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Uncategorized — Why Now?
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Just Because You’re Paranoid

Doesn’t mean no one’s out to get you.

Back on April 11th I wrote:

I read on a site during my search that the melamine may have been added to increase the protein level in the gluten when it was tested and priced. The site is a bit strange and “tin foil,” but amines are proteins, so there is some logic and science in the guess.

Today: LitBrit at Shakesville is reporting in the post, Pet Food Poisoning: Now In Three Protein Ingredients, that the FDA is looking into the possibility that the introduction of melamine is intentional “to increase the protein level in the gluten when it was tested and priced.”

The site where I read this is associated with the Schiavo controversy to an extreme degree, but they seem to have been correct on this point. I really hate that we have a government that makes what would normally be “wild conspiracy theories” not only rational, but true.

April 20, 2007   Comments Off on Just Because You’re Paranoid

Broadcasting the Rants of a Madman

Because they do not have to rely on advertising, the BBC has the ability to do things differently than the American media. Among the differences is having Peter Horrocks, Head of TV News at the BBC explain the process and thinking behind: Why we showed gunman.

In this case, my immediate reaction would have been to have a panel of experts in law enforcement, mental health, and the media review the material and report on it. Then I would have scheduled the materials to be broadcast at a later date, cynically, the Fall sweeps, to give the families and friends time to grieve. I wouldn’t have done it on the anniversary, as grief counselors would tell you that is another hurdle for those who are grieving. Six months would give professionals time to study the materials and come to reasoned conclusions. I would also make a significant contribution to a victims’ fund, knowing that whatever I did, some people would hate it, and I would need PR cover. It’s called reality, and it is brutal, but you ignore it at your own risk.

April 20, 2007   Comments Off on Broadcasting the Rants of a Madman

The Synod Has Spoken

Way back when, I was somewhat negative about the lack of diversity on the Supreme Court.

The fact that five male Catholics whose law degrees were granted by Harvard [3] and Yale [2] have decided that there is no problem with overruling the decisions of actual doctors of medicine with specialized training in the affected field leads me to believe I was right. This was an opinion designed to conform to the dogma of their fringe group in the Church, not the Founding Fathers.

April 19, 2007   6 Comments

The Media Becomes The Story

Between killing two people in the dorm and 30 in the class building, Cho Seung-Hui dropped by the Post Office and sent a package to NBC News with his disjointed thoughts on paper and DVDs.

He identified himself as “Ishmael” on the package and had “Ismael Ax” on his arm when found.

My wild guess from what little I read is that he may have meant “Ismael Ach”, of the tribe of Ismael, referring to not to Arabs, but to the novel, Ishmael by Daniel Quinn which deals with how messed up the world is.

Unfortunately he didn’t learn that you have to get elected before you get to change the world by killing a lot of innocent people.

April 18, 2007   4 Comments

As I Said

To Quote myself: “The brain has a nasty habit of blocking things people don’t want to remember and adding things to make a ‘better’ story.”

Melissa at Shakesville notes that we now know the first woman killed was not the shooter’s girlfriend. The victim’s roommate and best friend didn’t know the shooter and had never seen him. The media and probably law enforcement assumed that this was a boyfriend/girlfriend problem because that’s the most familiar story.

So the “Asian male with a maroon hat” would have been all the police would have had to work with even if the initial victims hadn’t died.

It’s unfortunate that we don’t have better tools available to spot dangerous mental health problems earlier, but we don’t.

From start to finish this is one of the 5% of cases where the victims didn’t know their murderer.

Update: Via All Hat and No Cattle – the initial police effort was focused on locating and questioning the victim’s actual boyfriend, Karl D. Thornhill because of the reasonable assumption that this was one of the 19 out of 20 cases of murder, rather than the exception.

April 18, 2007   9 Comments

The Shootings in Virginia

We are not going to know what happened for days or weeks. A single murder causes widespread shock in a small town, and something of this magnitude, will really amplify that effect.

Don’t make any assumptions about anything until we really know what happened. Eyewitness reports are not reliable – they are generally what people think happened. The brain has a nasty habit of blocking things people don’t want to remember and adding things to make a “better” story. You have to sift through and gather facts from multiple witnesses to get an approximation of the truth.

Evidence testing takes time. There isn’t a crime lab in the country that has all of the equipment that is displayed on television shows. No jurisdiction could afford it or the people needed to operate it.

Politicians will feel required to pass laws almost immediately. This always leads to bad laws. [Congress passed the USA PATRIOT Act in a state of shock.]

People feel helpless and want to do something – I’m sorry but there’s nothing we can do until we understand what happened, and, even then, there may be nothing we can do except show empathy for those who lost their loved ones.

April 16, 2007   11 Comments

Speaking of Rabid Mobs

Karen has Questions and More QUESTIONS… at Peripetia, but unfortunately Blogger doesn’t know me at the moment, so here’s the comment I was trying to make on sexism and racism:

It may be a defensive mechanism to explain personal deficiencies, real or imagined. It’s easy to blame “others” for your problems, a lot easier than taking a realistic look at yourself.

There are a lot of possible reasons why: you didn’t get the job or promotion; you aren’t making a lot of money; you didn’t get the date you wanted. Some of them may be the result of discrimination, but it could just be you.

These people just need to start their own version of the NAACP – the NAAFMJ. Let’s face it, there is a lot of membership potential for a National Association for the Advancement of Foul-Mouthed Jerks, and they already have media access.

[The article, Examining the alpha male at work, available via CNN, also sheds some light on the problem. I would note that many of the worst are “alpha males” in their own minds, not in reality. The phrase, “with all due respect,” covers the situation where none is due.]

April 16, 2007   8 Comments

A Good Idea

Neil the Ethical Werewolf at Ezra Klein came across the Edwards Tax Plan, which makes a lot of sense, is very easy to implement, would save the government and individuals money, and obviously can never be allowed. Edwards calls the plan Form 1.

Basically the IRS as all of the information needed to complete a Form 1040 for millions of people. It gets copies of W-2s, 1099s, etc., which is all most people use to fill out their tax return. Edwards wants the IRS to fill it out and send the completed form to people for them to review. If they agree the form is correct, they sign it and return it. The IRS form would be generated by a computer, and be both human and machine readable.

It wouldn’t help me, as not all of my clients are required to fill out a 1099, and my expenses vary a lot, but for millions of wage earners it makes a lot of sense.

The problem is that it will cut into profits of tax preparers, the “tax refund loan” business, and other hangers on in the income tax business.

Aside: People might be more aware of this proposal if two ladies hadn’t been chased out of their jobs by a rabid mob.

April 16, 2007   4 Comments

In Honor of the Day?

From YouTube:

Enjoy the music, if not the day.

April 15, 2007   2 Comments

Don’t Try This At Home

CBS reports that Karl Rove’s attorney is spreading the talking point: E-Mail Deletion Unintentional

Karl Rove’s lawyer on Friday dismissed the notion that President Bush’s chief political adviser intentionally deleted his own e-mails from a Republican-sponsored computer system.

The attorney said Rove believed the communications were being preserved in accordance with the law.

“His understanding starting very, very early in the administration was that those e-mails were being archived,” Rove’s attorney, Robert Luskin, said.

Bovine excrement, Mr. Luskin. Don’t try to sell that at trial because it just won’t fly…actually it won’t even get to leave the terminal.

[Read more →]

April 14, 2007   6 Comments

Want To Lose Weight?

Don’t respond to those e-mails, the Culture Ghost makes it easy. His dieting assistance plan starts here and then you scroll up. It will definitely “put you off your feed.”

Aside: when the e-mails about hoodia started, I thought they were for sweatshirts, given that spelling is not a strong suit among spammers. This is the downside of not watching TV.

April 14, 2007   12 Comments

Why Not Another War?

Kurdish FlagUpdate: The call for calm didn’t last long: Iraq reacts sharply to Turkish incursion threat. People still remember the Ottoman Empire.

Ellroon of Rants from the Rookery notes that Turkey’s Chief of Staff wants to invade northern Iraq.

Kevin Drum of Political Animal picked up on the problem of Kurdistan and includes a map.

The Wikipedia article on Kurdistan adds some numbers:

According to the Encyclopædia of Islam, Kurdistan covers around 190,000 km² in Turkey, 125,000 km² in Iran, 65,000 km² in Iraq, and 12,000 km² in Syria and the total area of Kurdistan is estimated at approximately 392,000 km².

There are an estimated 30-40 million Kurds in the region distributed proportionally with the land area, meaning about half in Turkey, then Iran, Iraq, and Syria.

In terms of concern, Turkey, Iran, and Syria are not happy about independence calls coming from the Iraqi Kurds. While the US is complaining about “foreign terrorists” infiltrating into Iraq from Iran and Syria, Turkey, Iran, and Syria are alarmed about the free movement of Kurdish terrorists into their countries.

The latest round of problems started over the plan for a referendum on the status of the city of Kirkuk, which, coincidentally, is sitting on oil.

[Read more →]

April 14, 2007   4 Comments

Nothing To See, Move Along

CBS News reports: Alarm Bells Ring Over China Food Imports

The list of Chinese food exports rejected at American ports reads like a chef’s nightmare: pesticide-laden pea pods, drug-laced catfish, filthy plums and crawfish contaminated with salmonella.

Yet, it took a much more obscure item, contaminated wheat gluten, to focus U.S. public attention on a very real and frightening fact: China’s chronic food safety woes are now an international concern.

[snip]

While the public was focused on the danger to their pets, sources tell CBS News that the FDA had tracked at least one suspect batch of wheat gluten into the human food supply, quietly quarantined some products and notified the Centers For Disease Control and Prevention to watch for new patients admitted to hospitals with renal or kidney failure.

“This really shows the risks of food purity problems combining with international trade,” said Michiel Keyzer, director of the Center for World Food Studies at Amsterdam’s Vrije Universiteit.

Don’t worry; be happy; the government will protect you.

While China talks about privatization, many of their “enterprises” operate on the old model, which demands fulfillment of quotas at any cost. Cut any corners necessary, but don’t miss the target you were given. The lives of individuals are not valued very highly and the elite don’t eat the local food.

Bribery and corruption is endemic in the system, even more of a problem since the move to capitalization began. If Party membership was once the key to a comfortable life, now it is considered the path to wealth.

The question for Americans is how many deaths will it take before we start seeing an effort made at really inspecting what comes into the country?

April 13, 2007   8 Comments

Running Government Like A Business

Another Washington Post investigative report: Tons of food spoiled as FEMA ran out of space

As many as 6 million prepared meals stockpiled near potential victims of the 2006 hurricane season spoiled in the Gulf Coast heat last summer when the Federal Emergency Management Agency ran short of warehouse and refrigeration space, according to agency officials.

In all, hundreds of truckloads of food worth more than $40 million are being thrown away or scavenged for unspoiled contents to be offered to domestic hunger-relief groups, FEMA officials said. Most of the meals were commercial versions of the military’s Meals Ready to Eat, which were ruined despite being engineered to withstand the demands of desert and jungle climates.

[snip]

News of the latest problems at FEMA follows findings after Katrina that the agency awarded up to $1 billion in improper payments to individuals, spent $900 million on 25,000 trailers that could not be used in flood zones and paid $1.8 billion for hotel rooms and cruise ship cabins that were more expensive than apartments.

MREs aren’t designed to be stored for extended periods in deserts and jungles; they are designed to be stored in human compatible warehouses until needed. If you keep the stuff at 70° it lasts for years, but at 100° it’s months. The storage requirements are on the boxes if you bother to read.

These people don’t seem to have any relevant training or experience in any of the necessary areas. Why are they still employed?

[If the WaPo keeps this up, they might be mistaken for a newspaper.]

April 13, 2007   9 Comments