The Pentagon is turning to unmanned aerial vehicles as bomb-delivery platforms. These would contravene the 1988 Intermediate Range Nuclear Forces Treaty but, no problem, it wouldn’t be the first pillar of arms control the current administration is trying to topple.
Beyond the Grave. “Mummification, it
seems, is making a comeback, and for a stiff fee, an
American company will take your beloved pet or family
member and preserve them for posterity…These 21st century interments are a little more hi-tech
than the old ‘hook-up-the-nose’ Egyptian rituals, but the
end result is still a work of art. However, for those involved in the preservation, there’s
no lack of spirituality to their work. The mummification services are provided by
Summum, a Salt Lake City religious group led by the delightfully-named Corky Ra.
Somewhat akin to the ancients, Ra and his adherents feel that preserving a body helps
the soul of its owner to find reference in the afterlife.”
Tibetans in U.S. Rally Against World Bank China Loan. This is not just any loan to China. Its purpose is to fund resettlement of 60,000 non-Tibetans to Tibet to facilitate its assimilation by breaking the back of its ethnic identity and culture. Genocide without murder? This has been going on since the Chinese occupation of Tibet began with the 1951 invasion, but the loan will fund an amplification of the scale of the process. The World Bank’s own independent review department was critical of the Bank’s granting the loan, in violation of the organization’s own social/environmental impact rules.
Chip That Would Restore Sight Implanted in People. Silicon microchip replacement retinas implanted in three patients who have lost their vision from retinitis pigmentosa. Too soon to tell if vision will be restored, but can you imagine how impressive an advance it would be if so?
New HIV Infections Soar in San Francisco. Public health officials said new infections in SF doubled last year. They attribute the disturbing reversal to the fact that the success of the past decade’s prevention and treatment efforts has inspired complacency about risk and a resurgence of high-risk activity. Trends in the SF gay community are considered harbingers of nationwide direction in AIDS infection.
Tibetans in U.S. Rally Against World Bank China Loan. This is not just any loan to China. Its purpose is to fund resettlement of 60,000 non-Tibetans to Tibet to facilitate its assimilation by breaking the back of its ethnic identity and culture. Genocide without murder? This has been going on since the Chinese occupation of Tibet began with the 1951 invasion, but the loan will fund an amplification of the scale of the process. The World Bank’s own independent review department was critical of the Bank’s granting the loan, in violation of the organization’s own social/environmental impact rules.
The Village Voice: Piss, Puke, and Prizes. “If you thought the TV networks were getting brash with so-called reality-based programming like Survivor, get set for a
wave of shock sites on the Internet, produced by young entrepreneurs looking to profit off America’s thirst for sordid
spectacle.”
Miranda‘s not the real problem: This National Review commentator essentially says that upholding Miranda was no sweat off conservative Supreme Court Justices’ backs, because “… the police have learned to work with — and
to work around — Miranda. Delivering the Miranda warnings
is, these days, little practical impediment to procuring
confessions….As anyone who watches television police shows knows, people
who have been arrested have a right to remain silent and a right
to counsel; the Miranda warnings are meant to make sure that
they know about those rights. Since almost everybody watches
television — and since everyone who is arrested gets the
Miranda warnings — why do so many people confess
anyway?
Here’s why: Miranda warnings are often delivered
ritualistically, and in a perfunctory tone of voice — thus making
them appear bureaucratic and trivial. After hearing the Miranda
warning delivered in a perfunctory voice, many suspects opt to
talk to the police, in the foolish belief that they can convince the
police of their innocence.”
BBC: Robo-man wows Japanese. Honda unveils what it describes as the
highest-performing bipedal robot in the world. “With the ability to judge the ground conditions
in human environments, the robot is capable of
walking on two legs and can also perform
simple tasks with its two hands.”
Discovery.com: Mayan Stone
Tablet Depicts
Horror. A previously-unnoticed limestone panel just discovered shows that the late Maya began to experiment with depicting emotion in their stone carvings. Two horrified captives brought before the king are shown clutching themselves in terror, probably contemplating their imminent sacrifice.
Drink more wine! Study seems to show why French suffer less heart disease, cancer.
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill scientists have discovered why a compound found in grapes and grape
products such as red wine shows natural cancer-fighting properties that might be important in preventing or treating the illness.The work appears to explain the so-called “French paradox” — the fact that French people experience lower rates of heart disease
death and certain cancers despite drinking more wine on average than U.S. residents do.Scientists found that the substance, trans-Resveratrol, or Res, modulates the activity of NF-kappa B, a protein that attaches to DNA
inside cell nuclei and turns genes on and off like a switch, the scientists found. Res apparently helps turn off a natural protective
mechanism in the body involving the protein that prevents cancer cells from being killed, as they should be.
R.I.P., Walter Matthau. Take a look at his filmography. When everyone mentions The Odd Couple, Grumpy Old Men and The Sunshine Boys, don’t forget his work in the early ’60’s in such films as Lonely Are the Brave, Charade, Mirage and Failsafe.
MSNBC: Will snazzy new jet fly high?
It weighs less than a German shepherd,
could fit in a baby’s crib, is quieter from a
distance than a blender and can propel six
passengers through high-altitude air at a 423-mph
clip: The new FJX-2 jet engine is so unlike
anything flying today that airplane executive Vern
Rayburn calls it “disruptive technology,” akin to
the culture-changing impact of the personal
computer he helped bring to market.
100 Countries Approve War Tribunal. The U.S. is struggling with over a hundred other countries over wording that would make Americans subject to arrest in foreign countries for war crimes even if the U.S. has not ratified the treaty. The U.S. government claims that would make our citizens and troops subject to “politically motivated” prosecution. It seems to me that full participation in the treaty process, rather than whining and seeking special treatment from an indefensible position of moral superiority, would be the only way to ensure a morally and legally robust tribunal system.
French Rally Around Unlikely National Hero. Charismatic anti-globalist sheep farmer on trial for trashing a MacDonald’s.
Mr. Bové was a little-known farmer and union official until
last August, when he and the nine other men took a tractor,
pick axes and power saws to the local McDonald’s. Mr. Bové
said at the time that he was incensed by what he saw as the
unfairness of the United States to tax French delicacies like
Roquefort cheese and paté de foie gras in retaliation for
Europe’s decision not to import hormone-treated American
beef.
[New York Times] (Mr Bove was reportedly at the recent WTO protests carrying around a wheel of Roquefort to feed demonstrators.)
Flight Tests by Iraq Show Progress of Missile Program. “Eighteen months after
American and British warplanes
badly damaged its missile factories,
Iraq has restarted its missile program
and flight-tested a short-range
ballistic missile, Clinton
administration and American military
officials said this week.” [New York Times]
Failed Dot-Coms May Be Selling Your Private Information. “Some failed
dot-coms are releasing information
their customers may have thought would
remain under lock and key as they scramble
to sell assets to appease creditors.” [New York Times]
“You can’t spoil a system that’s spoiled to the core,” says Ralph Nader, on the suggestion that he might be a spoiler in the presidential race.
Storm Debut Sobering For Town. Gloucester, MA girds itself to relive the traumatizing loss of the Andrea Gail as the film opens.
US Gays Tie Historic Knot in Midnight ‘Marriage’, as the Vermont civil union law takes effect. “Twenty-seven and a half years, that’s a long engagement.
It’s nice after all this time to say Holly’s my spouse”, said Lois Farnham. Meanwhile, the Presbyterians have voted to prohibit their ministers from celebrating same-sex marital vows even in jurisdictions where legal.
Fashion Craze Deprives Planes of Seatbelts.
A new fashion craze is threatening air safety in Norway — teenagers are stealing seatbelts to keep up their baggy
trousers.
Japan Suicide Rate Clings Near Record High. The tortured Japanese society has twice the per capita suicide rate of the U.S. and illustrates the close relationship suicide has with social and economic turmoil, first systematically characterized by French sociologist Durkheim a century ago.
New Scientist: Major havoc ahead. Road traffic will regularly grind to a halt and train services will increasingly be disrupted as a result of global
warming, a scientist at Britain’s Meteorological Office said last week.
Stephen Hawking’s Universe: Strange Stuff Explained. Concise elegant refrresher course on the concepts with which Hawking challenged us in A Brief History of Time. Partial contents:
Antimatter,
The Big Bang,
Black Holes,
Cosmic Background Radiation,
Dark Matter,
Imaginary Time,
Quarks,
Quasars,
Singularity,
Superstrings,
The Uncertainty Principle, Wormholes, etc. And, for more, the current issue of Discover has a primer on the efforts to study anisotropy in the Cosmic Microwave Background radiation, currently considered our best approach to unravelling ultimate cosmological mysteries.
Salon: Don’t tweak the geeks! “Hacker historian Eric Raymond critiques Kakutani’s “wrongheaded New York Times assault on digital culture”, and gets some licks in for Paulina Borsook’s Cyberselfish as well.
…Kakutani and Borsook’s failure to notice the native
generosity and sustained cooperation typical of hackers and
geeks makes the predictable slam at libertarianism and Ayn
Rand that follows unintentionally humorous. Borsook and
Kakutani are correct in describing the “cyberculture” (not a
term hackers would use) as implicitly libertarian. Where
they go wrong is in their presumption that this means my
peers desire to kill and eat the weak. The truth is, we don’t
build our networks to abolish ordinary people — we do it to
empower them.
New Scientist: “Just a normal town…
out of nowhere a wave of chaos was to wash over
that world. In a millisecond it was gone. There were no
phones, no computers, no power, nothing. Yet nobody
had died, no buildings razed to the ground. And then the
blind panic set in.” EMP weapons may already be part of some nations’ arsenals.
CNN.com: No prescription for the Pill? The FDA considers allowing over-the-counter sale of the pill. The price would be right, and on the surface of it, it would be an extension of a woman’s discretion over her own body. But I think this is a very very bad idea. It comes down to the amount of irrationality, eccentricity and bad judgment there is around so many matters related to sexuality and sex. Because of the possible complications of hormonal treatment, skipping gynecological checkups (as unpleasant as the exams can be) would be tempting but potentially disastrous. Then there’s taking the pill continuously to suppress the inconvenience or discomfort of menstruation, which can be quite medically dangerous if unsupervised. And the problems with potential overdoses (for example, in an ill-advised attempt to induce an abortion). And the considerable potential for adverse interactions with other prescription medications, which no lay person can be expected to recognize or track. By all means, women should learn as much as they can about the incredibly complicated reproductive cycle and its hormonal manipulation, but by all means allow an MD who is qualified to do so and committed to “first doing no harm” be an expert consultant.
Can you really trust the pharmaceutical companies who manufacture and distribute oral contraceptives to give you reliable and complete information in an unregulated market, when the only protective considerations toward their “customers” they have are around product liability costs? Take a look at some of the direct-to-consumer ads for other medications and tell me if they appear to be thoughtful comprehensive attempts to make you an informed careful consumer, or if they’re just trying to sell you something while making the most perfunctory of nods in the direction of product safety, usually in rapidly-scrolling small print. Don’t you bet the industry is just salivating at the potential expansion of this market, and that they will trot out any number of physicians in their pockets to talk about how medically safe this will be?
Other drugs being considered for release from prescribing requirements include antihypertensives, oral diabetic agents, and anti-cholesterol medicines. I’m ambivalent about some of these as well, especially the antihypertensives.
Addendum: an article that develops a more comprehensive critique of the medical advertising phenomenon. “If direct-to-consumer advertising empowers anyone, it’s drug companies.” This comes from a thought-provoking anti-consumerist webzine I was just pointed to, Stay Free.
Responding to Hate Groups: Ten Points to Remember, from the Center for Democratic Renewal.
The excellent weblog Romenesko’s Obscure Store and Reading Room is too subversive for some people’s tastes, apparently. If you’ve been blocked from accessing his site from your workplace, you may not have seen this yet. So, as a public service:
ACCESS DENIED?: Several Obscure Store visitors report that their companies
— AT&T included — now block my site. It seems that obscurestore.com has
been added to some master list of sites to be filtered out. If you need to get
around that, you can also enter Obscure via redwood.he.net/~obscure. Also,
some people say they’re being directed to http://www.he.net when they punch up
obscurestore.com. If a friend or associate reports this, tell them to refresh
their browser to access the site via my new Web hosting service.
Now, finally, there might be some entertainment value in Election 2000. [Salon]
An original Declaration of Independence auctioned off at SOTHEBYS.COM today went for $8.14 million; the opening bid was $4 million. The document had reportedly been found in the backing of a picture bought at a Philadelphia flea market in 1989 for $4 by someone who was interested in the frame.
Gene found for color blindness in Pacific Islanders. I can’t believe that this news report doesn’t even mention that this (achromatopsia) is the subject of Oliver Sacks’ fascinating Island of the Colorblind.
Retailers Hid True Costs of ‘Free’ PCs – FTC You’re all pretty savvy consumers, aren’t you? The FTC says you might not have known what you were really getting yourself into if you bought one of those computer-and-internet deals, because of deceptive advertising.
The Decline and Fall (cont’d.): Wildfire Rages at Wash. State Nuclear Site. Is there a natural uprising against human nuclear hubris this summer? Grassfires now threaten the Hanford Reservation as they did the Los Alamos National Laboratory last month. Radioactive environmental catastrophe looms, some say, if the winds spread the fire the wrong way through this obscene, contaminated dumping ground. Plutonium could be dispersed in smoke and ash, and radioactive ground denuded of vegetation by the fires could be washed into the Rio Grande by seasonal rains. Public health officials have demonstrated over and over again that they minimize risks to prevent public panic; “serves-you-right” doomsayers (like me) always spin worst-case-scenarios to wag our fingers more dramatically. I’d love to hear some credible, objective environmental scientist’s estimation of the degree and impact of such risks.
Pollution Eats Into Russian Exports of Caviar. What is the story on why the reduction is so drastic? This news item says that pollution of the Caspian Sea attributable to oil exploration and industry, as well as a contribution from increased illegal poaching, has cut caviar harvests by 2/3 in just one year.
Pressure Increases to End Nuclear Reprocessing. 90% of radioactive pollution of the northeast Atlantic comes from the Sellafield (UK) and La Hague (France) reprocessing plants for spent nuclear fuel. Now, but for the abstention of Luxembourg, the other countries with northeast Atlantic concerns are unanimously urging a move to dry storage of spent nuclear fuel instead of reprocessing. No comment from the UK or France yet. In the early ’90’s, this watchdog group was successful in pushing through a ban on direct sea dumping of nuclear wastes, which had been rampant up to that point. The UK and France, which initially opposed that earlier ban, joined in within a year. Recall that Sellafield’s viability is already questioned on fiscal grounds, far more persuasive than environmental concerns are to the nuclear industry. Also recall that Germany recently became the first industrialized state to resolve to totally decommission its nuclear power-generating capacity.
Forget me not. Neuroscientists are pushing the envelope, even if the work remains reductionistic and inferential for now, of understanding the biological basis of social affiliation. Recall the posts below on mirror neurons in primates, and autistic subjects’ failure to use facial recognition circuitry in the brain in interpersonal perception. Now this elucidation of the role of oxytocin in shaping relationships, at least in rodents…
Do they really still think, no matter how glaring or grotesque, that New Tobacco Labels actually deter smokers? It’s not as if any of the health warnings will be news to anyone, or that being better informed is the key to beating one’s compulsion.
Relatively Few Watch Penile Implant Webcast. The penile pump is the highest-rated solution for serious male erectile dysfunction; an implantation was webcast to increase public understanding of the technique, but only a few thousand, orders of magnitude less than those who have “tuned in” to other surgical procedure webcasts, watched. Might penile surgery be too unbearable for male viewers in particular?
The venue is different, but the white man is still not letting any savages stand in the way of his land grab.
Canada Researchers Make Major Anti-Cancer Discovery. Many common cancers are destroyed by being injected with vesicular stomatitis virus, not infectious to humans. Tumors affected include melanomas, leukemia, lung, breast and prostate cancers. Human patients have not yet been exposed to the massive doses of VSV that therapeutic application of this discovery would involve.
The mortuaries in Lagos, Nigeria are filling up due to a strike of government workers, and Authorities Have Ordered a Mass Burial of over 600 unclaimed corpses.
Supreme Court Strikes Down Anti-Abortion Law. The Nebraska law banning “partial birth abortion” (a heinous propagandistic term for the medical procedure flogged by its opponents) is unconstitutional. You never know with this Court, but you do know where some of its justices sit. The usual Gang of Three — Rehnquist, Scalia and Thomas — were joined in dissenting by Kennedy.
In a 6-3 vote, the Court also upheld the states’ rights to protect those going into or out of medical facilities from anti-abortion protesters. Kennedy wrote the opinion, and Kennedy and Scalia wrote dissents.
Regrettably, a 5-4 vote upheld the right of the Boy Scouts to exclude gays, overturning a decision by the New Jersey Supreme Court in the case of a Scout leader dismissed once known to be gay. Rehnquist wrote for the majority. Let’s see how the Boy Scouts fare now as an openly anti-gay institution.
Jon Carroll, a San Francisco Chronicle columnist, ponders Mondegreens.
Duh: Reasons to Live Help Prevent Suicide During Depression, says new psychiatric research. However, as a psychiatrist treating suicidal patients every day, I largely disagree with the article’s inference that treatment of a suicidally depressed patient be directed toward instilling hope. You can rarely persuade a hopeless patient that they should not be hopeless. If they were susceptible to that kind of reasoning, they wouldn’t be as desperately depressed,would they? And, more important, if you contradict their hopelessness, you’ve usually just made them feel you don’t take their complaints seriously and you’ve blown your alliance with them. One of my mentors once said that treating the suicidal means, first and foremost, paradoxically empathizing with the desireability of death.
I knew they couldn’t pull off the (derivative) public fiberglass animal art in NYC as they did in Chicago. Holland, Mich. is having difficulties too. And Toronto as well.
Steven Baum’s feeling abit peevish about some of the attributes of the weblogs he’s finding. I agree. [Ethel the Blog]
News of Palm’s next direction from the PC Expo, courtesy of Wired: “Palm, meanwhile, announced that it will support a different
module/expansion slot than those currently used by
Handspring and the soon-to-be-debuted Sony.
Palm’s official add-ons will be built around the Secure
Digital slot technology, from Toshiba, Matsushita, and
SanDisk.”
Jorn Barger, at Robot Wisdom, has been doing what he calls
Cliche Watch for awhile. He posts the links to Google searches he’s done of various phrases to elucidate their net.overuse. Search on “cliche” in the Robot Wisdom weblog page to find recent examples, which have included “half full half empty”, “in your pocket or are you just”, “ways of looking at a” (not “blackbird”), and “portrait of the artist as a” (not “young man”). A Google search of “cliche AND ‘robot wisdom’ ” lets you glimpse some of the recognized impact of Barger’s Cliche Watching.
Apparently partners.nytimes.com doesn’t work anymore. If you need to get to some of the previous New York Times links I’ve posted, reportedly you can use www10.nytimes.com. I can’t tell if these things are functional because I’m a registered NYT reader (and I don’t think, in this case, that’s such a bad thing), so they let me in on anything that redirects to nytimes.com itself. Thanks for readers informing me of links that don’t work for them…
The news doesn’t have to be logged, but I think the quote does:
“We have caught the first glimpses of our instruction book,
previously known only to God.”
–Dr. Francis S. Collins, director of the National Human
Genome Research Institute.
The Halfbakery, a repository of all things halfbaked. “Whatever you can think of.”
Supreme Court declines to hear appeal of denial of law license to white supremacist. “…(The) leader of the segregationist World Church
of the Creator was denied a law license last summer even though he
graduated from Southern Illinois University’s law school and passed the state
bar exam.
State bar officials noted that Hale had “dedicated his life to inciting racial
hatred,” and said he could not “do this as an officer of the court.”
I Was Certain, But I Was Dead Wrong. Any conviction based on the sole evidence of one eyewitness, no matter how competent and confident, can be a mistake. Commentary in the aftermath of the execution in Texas of Gary Graham.
The American Civil Liberties Union reacts to the completion of the human genome map with a warning about the urgency of legislation against genetic discrimination.
Greenpeace press release: Greenpeace Installs Webcam At The End Of France’s
Nuclear Reprocessing Discharge Pipe ‘To Open The Eyes
Of Governments’
The Register: Sony to unveil Palm-based multimedia handheld, according to the WSJ, which apparently got a sneak preview. With a slot for a memory stick and possibly a Handspring-like Springboard expansion slot for modem etc., “The Sony device will weigh a light 5.3 ounces, be narrower than the
stylish Palm V and thinner than the Palm III, and come in
black-and-white as well as color versions,” explained an unusually
gushing Journal. It also boasts a “JogDial scrolling and highlighting
button that allows users to manoeuvre the screen with one hand”.
St. Louis Riverfront Times: Not Just Another Pin-up in the Ste. Genevieve County Jail. In a bid for an interview scoop, St. Louis TV reporter Deanne Lane sent a handwritten letter and a postcard-sized color photo of herself to convicted and incarcerated serial rapist Dennis Rabbitt, now serving several consecutive life sentences after pleading guilty to sexual assaults on 14 women. “Think about it. Sending a picture of yourself to a sex offender
— what do you think he’s gonna do with it? It was just gross,”
says Rabbitt’s attorney. “Dennis thought it was ridiculous. Dennis gave
it to me. He said, ‘This is what I got. You keep it.’ He thought
it was silly. He was unimpressed.”
Asked about the handwritten letter and the photo, Lane is
foggy on details. “I don’t recall that,” she says when asked
whether she included a photo with her letter to Rabbitt.
Norman Mailer to draw cartoons for the New York Observer. “They’re somewhere between Feiffer and Picasso,”
Observer editor-in-chief Peter Kaplan says. “There is a nuance to them that is a
little darker and a little more intense than the average
cartoon. They look like they were done by a
novelist.”
Helping Parents Choose Wrong. Op-ed piece in The New York Times by Patrick Murphy, public guardian of Cook County IL, decries the bill just passed by the New York State legislature allowing legally sanctioned abandonment of newborns:
I work at the bottom of the judicial food chain, in juvenile
court, and the clients I represent there, abused and
neglected children, have the least clout of any in the legal
system. Daily I see their lives laid waste. In some cases it is
inevitable: what some parents do to children cannot be
undone by social workers, judges and lawyers. But too often
the misused influence of politicians and interest groups is
causing unintended misery.
But IMHO his opposition is for the wrong reasons — he mainly fears the discouragement of the adoption process. I think the problem with the law is, first and foremost, that it strips away any remaining residue of responsibility, thoughtfulness or obligation from the decision to have a child. It should be thought of as one of those benchmarks by which we measure the worth of our society, like several others I can think of off the top of my head — our incarceration rate; our eagerness for state-sanctioned murder; and our glorification of the mediocre and unthinking insofar as someone like George Dubya leads the pack for President. Just for starters.
New York Times: A Magic Carpet of Cultures in London In a much more vibrant and fertile way than, say, in New York or LA, multiculturalism pervades London’s cultural life. Maybe it comes of being an erstwhile colonial power?
But unlike before, the purveyors of diversity are more than
suppliers. They choose not to be possessed but to possess,
and to move beyond becoming just another choice for the
insatiably greedy white consumer. The “ethnic minorities”
are beginning to redefine the very essence of what it means
to be a Londoner.
Seeing Drugs as a Choice or as a Brain Anomaly. Psychiatrists debate whether the brains of abusers are malfunctioning badly enough to make their actions nonvolitional. Brain changes in heavy chronic drug users are easy to demonstrate, but when do they cross the line to being considered responsible for alterations in behavior, or worthy of being called a disease? Ramifications are legal and fiscal as well as medical, of course. [New York Times]
EPIC Testimony on Use and Misuse of the Social Security Number. Mark Rotenberg, executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, testified before a subcommittee of the House Ways and Means Committee on May 11.
In conclusion, there is clear authority in both legislation and judicial opinion that supports the enactment of further laws to limit the collection and use of the
Social Security Number. It is particularly important that such legislation not force consumers to make unfair or unreasonable “choices” that essentially
require trading the privacy interest in the SSN for some benefit or opportunity.
What’s News at Junkbusters. “This page is updated frequently, for the benefit of both reporters and consumers who want to keep posted on current events affecting
their privacy. ”
Wired: New York Times Site Exposes CIA Agents. “A freedom of information activist plans to publish online a classified CIA document that was pulled from The
New York Times‘ site after newspaper officials learned it exposed the identities of Iranians involved in the
1953 U.S. and British-backed coup that overthrew Iran’s elected officials.
The Times used the graphic to accompany an article detailing the coup. In a technical glitch, those who
visited the Times website on June 16 were able to read the names of the agents when they downloaded
the graphic.”
Wired: Amazon to Break Embargo on early sales of fourth Harry Potter book, slated for July 8th release and inspiring booksellers’ dreams of dollar signs and ringing cash registers.
Oh my, Dr. Laura says her feelings have been hurt by those nasty homosexuals trying to axe her upcoming TV show. “I’ve cried more at times than I would like to admit,” Schlessinger told Time magazine. “It’s been agonizing.” But she also persisted: “Not being able to relate normally to a member of the opposite sex is some kind of error. We were biologically meant
to give birth to more people.”
In Gamble, U.S. Supports Russian Germ Warfare Scientists. U.S. support is massively endowing the careers of some 2200 scientists at more than 30 institutions throughout the former Soviet Union. It might not be an oversimplification to say that we are buying them out mostly to prevent them from selling their expertise to some notorious “rogue state”.
Feed: Street Level, the brave new world of urban mapping. “New York City and Los Angeles,
already seen as the epicenters of American narcissism, are
getting to know themselves a lot better these days. With
sophisticated computer simulation and mapping projects
underway, they’ll soon know themselves down to the square
foot. Both maps will integrate aerial photos with data gathered
from city agencies, utilities, and developers, and will be
continuously updated in years hence.” Among other consequences, the maps, it is claimed, will make for “one-stop shopping” for potential terrorists.
The Jerusalem Report is amused as Islamists attack apparent hidden anti-Islamic messages in multinational brand name advertising.
Squall: Blowing the lid on the Bilderberg conference: “You’d imagine that if the President of the World Bank, the director of the World Trade
Organisation, the Queen of the Netherlands and the head of the Xerox Corporation were
amongst the delegates at an international conference, there would be some mention of it in
the media.
But then again this is the annual meeting of the highly influential and highly secretive
Bilderberg Group, a collection of top ranking western politicians, media moguls, corporate
presidents and big bankers who meet at a different location each year to conduct
clandestine talks on the furthering of global capitalism. Every delegate, including a handful
of carefully selected journalists, are sworn to secrecy.”
Fetus Develops Taste for Food in the Womb. It appears that exposure to
flavors either through amniotic fluid or in breast milk can influence a child’s food preferences.
APB news: Satanists Suspected in Theft of General’s Skull
A satanist likely is to blame for the theft of a Civil War general’s skull from a Rochester cemetery during
this week’s summer solstice, police said today.
Fading aroma. The gene pool of wild arabica coffee plants is under threat. Over 90% of the coffee we drink is arabica, and the highland forests of Ethiopia from which it originates, and where wild coffee plants make up most of the underbrush, have lost more than half of their trees in the past 30 years. When cultivated coffee on plantations outside Ethiopia is devastated by the diseases from which they are in peril, breeders turn to the Ethiopian gene pool for help.
Fetus Develops Taste for Food in the Womb. It appears that exposure to
flavors either through amniotic fluid or in breast milk can influence a child’s food preferences.
Slate: The Sultans of Stats – A Harvard professor pooh-poohs McGwire’s records. Is he right? I’ve suspected this was true; here is the best articulation of it. “Home runs can’t be as meaningful as they once were if
Steve Finley is on pace to hit more in a season than Reggie
Jackson ever did. But it is also irrelevant. Baseball history,
even as the purists who complain about today’s cheapened
offensive statistics construct it, is little more than a record of
inflated achievement. Insane numbers don’t threaten the
integrity of baseball’s historical accomplishments. They
constitute it.”
Matthew Rossi, in the excellent and maniacal (!) Once I Noticed I Was on Fire, I Decided to Relax and Enjoy the Fall, on weblogging:
Lately, it seems as though you might as soon admit to consorting with Lucifer
as maintaining one of these sites. Everyone’s tired of it, it seems. Everyone’s
sick of the link economy, or the cookie cutter nature of 9/10’s of the content of
these ‘blogs’ as people have taken to calling them. Everyone wants to get
back to the purity of maintaining a site just for them.Well, not me, baby. Me and my diseased imagination are gonna keep on
keeping on till they pry our cold dead fingers away from the keys. Let me bare
myself to my limited readership for an instant; I am fully aware of how unique I
am, and I like it. I like that I’m smart. I like that I’m erudite. I like that I read
and think about what I read and melt my disparate reading into mental alloy. I
am, in short, not all that humble about this page, or what it is I do on it. Is it
Earth-Shattering? Nope. Does anyone care? Well, a few people do, and
they’ve been very nice about it. To everyone who has bothered to come by and
send me a nice email, I thank you kindly. Your simple generosity has been
appreciated.But I do not do this for you, and I never did. Go back in the archives and
look. I was rampaging along the edges of the sanity borderlands well before
anyone was linked to me, before anyone read a damn thing I had to say, and
I’ll be doing it as long as there’s a cheap and easy way for me to screed out
these demented babblings without having to work too hard at coding.
vnunet.com: Deserted domains to go under the
hammer. “Hundreds of thousands of domain names that have been
abandoned by their owners will be sold in an auction next
week, and there might be some real bargains on offer.
On Wednesday, US domain name registrar Network Solutions
will run the first ever auction of its kind, which will include
.com, .net and .org domains and could be the internet sale of
the century because a ceiling of just $35 has been set on
each name.”
I’m sure everyone’s heard this already, but it’s too exciting not to log. Signs of Recent Water Flow Spotted by a Mars Orbiter: “A
spacecraft orbiting Mars has
sighted grooved surface features
suggesting a relatively recent water
flow on the planet, a finding that
could redirect efforts to find
evidence of past or present life
there, experts said today.” [New York Times]
Greil Marcus profiles Sleater-Kinney, with audio clips. Courtney Love, in her recent critique of the music industry, cited them as one of the bands too good not to be heard.
Protesters “Just Do It” Again to Nike [New York Times]
Among the Deaf, Sign Language Faces a Challenge. In face of burgeoning acceptance of ASL, critics say
the overreliance on sign
language fosters a kind of false pride in deaf separatism. The consequences include needless academic impairments. [New York Times]
CBS News: Harry Potter’s Magical Print Run: 1.5M
“We have certainly never
heard of anyone else doing
such a large first print of a
book, children’s or
otherwise,” said Sarah
Odedina, editorial director of
children’s books at the
London-based publishers.
This meme is being propagated rapidly through the weblogging world (if you want to call it a meme). The do.some.good bookmarklet (linked to the left) opens browser windows for four donation sites — the
Hunger Site, Click for a Cause, The Rainforest Site,
and Clear Landmines —
with one click. Just go to each, click to donate,
and close the window. Drag the “do.some.good” link to the personal toolbar on your
browser and click on it daily to do.some.good with ease. [via Rebecca Blood]
An Apple a Day may be a better antioxidant than high-dose vitamin C.
Mean and green. Viruses given a gene for a toxin from one of the world’s deadliest spiders could replace chemical pesticides, say
researchers…When the modified baculovirus infects an
insect, the insect’s cells should start to produce the toxin, killing it faster than wild viruses.” ?Famous last words: ” Because the host dies
quickly, before much virus can replicate, the modified virus shouldn’t persist in the environment, say the
researchers.” [New Scientist]
“Left Behind”: Superficially Christian. Christian editor Michael G. Maudlin and theology professor Randall Balmer agree that this bestselling millennial pulp fiction series turns the Book of Revelation to “camp Christianity.” Along the way, they explain end-times theology to unbelievers.
Remote-Control Assassination. The improvement in precision of GPS now available to private citizens allows missile targeting of individuals by would-be assassins, says Robert Wright in Slate. Weblogger David Brake, who also knows something about location technology, thinks the Slate article isn’t worth much.
Happy Summer Solstice! At 01:48 Universal Time today the Sun reaches its northernmost point in the sky.
Nearing Diagnosis Of Alzheimer’s In Living Patients. A test for the first time promises to allow radiological visualization of Alzheimer’s plaques in living patients. Until now, the diagnosis has been presumptive until autopsy reveals the plaques.
The Nation cover story depicts David Horowitz’s Long March from Ramparts editor and major Black Panthers white liaison, to combatant against “political correctness”, to chief Republican strategist.
Aim Low by Yossi Klein Halevi. New Republic commentator argues that the prospects for Arab-Israeli peace are slim, that Assad’s death will not improve relations with Syria, and that Israel should have “a
government without great expectations, inward-looking
and aware of its limits: a government of national
humility.”
Slate: Rogue State Contest Winners
Politics makes strange bedfellows, but apparently no one can stand sleeping with Buchanan for long…
Why is the Lockerbie trial being ignored by the media?
“The Lockerbie case is probably the most interesting and
important criminal trial taking place anywhere in the world. But
you’re not likely to be reading or hearing very much about it in
the weeks and months to come.” [The Guardian]