie, and MTV chief Brent Hanson.” The Guardian

    For those few of us who listen: two Village Voice critics grapple with the state of ‘serious’ music today. First, from Kyle Gann, Death Wish “New music is at an impasse — you can’t convince people it exists.

    There is a certain small culture around it, but it is impossible to get power brokers outside that culture to believe that anything is going on. The offcial line is, classical music is finished, a closed book, Glass, Reich, and maybe John Zorn the end of history. And it does not help that jazz is ever more officially referred to as “America’s classical music.” First of all, what is that supposed to do for jazz? Legitimize it, make it blandly respectable and therefore ignorable? And it slaps those composers whose training is classical out of the water. With the Wynton Marsalis crowd threatening to bring jazz history to a close and turn it into a repertoire museum, jazz musicians who believe in the ongoing evolution of the art are in the same boat as the new-music people. We need to band together.”

    And Voice jazz critic Larry Blumenfeld <a href=”http://www.villagevoice.com/issues/0102/blumenfeld.shtml
    “>blasts the Ken Burns documentary currently on PBS, echoing much the same concern about the Marsalis hegemony, as I wrote about several months ago. Burns has said that this is a series that isn’t supposed to be for those who already listen to jazz, and dismisses criticism from the jazz critic community, who have complained that it is unduly classicist at the expense of the living tradition of improvisation and the “embrace of entropy” that lies at the heart of jazz. “Burns’s film may raise jazz’s water level in our culture at large, as the record-company executives hope, but it may also signal a final dry season for the music’s forward flow.”

    Itch Gets Its Own Neurons. It has long been thought that the itch sensation is conveyed by pain neurons, and that that is why scratching, which stimulates the pain sensors, can relieve an itch. But now it has been found that there are specific, separate neurons in the CNS that respond to itch.

    “Eco-pornography”: The latest book by a Pacific Northwest journalist who has given much aid and comfort to environmentalists throughout his career commits the heresy of saying that the “handbasket-to-hell” pronouncements of the Greenpeace set are dead wrong, and that things are improving. He cites new oceanographic and marine biological data to suggest that the notion of a “sacred balance” is askew — the North Pacific ecosystem undergoes dramatic periodic “sea changes” of its own accord independent of human impact. Terry Glavin believes that public despair about environmental degradation is another version of millennialism. He cites a long list of species whose numbers have been rising exponentially over recent decades, and he says the First Peoples fished out the salmon to a similar extent to modern commercial fishing endeavors long before the European presence in the Northwest. National Post

    For the perfect party, invite a mathematician. A mathematical theory predicts how large a gathering of people must become before it inevitably breaks down into cliques of mutual interest and mutual dislike.

    The same mathematical column has the following tidbit which I find fascianting (and am clipping and saving) but is guaranteed to have only limited appeal, I fear:

    Is there
    a formula for working out the day of the week
    corresponding to a date of birth?

    Indeed there is. Suppose the date is September 23,
    1959. First, take the final two digits of the year (in
    this case, 59), divide them by four, ignoring any
    remainder (14), and add the result to the original
    two digits (giving 73). Now add to this the day of
    the month (23) and divide the result by seven, this
    time keeping only the remainder (five).

    Next, add the “month number”: six for January (five
    in leap years), two for February (one in leap years);
    two for March; five for April; zero for May; three for
    June; five for July; one for August; four for
    September; six for October; two for November; four
    for December. Finally, add two and divide the result
    by seven, again keeping only the remainder. The
    result is the day of the week on which you were
    born, starting from one for Sunday. So September
    23, 1959, was a Wednesday. The Telegraph

    [If you try this for dates >12/31/99, instead of using just the last two digits of the year, you have to use the number of years since 1900, i.e. ‘100’ for the year 2000 etc.]

    Deadly virus fuels bio-terror fears. “Scientists who accidently (sic)
    created a deadly
    version of mouse smallpox in the laboratory say
    lethal human viruses are only a step away.

    The prospect of such dangerous organisms
    being produced relatively easily have left
    bioterrorism experts fearful of killer global
    epidemics.” Subtle modifications to the genome of a virus can, it seems, render it much more virulent and render vaccines useless in producing immunity. Scientists are already busy making small modifications to various pathogenic viruses to use them as vectors to carry genes into the body’s cells for genetic therapy. BBC

    Bad Moon Rising: The sinister influence of the full moon on behavior has a venerable place in folklore and inconclusive support in scientific studies. Leaving humans aside for the moment, might there be a general tendency toward hostility under the full moon? Two studies coincidentally published in the same issue of the British Medical Journal, one from the UK and the other from Australia, reached contradictory conclusions in examining the relationship of severe animal bites and lunar phase. Beyond 2000

    Galaxies Made of Nothing? New Theory of Mysterious Dark Matter. “If the concept of dark matter gives you a bit of a headache,
    hold on to your Advil.

    Theorists attempting to explain some of the “missing mass”
    in the universe now say there may be entire galaxies that are
    dark.: A new theory “…suggests that for every normal,
    star-filled galaxy, there may be 100 that contain nothing, or
    at least nothing that we understand.” space.com

    Mobile Phone Forces Plane to Land. “A Slovenian airliner made an emergency
    landing Tuesday after a passenger’s mobile phone caused its electronics system to
    malfunction and indicate there was a fire on board, Adria Airways said Wednesday.” Reuters

    A World Divided Into Two-Way-Pager Camps. “Two wireless systems, two passionate camps. The
    rectangular, rigid BlackBerry is the choice of a high-tech and
    financial elite, including Bill Gates, Michael Dell and the
    investment bankers at Goldman, Sachs. They would not be
    caught dead carrying a fire-engine-red or cobalt-blue
    Motorola Talkabout, which the company markets to young
    adults — even teenagers passing e-notes in class.” But they all seem to feel that cellular is passé, as in “20th century”…New York Times

    3 Sisters (Sorry Chekhov), Maureen Dowd: ” The president-elect, known for his gunslinger’s stance and
    circle of establishment good ol’ boys, has added some female
    swagger to his staff — the G.O.P.’s three most famous alpha
    females, tall, tough, salty, relentless and fanatically loyal
    operatives Mary Matalin, Margaret Tutwiler and Karen
    Hughes. Jealousies, one-upmanship and hijinks bound to
    ensue?

    Never before has a White House had this many powerful,
    senior, vocal women in it — at least not since Hillary Clinton
    dined alone. And, more deliciously, never before has a
    White House had this many powerful, senior, vocal women
    assigned to do exactly the same job.” New York Times

    ‘I Think He’s Nuts’, said the wife of a 36-year-old seminary student from Jerusalem. He had opened a knapsack he found on the ground next to a neighborhood school to find it contained two mortar shells connected to a cellular phone, so he gave a tug and disconnected the phone from the explosives. Several minutes later, the phone rang, a signal that would have triggered the explosion.

    See the “[discuss]” link on each post? I’ve added BlogVoices‘ functionality to FmH. BlogVoices By clicking on the link, you can add to a public discussion thread about any of my postings, or just ‘lurk’ and read the discussion (if any) to date. Enjoy.

    The depleted uranium furor continues not to attract the attention in the U.S. with which it is being covered in Europe. A new report, scoffed at by the British Ministry of Defence, reveals that a secret, but leaked, paper from the British Army’s medical team warned the Army four years ago that soldiers exposed to dust from depleted uranium weapons risked lung, lymphatic and brain cancer. Of course, all the concern about NATO peacekeeping forces’ exposure to radiation pales in comparison to the likely Balkan victims. Independent And now Britain’s Royal Navy announces that it is “phasing out depleted uranium ammunition on its warships
    after the U.S. manufacturers stopped producing the shells that have sparked safety
    concerns.” Reuters via ENN

    The Patriot Missile “Didn’t Work”. “Secretary of Defense
    William S. Cohen, supporting a
    decade of questions about the
    Patriot missile’s performance, said
    Raytheon Co.’s famous antimissile
    system failed to work in the Persian
    Gulf War.” Raytheon begs to differ. Critics have long claimed its kill rate was anywhere between 0-10% in contrast to the 70% figure the U.S. Army and Raytheon have cited. Cohen’s point: we need to invest in research to improve antimissile technology. Watch this space, since the antimissile defense program is certainly alive and well, especially with Dubya ascending to the throne. Boston Globe

    How will Microsoft position Whistler, the Win-9x replacement OS now in beta and due out (so they say) in the second half of Y2K1? Is it an upgrade or something new? The Register And here‘s a good preview of several of its features. Windows Help.net

    An Unacceptable Risk. Washington Post op-ed piece by Lloyd Cutler, former counsel to Presidents Carter and Clinton, and Howard Baker, former Republican Senator from Tennessee and Senate majority leader: “Russia’s nuclear stockpile is the most serious national security threat we face today.”

    Genre Trouble: The Boston Review considers the densely-written fiction of John Crowley (The Deep, Beasts, Engine Summer, Little Big, Aegypt, Love and Sleep, Daemonomania), off the critical radarscreens because he “(tries) to create literature with the tools of the genre writer”. He runs the risk “of intimidating readers and baffling
    reviewers, of trying the patience of his publisher, of falling
    off the literary map altogether.” He’s largely out of print and what there is is buried in the sci-fi/fantasy section of your bookstore.

    Paean to a Jan. 8th New Yorker piece describing the writer’s mental illness and psychiatric hospitalizations. “Daphne Merkin bravely gives words to the silent scream and deserves not our pity,
    not our voyeurism, but—better than our sympathy—our envy and admiration of her
    sharp eye and sharper tongue. We need her to stay with us for a very long time.” The New York Observer

    A consortium of six daily newspapers including the New York Times, the Washington Post, the parent company of the Los Angeles Times, and the Wall Street Journal has convened to cost-share on an examination of all the uncounted Florida ballots. The Miami Herald is racing them to complete its own solo recount effort. The New York Observer