Experimenting with an airplane engine while in flight.
Reflections on Three Mile Island 30 years later, by Fred Bortz, Science Blog.
big on love, tolerance, and the human potential
Experimenting with an airplane engine while in flight.
Reflections on Three Mile Island 30 years later, by Fred Bortz, Science Blog.
The Bush McCain-Palin Pension Plan:
Just months before the start of last year’s stock market collapse, the federal agency that insures the retirement funds of 44 million Americans departed from its conservative investment strategy and decided to put much of its $64 billion insurance fund into stocks.
Switching from a heavy reliance on bonds, the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation decided to pour billions of dollars into speculative investments such as stocks in emerging foreign markets, real estate, and private equity funds.
The agency refused to say how much of the new investment strategy has been implemented or how the fund has fared during the downturn. The agency would only say that its fund was down 6.5 percent – and all of its stock-related investments were down 23 percent – as of last Sept. 30, the end of its fiscal year. But that was before most of the recent stock market decline and just before the investment switch was scheduled to begin in earnest.
No statistics on the fund’s subsequent performance were released. [link]
We’re lucky the Wall Street ‘free market’ busted just prior to moving our entire government to New York.
The last suckers:
“…the main takeaway here is the roughly $500 billion in underfunded private pension plans… in this financial Armageddon, there isn’t a model that hasn’t been laid to waste.”
A vast number, maybe even a majority of U.S. private equity firms, owe their existence to CalPERS. Exxon Mobil filed a lawsuit against Northern Trust alleging a breach of fiduciary responsibility, investing funds “recklessly and imprudently, by acting disloyally and causing massive losses.” This type of lawsuit may be a seachange in terms of corporate pension funds, who are on the hook for massive losses, turning their anger toward Wall Street.
Economic upswing needed here perhaps?
Nearly 1/3 of women over 65 will fall every year, and the rate goes up with age.
The risk for men is somewhat less but still substantial.
Although hip fractures are the classic disastrous consequence of falls, head injuries and back injuries can also occur.
These incidents can set people on the path to long-term decline and disability.
What’s needed to help revive the economy? Thoughtfulness about people’s physical environment…
Remarkable. The pool of customers shrinks but the price doubles.
Health care costs doubled from 1996 to 2006, but more are being left out of the health care system than ever before.
An estimated 87 million people — one in every three Americans under the age of 65 — were uninsured.
And blacklists are everywhere, pumping margins.
Trying to buy health insurance on your own and have gallstones? You’ll automatically be denied coverage. Rheumatoid arthritis? Automatic denial. Severe acne? Probably denied. Do you take Metformin, a popular drug for diabetes? Denied. Use the anti-clotting drug Plavix or Seroquel, prescribed for anti-psychotic or sleep problems? Forget about it.
First, do no harm to the health care provider’s income.
Our culture of raiders truly needs strong challenge. Our corporations are resources to be well managed rather than prizes to be pillaged.
Simon Caulkin: It’s time to explode the myth of the shareholder | Observer
“the entire notion of the shareholder has to be rethought.
“In an age when a listed company’s share register suffers 90% churn each year, the very concept of “the shareholder” dissolves, corporate governance expert Professor Bob Garratt told a recent meeting of the Human Capital Forum. Calling for a ‘cultural and behavioral transformation’, Garratt declared that the first duty of directors was not to shareholders, but to the company itself.
“…to move from agency theory to stewardship theory…”
In contrast to our nervous daze:
India stands on the cusp of a revolution.
There is optimism all-round and in certain quarters, even fear of the growing prowess of India. This is a good start, but only the first step in what is a long journey. This is an opportunity for change and growth that we in India can simply not afford to lose.
There are a billion dreams at stake.
So, these are my suggestions to you. The goal is not to find fault with what is happening. Rather, it is to provide specific inputs so that you and your government can continue to catalyse the positive forces that have been unleashed in the marketplace.
And what of our 300,000,000 dreams?
From seekingAlpha, “We still have not seen any of the real villains of this crisis be brought to justice.”
If a person murders another they can get the death penalty. But if a banker is responsible for fraud causing trillions of dollars of losses, affecting millions of people, the bankers claim ignorance.
And they not only get to keep their bonuses that were collected illegally, but they aren’t charged with any criminal activity.
Only in America will you see this. This isn’t allowed in Japan, Canada, or Europe. And it certainly isn’t allowed in China.
Perhaps many of you have forgotten the dotcom charade. I certainly haven’t. Thousands of people should be in prison, from Wall Street analysts and bankers involved in irresponsible IPOs, to executives and others involved in insider trading. But only a few were indicted.
Most likely, this current crisis will share a similar fate because the media will continue to distract attention away from the real criminals and focus on Madoff and Stanford. But remember, neither had anything to do with the banking crisis.
This is a character line of Sherlock Holmes:
“Sometimes in this life you meet people who you see as ‘large soul’ which are a privilege to know.”
These are not a criminal mind nor would they seek your loss or want your prize.
Foreboding ash of Alaska’s Redoubt Volcano.
Gallery at Alaska Daily News.
Reader’s pics here.
Time lapse video here.
Volcano Observatory Alert site.
Don’t sneer at science — volcano monitoring saves lives.
Alaska Republican Senator asks Congress to fund volcano monitoring.
The NYTimes says the fate of New Orleans has yet to be determined. Imagine the error.
The essay continues by pointing out “Los Angeles has the most talented cluster of architects practicing anywhere in the United States, and at one point or another most of them have invested significant brain power in figuring out how to remake Wilshire Boulevard.” One street, no action.
The Bronx? Decades slip by while arguing. The Rust Belt? Homeland Security is active.
A concrete proposal is to create a National Infrastructure Bank with no other purpose than to do something concrete.
A half-century ago American engineering was the envy of the rest of the world. Cities like New York, Los Angeles and New Orleans were considered models for a brilliant new future. Europe, with its suffocating traditions and historical baggage, was dismissed as a decadent, aging culture.
It is no small paradox that many people in the world now see us in similar terms.
It is a truism that almost any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so, and will follow it by suppressing opposition, subverting all education to seize early the minds of the young, and by killing, locking up, or driving underground all heretics. – Robert A. Heinlein, via TumTumblr
Will knowledge ultimately tear us apart?
When we go online, each of us is our own editor, our own gatekeeper. We select the kind of news and opinions that we care most about….Nicholas Negroponte of M.I.T. has called this emerging news product The Daily Me. And if that’s the trend, God save us from ourselves…
That’s because there’s pretty good evidence that we generally don’t truly want good information — but rather information that confirms our prejudices.
We may believe intellectually in the clash of opinions, but in practice we like to embed ourselves in the reassuring womb of an echo chamber.
One of last year’s more fascinating books was Bill Bishop’s “The Big Sort: Why the Clustering of Like-Minded America is Tearing Us Apart.” He argues that Americans increasingly are segregating themselves into communities, clubs and churches where they are surrounded by people who think the way they do…
The nation grows more politically segregated — and the benefit that ought to come with having a variety of opinions is lost to the righteousness that is the special entitlement of homogeneous groups…
The result is polarization and intolerance.
Look. This is a good example of politicians pulling your chain.
Take the phrase “universal health care”. We’ve been using the term for many years. It means a national health plan. Pro or con, for or against, when we say “universal” we argue about a regulated national plan.
To manipulate sound bites, Republicans are now trumpeting “universal”. The proposal just announced uses “universal” no fewer than seven times in one press release!
That’s rude. That’s wrong. That’s con.
They’re promoting universal access to purchase an insurance policy from lobbyist friends on The Street. That’s the hitch.
Republicans argue for the mystical free market while the Miami Herald uncovered insurance brokers are trained to cherry pick patients. Oh, profits! As if paying billions in commissions is better for us than paying public employees.
You decide. It’s a margin call.
Jonah Lehrer reports on men vs. women: “Let’s begin with that perdurable cliche about female intuition. My own hunch is that women got associated with intuition, emotionality and all those other “irrational” aspects of cognition simply because that was a way of demeaning the female brain.
“Is there a difference between the male and female brain when it comes to decision-making?
“My own guess is that future work on gender differences will find plenty of additional ways to distinguish the male and female brain. But these differences won’t be reducible to trite, general truisms, such as “women are more intuitive” or “men are better at abstract thought”.
“When it comes to the brain, cliches are never true.”
Dereck Bownds reports: “Even for one of the smallest muscles in a mouse, the wiring diagram differs between two individuals, and even between the left and right sides of the same mouse.”
We each are various.
And perdurable.
So worried about bankrupt newspapers? The average American adult spends eight hours a day in front of screens. Ink never gained as much.
There’s nothing new in any of this. It merely affirms what many of us already know.
The fact is that people in management right across the media simply don’t read.
Ironic isn’t it? And if they did, then they would have seen this coming a long time ago and moved to a safe haven. And yet it has nothing to do with the recession. The recession is merely going to hurry it along.
Discovering treachery where we were expecting good faith is provoking millions of us to anger. Wall Street and others try to calm us as they feign ignorance or blame complexity or turn to scapegoats.
We’ll be stronger if we face disappointment and demand better policies. We’re vulnerable if we rage into a mob. Populism is for Losers. “Populism is against. It can’t exist without an enemy, and is seldom able to create much beyond anger, misery and grief.”
We should be sure opinions are truly our own. We should warn ourselves if we blame groups or types or cadre. These are always abstract, ghosts in our mind only.
Our tomorrow is repair and not revenge, a better snarl.
Comments as folks are facing a national guile are what comments should always be.
The EPA is all over Earth Day, cites the White House.
Send in your videos and photos of what you’ve done to help your little corner of the earth, or just a little corner of the earth you admire, and the EPA will feature them.
Come Home, America:
The Rise and Fall (and Redeeming Promise) of Our Country
“We’re at a break point in our history,” he said. “And it’s not just the financial system, although that’s front and center. It’s the deteriorated economy, it’s militarism looking out in the world, trying to find the next war. It’s a lot of things coming at us, all at once. I believe, on the other side of all of these adversities, we can become a better country.
But to make that happen, Greider thinks, “People at large, I don’t care whether they’re middle class or upper class or working poor or union, non-union, have to find ways to come together themselves, perhaps in very small groups at first, and talk about their own stuff. Their experiences, their ideas their convictions, their aspirations for the country, themselves, their families, and then broaden out a bit, laterally. And have more people in the discussion. They don’t have to become a giant organization, but they have to convince themselves that they’re citizens…
“That’s kind of the mystery of democracy. People get power if they believe they’re entitled to power.
“America the Possible,” he calls it.
A Scientologist is chief of Sarah Palin’s 2012 campaign. What do you get when voodoo meets Xenu?
Several links at Metafilter’s ‘Perfect Storm of Stupid‘.
Sarah Palin understands the importance of religion in politics. That’s why the Political Action Committee preparing for her 2012 presidential bid is being run by John Coale – an OT-VII Scientologist. Coale – who switched his support from Hillary Clinton to John McCain during the 2008 campaign – originally turned to Scientology to get off drugs. He later introduced to the faith his wife – fellow attorney Greta Van Susteren. Together they assisted in the Church’s successful takeover of the Cult Awareness Network. (In her later role as a FOX News personality, Van Susteren has been an ardent defender of Palin herself.) In 1986, Coale developed a plan to help Scientology gain influence in Washington. While he reports that nothing came of it, a Scientology PAC currently operates as Citizens for Social Reform – helping to fight the Church’s war against psychiatry.
How many Americans get food poisoning each year: 87 million illnesses, 367,000 hospitalizations and 5,700 deaths.
These numbers just scratch the surface, listed only after a lab test at the CDC. Many sick people ‘just soldier on’.
Food poisoning affects roughly 25% of us every year and roughly 30% of people in industrialized countries; merely a tenth of disease is caused by salmonella. [AP rewrite of CDC data is here at Physorg]
There’s trouble in the system. Regulators respond after people are dead. Dumb.
a chlorine wash is frequently used
farm work
Should Public Health Prevention Start in the Field? : Get tough on enforcing the Occupational Health and Safety Act
StillTasty is a site of guidelines about how long to safely keep leftovers and other food handling tips. If in doubt, check it out.
Question: Are you supposed to rinse raw chicken before cooking it?
Answer: No — in fact, it’s not a good idea at all.
The United States Department of Agriculture advises against the practice of rinsing poultry or meat before cooking it. The problem is that when you rinse raw chicken, you’re allowing the bacteria that is present on the surface of the poultry to spread to everything else that’s nearby — including sink and counter surfaces, kitchen utensils and any other foods that might be within spattering range of the rinsing water.
Zeolites have always turned me on cuz of their utter elegance, meaning “It’s the shape, stupid”. Here’s folks that shape nano-aluminum to pull apart water. Has a way to go, of course, but quantum mini-refineries are fun. UWisconsin’s new way to produce hydrogen…
My favorite “What were we thinking?” chart.
