Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Why Mark Twain would be booted from Facebook

American author Mark Twain would have turned 176 today, and to celebrate, Google has decorated its homepage with an elaborate doodle, depicting a couple of boys slapping paint on a wooden fence. The boys, of course, are Tom Sawyer and a friend that he conned into whitewashing the fence. But who was Twain? Only one of the most accomplished writers in American history.

Born in 1835 in Missouri, Twain traveled widely through the American south and the west, recording his impressions for magazines and newspapers, including Harper's and the Sacramento Union. His first novel, The Gilded Age, was published in 1873, and his last, The Mysterious Stranger, in 1916, after his death. Ernest Hemingway later acknowledged that "all modern American literature comes from one book by Mark Twain called Huckleberry Finn."

All of which got us thinking: What if Mark Twain, that great chronicler of American culture, was alive today? Would he approve of today's online world? Well, maybe not. He certainly wouldn't be allowed on Facebook, especially if he refused – as he sometimes did – to go by anything other than his pen name: Mark Twain.

After all, savvy readers will remember that "Mark Twain" is an invention – a piece of riverboat slang. Twain's real name was the somewhat-less-pithy Samuel Langhorn Clemens. (True story: Before he was Twain, Clemens was often credited as "Thomas Jefferson Snodgrass.") And there's nothing that riles up Facebook more than a person – any person! – who refuses to use their real name.

Consider the peculiar case of another writer, Salman Rushdie. Rushdie recently had his account deactivated. After he sent Facebook HQ a copy of his passport, the social network reactivated the page, but forced him to use his birth name, Ahmed Rushdie. Rushdie eventually obtained a reversal, as well as an apology from the folks at the social network, but Facebook brass has stressed the importance of something called "real name culture," an idea also embraced by Google+ and several other social networks.

"Facebook has always been based on a real-name culture," Elliot Schrage, vice president of public policy at Facebook, told the New York Times. "We fundamentally believe this leads to greater accountability and a safer and more trusted environment for people who use the service." Maybe so. But it sure would have made Samuel Langhorn Clemens pretty cranky.


Why Mark Twain would be booted from Facebook

Sunday, November 27, 2011

The Average Bush Tax Cut For The 1 Percent This Year Will Be Greater Than The Average Income Of The Other 99 Percent

As Occupy Wall Street protestors continue to demonstrate across the country, congress' fiscal super committee failed to craft a deficit reduction packagedue to Republican refusal to consider tax increases on the super wealthy. In fact, the only package that the GOP officially submitted to the committee includedlowering the top tax rate from 35 percent to 28 percent, even as new research shows that the optimal top tax rate iscloser to 70 percent.

Sen. Patty Murray (D-WA), who co-chaired the super committee, explained that the major sticking point during negotiations with the GOP was what to do with the Bush tax cuts. With that in mind, the National Priorities Project points out that those tax cuts this year will give the richest 1 percent of Americans a bigger tax cut than the other 99 percent will receive in average income:

The average Bush tax cut in 2011 for a taxpayer in the richest one percent is greater than the average income of the other 99 percent ($66,384 compared to $58,506).

"The super committee failed to grapple with the extraordinarily costly Bush tax cuts for the richest—tax policies that, according to the Congressional Budget Office, cost more in added federal debt than they add in additional economic activity," explained Jo Comerford, NPP's Executive Director. Frank Knapp, vice chairman of the American Sustainable Business Council, added in a statement yesterday, "the high-end Bush tax cuts are a big part of the problem – not the solution…It's obscene to keep slashing infrastructure and services for everybody on Main Street to keep up tax giveaways for millionaires and multinational corporations."

The Bush tax cuts have done nothing but blow up the federal debt and hand billions in tax breaks to the Americans who needed them least. As a reminder, past grand bargains when it came to the budget included substantial new revenues, to balance the pain of getting the country's budget in order. Instead of adopting that approach, the GOP wants to continue lavishing tax breaks onto the 1 percent, while asking everyone else to sacrifice.


Saturday, November 26, 2011

Ralph Steadman's artwork for Alice in Wonderland takes you to Gonzoland [Alice In Wonderland]

In 1967, artist Ralph Steadman — whose freewheeling design would go on to be synonymous with Hunter S. Thompson's Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas — drew an edition of Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland. Just like Salvador DalĂ­, here was an illustrator whose style was a custom fit for Carroll's phantasmagoric fantasy world. More »
I'm seriously looking forward to reading this. 




The illegal immigrants of the USA

Submitted by: daegu
Posted at: 2011-11-25 06:40:22
See full post and comment: http://9gag.com/gag/738732






Friday, November 18, 2011

Nina Simone/ Feeling Good

I have a new idea for a story, probably a short story. It comes from the idea of waking up in a fog from a vivid dream. It also makes me think of the song Feeling Good, covered best by Nina Simone. Teasers...



Nina Simone/ Feeling Good - YouTube

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

JP Morgan Money Mismanagement

I recently had the unpleasant experience of attempting to make a withdrawal from a 401k account managed by JP Morgan. That should be the first sign that this was going to be an unpleasant experience at best. After going back and forth for over three months, I was finally able to withdraw less than half of what I was originally told. Almost every aspect of the experience was painful and felt like being taken for a ride by con men. It's no wonder the world has lost faith in our banking and investment system. With companies like this treating customers like step-children, I would hope that everyone sees the reality and decides to cut the cord as I have. They make bad investments, customers pay the price, and they write it off as market fluctuations. I no longer contribute to this system and have taken as much of my money out as they let me (there's the other big problem, it's my money) and invest in something I can hold in my hand, like silver or gold.

Then they have the nerve to ask me to complete a customer satisfaction survey. Open the floodgates:

Taking over three months to complete a withdrawal is beyond unacceptable. Working with a business that consistently fails to communicate status of a withdrawal or even acknowledges responsibility for failures in communication is also a serious let-down to the customer. I will say that the initial people who answer the phones are friendly, courteous, and apologetic for the failures of the company and other departments which refuse to speak directly to the customers. That was the only part of my interaction with the company that was not a completely miserable experience.

Given the overall displeasure with the banking and financial industry, I would think that this business would want to make all efforts to maintain customer satisfaction and trust. Maybe that's not a part of the mission statement anymore? The retirement planning division also needs to recognize that customers CHOOSE to allow JPMorgan to manage our money, but the company responds in a manner that suggests they believe they are entitled to and unwilling to surrender customer funds without a fight.

Customer complaints: http://www.epinions.com/review/JP_Morgan_Chase_Bank_1/content_362834333316

Sven Vath – Live @ Creamfields 2011, Buenos Aires – 12-11-2011

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Steve Niles' Remains

REMAINS 1-5 ( COMPLETE ) ZOMBIE MAYHEM BY STEVE NILES AND KIERON DWYER

REMAINS (download torrent) - TPB

Startled Deer Becomes New Republican Frontrunner

CONCORD, NH (The Borowitz Report) – The race for the Republican presidential nomination took an unexpected turn today as a new poll showed that a startled deer was the new GOP frontrunner.

Bucky, the red deer who is the first choice of likely Republican voters is believed to be the first woodland creature ever to lead a major party's presidential field.

"Voters like what they see in Bucky," said veteran political strategist Ed Rollins, who has signed on to helm the red deer's primary campaign.  "The fact that he is unable to speak is a major asset."

In his first appearance in Concord, New Hampshire, however, the antlered candidate garnered mixed reviews for what some observers said was an unsteady performance.

Appearing frightened by the TV lights, Bucky kicked over the podium and then pranced down the hall before being subdued by a tranquilizer dart.

"Clearly he's a little rough around the edges," said Mr. Rollins.  "But he still did better than Herman Cain."

It was another rough day for Mr. Cain, who offered this response to a reporter's question: "For the last time, I did not touch her down there.  Oh wait, did you say 'Libya?'"

Gov. Rick Perry also stumbled badly in a campaign appearance in Iowa, telling supporters, "If I am elected, I will find out where Iran's nuclear weapons are.  Also, where Iran is."

Meanwhile, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich predicted that his recent rise in the polls is not a fluke: "The American people want an adult, and no one has a stronger record of adultery than I do."






Employees Create Beer Vending Machine

Arnie Beer Vending MachineI've read articles about cool places to work such as Google where they have free massages and sushi lunches, Facebook which provides free laundry and daycare services, or Clif Bar which has a 40 foot rock wall and fitness center.

Add to the list of cool places to work Arnold Worldwide, a Boston-based advertising agency.

Instead of being content with the usual vending machine most large companies have, the employees decided to create a machine they call Arnie, which sounds like the ultimate vending machine.

No, not just because it tweets on it's own, or the fact it has data recognition when employees insert there key fob into it and it greets them by name and remembers their preferences, or even the touch screen iPad like interface that is temperature aware and has a Soundtube.

It's all about the beer.

Yes, thats right, for all employees over 21 they can use Arnie, the beer vending machine that also includes an "alepedia" that allows employees to learn more about each of the brews it carries.

At the time of me writing this, they currently have 6 different beers, all of which they brew including an eponymous brew, the "Arnold Pilsner." The agency has also experimented with a variety of ale styles, and will be able to brew beer styles specific to seasons, events, people and even clients, inviting others at the agency to become involved in the brewing process.

Arnold Worldwide Beer

The employees who came up with the beer vending machine took advantage of Arnold's agency-wide initiative to "manage less and make more." The agency sets aside $100,000 each year for employees to bring new and innovative ideas to life.

Although I work from home and can drink a beer pretty much whenever I want, most people don't have that luxury so having a beer vending machine might just be one of the greatest perks a company could offer.

To keep up with Arnies tweets you can visit its Twitter at @ArnieBeer.

What types of perks does your company have?







Seven Funniest Facebook Statuses Ever

Young Love

Funny Facebook Status You Are 12 Young Love

Raising The Dead

Funny Facebook Status Zombie Father

It’s A Wall Street Miracle!

Funny Facebook Status Overdraft Miracle

That Took An Unexpected Turn

Funny Facebook Status Unexpected Turn

God Is Dead, And We Have Killed Him

Funny Facebook Status God Dies For Your Sins

Why Was She Searching That In The First Place?

Funny Facebook Status WTF Search

He Had It Coming

Funny Facebook Status Twilight Love


The Seven Funniest Facebook Statuses Ever | Runt Of The Web - StumbleUpon

What secret Star Wars project is Lucasfilm working on? [Star Wars]

Mysterious domain name snatchings are happening over at Lucasfilm. Has the latest Lucasfilm online activity just revealed a big Star Wars project on the rise? Definitely perhaps. More » 




Six Fictional Drugs With Unintended Side Effects

Datos Pegados ff93Substance D, Soma, Melange – they've all been part of our culture for decades. Gabe Habash looks at the side effects for Publishers Weekly:

In fiction and in reality, medicine is designed and set up to operate with the best of intentions, to eliminate pain and disease and the things that push us toward mortality. In theory. In practice, we know that there are holes in this theory. But for all the problems in the reality of medicine, at least we don't have to worry about these 6 fictional drugs, which were designed to make the world a better place, but failed in all types of spectacular ways.

1. Altruizine from "Altruizine" by Stanislaw Lem

Unintended Side Effect: It makes people too altruistic.

Lem, one of the most widely-read sci-fi writers in the world, wrote a short story within his collection The Cyberiad about Altruizine, a metapsychotropic drug that causes the user to feel the pains and emotions of others within a radius of fifty yards.

According to its discoverer, Altruizine

"will ensure the untrammeled reign of Brotherhood, Cooperation and Compassion in any society, since the neighbors of a happy man must share his happiness, and the happier he, the happier perforce they, so it is entirely in their own interest that they wish him nothing but the best. Should he suffer any hurt, they will rush so help at once, so as to spare themselves the pain induced by his. Neither walls, fences, hedges, nor any other obstacle will weaken the altruizing influence… We assume no responsibility for results at variance with the discoverer's claims."

The story, which has a full title of "Altruizine, Or a True Account of How Bonhomius the Hermetic Hermit Tried to Bring About Happiness, and What Came of It," is about a robotic engineer who creates the drug and sends Bonhomius the Hermit (who is eager to help others) into society to try it out. What happens is people start experiencing things like the birthing pains of a cow, while others run into a newlyweds' house to experience their new pleasures vicariously…

[continues at Publishers Weekly]

...as if looking through a scanner, darkly...




Italy Makes Large Cash Transaction Illegal

For those of you who pay attention to world news you've already heard that Italy has implemented a series of austerity measures. One of these measures I find especially egregious:

Measures to fight tax evasion will be strengthened, including a limit of 2,500 euros on cash transactions

What am I supposed to do if I want to buy my friend's $5,000 vehicle? Since cash is out do I have to wait for them to get setup to accept credit and debit card transactions? Perhaps we'll have to insert a middle-man such as an auto dealer in order to complete the transaction now. Is the legality of the transaction based on the worth of the object(s) being sold or the method of trade being accepted. If it's based on the worth of the object(s) this becomes a big deal since all large value transactions between individuals (selling your automobile for example) will basically be illegal as most individuals are not setup to accept credit and debit cards. On the other hand if this is based on the method of trade being accepted (euros in this case) than this isn't too big of a deal since both parties could agree to transact using something of value like gold and silver.

This austerity measure also assumes Italy's problems have stemmed from lost tax money due to minor transactions between individuals going unreported. I can tell you right now that's not the problem. As this isn't the problem I'm betting money this austerity measure is being put into place so the government can keep and eye on what people are purchasing and use that data in enacting future legislation.

The globalist central banks are tightening their grip on economies around the world in a last-ditch effort to retain control. To paraphrase Princess Leia; the tighter you squeeze your fist, the more communities will slip through your fingers. And to quote Philip K Dick; "The Empire Never Ended."




Sunday, November 13, 2011

Whisky

I had no idea that American corn whiskey was not wood-aged...

Whisky - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A glass of whisky

Whisky (Scottish English and British English) or whiskey (Hiberno-English and American English[1]) is a type of distilled alcoholic beverage made from fermented grain mash. Different grains are used for different varieties, including barley, malted barley, rye, malted rye, wheat, and maize (corn). Whisky is aged in wooden casks, made generally of charred white oak, except that in the United States corn whiskey need not be aged.

Whisky is documented in Ireland and Scotland in the 15th century.[2][3] Whisky is a strictly regulated spirit worldwide with many classes and types. The typical unifying characteristics of the different classes and types are the fermentation of grains, distillation, and aging in wood. Indian whisky is an exception, where grain fermentation is not a requirement and the most common basis is fermented molasses. The requirement for aging in wood is also not entirely universal.

Friday, November 11, 2011

Dr. Russ Roberts: "I Want My Country Back!"

Video - George Mason University Economics Professor Dr. Russ Roberts What follows is my testimony before the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, delivered October 28,...

What follows is my testimony before the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, delivered October 28, 2009.  The topic was executive compensation and the Special Master for TARP Compensation, Kenneth Feinberg, who was determining compensation at the firms who had not repaid their TARP funds.

Americans are angry about executive compensation.

Rightfully so.

The executives at General Motors and Chrysler don't deserve to make a lot of money. They made bad products that people didn't want to buy.

The executives on Wall Street don't deserve to make a lot of money. They were reckless. They borrowed huge sums to make bets that didn't pay off. And they wasted trillions of dollars of precious capital, funneling it into housing instead of health innovation or high mileage cars or a thousand investments more productive than more and bigger houses.

Everyday folks who are out of work through no fault of their own want to know why people who made bad decisions not only have a job but a big salary to go with it.

No wonder they're angry at Wall Street,

But if we keep getting angry at Wall Street, we'll miss the real source of the problem. It's right here. In Washington.

We are what we do. Not what we wish to be. Not what we say we are. But what we do. And what we do here in Washington is rescue big companies and rich people from the consequences of their mistakes. When mistakes don't cost you anything, you do more of them.





Why We Still Love Battlestar Galactica's Ronald D. Moore [Essay]

Ronald D. Moore had a huge cult following long before he relaunched Battlestar Galactica. His work on Star Trek was notably awesome, and his very public departure from Voyager, complete with spot-on critiques of the show's failings, was legendary. Whenever Moore joined the staff of a show like CarnivĂ le or Roswell, you knew you were in for something special. More »





New Italian PM, European Head of Trilateral Commission,Yale graduate, Bilderberg member & Goldman Sa

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mario_Monti

Mario Monti was born in Varese, Lombardy. He is married, and has two children. He holds a degree in economics and management from Bocconi University, Milan. He completed graduate studies at Yale University, where he studied under James Tobin, the Nobel prize-winning economist.

He taught economics at the University of Turin (1970-85) before moving to the Bocconi University, of which he has been rector (1989-1994) and then president (since 1994). His researches have conducted to the Klein-Monti model, aimed at describing the behaviour of banks operating under monopoly circumstances.

In 1994 he was appointed to the European Commission, along with fellow-Italian, Emma Bonino, by the first Silvio Berlusconi government. In his capacity as European Commissioner from 1995, he was responsible for "Internal Market, Financial Services and Financial Integration, Customs, and Taxation".

Four years later, in 1999, Massimo D'Alema's government confirmed his appointment to the new European Commission under the presidency of Romano Prodi. Thereafter he was responsible for "Competition", in which capacity he initiated anti-monopoly proceedings against Microsoft. He also led the investigation into the proposed merger between General Electric and Honeywell in 2001, which the European Commission blocked.

The second Berlusconi government did not confirm him in 2004, and proposed Rocco Buttiglione in his place. Since Rocco Buttiglione was rejected by the European Parliament, the government proposed Franco Frattini.

In 2010, Monti was entrusted by president Barroso to produce a Report on the future of the Single Market proposing further measures towards the completion of the EU single market.

On 15 September 2010 Monti supported the new initiative Spinelli Group, which was founded to reinvigorate the strive for federalisation of the European Union (EU). Other prominent supporters are: Jacques Delors, Daniel Cohn-Bendit, Guy Verhofstadt, Andrew Duff, Elmar Brok.

As well as being President of the Bocconi University of Milan, Monti is the first chairman of Bruegel, a European think tank founded in 2005. He is also European Chairman of the Trilateral Commission, a neoliberal think tank founded in 1973 by David Rockefeller and member of the Bilderberg Group .

On 9 November 2011 Monti was nominated Senator for life by the Italian President Giorgio Napolitano. Mario Monti has been seen as a favourite to replace Silvio Berlusconi to lead a new unity government in Italy in order to implement reforms and austerity measures.

Monti is a keen Egyptologist, an interest he picked up during his time at Turin University. He is a patron of the Museo Egizio in Turin a museum that specialises in Egyptian archeology.

http://ec.europa.eu/economy_finance/bef2009/speakers/mario-monti/index.html

Mario Monti is President of Bocconi University and Honorary President of Bruegel, the European think tank he launched in 2005. He is also a member of the Reflection Group on the Future of Europe set up by the European Council and chaired by Felipe González.

Mr. Monti served as European Commissioner in charge of the Internal Market, Financial Services and Taxation from 1995 to 1999 and then as European Commissioner for Competition (1999-2004). In the latter position, he handled a number of well-known cases such as General Electric/Honeywell, Microsoft, and the German Landesbanken. He also introduced a radical reform of EU antitrust and merger controls and led, with the US authorities, the creation of the International Competition Network (ICN).

As EU coordinator for the France-Spain electricity interconnection, he brokered the agreement between Prime Ministers Fillon and Zapatero in June 2008. Mr. Monti was also a member of the Attali Committee on French economic growth, set up by President Sarkozy (2007-2008).

Mr. Monti is an international advisor to Goldman Sachs and a member of the advisory board of the Coca-Cola Company.

Mr. Monti graduated from Bocconi University and continued his studies at Yale University. Prior to joining the Commission, he was a professor of economics and subsequently Rector at Bocconi University, his alma mater.

————-

tick tick tick tick..yeah hes got all the ticks..

we showed you the greek PM a few days ago..and now heres the new italian PM to be..all roads lead to the same big groups..


Radioactive iodine detected over Europe: Source currently a mystery

The U.N. nuclear agency is reporting "very low" — but higher than usual — levels of radiation in the Czech Republic and elsewhere in Europe.

The International Atomic Energy Agency says the "very low levels of iodine-131 have been measured in the atmosphere over the Czech Republic" and elsewhere on the continent.

Its statement on Friday said the current levels do not seem to pose a public health risk.

IAEA says the cause is not known, but it is not the result of Japan's Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster, which spread radiation across the globe in March. more
This tragedy makes me think of the Japanese anime film Vexille, where humanity becomes a victim of its own technological achievements. 

Texas Scientist Makes Strands of Invisibility Cloak

A University of Texas scientist is working on developing a technology that would delight Harry Potter fans everywhere--an invisibility cloak. Ali Aliev uses carbon nanotubes--which look like pieces of thread--and then heats them up rapidly until the objects beneath them effectively disappear.You can watch the threads disappear as they are heated up in this video. So how do the threads work? In a paper published in Nanotechnology in June, Aliev explains that the invisibility cloak exploits the "mirage effect." A highway can become so hot that small circles that look like puddles of water appear in the road. That happens when the road is so hot that the surface bends the light around it, so that the driver sees the reflected sky instead of the pavement. The carbon nanotubes create a similar effect.





Ron Paul wins again

The Herminator

Landlord set 240v booby-trap for lodger

AN "irrational" British landlord booby-trapped a door handle almost electrocuted his lodger after an argument over a pay-TV subscription.

Social collapse is rising across the planet. It's a mad, mad world. 

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Doctor Who Ride-in Dalek

When we were kids, we wanted nothing more than Power Wheels. Or an ATV. But our moms said no because they are meanies. (Hi Moms. We really don't mean this. Okay, we did mean it when we were five, but what did we know?) Once we get our hands on the TARDIS, we're going to have The Doctor go back to the 80s, buy a Power Wheels car, and drop it off on our front doorstep with a bow and a little gift card. Then everything will be right with the world.

Until then, we've found the ultimate thing for the wee geeks we love in the present time: the Doctor Who Ride-In Dalek. This Red Dalek is made from a mixture of ballistic nylon and laminated rubberized polyvinyl, which is soft to the touch but extremely durable and tear resistant. While it is inflatable, this is more the quality of a snow tube, not a beach ball.

A 6v battery powered motor gives 360 degree steering and a maximum speed of nearly 2 mph! It won't hover or fly up stairs, but hey, we'll put in that suggestion for version 2.0. A soft bumper around the edge of the Dalek will protect your walls and furniture. The steering wheel has buttons which trigger ten authentic Dalek phrases so your wee geek can let people know that their extermination is at hand.

And because we know you'll ask, no, we haven't found one in adult sizes yet. We'll keep looking.

NOTE: Because this is imported from the UK, it will require a UK outlet adapter (not included) to be able to charge in an outlet in the USA.

Product Specifications

  • For Ages 3 - 6 years old or small older kids :)
  • Maximum weight: 65 lbs
  • Ride-in Dalek lets your wee geek exterminate their foes
  • Red Dalek body made of extremely durable and tear resistant nylon/polyvinyl
  • 6v rechargeable battery powered motor
  • 360 degree steering and a maximum speed of nearly 2 mph
  • Flashing lights give an eerie Dalek technology glow
  • 10 authentic Dalek phrases can be triggered on the steering wheel
  • Soft bumper on the edges protects your walls and furniture
  • Comes in 2 parts: motorized base and inflatable body section
  • Easy to assemble, just over 4 feet tall when fully assemble.
  • Unfortunately, it does not hover. We hope v. 2.0 does.
  • We checked and no, it does not come in adult sizes. Sorry!
  • NOTE: Because this is imported from the UK, it will require a UK outlet adapter (not included) to be able to charge in an outlet in the USA.




ThinkGeek :: Doctor Who Ride-in Dalek

Ridley Scott Brings Us The Prophets of Science Fiction

There are some writers who you would swear must be able to see directly into the future. Even if only through a scanner, darkly, these authors of speculative fiction seem to be looking over your shoulder from the past and reading the headlines from today.


Starting tonight at 10PM ET/PT on Science, movie maker Ridley Scott brings together scientists, writers, and other thinkers to honor the Prophets of Science Fiction. Each episode focuses on a writer who helped explain and expand the world of science through the use of fiction. The series will use film clips, reenactments, illustrations, and interviews with top thinkers — including director Paul Verhoeven and theoretical physicist Dr. Michio Kakuto — to tell the story of the author, and the modern day scientific implications of what they wrote.
According to Scott:
For years I have been fascinated with the connection between creative inspiration and scientific progress. Often there is an attempt to separate the worlds of art and science, when in reality the two are inseparably linked.
I had a chance to preview the first episode, telling the story of Mary Shelly and how she wrote her masterpiece Frankenstein at the tender age of 19 during 1816, the infamous "year without a summer." The narrative follows her own explorations of reanimation based on the best science of the early 19th century, and of the creation of man-made life.
Interestingly — and often overlooked in favor of the Hollywood versions of the story — the actual animation of the monster in Shelley's novel barely takes a page to describe. Yet the mythology around the use of electricity is what most of us remember, and forms an important part of this documentary's narrative, most especially showing clips from Kenneth Branagh's 1994 interpretation. However, what the documentary also spends a good deal of time on is the true central theme of the book — how we might deal with intelligences of our own making — examining robots and artificial intelligence.
I'm more a fan of the CinĂ©ma-vĂ©ritĂ© style of documentary, and I found the narrator in this episode often annoying. The interviews, although expert and informed, felt a bit on the stilted side. The speakers seemed to have scripted bullet points they were speaking from. Still, the information was interesting, and enlightening. I especially enjoyed how the documentary went back and forth from the story of Shelley, directly tying what she wrote to modern science.
The story of Mary Shelley is the first of the prophets, but by no means the last. The list is not particularly surprising, but may not be without controversy:
  • Mary Shelley — Tonight
  • H.G. Wells — 16 November
  • Phillip K. Dick — 23 November
  • Arthur C. Clarke — 30 November
  • Isaac Asimov — 7 December
  • Jules Verne — 1 February
  • Robert Heinlein — 8 February
Notice anybody missing?
The list favors the Classic and Golden Age of science fction, with Dick being the only representative of New Wave sci-fi. There are no Cyberpunk authors. That's not to say any of the authors spotlighted in the series are unworthy, but I hope they do a second season with Harlan Ellison, Kurt Vonnegut, Jr., J.G. Ballard, William Gibson, Neal Stephenson, Pat Caddigen, and Bruce Sterling.
Did I leave anybody out?

Monday, November 7, 2011

Cunnilingus

Ron Paul on the World Debt Crisis

Transcript

This is a rush transcript. If you notice any errors please report them using the "Help improve this post" link at the bottom of this post.

Neil Cavuto: Republican presidential could, Ron Paul, says, "Think again". He joins us on the phone. Congressman, your concern has always been, "We've got a world that's broke, and a world that just has to wake up to that fact", right?

Ron Paul: Right, I don't think we're willing to admit the truth around the world, we know where all the problems are, but the only thing they talk about is spending more money and increasing the debt. But it's a debt crisis, and it's worldwide. This week, our national debt crossed our GDP for the first time in its history. But the world is that way too, they have a 195 trillion dollars worth of debt, and that's approximately what the GDP is. So, the world is literally bankrupt, and all they can say is, "Where are we going to get the money from? How are we going to bail them out?" And we're very much involved because our banks are involved with the derivatives, protecting the banks of Europe, so that's why they don't want the banks to go under. But you can't solve the problem of debt and too much spending by spending more and increasing the debt. I just don't understand how they can believe this would work.

Neil Cavuto: But would Americans be any more receptive to this painful medicine than the Italians are right now. You know, a lot of these folks singing and celebrating in Rome as we speak – we can take a peek at that again – they're not inclined to want to accept cutbacks of any sort, even slightly raising the retirement age in Italy, which I believe is 55, they want to make it 57; it's 52 in Greece, they want to make it 54. And they resist that in any way they can, and these Italians are resisting any adjustments in the social net in any way they can. Would we react the same way?

Ron Paul: Yea, and I think you can understand that; people become very dependent, they don't want their allowance cut because they won't know what to do. But the whole thing is, if we continue to do this, it will be cut. For instance, the cost of living is going up for the retired people, the standards of living is going down, so if we keep doing what we're doing, they will be cut. And I think the government knows that, I think Bernanke knows this, but they want inflation. Certainly Paul Krugman argues this case, and they want inflation and therefore that will reduce the standard of living without saying that you have a nominal cut. But this has been around for a long time, that's how you cut real wages when wages have to come down, because nobody will accept the nominal cut, so nobody is going to accept this. Their problem is the usual tools of spending and printing money hasn't worked for them because the debt is so big. And just continuing to do this just makes our problems that much worse. And what I have always worried about has been that this would lead to political turmoil, and that's what we're witnessing today; and that will be worldwide.

Neil Cavuto: So I take it from what you're saying, Congressman, is that you certainly, if you became President of the United States, would not be adding American moneys to either the IMF, a big international lender, or the World Bank for that matter; we are, of course, the biggest contributor to both. And when it came to bailing out a country, be it Italy or Greece, you would say no?

Ron Paul: I would say no, but what the IMF does is into the billions, but the Fed plans to spend trillions. And Bernanke was rather clear the other day: "We're standing by, we're watching this, and we're ready to act so that the system doesn't collapse". And there will be a lot of threats and intimidations and fears, just like they did in 2008, and they will resort to bailing out. But I think the people are waking up, the rich get bailed out, the banks stay in business and the corporations get the money. But the common man, the middle class, lose their jobs and they get the disadvantage of their cost of living going up, and then they lose their houses. So the resentment is there and it's justified. What I worry about, though, is where the blame goes. Is the blame going to go to the monetary system and the bailing out of the special interests, or will the blame go to … I don't want them to start blaming capitalism and free markets and profits, per say.

Neil Cavuto: I was just going to say, Congressman, because you were sounding like an occupy-Wall Street there, I guess you relate more to their frustration, but not to their target. In this case, and in some of these protests this week, a lot of banks and brokerage houses and that sort of thing.

Ron Paul: Right, and I think it's a mixed bag, I think there are some people there that are directing their attention to the Federal Reserve, but there are a lot of them saying anybody who's rich has to be taxed, and that is wrong. If you're rich because you provide a good product for the marketplace, you should be rewarded and encouraged. But if you're rich because you have an inside track to easy money and credit and you get bailed out and the Fed takes care of you because you're too big to fail; people have caught on to this and that's their anger. But the big job we have is sorting this out and blaming the bad economic policies that we've been putting up with for so long.

Neil Cavuto: Congressman, good, at least, hearing you again. Be well.

Ron Paul: Thank you.

Neil Cavuto: By the way, I was getting a clarification on this concert going on.

Ron Paul makes me think the world might have a second chance to survive, if we can change the way we think.

Related posts:

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  2. Ron Paul on FEMA, Inflation and 2012 Campaign Transcript This is a rush transcript. If you notice any...
  3. Ron Paul on the Need to Cut Spending Ron Paul explains why he favors cutting government spending

Unbelievable rock formations around the world (35 Photos)

Stone 11.11.11 Vertical Epic Ale release day

Stone Brewing Co. has released Stone 11.11.11 Vertical Epic Ale, the penultimate installment of its legendary series. Begun on February 2nd, 2002 (02.02.02), these bottle-conditioned ales have all been Belgian-influenced, but they share little else in […]


Stone 11.11.11 Vertical Epic Ale release day

Press Release: (Escondido, CA) – Stone Brewing Co. has released Stone 11.11.11 Vertical Epic Ale, the penultimate installment of its legendary series. Begun on February 2nd, 2002 (02.02.02), these bottle-conditioned ales have all been Belgian-influenced, but they share little else in […]


Is “Higher Education” more of a rip-off than a benefit today?

Well you have to ask yourself what you get for the money when you purchase anything don't you?  I mean isn't that how you make buying decisions for the most part?  You weigh the advantage the purchase makes in your life and you figure out whether or not parting with your money justifies the supposed benefits.

In the case of higher education in this country, it's my guess we passed the point of diminishing returns eons ago.  A college degree just isn't what used to be a few decades ago, but it costs a hell of a lot more.  Jack Kelly fills us in:

Tuition and fees at colleges and universities rose 439 percent between 1982 and 2007. Median family income rose just 147 percent during that period.

Median household income has fallen 6.7 percent since June 2009. The cost of attending the average public university rose 5.4 percent this year.

Student loan debt recently passed $1 trillion. It's now more than credit card debt. The average graduate of a four-year college owes $27,000.

So you have a cost that has risen far and away faster than inflation and median family income for, well, no good reason that I know of.

Oh wait, I said "good reason".  There is a reason.   Can you say "subsidy"?  That coupled with the myth that a college degree … any college degree … is worth its weight in future gold.  But it appears that gold may be fool's gold. 

I love this description of what many institutions of "higher learning" have become:

College students don't get much for their money. Nearly half learn next to nothing in their first two years; a third learn almost nothing in four, according to a report authored principally by Prof. Richard Arum of New York University.

"Students who say that college has not prepared them for the real world are largely right," said Ann Neal, president of the American Council of Trustees and Alumni. "The fundamental problem here is not debt, but a broken educational system that no longer insists on excellence."

Or even adequacy. "A college degree nowadays doesn't necessarily signal that its holder has any useful work skills," said Charlotte Allen of the Manhattan Institute.

"For decades our schools have abandoned the teaching of basic facts and foundational thinking skills, and replaced both with leftish received wisdom and stale mythologies, all the while they have anxiously monitored and puffed up students' self esteem," said classics Prof. Bruce Thornton of California State University Fresno.

I agree totally with Ms. Neal.  There is no insistence on excellence.  That's not true of every institution out there, obviously.

However a look at the various new degree programs provides a peek into the priorities of the schools.  To broaden and accept as many students as they can to also broaden the revenue stream they're provided.  The unique offerings are most likely not made to produce anything meaningful in academia and certainly not in the real world, but they do attract a certain type of student to such a degree program that is fully willing to buy into the myth that somehow a degree in gender studies is going to be useful and are willing to pay the big bucks demanded (even if that means borrowing them). 

And, of course, government subsidizes the purchase, so there's certainly no reason for the school to back off such a useless program or lower it's price to something roughly equivalent to its utility in the real world.

What happens?  Precisely what you'd think would happen.  Its much like the housing crisis.  Loans are given to people who aren't really capable of college work.  They leave with nothing or some marginal degree and huge debt. 

Meanwhile:

Others graduate to find there are no jobs for them. Roughly 60 percent of the increase in the number of college graduates since 1992 work in low-skill jobs, Prof. Richard Vedder of Ohio University discovered. In 2008, 318,000 waiters and waitresses had college degrees, as did 365,000 cashiers and 18,000 parking lot attendants.

Because degrees have been so diluted and their worth so compromised over the years, they're less and less of a guarantee of a good job and better wages.

But because government subsidizes education and distorts the market, guess what?

And, according to a study by the American Enterprise Institution and the Heritage Foundation, teachers are paid $120 billion over market value.

There is fraud at every level of the education system, thanks mostly to politics, said Herbert London, professor emeritus at New York University. Teachers and professors go along to save their jobs.

"They simply cannot say that college isn't for everyone … or that rigorous exit requirements at any level do not exist," he said. "Hence, there is the clarion call for more money."

Of course they can't.  The gravy train is just too rich to quit.

And, you also need to understand what is actually happening in colleges and universities across the nation to appreciate the full impact of this market intrusion by government.  Colleges, as mentioned, no longer demand excellence.  Instead, they spend an enormous amount of time and effort teaching what a college student should have mastered before ever showing up at a university:

We spend about $10,600 per pupil in public schools, 377 percent more, in inflation-adjusted dollars, than we spent in 1961. Yet among students who go to college, 75 percent require some remedial work.

If you managed to catch some of the protests in WI that included teachers and caught the spelling on some of their signs, the stats above wouldn't particularly surprise you.  We spend more on education today and and get even less than in the past.  What you have to remember is that at every level it is either run by or subsidized by government.

Now at every level, we're seeing the results of that sort of intrusion, aren't we?  A dismal record of extraordinarily expensive non-achievement.  And nothing is going to change or improve in that regard as long as government stays in charge and subsidizes the growing bubble with your money.

But you'll never hear that said, will you?

Mark my words. There is a bubble in the educational debt market building toward a burst just like the one we saw in the housing and automotive manufacturing markets. Subsidizing any market or industry at taxpayer expense only props up than market falsely when it can not sustain itself, inviting collapse. Continued bailouts of these markets is unsustainable as driving our economy further down the hole. 





Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Testicular tumor has a face

 Multimedia Archive 02042 Face 2042115C

This is an ultrasound image of a mass in a 45-year-old's testicle. It was published in the International Society of Urology's journal, Urology. Is it just another example of pareidolia or something far… more… sinister? From the article:

The residents and staff alike were amazed to see the outline of a man's face staring up out of the image, his mouth agape as if the face seen on the ultrasound scan itself was also experiencing severe epididymo-orchitis.

"Face discovered in testicular tumour"