Monday, February 28, 2011

EDUCATION Creationists trying again


The Scopes strategy: creationists try new tactics to promote anti-evolutionary teaching in public schools. Under the guise of "academic freedom" creationists are co-opting some old heroes of the fight to teach evolution in the classroom for their anti-science campaign


Tuesday, February 22, 2011

ECONOMY Market Crah Predicted around Christmas 2011

SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif. (MarketWatch) — Politicians lie. Bankers lie. Yes, they’re liars. But they’re not bad, it’s in their genes, inherited. Their brains are wired that way, warn scientists. Like addicts, they can’t help themselves. They want to sell stuff, get rich.

Saturday, January 15, 2011

IGNORANCE A Dialog With Conspiracy Nuts

Alice, Meet the Stupids Family

Shortly after the anniversary of he 9/11 attack, a writer had submitted an article calling for the nation to come together in the same spirit as had motivated us immediately following the actual attack, in 2001.
Apparently totally unable to focus on that content, a number of individuals reverted once again to try to prove that attack was a U,S. Government conspiracy. This is the dialog  between myself and a number of the advocates of this theory, taken directly from the comments appearing at that time. The term “Author,” is, at all times, referring to my comments or responses.

EMPLOYMENT - Job Growth

Where the Jobs Are - 2011

Sunday, January 9, 2011

POLITICS - Obama Administration

Misery With Plenty of Company - NYTimes.com

CRIME - Shooting: Rep Gifford Critical 6 Dead, 12 Wounded

Gabrielle Giffords shooting in Tucson: Did it stem from state of political discourse?

Pardon me for a totally different take on this whole situation, Tragic? Of course. But trying to pin the cause on Tea Party, Palin, Beck, et al, is absurd. There will always be crazies. People talking to voices, or seeing Hitler marching down the street. 

All of us rightfully worry about the surveillance under which we live, justified by the flimsiest of government justifications. Founders, in their constructing the Constitution, did not in their wildest dreams, have any idea of how the Fourth Amendment could possibly fail to protect the privacy of citizens.  Stifling the hate purveyors who dominate much of the media is no guarantee of protection against the crazies.  As a nation, we must somehow find the balance between the technological protections available to us, versus are right to be free from the prying eyes of government.

This will always be a constantly shifting and ever changing fine edge balanced between remaining unseen and unknown, against the protection which professionally managed technology can provide. if for example, YouTube had a built-in capability to identify word or audio combinations suggested in that the submittal was by someone who was potentially dangerous, we might have been warned in advance that this assailant was someone who should be carefully monitored.  Yet, all of us are concerned, and rightfully so, that the NSA has the technological capability, and engages in precisely the same activity, deployed against American citizens.

Does any of this answer the question of privacy?  No.  That said, it is that question which should be asked.

Saturday, January 8, 2011

OPED Revising history through writing

WHEN the new House of Representatives convened on Thursday, the Republican leadership kept its promise to start the session by reading the text of the Constitution aloud. This break from Congressional tradition had a polemical purpose: Representative Robert Goodlatte, the Virginia Republican who came up with the idea, remarked that “lots of my constituents have said that Congress has gone beyond its powers granted in the Constitution.

OPED Revising history through writing

WHEN the new House of Representatives convened on Thursday, the Republican leadership kept its promise to start the session by reading the text of the Constitution aloud. This break from Congressional tradition had a polemical purpose: Representative Robert Goodlatte, the Virginia Republican who came up with the idea, remarked that “lots of my constituents have said that Congress has gone beyond its powers granted in the Constitution.

CRIME Nebraska School Shooting

The new year is barely a week old, but the nation has already recorded its first deadly school shooting. 

On Wednesday, a 17-year-old student opened fire at Millard South High School in Omaha, sending students rushing to the kitchen to seek safety. The vice principal, Vicki Kaspar, was killed and the principal, Curtis Case, was seriously injured. The gunman, Robert Butler Jr., was later found dead in a car not far from the school, an apparent suicide.

POLITICS - Gibbs Leaves

Robert Gibbs: How the press secretary changed, and who will follow him

ECONOMY - UNEMPLOYMENT

The Job Market -- A lost Decade

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Anonymity and the Dark Side of the Internet

"[Recently written] is a new set of essays on the dark side of the Internet titled 'The Offensive Internet.'The question that drives the volume is 'what can be done about irresponsible information' spread by the Internet, a medium that allows slander to 'be done with a few keystrokes, with complete anonymity, and . . . with no fear that the Internet provider on whose website the slur is found will somehow be held responsible for incorrect . . . or defamatory statements'? In the course of the volume the Internet is characterized as a cesspool, a porn store, a form of pinkeye, a raunchy fraternity, a graffiti–filled bathroom wall, a haven for sociopaths, and the breeder of online mobs who are no better than 'masked Klan members' in their determination to 'interfere with victims’ basic rights.'”

Monday, January 3, 2011

Thursday, December 30, 2010

Conservative or Liberal? Workspace Reveals All

Your office or bedroom holds telltale signs of whether you are a conservative or a liberal, finds a new study. While political conservatives tend to keep a tidy, organized office, political liberals favor colorful, more stylish but cluttered spaces.

Wednesday, December 29, 2010

THE TRUTH WEARS OFF

Is there something wrong with the scientific method?

An across the boards decline in the significance of well accepted research is examined and explained


Read more http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2010/12/13/101213fa_fact_lehrer#ixzz19W1q1YEF

The Jobs Crisis

The recession has been over for more than a year now, but so many people are out of work that it doesn’t feel like much of a recovery. In November, the economy added just thirty-nine thousand jobs. The failure to translate G.D.P. growth into job growth has given us an unemployment rate that remains near ten per cent (twice what it was in 2007), and has swelled the ranks of the long-term unemployed

Read more http://www.newyorker.com/talk/financial/2011/01/03/110103ta_talk_surowiecki#ixzz19VsFbz65

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

In Pursuit of a Mind Map, Slice by Slice

brain neurosciene A new and tremendously expensive research project is underway designed to eventually provide neuroscientists with an understanding of how the brain is wired.

The Data and the Reality

Maybe they’ve stumbled onto something in their windowless rooms. Maybe the economy really is gathering steam. But in the rough and tumble of the real world, where families have to feed themselves and pay their bills, there are an awful lot of Americans being left behind.

Cheaters Find an Adversary in Technology

Company uses "Data Forensics to identify cheating students and teachers

Monday, December 27, 2010

In ‘Daily Show’ Role on 9/11 Bill, Echoes of Murrow

Jon Stewart New Edward R. Murrow?  
Demonstrated by role in passage of 9/11 1st Responder Bill

Smart Pen -- Interesting idea

Here it is, a really interesting extension of the much older digital pen. This one requires no special paper, and records voices. It can also be sent as email to others. 


While working at Earthlink, somewhere around 2002, I had an early version of this kind of pen, but it required special paper, which was relatively expensive, and had no audio playback. I recall losing it , which was  monetarily expensive loss, but no loss in terms of usefulness.

Sunday, December 26, 2010

Obama's insular White House worries his allies

The president famously relies on a tight circle of advisors. But with Republicans running the House next year, many say Obama will need some new faces to convey a new message.

Saturday, December 25, 2010

Obama's Hawaii vacation mixes golf with such topics as arms pact and reelection

"Recharging the presidential batteries"
KAILUA, HAWAII - Almost immediately after he walked off Air Force One early Thursday morning, a relaxed-looking President Obamahad a green lei around his neck and a smile on his face

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Computers That Trade on the News

Wall Street Traders Using Text Analysis Tools


The number-crunchers on Wall Street are starting to crunch something else: the news.
Math-loving traders are using powerful computers to speed-read news reports, editorials, company Web sites, blog posts and evenTwitter messages — and then letting the machines decide what it all means for the markets

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

A Hacker's perspective on WikiLeks

The Hazards of Nerd Supremacy: The Case of WikiLeaks

Big government not the cause of economic problems

Robert Reich tells us what we already knew.


he tax deal negotiated between the president and Republicans is the latest version of trickle-down economics. It also confirms the Republican story of what happened to the economy and how to fix it: The bad economy is big government's fault, and the solution is to shrink government.

Life and Death Decisions Weigh on Junior Officers

QURGHAN TAPA, Afghanistan — The hill wasn’t much to behold, just a treeless mound of dirt barely 80 feet high. But for Talibanfighters, it was a favorite spot for launching rockets into Imam Sahib city. Ideal, American commanders figured, for the insurgents to disrupt the coming parliamentary elections

Monday, December 20, 2010

Obama has strong first-half finish

President Obama ends his first two years with image-altering successes; the next two may prove more frustrating.

Obama/Big Brother

Big Brother is watching you’. Yet another move toward a totalitariangovernment has secretly occurred that bears ominous signals for personal freedom. Barack Obama is demanding access to the Internet records of average citizens, in secret, and without court review.

Sunday, December 19, 2010

America's New Mercenaries

America's New Mercenaries

As American commanders meet this week for the Afghanistan review, Obama is hiring military contractors at a rate that would make Bush blush.

Politics in Iraq Casts Doubt on a U.S. Presence After 2011 - NYTimes.com

Politics in Iraq Casts Doubt on a U.S. Presence After 2011 - NYTimes.com
BAGHDAD — The protracted political turmoil that saw the resurgence of a fiercely anti-American political bloc here is casting new doubt on establishing any enduring American military role in Iraq after the last of nearly 50,000 troops are scheduled to withdraw in the next 12 months, military and administration officials say.

Saturday, December 18, 2010

'Don't ask, don't tell' bill clears Senate procedural vote

'Don't ask, don't tell' bill clears Senate procedural vote

The Senate voted Saturday to proceed to debate on a bill ending the military's "don't ask, don't tell" policy, putting the campaign to end the ban on gay men and lesbians one vote away from completion.
Senators voted 63 to 33 go proceed to debate on the bill. Fifty-seven members of the Senate Democratic caucus and six Republicans -- Sens.Scott Brown (Mass.), Susan Collins (Maine), Mark Kirk (Ill.), Lisa Murkowski (Alaska), Olympia Snowe (Maine) and George Voinovich(Ohio) -- voted yes. Four senators -- Jim Bunning (R-Ky.), Judd Gregg(R-N.H.), Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) and Joe Manchin III (D-W. Va.) -- did not vote.

Carpentry among industries that aren't rebounding after recession

Carpentry among industries that aren't rebounding after recession

IN LAS VEGAS -- Every day in this desert city, the carpenters climb into their pickups and vans, resumes stacked on the passenger seats, driving first to the union hall, then in circles from one chain-linked construction site to another, asking for work.

For a year or more, it has been the same.

Nothing.

If they keep pursuing work as carpenters, in fact, many of them may never find a job.

Friday, December 17, 2010

Amazing Word Frequency Viewer

Compare Frequency Occurrences of any word or phrase from the Middle Ages until today!

"Scholars interested in topics such as philosophy, religion, politics, art and language have employed qualitative approaches such as literary and critical analysis with great success. As more of the world’s literature becomes available online, it’s increasingly possible to apply quantitative methods to complement that research. So today Will Brockman and I are happy to announce a new visualization tool called the Google Books Ngram Viewer, available on Google Labs. We’re also making the datasets backing the Ngram Viewer, produced by Matthew Gray and intern Yuan K. Shen, freely downloadable so that scholars will be able to create replicable experiments in the style of traditional scientific discovery.

Thursday, December 16, 2010

US spy agencies paint grim picture of Afghan war

US spy agencies paint grim picture of Afghan war


Two reports produced by US intelligence agencies sharply contradict the American military's claims of success in the nine-year-old war in Afghanistan.

The National Intelligence Estimates on Afghanistan and Pakistan were recently presented in secret to members of the Senate and House intelligence committees. They represent the consensus view of Washington's 16 separate intelligence agencies, led by the Central Intelligence Agency, the National Security Agency, the State Department and the various arms of military intelligence.

6 Ways to Boost Brain Power:

6 Ways to Boost Brain Power:

Scientific American Reports

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Scientists Gain Insights into How to Erase Pathological Fear

Scientists Gain Insights into How to Erase Pathological Fear

An OpEd "In Defense of Secrecy"

After using as an example a newspaper revelation of a satellite phone used by Osama bin Laden, the author takes the position that among the limitations on First Amendment rights, should be a requirement that classified information cannot be freely revealed.

Quoted from this article, is the rationale used by the author to support his contention that free speech limitation is justified:

The most common argument is that protecting information, and prosecuting offenders, is a violation of free speech. That is simply not true. The Supreme Court has never upheld First Amendment absolutism. There are legal and reasonable restrictions on what people are allowed to say, print, or broadcast. It is illegal to incite a mob to violence. It is illegal to libel others. It is illegal to make false claims in advertising about a product. It is illegal to utter profanity on broadcast television or radio. And it is, in fact, illegal to reveal information that would cause immediate harm to U.S. national security. This was uncontroversial during World War II, when sailors and their families were routinely trained that "loose lips sink ships."
More Americans Say They're Cybercrime Victims
Americans are nearly as likely to be victimized by an Internet-based crime as they are of other forms of nonviolent theft. At least that's the perceptions expressed by Americans when asked about crimes committed against themselves and their families.