Episode LI: Mankind totters before a thing that breeds faster than it can be killed!


Old thread cleansed with flamethrowers and bazookas; a new nest emerges!

(Current totals: 10,075 entries with 973,299 comments)

Comments

  1. Bride of Shrek OM says

    Ol’Greg

    If you use Mirena though, back it up with something. Seriously.

    A friend of mine that I’ve since lost touch with got pregnant with it in, and ended up losing the baby anyway… but the whole thing could have been avoided :(

    Actually I think BOS said on here she got pregnant with Mirena too?

    ..yep ,that was me. Had the thing put in, six weeks later was pregnant.

  2. Ol'Greg says

    it’s a bit of a false dichotomy to suggest it’s either psychological or hormonal. I see no reason why the relevant hormonal outpour cannot be triggered by a psychological phenomenon. Works for adrenaline and oxytocin.

    Good point. I wasn’t intentionally trying to pit them against each other, just guard against the argument that it is entirely hormonal.

    I think maybe hormonal fluctuations could be interpreted a lot of different ways psychologically and then responded to accordingly and also vice versa with psychological issues triggering hormonal changes as well.

    So I guess that does make sense too.

  3. Bride of Shrek OM says

    Ambook

    According to the Mirena package insert, as of 2006 there had been 9.9 million users and around 360 live births for the users.

    I don’t know where they get their statistics from. I mean when I had my baby it wasn’t like anyone had to report it to anybody or anything so presumably my “live birth” wouldn’t have been counted. My Obstetrician at the time thought it was unusual but it was the second Mirena birth he’d attended ( and the damn things had been out in Aust only 2 years at that point) so I’m going to hazard a guess here, based on anecdotal evidence only of course, and say the company that manufacturers Mirena are bit fat fucking liars.

    It should be also kept in mind that as part of the terms of out of court settlements , strict confidentiality could be employed as a clause so if Mirena HAD been sued for wrongful birth then it could very well be that the statistics do not include these cases. In Australia we do not have suits for wrongful birth so suing here would nnever have been an option but it is a very different proposition in many of the states of the US and it is highly possible that numbers are being fudged. I have some precedent case on that somewhere but it’s 4 am here and finding it would be beyond my capabilities.

  4. David Marjanović says

    On the fashion issue, I think it’s time for blogpimping again.

    Aaand, it turned out that he assumed that after they were married, she would (naturally) change her mind, and then was all p-o’d when she stuck by her guns. After all, it wasn’t his 50% chance of dying.

    <headdesk>
    <headdesk>

    Also AFAIK it won’t specifically mess up the baby. I’m sorry if my post made it sound like Mirena caused the miscarriage.

    What happens depends on where in the uterus implantation happens. If the embryo happens to, I don’t know, wrap around the coil or something, it’s doomed. If not, see BoSOM.

    Biology aside, a culture that encourages reproduction and parental rearing is a culture that will be present in the next generation*.

    “Biology aside”? That’s called natural selection! :-)

    I have no idea what that means.

    I had thought you mentioned Minot because Minot, small as it is, offers fewer possibilities to temporarily get out of each other’s way or something. Thanks, anyway, for the information.

    Of course I didn’t mean to imply a relationship completely without compromises is likely, just that external factors influence how many compromises will be necessary in any particular relationship.

    (And, hey, if I correctly understood every time what you mean, that would be… a bit scary, wouldn’t it. :-) )

  5. Jadehawk, OM says

    I had thought you mentioned Minot because Minot, small as it is, offers fewer possibilities to temporarily get out of each other’s way or something.

    ah, ok.

    well, it’s more like minot doesn’t give me many opportunities to get out of the house and because of that I get cabin fever.

  6. Sili, The Unknown Virgin says

    Bébé de Lait?

    As long as you don’t cook it in breastmilk it should be kosher.

  7. Lynna, OM says

    One of the female lights of the Christian music scene, Jennifer Knapp, recently came out as a lesbian, admitting to a long-term same-sex relationship. The comments that follow the story in Christianity Today will drive you to despair. Samples:

    Gods Lamb – You’re right !I do have issues with this subject. First, I LOVE GOD! – it drives me to RIGTHTEOUS ANGER when I hear people like miss Knapp say Gods word isn’t clear on this subject. That’s A LIE!!!. Second, I LOVE PEOPLE. I DON’T WANT HOMOSEXUALS TO BE DAMNED TO HELL!!! HOW MANY PEOPLE WHO HAVE SAME SEX ATTRACTIONS ARE NOW GOING TO GIVE UP THE FIGHT and GIVE IN TO HOMOSEXUAL SEX WHICH IS SEXUAL PERVERSION???? How many are going to do so becausse they were motivated by miss Knapp!!! Third I LOVE THE USA. This nation is on the BRINK OF CATASTROPHE!!!! God destroyed Sodom & Gommorrah because of this sin, since He is consistant, he will HAVE TO DO THE SAME TO AMERICA if we continue to embrace same sex marriage and homosexuality as normal!!!! I’m not saying he will do so in the same manner. I beleive he will simply turn His back on this nation because we will have TURNED OUR BACKS ON HIM!!!!! And America will slowly decline, & decline, & decline…..GOE FORBID!!!

    Homosexuality is a sin. People need to get back to the Word. The Bible is Gods truth and not what man claims to be the truth of today. God is Holy; unrepentant sin will not go unpunished on the day of judgment. In fact, NKJB 1 Corinthians 6:9-10 says this: Do you not know that the unrighteous will not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived. Neither fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor homosexuals, nor sodomites, 10 nor thieves, nor covetous, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor extortioners will inherit the kingdom of God. Unfortunately, just because a person calls themselves a believer, means nothing. Until Jennifer Knapp turns away from this sort of lifestyle then she is being disobedient, rebellious and unrepentant. Yes, God loves her, but He is also a HOLY GOD and unless she lays her sin at the cross and turns away from it she will be punished for this sin on the day of judgment. We need to turn to the Bible to find the truth that sets us free.

  8. Ol'Greg says

    I wonder WHAT IT IS that makes PEOPLE type LIEK THIS when THEY ARE TAKKING about the HOLY BIBLE?????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????

    Last night we went for a late dinner. Very late, and also in the wrong city (Ft.Worth). I never go there, but only because it’s an inconvenient drive if I’m not at some specific event there.

    Being unaccustomed to Ft. Worth we thought plenty of places would be open on a Sunday night at 9 if we went to the Square. Wrong.

    We did end up finding a place, and it was great. But while walking around from locked door to locked door there was this preacher kid standing on the corner screaming gospel down the largely empty street while a bunch of kids in what looked like extreme prom gettup were wondering around and having, it appeared, some seriously cheesy pics taken. Sorry I get judgy on annoying portrait positions.

    In the meantime a group of younger girls in shoes they didn’t look accustomed to wearing were trying to get an Avedon look. Jumping up repeatedly while their friend tried to capture the exact moment on her point and shoot. It was funny, the people all busy and the preacher kid (he was young) just belting the gospel into the indifferent night.

    I kept wanting to start reciting Hamlet or something from the other corner.

  9. blf says

    I kept wanting to start reciting Hamlet or something from the other corner.

    In a “pirate accent” whilst waving a cutlass…

  10. KOPD says

    Alas, poor Yorrrrrick. I knew him, matee. A scurvy dog of infinite jest, a most excellent swashbuckler.
    Aye, he hath borne me plunder on his back a thousand times, that laddie.

  11. ambook says

    Great science question of the day. Our nature center had a “birthday party” event for our one-winged bald eagle. It was a nice sunny day, and there were eastern box turtles sunning themselves in the woods not to far from the nature center building. “Do the naturalists here put the turtles in the woods for people to find?”

    Why, yes, and we also do snakes, poison ivy, assassin bugs, and black widow spiders. While dressed in a pink Easter bunny suit. Why do you ask?

    Then there was the fool who called us demanding that we had to come right away – there was a dead platypus in the parking lot of the local liquor store. (I live in Maryland – it was a beaver.) And the person at a federal government Earth Day event a couple years ago who came up to the woman holding the bald eagle and asked, “Is that a bison?” And the person who came up to me while I was brushing our domestic rabbit and asked “What kind of animal is that?” (To which my husband says I should have responded, “It’s a long-eared eastern fur snake, which is, strangely enough, a species of bird.”)

    Snark welcome.

  12. blf says

    In a “pirate accent” whilst waving a cutlass…

    Is there another way?

    Inn Monty Python et Holy Grail French accént, you sons of silly persons !

  13. Dianne says

    So, speaking of Christianity and homosexuality, I’ve heard it claimed that “abomination” doesn’t mean what we think it means (or at least the word translated into abomination doesn’t.) Anyway, the claim was that all it actually meant was “probably not the best idea right now”.

    Can anyone confirm or debunk this claim?

  14. Ol'Greg says

    Then there was the fool who called us demanding that we had to come right away – there was a dead platypus in the parking lot of the local liquor store. (I live in Maryland – it was a beaver.)

    Ha! One of my sets of great grandparents didn’t speak English well and neither did their children really. We were visiting that group of family way out where they lived and my grandmother and some of her siblings along with my great grandpa were all kvetching about the poor health of the vegetables they had grown that year.

    It was those salamanders! Eating up the carrots and cabbages. After several rounds of salamander damning my mother got the nerve up to ask one of them what a salamander looked like.

    Salamanders: Blind mammals that dig tunnels underground and eat roots.

    Who knew?

  15. Jadehawk, OM says

    the Online Etymology Dictionary disagrees:

    abomination
    early 14c., “feeling of disgust, hatred, loathing,” from O.Fr. abomination, from L. abominationem (nom. abominatio) “abomination,” from abominatus, pp. of abominari “shun as an ill omen,” from ab- “off, away from” + omin-, stem of omen (see omen). Meaning intensified by folk etymology derivation from L. ab homine “away from man,” thus “beastly.”

  16. ambook says

    @OlGreg – none of these people have poor English skills as an excuse. And we are located in a solidly middle to upper middle class area, so education isn’t really an excuse either. Now off to get into my easter bunny suit. (Although given that it’s Boobquake, perhaps I should do the Playboy thing. Fancy meeting THAT in the woods!)

  17. 'Tis Himself, OM says

    When I told a doctor I wanted a vasectomy he said “it’s almost impossible to splice the tubes again so you better be sure.” When I told him I was sure he said to see his secretary for an appointment.

    BTW, guys, you may have heard that getting a vasectomy is a big pain in the balls (sorry, couldn’t resist). I had no particular problem because I did what the urologist told me to do. The men I’ve talked to who did have problems didn’t follow instructions.

  18. Dianne says

    The inevitable fact of my own death makes life no less sweet to me. Or maybe sweeter.

    Death is the mother of beauty. (W Stevens)

  19. Ol'Greg says

    Well while you’re at it ambook, could you guys lay off the ragweed planting around here? It makes it hard to get to the creek by my house and it makes my nose stuffy too. I’d rather you guys plant geraniums there this year. They’re pretty and they smell nice.

  20. Sili, The Unknown Virgin says

    When I told a doctor I wanted a vasectomy he said “it’s almost impossible to splice the tubes again so you better be sure.” When I told him I was sure he said to see his secretary for an appointment.

    BTW, guys, you may have heard that getting a vasectomy is a big pain in the balls (sorry, couldn’t resist). I had no particular problem because I did what the urologist told me to do. The men I’ve talked to who did have problems didn’t follow instructions.

    Just about what I was told as well. Plus the asking about “what if you meet a nice girl later? This is really only something married men do.”, but that was it. Oh, and of course I had to stress that this wasn’t just the depression talking.

    I think I shoulda worn some firmer underwear – I did have a bit of pain the next coupla days.

    Of course, in my case the vas is prolly largely for show, but now it’s done. Only just got around to handing in a sample for testing, though.

  21. KOPD says

    guys, you may have heard that getting a vasectomy is a big pain in the balls

    My dad decided to save money by skipping the anesthesia. I will not make that mistake when my time comes.

  22. ambook says

    @Jadehawk – I am really really tired of the word abomination being used as a translation in this way. Here’s a brief description I found of the Leviticus verse online (I have read the same description in lots of places – it’s not a subtle or unusual argument.)

    Lev 20:13 is giving the penalties for the Lev 18:22 “abomination” or in the Hebrew “toevah”. Unlike what the English translation implies, toevah did not usually signify something intrinsically evil, but something which is ritually unclean for Jews. Eating pork, shellfish, lobster, trimming beards, mixing fibers in clothing, and having sex during a women’s menstrual period is just as much an “abomination”. It is used throughout the OT to designate those Jewish sins which involve ethnic contamination or idolatry. In many other OT verses it simply means idolatry.

    So Christians can yammer all they want about Leviticus – it does not mean what they think it means. It had to do with distinguishing ancient Jews from the religions of their neighbors. End of story. Orthodox Jews take the food/beards/mixed fiber stuff just about as seriously as the gay-sex verse, and some interpret the Leviticus verse to mean no anal sex, not necessarily no gay sex. Non-orthodox groups are pretty much ok with homosexuality (not to mention non-theism, but don’t tell Christians that – it makes their heads explode).

    And have I mentioned that I think it really sucks to have one’s religion or philosophical/cultural tradition be at the center of someone else’s religion? Especially when that religion is crazy and doesn’t actually figure out what the words actually mean in the original language?

  23. Walton says

    Sili: You’ve reminded me of another thing the Lib Dems are wrong on. They don’t support nuclear power.

    I think Britain’s energy industry should follow the same lines as France, and move towards nuclear power for the bulk of our electricity needs: it might not be perfect, but it’s the best option we’ve got.

    See? I do have some rational reasons to vote Conservative. :-)

  24. Lynna, OM says

    Lynna, you do pick some gems for us, don’t you? :)

    I spare no expense to bring you the worst of the worst.

    BTW, I hear through the unofficial grapevine that I will be getting one of the Take Pride in Idaho awards. Confusion surrounds the actual event, and dead links add to the confusion on the website for the Conference on Recreation and Tourism, but it was the guy giving out the awards who contacted Leland, so it could be real … real, while simultaneously iffy, in an Idaho “talk to the man, not the woman” sort of way. If I have to stand around in the Doubletree Hotel in Boise and have awards thrust at me, I will place the blame squarely on your shoulders. :-)

    In another interesting aside, it seems the who will be giving out the award thinks it is a “mistake” (his word, in email to Leland) to have only my name on the award and not Leland’s name. I’ll be happy to have Leland’s name on the award, but it’s odd that no one asked me about this proposed change (they asked Leland). They don’t offer an award to photographers, so on the nomination our Publishing Company mentioned Leland within the descriptive text, in much the same way that you did on the nomination form. There’s only room to nominate one person, and that person is the writer. The whole thing may turn into a comedy, which is fine by me.

  25. Sili, The Unknown Virgin says

    See? I do have some rational reasons to vote Conservative. :-)

    You might as well vote Labour, then, if that’s the reason.

    And you suddenly forget that the LD will be the minor coälition partner – I don’t think nuclear is part of their list of suggestions. They quite wisely haven’t made any demands of future partners.

    Of course, I may be naïve, but at least I’d expect LD to do a proper evaluation of the need, safety and rentability of plants before putting them up. (Another reason to get rid of one-person constituencies: NIMBYs.)

  26. David Marjanović says

    It rained today, and now the ground is full of cherry petals, while the wild roses start to blossom. Lots of snails everywhere, too.

    Sven, are you still reading? The March issue of the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology has arrived. Turns out that, while I’m fooling around with amphibians, other people work, piece by piece, on turtle origins… or at least on early turtle evolution:

    Juliana Sterli & Marcelo S. de la Fuente (2010): Anatomy of Condorchelys antiqua Sterli, 2008, and the origin of the modern jaw closure mechanism in turtles, JVP 30(2), 351 – 366.

    Abstract:

    Here we present a detailed anatomical description of cranial and post-cranial remains of a Jurassic turtle, Condorchelis antiqua Sterli, 2008, from the Cañadón Asfalto Formation (Middle Jurassic) in central Patagonia. Although C. antiqua is similar in morphology to the Early Jurassic turtles Kayentachelys aprix and Indochelys spatulata, it differs in that it lacks both pterygoid teeth and a V-shaped suprapygal 2, respectively. In light of new discoveries and reinterpretations of other fossil taxa, we suggest that several changes in the evolution of the skull morphology of turtles (such as the closure of the basipterygoid articulation, the closure of the interpterygoid vacuity, the development of the secondary lateral wall in the braincase, the development of temporal emargination and/or the posterior extension of the crista supraoccipitalis) could be related to the acquisition of a stronger skull to accommodate the modern pulley system. The optimization of these characters in a phylogenetic framework shows that they are coincident with the appearance of trochlear systems (oticum or pterygoidei) in turtles, suggesting a functionally correlated relationship among them.”

    It’s normal to have teeth on the palate as well as on the jaws; palate teeth have been independently lost in the ancestors of mammals and crocodiles. In turtles, the jaw teeth were lost first, then those on one palate bone after the other. The pterygoid is the last one to lose them in turtles, so Condorchelys could be the oldest known completely toothless turtle.

    The suprapygals are bones in the carapace.

    The remaining two sentences mention the evolution of the pulley mechanism of the jaw-closing muscles in modern turtles. In modern turtles, the jaw muscles originate in the back of the skull and insert in the lower jaw; that means they would pull obliquely backwards, while the lower jaw is supposed to move upwards vertically. This is solved by having the muscles run around a pulley. The fun part is that this is done in two different ways (one involving the upper side of the pterygoid bone mentioned before, the other the inner-ear capsule) in the two subdivisions of the modern turtles, Pleurodira (which pull the head and neck under the carapace sideways) and Cryptodira (which retract it vertically). Both mechanisms are lacking in the famous Triassic stem-turtle Proganochelys. For a long time, it was thought that these mechanisms must have evolved independently, but this is now under debate. The paper argues that the presence of either mechanism is correlated to a lot of other differences between modern turtles and old ones like Proganochelys and Condorchelys, namely the anatomy of the palate and the size and shape of muscle attachment sites on the sides of the braincase and the occiput. If correct, this means that these characters cannot be counted separately in analyses of turtle phylogeny.

    In many other OT verses it simply means idolatry.

    Now that is interesting.

    I think Britain’s energy industry should follow the same lines as France, and move towards nuclear power for the bulk of our electricity needs: it might not be perfect, but it’s the best option we’ve got.

    In the short run perhaps.

    In the long run, becoming dependent on that stuff isn’t better than being dependent on oil. I read in the 1990s that the world supply of uranium was going to last 60 more years. (I don’t know how old the estimate itself was.) Demand is now way up, and you’re proposing to increase it further…

    In the even longer run, where do you store the radioactive waste for the next thirty thousand years?

  27. Sili, The Unknown Virgin says

    I think Rorschach complained we Danes hadn’t planned a Pharyguphest yet.

    I’m not much of a planner – nor do I like responsibility – but I guess he has a point.

    What did you do in Oz? Are we meant to book a bar or just find a place big enough to hold us informally? Dinner? Drinks? Dance?

  28. Jadehawk, OM says

    I read in the 1990s that the world supply of uranium was going to last 60 more years.

    that’s only for the particular type of uranium needed for older reactors. Not a problem anymore with the newer reactors, which can use the common isotope of uranium as well; some can even use thorium.

  29. Sili, The Unknown Virgin says

    I mean of course Pharynguphest. I musta been thinking of that salad thing: pharygula.

  30. ambook says

    @ David M

    NO NO NO – turtles came from fairies in bunny suits. Really. About 6000 years ago. What kind of infidel are you, reading such stuff?

  31. Katrina says

    (To which my husband says I should have responded, “It’s a long-eared eastern fur snake, which is, strangely enough, a species of bird.”)

    ambook, it sounds like your husband and mine would get on very well together.

    When my boy/girl twins were little, we tried to be sure that each was dressed in a way that reflected their genders – hoping to reduce the number of questions by curious bystanders. That, plus the fact that he was a blue-eyed blond and her eyes were so dark as to look black, with curly dark brown hair, and it was obvious at a glance how different they were (and still are).

    Nevertheless, we would inevitably be asked if they were identical. To which my husband would reply, straight-faced, “Why yes, except she seems to be missing a penis.”

  32. Sili, The Unknown Virgin says

    60 years may still be what we need to tide us over. I can assure that I don’t think of nuclear as a replacement for renewables.

    But it’s still gonna be a long time before we have intercontinental superconducting powerlines – which we’ll need if we’re to cart around direct current from solar.

    And of course, having running nukes will allow for the production of more Pu-236, which we fucking need for spaceprobes.

  33. Walton says

    that’s only for the particular type of uranium needed for older reactors. Not a problem anymore with the newer reactors, which can use the common isotope of uranium as well; some can even use thorium.

    Yay! So I’ve got a whole host of reasons to vote Conservative: better energy policy, as well as their clear plan to reduce the budget deficit, and, of course, the fact that a Conservative vote is the most surefire way of getting rid of Labour. And they are slightly better than Labour (though still not good enough) on civil liberties.

    In fact, I just voted Conservative in a postal vote for the local council election. I’m still not 100% decided which constituency to vote in for the parliamentary election, since I’m registered in two places.

  34. Feynmaniac, Chimerical Toad says

    Yay! So I’ve got a whole host of reasons post hoc rationalizations to vote Conservative

    Fixed.

  35. MrFire says

    I think Britain’s energy industry should follow the same lines as France, and move towards nuclear power for the bulk of our electricity needs

    I think the US government should find a way to tap Teabagger vitriol for much the same purpose.

  36. David Marjanović says

    Fuck. Only the first paragraph of the blockquote is the abstract.

    Another reason to get rid of one-person constituencies: NIMBYs.

    Absolutely.

    some can even use thorium.

    Such reactors already exist? I thought they were only planned.

    intercontinental superconducting powerlines – which we’ll need if we’re to cart around direct current from solar

    Really?

  37. Carlie says

    Nevertheless, we would inevitably be asked if they were identical.

    I used to get this about my little (fraternal twin) brothers all the time. I never understood it – you’re looking right at them, and you’re asking whether or not they’re identical? Can’t you, you know, tell by looking? Which you’re doing right now? Sheesh.

  38. ambook says

    On twins –

    I once got asked the “are they identical” question by a stranger at a New Jersey Turnpike rest stop while my 8 week old kids were on the diaper changing table with their diapers off. I guess some people are unclear on what the word identical means.

  39. Geoffrey says

    @Katrina

    “Why yes, except she seems to be missing a penis.”

    Please to be sending me one new 19″ monitor and keyboard. I also require new shirt as this one seems to have acquired coffee stains.

  40. AnthonyK says

    Yay! So I’ve got a whole host of reasons to vote Conservative

    No good ones though. Oh, wait, that’s right, we need a change of government! That’ll work!

    the common isotope of uranium

    Quite useless. Hangs around reactor corners, breeds too fact, and very difficult to get rid of. 238 scum.

    some can even use thorium

    But only if you believe in the Norse pantheon.

    Turtle evolution

    Hmmm. Turns out that the word “tortoise” isn’t used in the US or Australia. But whatever you call them, these reptiles were the first to have testude babies.

    The wikipedia article on them is really very pretty.

  41. Dianne says

    Very occasionally one of a pair of (initially) male monozygotic twins will lose the Y chromosome and be born identical to the other twin except for being a girl. So it’s not quite impossible to have gender discordant monozygotic (“identical”) twins.

    Of course, the pro-lifers claim that they’re one child because they developed from a single egg that will “if not interfered with” develop into one baby. A hermaphrodite, perhaps?

  42. ambook says

    There are also maternal identical twins, where the ovum splits before fertilization and is fertilized by separate sperm. And there are chimeras. Life is a lot weirder than pro-lifers seem to acknowledge.

  43. Katrina says

    Sorry, Geoffrey, but – you know – the question gets old after a while.

    @ Carlie: at least they were both boys. I mean, sheesh!

    Then there were always the people trying NOT to ask if they were twins. So they would ask, “How far apart are they?” Straight answer, “One minute.” Which was generally followed by a double-take.

    Sometimes, people would catch themselves as they were asking whether or not the kids were identical. You could see it, that look on their faces as if a wall were approaching and the brakes just wouldn’t work well enough.

    Now, in all fairness, I have read that there have been cases where they think they have twins with identical maternal chromosomes and different paternal chromosomes, where the ovum splits prior to fertilization. In that case, I suppose you could have b/g twins who *appear* identical.

    Still, by conventional definition, identical twins are monozygotic.

  44. Jadehawk, OM says

    Such reactors already exist? I thought they were only planned.

    no, they don’t exist yet. but we were talking about the viability of nuclear in the near-future, after all.

    Storage of radioactive waste is the main problem with nuclear.

    In the ideal world, it would only be used to bridge us over until we figure out how to harvest solar etc., and then switch over, so that we don’t accumulate too much of the nasty shit.

    In reality, a switch to nuclear would become a permanent commitment (success-oriented planning, remember? one solution is enough, alternatives are expensive and not needed!), which would promptly cause a problem larger than the current global warming crisis: an evergrowing mountain of deadly shit leaking left-right-and-center into the environment.

  45. Jadehawk, OM says

    the common isotope of uranium

    Quite useless. Hangs around reactor corners, breeds too fact, and very difficult to get rid of. 238 scum.

    breeder reactors can use it. I know they’re only in the experimental stage right now, but they seem to work.

    But again, I really don’t see nuclear as a long-term solution anyway. That’s just a surefire way to cause another massive crisis.

  46. Nerd of Redhead, OM says

    I know they’re only in the experimental stage right now, but they seem to work.

    No, they do work. Used to create A-/H-bomb material, and have for a long time. U238 plus a neutron can equal Pu239. Very fissile material…

  47. 'Tis Himself, OM says

    Storage of radioactive waste is the main problem with nuclear.

    There’s other problems as well.

    * Nuclear reactors are expensive to build, operate and maintain.

    * A 767 flown into a containment vessel would create an environmental disaster which would take decades to recover from.

    * Mining, refining and enrichment of uranium produce radioactive isotopes which contaminate the surrounding area.

  48. ambook says

    The biggest storage problem is that the most geologically stable place, at least in North America, to store the waste is the Canadian shield (northern Maine for the US) and it’d be politically problematic to declare that Maine should be a nuclear waste repository. Then there’s the transportation problem to get the stuff there.

  49. Rorschach says

    Are we meant to book a bar or just find a place big enough to hold us informally?

    That’ll do, it’s what we did down here.Sure PZ would put it on the front page when you have a time and place figured out.

    I had no particular problem because I did what the urologist told me to do.

    Vasectomies are frequently done by GPs in their practice over here.Which has the result that I get to see quite a few painful scrotums.Like, very painful scrotums.

    So, speaking of Christianity and homosexuality, I’ve heard it claimed that “abomination” doesn’t mean what we think it means (or at least the word translated into abomination doesn’t.)

    On that note, where’s Owlmirror??

    According to the Mirena package insert, as of 2006 there had been 9.9 million users and around 360 live births for the users.

    I don’t know where they get their statistics from.

    Well, their website states that Mirena “is over 99% effective to prevent pregnancy”.Nice example right out of the book “How to lie with statistics”.
    Took one of the little buggers out the other day, was a bit messy in there, what with bleeding and all.
    There is voluntary,not mandatory reporting of side effects in the USA and Australia btw, and I guess getting pregnant would count as one.

    The studies I can find show a similar or better rate of contraception, while being cheaper with more side effects.

  50. Jadehawk, OM says

    from the study:

    Amenorrhoea was the main reason for the discontinuation of the LNG-20 intrauterine system,

    my first thought: why?! what the fuck is wrong with all these women? do they like being in pain?!

    and then I read the next sentence. Either PP is just THAT good at this, or people just don’t pay attention when doctors talk/don’t read the pamphlets.

  51. cicely says

    ambook, re linky goodness; these used to get me, every time, until our Squidly Overlord added a short cheat sheet underneath the “Leave a comment” box. First, copy in that stuff in brackets about a href=, and backspace over the letters url (leaving the quotes) and copy in the address for what you’re wanting to link. Next, backspace over the word ‘link’ and type in whatever word you’re wanting to be the clickable (frequently ‘here’). Should work.

  52. ambook says

    @ Jadehawk – Yes, that was mega weird. My midwife told me that was a side effect and that it was fine (even desirable), and also told me to use backup methods for a couple of months. Weird.

    @cicely – I thought I’d done that, but I couldn’t get it to behave. Next time.

    @Rorschach – I responded on the boobquake thread from a couple days ago – I was actually trying to understand what you said.

  53. cicely says

    ambook, now I think about it, my links didn’t wanna behave unless I ended it with /a href. You might want to give that a try.

  54. Becca says

    Totally OT, but I need some help with iTunes, if anyone here knows anything about it. I was running iTunes 9 on a Windows XP box.

    Last night, I tried to download a soundtrack for my daughter from the iTunes store. iTunes froze in the middle of the download.

    I rebooted. iTunes still freezes upon opening. It tries to connect to the Apple store, and freezes. No matter what I do, I can’t seem to get it to not try to connect to the Apple store.

    I tried disconnecting from the internet, thinking maybe the problem was in the iTunes store somehow. iTunes still freezes upon opening.

    I reloaded iTunes – it still freezes upon opening.

    I totally deleted every Apple ap using Add/Delete Programs from the Control Panel , redownloaded iTunes – it freezes upon opening.

    I’ve disconnected all my anti-virus stuff. iTunes still freezes upon opening.

    I’m afraid to call Apple Support – they’ll just tell me to create a new user account, and if I do that, I’ll lose all my Windows setup: my Office tool bar, all my Firefox bookmarks.

    Does *anyone* have any suggestions for how I can get iTunes to work short of creating a whole new user account in Window (which is Apple Support’s solution for everything)? I’ve backed up my .itl files, so I don’t *think* I’ll lose most of my library if I do have to recreate everything de novo, but I’d really rather not have to do that.

  55. boygenius says

    Like, very painful scrotums.

    My poor father. When he was driving home after his vasectomy, he had to stop 1/4 mile from the house and help stomp out a small forest fire. The stupid kids across the road from us had let a campfire get out of hand and the flames were heading towards our house.

    Me? I would have let the fucker burn.

  56. Nerd of Redhead, OM says

    Becca, the typical advice on an Apple system would be to delete the preferences file, which is probably corrupted.

  57. Ol'Greg says

    Becca, maybe something in the iTunes library files is corrupted? Or in one of their other files where they store the stuff that doesn’t get de-installed when you remove it.

    If reinstalling iTunes doesn’t help then that may be because deinstalling iTunes doesn’t delete whatever files made to store info and then the new install just uses that corrupted file? That would maybe explain why a new user acct would work because it wouldn’t have that file in its preferences yet. Until you make one, by runing iTunes… thus beginning the whole thing over again.

    When you go into any of those files without opening itunes does anything freeze? And I mean the iTunes library file folder, not any other you might have on your drives. I hate iTunes and use it as little as possible, deeply resenting that it forces me to allow it to make a copy of everything. So I’m not the best person to ask as I only deal with it when I need to put something on my phone or iPod. Yes. I have them. Both.

    It freaked out my pc once too, but my guess is if they typically ask to make again on the new user then it’s something that gets corrupted as itunes does its usual maintenance stuff.

    I guess the next thing would be, what to do if that is the case though?

    Maybe go in and (after making sure you’ve got anything backed up that might get lost) deleting those associated library files from iTunes, deinstalling it, restarting the PC, running a search for any windows updates needed, and then re-installing iTunes. That way if there was an update missing maybe you’ll get it back too? Just one more thing I guess I could see causing that. Like I said this isn’t something I know a lot about. It just sounds like something that the computer keeps trying to move or deal with on startup (library files would be one such thing I think) that isn’t working right so causing a hang up.

  58. Becca says

    @497 – re: adoption: we adopted two kids in open adoptions. It doesn’t have to cost the earth. if you want to know more about our experience, please feel free to contact me at becca (at) di (dot) org.

    re: having children: I always knew I wanted children in my life. When my current (second) husband and I were courting, I told him that 1) I wanted children and 2) there was a good chance I couldn’t conceive. While Chris pretty much let me drive the whole thing (infertility treatments, when to call a halt, moving into adoption), he was always very supportive of whatever my decision was.

    My feeling, and I think his too, was that I didn’t so much want to get pregnant as to have a child (as distinct from having a baby)in the family – with the object that children grow up. Our adoption agency found this refreshing… too many people go into it wanting a baby, and then have problems when that cute little pink and white thing turns two and learns the word NO.

  59. Ol'Greg says

    Oh yeah, and just for clarity I’m not talking about whatever file all your music is in. Only the copy of the that music that iTunes makes for itself.

  60. Rorschach says

    Deleting the installation and config files(in /Program Files) might help, also, you should be able in XP to create another user account and see if Itunes works for a new user.

  61. Geoffrey says

    Becca,

    What happens if you move the .itl and the .xml file from the iTunes folder in the My Music folder in your My Documents to somewhere else?

  62. Becca says

    I’ve backed up my itl (itunes library) files, do that every so often, so I won’t lose too much.

    where do I find the preference files to try to delete them? I’ve deleted just about everything I can find that relates to iTunes.

  63. Geoffrey says

    Becca,

    Preference file is only if you’re on a Mac as Nerd mentioned.

    The other option is to drag the entire iTunes folder (usually located somewhere under My Documents) to somewhere else and launch iTunes again. iTunes should then recreate what’s needed.

  64. Nerd of Redhead, OM says

    Becca, on an Apple system, it would be in users/user/library/preferences. Not sure where it would be on a Windows system, but somewhere in the documents and settings folder.

  65. Ol'Greg says

    Wow Jadehawk, I just finally perused your blog beyond the occasional post you link here.
    It’s great!

    I always think I want to blog but I can’t seem to find time to write a good post, and by the time I do it’s no longer relevant anyway.

    Meh…

    I’m content with the frivolous though really.

  66. Leigh Williams, WeWhoStormTheGatesOfOmelas, OM says

    Katrina:

    Nevertheless, we would inevitably be asked if they were identical. To which my husband would reply, straight-faced, “Why yes, except she seems to be missing a penis.”

    Sounds like we need to get your husband, Ambook’s, and Mr. Science together. We, too, did the “gender-clue” dressing. So here were two babies, one in pink, one in blue, and because they were quite similar in size and coloring, the inevitable question, are they identical. Irritated the hell out of Mr. Science. So he began replying, in tones of surprise and outrage, “God, I hope not!” I don’t know if the folks asking the question ever got the joke; this usually happened in Walmart, and I almost always immediately explained (the quality of mercy is not strained, and so forth).

    I can’t say we ever got the question when the twins were lying in the rude nude, however.

    Dianne, Katrina, and Ambook, I was unaware of maternal identical twins and gender discordant identical twins. That is very interesting; our twins are still a matched set in looks, though Boy Twin is 6’1″ and Girl Twin is only 5’9″. I would love to see a DNA profile on them.

  67. Jadehawk, OM says

    Wow Jadehawk, I just finally perused your blog beyond the occasional post you link here.
    It’s great!

    I always think I want to blog but I can’t seem to find time to write a good post, and by the time I do it’s no longer relevant anyway.

    Meh…

    I’m content with the frivolous though really.

    thanks! :-)

    I really needed someplace to dump my random internal monologues, because they were cluttering my brain and I started having a hard time focusing on things. So in the end, the blog is a bit of a timesaver, because now I can just dump my thoughts there, and stop thinking them long enough to get some actual work done :-p

  68. Antiochus Epiphanes says

    Becca(#567): Thanks. We haven’t talked about this in a few months, so I’m going to see if my wife’s thoughts about this have changed at all. We sort of left off where we had been for a long time with having our own kid (it would be nice but can we handle it), but then our initial assessment was that we were maybe not in a financial position to do this.

    I’ll get back to you via the e-mail that you so kindly provided.

  69. Feynmaniac, Chimerical Toad says

    LMAO!

    Colbert mentioned both boobquake and the barter-your-doctor-with-a-chicken on his show.

  70. Bill Dauphin, OM says

    Jadehawk:

    I really needed someplace to dump my random internal monologues…

    Heh. I usually dump mine here, which is probably why I can’t seem to keep my own blog going!

    I finally got around to bookmarking yours, and I’ll get started on reading back into the archives ASAP.

    In other news… the farce is strong with this one! Texas is trying hard to stay even with Arizona in the crazy sweepstakes.

  71. Leigh Williams, WeWhoStormTheGatesOfOmelas, OM says

    Arizona hasn’t got a chance, Bill. We’re bigger and have far more idiots than they do. How could they ever hope to catch up to us, when not only do we have so many elected Republican/Tea Party officials, but also the State Board of Education?

  72. Bill Dauphin, OM says

    Leigh, I fear you’re right about my former home state. BTW, I just tonight was looking at your FB profile and noticed that you graduated from my university just as I was getting ready to enter it! Small world, eh?

    I know you’ve already seen this (‘cuz you left a nice comment), but I’m wondering what the rest of the crowd here thinks: Is this art? ;^)

    How ’bout this?

    We got us some purty places here Noooooo England!

  73. Walton says

    I suppose financial fraud follows quite naturally when you’re “Prince” Charles’s aide at his fraudulent Foundation for Integrated Health.

    I don’t endorse his homeopathic lunacy, by any stretch of the imagination, but what do you mean by putting “Prince” in quote-marks? He is, in fact, a real prince: whatever false claims he may be making, his title is not one of them.

    That article is deeply worrying, though. I knew he was into quackery, but I didn’t know he was actively campaigning for it to be provided on the NHS. The good thing is that, if and when he becomes King, he will have to shut up about these things, as it would be grossly improper for a reigning monarch to be backing something so controversial. Even so, what he is doing now is undermining the institution of the monarchy.

  74. Ring Tailed Lemurian says

    what do you mean by putting “Prince” in quote-marks?

    It means I am a republican, and I am highlighting the absurdity of self-given “royal” titles. If I was referring to Michael Jackson I’d put Prince of Pop in quotes too.

    what he is doing now is undermining the institution of the monarchy.

    Hooray!

    Oh what joy! Getting Walton to clutch his pearls has made my day. :)

    Disgusting that Charlie Boy’s fraudulent, bogus, quackery vehicle got around £1 mllion of public money.

  75. Feynmaniac, Chimerical Toad says

    Even so, what he is doing now is undermining the institution of the monarchy.

    Keep up the good work Charlie!

  76. WowbaggerOM says

    Walton wrote:

    He is, in fact, a real prince: whatever false claims he may be making, his title is not one of them.

    Hmm, that’s just silly enough to remind me of this:

    King Arthur: I am your king.
    Woman: Well I didn’t vote for you.
    King Arthur: You don’t vote for kings.
    Woman: Well how’d you become king then?
    King Arthur: The Lady of the Lake, her arm clad in the purest shimmering samite held aloft Excalibur from the bosom of the water, signifying by divine providence that I, Arthur, was to carry Excalibur. THAT is why I am your king.
    Dennis: [interrupting] Listen, strange women lyin’ in ponds distributin’ swords is no basis for a system of government. Supreme executive power derives from a mandate from the masses, not from some farcical aquatic ceremony.

  77. John Scanlon FCD says

    Dianne #486,

    I feel somewhat guilty about having a kid: Any person who is born is going to die… Most people think this line of reasoning rather odd.

    A version of negative utilitarianism. Some people argue it as a general philosophical position (or as a form of trolling, if there’s a difference), but the ‘oddness’, to me, is that it devalues life by ignoring its every positive quality. There are plenty of reasons for not having kids that seem quite sane to me, but that’s not one of them. YMMV. :)

    Given that everything that lives dies (in the long run), there are a couple of ideas that would work in counterarguments; the economic concept of temporal discounting, and renormalization from quantum field theory.

    Or “Eat, drink and be merry, for tomorrow we… never mind.”

    Ambook #516… heh heh.

    Ol’Greg #525, geraniums smell nice??! Fuck that stink! Could be one of those genetic things like the smell of asparagus-laden pee, some don’t notice it.

    AnthonyK #547,

    Turns out that the word “tortoise” isn’t used in the US or Australia.

    News to me; ‘tortoise’ is still quote commonly used for chelids in Oz. One reason for discouraging this is that back some decades (up to early 1970s anyway) there was a roaring trade in wild-caught and baby turtles of various native species, all of them aquatic and carnivorous, and the pet shops used to stock British ‘how to look after your pet tortoise’ pamphlets. Tortoises (Testudo spp., Testudinidae) are fully terrestrial and largely or exclusively herbivorous, and the recommended diet was mainly lettuce. Not many survived.

  78. MrFire says

    Executives from Goldman Sachs are going up to Capitol Hill today to testify.

    This would be the point in an Ayn Rand novel where they launch into a self-justifying speech about how they represent the ideal of Man, how the rules are simply oppressing their brilliance, and how the majority of humankind is worthless.

    And then proceed to get acquitted of absolutely everything.

  79. SC OM says

    The Asshole Formerly Known as Prince Charles.

    A pleasant ring to it, that has.

    This would be the point in an Ayn Rand novel where they launch into a self-justifying speech about how they represent the ideal of Man, how the rules are simply oppressing their brilliance, and how the majority of humankind is worthless.

    Perfect.

  80. negentropyeater says

    And then proceed to get acquitted of absolutely everything.

    Methinks if our “representatives” don’t do justice, some people will eventually do it for them, and they won’t put them in prison but use the many available firearms and other easily manufactured molotov cocktails against their kids or families who shop in one of the highend stores around the corner…

    I’m not condoning violence against Goldman executives or their families, but our Government’s inaction will most probably lead to this.

  81. SteveV says

    Nerd of Redhead:
    heard on the radio the other day that none of the wives of the 100 richest men in the UK are redheads. As Miss M is a redhead I think I know why – her shoe habit alone is enough to ensure poverty. Does this strike a chord?

  82. MrFire says

    Perfect.

    I hope that makes up for the Squeeze link I posted yesterday.

    and they won’t put them in prison but use the many available firearms and other easily manufactured molotov cocktails against their kids or families who shop in one of the highend stores around the corner…

    The only people deranged enough to do that are, ironically, probably busy targeting ‘big government’ right now.

  83. Walton says

    Methinks if our “representatives” don’t do justice, some people will eventually do it for them, and they won’t put them in prison but use the many available firearms and other easily manufactured molotov cocktails against their kids or families who shop in one of the highend stores around the corner…

    I’m not condoning violence against Goldman executives or their families, but our Government’s inaction will most probably lead to this.

    negentropyeater, that comment was not OK. You should be ashamed of yourself.

    It is not sufficient, having made inflammatory and hateful comments like that, to try and cover yourself by assuring everyone that you “don’t condone violence”. What you just said is no different from the anti-abortionists who say things along the lines of “Well, I don’t condone violence against abortion doctors or their families, but some people will probably attack them if something isn’t done about it.”

    In a free society, you’re entitled to disagree with the practice of investment banking, just as other people are entitled to disagree with the practice of abortion. But talking so blithely about violence towards a group of people – including children – is never OK.

  84. Walton says

    And sending Goldman Sachs executives to prison would, incidentally, be completely and utterly ridiculous and profoundly illiberal.

    This illustrates perfectly that the authoritarian left is just as bad as the authoritarian right.

  85. Janine, Mistress Of Foul Mouth Abuse, OM says

    And sending Goldman Sachs executives to prison would, incidentally, be completely and utterly ridiculous and profoundly illiberal.

    This illustrates perfectly that the authoritarian left is just as bad as the authoritarian right.

    Because a common thief committing B&E does so much more damage to people then those executives responsible for wrecking the economy.

  86. Sili, The Unknown Virgin says

    intercontinental superconducting powerlines – which we’ll need if we’re to cart around direct current from solar

    Really?

    As I understand it, yes.

    The reason we use high voltage power lines, is that it reduces the resistive loss somewhat (P=½RI2=1RU2). The benefit of AC is that it is ‘easily’ transformed up and down in potential. No such luck with DC, so either we’d have to first make it AC, which is what we do now, or find a way to reduce loss, which is where superconduction comes in.

    Yes, there are hella problems with nuclear waste, but at least it’s fairly localised. Carbondioxide once emitted spreads out into the entire atmosphere. I fear nuclear is the lesser of the two evils here. Someday we’ll have to suck CO2 out of the atmosphere at a rate fare above what plants can do now. But we won’t have the tech for that for a long time I fear, and unlike bloody Freeman Dyson I’m not gonna bet on the synthetic biologists giving us supertrees that bear diamond fruit in the next decade. Friggin’ techno-utopian.

  87. MrFire says

    Walton,

    I got the impression that negentropyeater was referring to the more extreme breeds of teabagger out there – that is, the individuals who are addicted to their own free-floating anger, and who are looking more for something to rage at than anything else, and are equally and indiscriminately angry at government as much as at Wall St.

    With all due respect to negentropyeater, though, I suppose one could read it the way you read it.

    And sending Goldman Sachs executives to prison would, incidentally, be completely and utterly ridiculous and profoundly illiberal.

    Seriously? I thought they were under the gun for quite legitimate and heinous fraud charges:

    The S.E.C. action is a civil complaint, but it could be referred to criminal prosecutors who would have to prove that individuals intended to defraud investors.

    Jailtime is a distinct possibility – and quite rightly so.

  88. SC OM says

    These CEOs, man…If you’re that ruthless, you’re a scary dude. I tell you, now when I walk past a little gang banger, I don’t even blink. But if I see a white dude with a Wall Street Journal, I haul ass. Before I walk past the Arthur Andersen building, I cut through the projects. If you cut through the projects, you may just lose what you have on you that day. I ain’t never been mugged of my whole future.

    – Wanda Sykes

  89. Nerd of Redhead, OM says

    heard on the radio the other day that none of the wives of the 100 richest men in the UK are redheads.

    Considering redheads make up 5% or less of the population, and studies have shown men really prefer brunets, it isn’t surprising.

    As Miss M is a redhead I think I know why – her shoe habit alone is enough to ensure poverty. Does this strike a chord?

    The Redhead has always lived on a budget. So she shops at outlet stores. Which doesn’t say the quantity hasn’t added up over the years, as almost nothing gets thrown away…

  90. Paul says

    Seriously? I thought they were under the gun for quite legitimate and heinous fraud charges:

    Walton is against prison time for “purely financial” crimes. I mean, it’s not like they mugged someone. They simply deliberately ruined the economy.

  91. cicely says

    And sending Goldman Sachs executives to prison would, incidentally, be completely and utterly ridiculous and profoundly illiberal.

    How do you figure?

  92. Rutee, Shrieking Harpy of Dooooom says

    In fairness, Walton is against using prison as punishment to begin with. That said, I don’t know how one would avoid jail time for the various fraudsters of the US, while also jailing small time thugs, without making Khalil Ghibran’s statement on the law come true; “The law is a net designed to catch small fish, not large ones”.

  93. Matt Penfold says

    That said, I don’t know how one would avoid jail time for the various fraudsters of the US, while also jailing small time thugs, without making Khalil Ghibran’s statement on the law come true; “The law is a net designed to catch small fish, not large ones”.

    Maybe they should be forced to work in a fast food restaurant at minimum wage for the rest of their lives. After be stripped of all their existing assets of course.

  94. cicely says

    Walton, what do you think would be an appropriate punishment insted of incarceration?

  95. Ibis3 says

    Attention pro-choice people!
    When the G8 convenes for their meeting this summer Canada will be pushing a “maternal health” initiative for women in developing countries. But the Conservative gov’t only wants to help women if they’re baby-making machines. They “might” aid if family planning is involved, but definitely won’t if access to abortion is supported. In other words, Canadian women have a choice but the poorest women in the world shouldn’t have access to abortion.

    Please vote in this poll.
    Do you think Canada should fund abortion services as part of a G8 initiative to improve the health of mothers in poor countries?

    And if you’re so inclined, please do more. Write to your head of gov’t, the Canadian PM, and the Canadian MP in charge of international aid, Bev Oda.

  96. Feynmaniac, Chimerical Toad says

    And sending Goldman Sachs executives to prison would, incidentally, be completely and utterly ridiculous and profoundly illiberal.

    This illustrates perfectly that the authoritarian left is just as bad as the authoritarian right.

    Have you read what these guys did? Even the stuff they did legally shows a borderline pyschopathic mind at work. Some of these fraudsters seriously need rehabilitation. What’s to stop these people from finding new victims?

    Incidently, what about a guy who robs a bank? Does he deserve jail time? I’ve agreed with you in the past that we send WAY too many to prison and that it should be used sparingly. However, in the case of massive fraud it’s justified. Violence isn’t the only way to harm others. There are some people so twisted that the threat of jail is the only thing keeping them from harming others.

  97. Ol'Greg says

    In fairness, Walton is against using prison as punishment to begin with.

    I started to type something myself but realized it came down to this point. But I disagree with the quote “The law is a net designed to catch small fish, not large ones” also.

    The law, in terms of prison, is a way of punishing and intimidating the lower classes. You lock people up to keep them away from the good people, to help remove them from society, to reduce societies contact with them and to punish and intimidate the masses in the hopes that they will be kept passive by it.

    At least that’s how I see it. Now whether that’s good or bad I guess is another question? There may be some merit in that cruelty, but maybe not? Perhaps by not feeding the social environments that cause that relationship that kind of system would be unnecessary?

    I really don’t think the same social factors apply, so I think comparing them to local thugs is disingenuous. Not that they are better, but that they are different.

    The law, however, is not just about throwing thugs in prisons. It’s also about checking power. In the case of the fraudulent Goldman Sachs types, compare how Martha Stewart was treated publicly for some small corporate indiscretion to how these execs are treated and I think you will see that prison in popular culture is more about what kind of people society wants to hurt than about true justice for societal damage. People wanted her taken down a peg, and were happy again once she was. But the whole thing was a farce.

    Here you have people who truly did damage to the economy. Does throwing them in prison Martha Stewart style do anything worthwhile? Will we all be happy if the repent and promise to be real nice when they get out?

    At the same time the law is the very thing that could prevent the kind of economy killing fraud that happens at the top tiers, by closing up the loopholes and implementing regulation, and by involving public awareness through this process.

    Perhaps a proper punishment for corrupt execs IMO, would be to remove them from power and have them pay long lasting fines or else have some of their property and holdings seized.

    Who cares where their bodies sit anyway?

  98. Rutee, Shrieking Harpy of Dooooom says

    Perhaps a proper punishment for corrupt execs IMO, would be to remove them from power and have them pay long lasting fines or else have some of their property and holdings seized.

    That probably would be fair, but I doubt the law is written to allow such a punishment. Therefore, given due process and various rules about laws in the constitution, the people who did it are free from any retaliatory legislation, only stuff drafted prior to their fucking over of the economy. Which is the essence of Ghibran’s claim really (The folks who do big fuck ups will get away), and honestly I find it a little daunting to try to refute it given some of the particulars of corporate law.

  99. MrFire says

    In fairness, Walton is against using prison as punishment to begin with.

    OK. I had originally read it as ‘Goldman Sachs executives have done nothing to merit disapprobation’.

    However, if the meaning was that ‘executives should be punished, just by means other than jail’, that is a different matter, and one in which I can make little informed comment. I presume that appropriately punitive financial penalties and a disbarring from working in the given area, on top of foreiture of all ill-gotten gains, is a start of sorts. Of course, minimizing the chances of it occurring in the first place is ideal.

    Walton, do you have links to any threads where you have made these points in more detail?

  100. Lynna, OM says

    Bringing the mormon pain:

    If a young woman persisted in rebellion and a young man refused to go on a mission, castration was a punishment the Church did not hesitate to employ: Bishop Warren Snow of Manti, San Pete County, although the husband of several wives, desired to add to his list a good-looking young woman in that town. When he proposed to her, she declined the honor, informing him that she was engaged to a younger man. The Bishop argued with her on the ground of her duty, offering to have her lover sent on a mission, but in vain. When even the girl’s parents failed to gain her consent, Snow directed the local Church authorities to command the young man to give her up. Finding him equally obstinate, he was one evening summoned to attend a meeting where only trusted members were present. Suddenly the lights were put out, he was beaten and tied to a bench, and Bishop Snow himself castrated him with a bowie knife. In this condition, he was left to crawl to some haystacks, where he lay until discovered…[he] regained his health but has been an idiot or quiet lunatic ever since… And the Bishop married the girl.

    The castration of Thomas Lewis appears in the following:
    – MORMONISM UNVEILED, or THE LIFE AND CONFESSIONS of the Late Mormon Bishop JOHN D. LEE

    – The Mormon Hierarchy, Extensions of Power by D. Michael Quinn.

    – The Rocky Mountain Saints by T. B. Stenhouse, 1873.

    – Vol. 5 of Wilford Woodruff’s Diary, June 2, 1857

  101. David Marjanović says

    In reality, a switch to nuclear would become a permanent commitment (success-oriented planning, remember? one solution is enough, alternatives are expensive and not needed!), which would promptly cause a problem larger than the current global warming crisis: an evergrowing mountain of deadly shit leaking left-right-and-center into the environment.

    Looks like it.

    For those who don’t remember, here’s the daily blogpimping. Enjoy!

    breeder reactors can use it. I know they’re only in the experimental stage right now, but they seem to work.

    There was one in France and one in Japan, and they’ve both been switched off.

    This would be the point in an Ayn Rand novel where they launch into a self-justifying speech about how they represent the ideal of Man, how the rules are simply oppressing their brilliance, and how the majority of humankind is worthless.

    And then proceed to get acquitted of absolutely everything.

    Am I glad I’ve never even seen an Ayn Rand novel.

    heard on the radio the other day that none of the wives of the 100 richest men in the UK are redheads. As Miss M is a redhead I think I know why – her shoe habit alone is enough to ensure poverty. Does this strike a chord?

    Racism.

    The only people deranged enough to do that are, ironically, probably busy targeting ‘big government’ right now.

    Heh. I bet that’s true.

    intercontinental superconducting powerlines – which we’ll need if we’re to cart around direct current from solar

    Really?

    As I understand it, yes.

    Sorry, I thought of this while I was switching the computer off.

    Just… what’s the problem with transforming it to AC?

    Yes, there are hella problems with nuclear waste, but at least it’s fairly localised.

    It’s difficult to keep anything localised over 30,000 years. Especially if it’s however slightly soluble in water.

    Diamond fruit, LOL!

    Please vote in this poll.

    Do you think Canada should fund abortion services as part of a G8 initiative to improve the health of mothers in poor countries?

    63% 6958 votes Yes

    37% 4048 votes No

  102. Lynna, OM says

    Look! Progress in the morridor! Four high schools in a mormon stronghold, the St. George area, are being forced to be more tolerant toward gay students:

    With a little nudge from the American Civil Liberties Union, four St. George high schools have approved Gay-Straight Alliance clubs for the first time.
         Starting in fall 2010, Desert Hills, Dixie, Pine View and Snow Canyon high schools will have after-school forums specifically for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) students, along with their straight friends and allies.
         Nationally, there are 4,000 such clubs registered with the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network (GLSEN). The clubs promote safe school climates for all students, regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity.
         Last fall, a small group of St. George students launched an effort to form a GSA at every high school in the Washington County School District.
         “We felt alone,” said Logan Hunt, a gay senior at Dixie High. “We were worried about our [LGBT] friends we had met. They were often depressed. … We wanted to create more tolerance in our community for everybody.”
         But Hunt and his friends met with resistance from some school principals who denied their applications or insisted the clubs meet requirements that the ACLU considered onerous.
         After receiving complaints, the ACLU of Utah reviewed club policies at five Washington County high schools and found most were more burdensome than the district’s policy.
         Desert Hills, Dixie and Hurricane high school policies contained “unconstitutional requirements that were very clearly designed to make it so unpopular or minority view points could not be heard,” said Darcy Goddard, ACLU of Utah’s legal director.
         For example, one school required signatures from 30 students, unanimous approval of a student “executive council,” the principal’s OK and then a majority vote by the school’s faculty. Goddard also was concerned that two schools had vague requirements that clubs promote activities that are “moral” or “wholesome.”…

  103. negentropyeater says

    Walton,

    It is not sufficient, having made inflammatory and hateful comments like that, to try and cover yourself by assuring everyone that you “don’t condone violence”.

    No, it wasn’t inflammatory or hateful. I’ve been an investment banker myself and I don’t hate that profession.
    But if you are too naïve to understand why mega rich people deliberately wrecking the economy to gain maximum profits and going unpunished actually tests social cohesion and generates violence, I can’t help it.

    And your analogy with abortion clinics is a mindboggingly stupid strawman of what I wrote.

  104. Ol'Greg says

    I’ve been an investment banker myself

    Really? That’s interesting…

    what made you do something else? Of course you’ve no obligation to answer that. Just piqued my curiosity.

  105. Jadehawk, OM says

    unlike bloody Freeman Dyson I’m not gonna bet on the synthetic biologists giving us supertrees that bear diamond fruit in the next decade. Friggin’ techno-utopian.

    wtf are you talking about? we already have those! see?

  106. Lynna, OM says

    Rachel Maddow presented an interesting story on the racist roots of Arizona’s new immigration law: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26315908/#36791568
    The story begins with a discussion of the bipartisan (Kerry/Graham) legislation that was scuttled by Lindsey Graham because he was objecting to immigration reform [say what?] — don’t expect logic, but do expect obstructionist propaganda flavored with racism from the backers of the Arizona law.

  107. David Marjanović says

    Homer Simpson: “I only found a Newsweek magazine from 1986″… it’s shown: “Why America Loves Saddam”, with Uncle Sam and Saddam drinking a same cocktail through straws from the same glass.

    Cinema: Eating Nemo, The Fashion of the Christ…

    There are some people so twisted that the threat of jail is the only thing keeping them from harming others.

    Only if you can convince them they’ll actually get caught.

  108. David Marjanović says

    wtf are you talking about? we already have those! see?

    Beautiful, except there’s no carbon whatsoever in rubies… :o)

  109. Sili, The Unknown Virgin says

    The seeds are made of diamonds.

    I see I managed to put a factor ½ into the power equations. Stupid me.

    I’m honestly not sure what the problem with conversion to AC is.

    It’s difficult to keep anything localised over 30,000 years. Especially if it’s however slightly soluble in water.

    Yes.

    Notice how I don’t invoke our brilliant, genius techno-utopian descendants to take care of the problem for us.

  110. David Marjanović says

    The seeds are made of diamonds.

    Really? They look like metal. Pity the photo isn’t any bigger.

  111. Alan B says

    It really is a day for total stupidity:

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1269257/Man-sailing-Britain-small-boat-doing-laps-small-island-Kent.html?ITO=1708&referrer=yahoo

    Man ‘sailing around Britain’ in small boat was doing lap of small island off Kent.

    A man who thought he was sailing round the UK turned out to be circling a small island off the coast of Kent and didn’t realise until he ran out of fuel.

    A lifeboat was called to rescue him after his engine wound down off the Elmley Marshes on the Isle of Sheppey, which he had been sailing round all day and night.

    In addition to his tour of the 8-mile-wide island, the man, who had set out from Gillingham, had also made a series of other unfortunate decisions: The man had bought the motor cruiser online, and it only had a 20-litre fuel tank and a 20 horse power engine – not designed for sea use.

    He had taken the ‘wrong’ turn on the road map he was using and had no provisions onboard.
    He was making his way to Southampton alone with no navigation equipment.

    He thought that because he could drive in his car to Southampton using a single tank of fuel, he only needed one tank of fuel for the vessel and he had a VHF radio, but did not know how to use it.

    Lifeboat volunteer Tom Ware said: ‘Because he had no chart and he didn’t even know what navigational charts were, his general principle was to keep the land on his right, except he didn’t realise Sheppey was an Island.

    Candidate for a Darwin Award (failed)

  112. Bill Dauphin, OM says

    Alan B (@624):

    There’s so much WIN in that story:

    First, I love the fact that his “angel” is a sultry hottie with wings; just barely this side of softcore porn.

    Nest, doesn’t the macho motto on the tattoo — Only the Strong Survive — pretty much fly in the face of trusting one’s fate to a guardian angel, or, indeed, in the face of the typical Christian teaching that people are powerless in their own right, and must rely on the Lord for their strength?

    Finally, I’m always fascinated by these “guardian angels” who wait ’til after the “horrific car crash” to intervene! In fact, given that the story gives no cause for the car this kid was driving having “swerved into a tree,” I’m tempted to think his guardian angel really looks more like Clarence from It’s a Wonderful Life, and deliberately made the car crash because he was pissed off about the arrogant, sexed-up tat!

    ;^)

  113. MrFire says

    Oh and Lynna, back @530:

    BTW, I hear through the unofficial grapevine that I will be getting one of the Take Pride in Idaho awards.

    That’s very promising news – I’m very excited! However, I shall accept no part of the blame. It is fully your fault for being such a good writer. If I hadn’t done it, someone else would have done it in my place, and all that.

    Thanks, also, for the heart-warming forced-castration story.

  114. blf says

    [“Prince” Woo-woo] is, in fact, a real prince: whatever false claims he may be making…

    No, he’s a prince only if you believe all one family must be inherently first-above-others. I don’t, and absolutely refuse to refer to him or the rest of them any differently that I refer to others.

  115. negentropyeater says

    Ol’Greg,

    what made you do something else?

    working 80 hours per week. It was Ok for a few years, I was younger, eager, and money was excellent. But I realised having a nice bank account but spending the entirity of my time sleeping, at work, in business dinners and hotels, planes and airport lounges wasn’t going to make me happy much longer.

  116. Lynna, OM says

    Something about the story Rachel Maddow presented (link in comment #620) pinged my mormon radar. Maybe it was the confluence of white supremacist/patriotic rhetoric with clean-cut white guys with organizational skills … maybe it was the appearance of stories about some of the major players in the Deseret News published in Salt Lake City.

    I looked into it a bit more and came up with this:

    What’s up with the Mormons? Orem, Utah legislator Stephen Eric Sandstrom last week pledged to follow the lead of “my friend” Arizona State Senator Russell Pearce and expand the number of states with show-me-your-papers bills aiming to criminalize, jail, and deport irregular migrants.
         Rep. Sandstrom, who is a graduate of Brigham Young University and a former Mormon missionary to Venezuela, takes credit for co-founding a state’s rights organization called the Patrick Henry Caucus.
         Sandstrom’s “friend”, Sen. Pearce of Arizona, sponsor of the recently signed SB-1070, hails from the Mormon stronghold of Mesa and claims to be the mastermind behind Maricopa County’s infamous Tent City Jail….

    Ahh, right. There it is. The story is called Mormons for Racial Profiling.

    Note that Rachel Maddow tears open Senator Russell Pearce’s racism in her story. Real Nazi’s, with swastikas and all, and not just the Godwin-Nazis, as Rachel notes. Pearce wrote, among other obnoxious screeds, “a world in which every voice proclaims the equality of the races, the inerrant nature of the Jewish ‘Holocaust’ tale, the wickedness of attempting to halt the flood of non-White aliens pouring across our borders…”

  117. Lynna, OM says

    Mr. Fire, you are quite welcome. Glad you enjoyed the heart-warming castration story.

    Here’s the latest news on the award: Yes, I am to be awarded and feted. Turns out they have decided to give me the award for writing, and to add a separate award for Leland. So, a win-win all around. Of course, the mormon dude-in-charge never did contact me about the change in the award. He has spoken only to Leland. :-) Nevertheless, I intend to have cake, and eat it too.

  118. Walton says

    negentropyeater,

    I apologise. I perhaps overreacted to your post and read stuff into it that wasn’t there.

    I’ve been having a very bad day IRL and am not totally on top of things right now. :-(

  119. blf says

    And sending Goldman Sachs executives to prison would, incidentally, be completely and utterly ridiculous and profoundly illiberal.

    Charging them with specific and plausible offences, and putting them on trial, is a prior step. Only if found guilty would a spell in prison—or other possible punishments—be considered. Prior to any charges being laid, an investigation is needed; prior to any investigation, you generally need a reasonable suspicion.

    It’s quite a long process from hearings before Congress to prison. To arbitrarily declare prison is “utterly ridiculous” at the outset is what is profoundly illiberal.

  120. ambook says

    @negentropyeater –

    I actually spent most of my 20s as an M&A lawyer at a big NY firm, then got a Ph.D. in psychology, then realized that what I most enjoy is actually hanging out teaching kids about what you find turning over logs and rocks. In middle age, I cannot believe that I spent my precious youth sequestering myself in windowless conference rooms 120 hours a week. Ridiculous.

    I had lunch with a friend from Wall Street a couple weeks ago and his wife told me all about how the New York Times is a gossip rag that exists to persecute investment bankers and rating agencies. I didn’t leap out of my chair and strangle them, though it took some silent reminding myself of why I originally liked them (and still do, but think it’s better not to talk about some topics!)

  121. Jadehawk, OM says

    Beautiful, except there’s no carbon whatsoever in rubies… :o)

    pffft ;-)

    and actually, I’m mildly disappointed that no one bothered to point the far more important issue that strawberries don’t grow on trees…

  122. Ol'Greg says

    negentropyeater, I think that’s kind of ideal. To start out with something that pays a lot but is stressful, save some money, and then do other things.

    Meh… I have no idea what will make me happy. I should just be glad I have a good job. I’m lucky enough I guess.

  123. Alan B says

    #639 Jadehawk, OM

    Not even strawberry trees? Arbutus unedo

    See Wiki and about 3,690 other links.

  124. ambook says

    and actually, I’m mildly disappointed that no one bothered to point the far more important issue that strawberries don’t grow on trees…

    But the easter bunny does distribute turtles, right? (I’m going to get someone to dress up in an EB suit with a couple of our captive turtles at our next staff party – maybe I’ll get a strawberry tree as well.)

  125. Walton says

    No, he’s a prince only if you believe all one family must be inherently first-above-others. I don’t, and absolutely refuse to refer to him or the rest of them any differently that I refer to others.

    When I refer to Mahmoud Ahmedinejad as “President of Iran”, or to Kim Jong-il as “President of the National Defence Commission of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea”, am I expressing any kind of approval of the moral legitimacy of the Iranian or North Korean systems of government? When I refer to the former Archbishop of Westminster as “Cardinal Cormac Murphy O’Connor”, am I expressing any kind of belief in the structures and titles of the Catholic Church? No. In both cases, I’m simply using a title which is correct in the appropriate legal and social context. It’s no more a value-judgment than calling someone “Mr [first name] [surname]”.

    This is different from the situation where someone is wrongly using a title to which he or she is not entitled according to the recognised legal and social conventions applicable in his or her country. For example, it’s fine to use scare-quotes for “Dr.” Gillian McKeith or “Dr.” Kent Hovind, considering that both of them received dubious “doctorates” from unaccredited establishments which are not generally recognised as real universities, and are therefore not entitled to call themselves “Doctor” in most jurisdictions. Similarly, it would be appropriate to use scare-quotes for “Prince” Paddy Roy Bates of Sealand, since he is not recognised as a real head of state according to international law, and is not a Prince by any objectively recognised law or custom.

    Prince Charles’ claim to be Prince of Wales (and Duke of Cornwall, Duke of Rothesay, Baron Renfrew, Lord of the Isles, Prince and Great Steward of Scotland, &c.) is, of course, entirely a matter of British law and social convention. If Parliament were to legislate tomorrow to abolish all these titles and rename him “Mr. Charles Mountbatten-Windsor”, then the latter would become his legal name. (This has actually been done in some countries which have abolished noble titles by legislation.) Equally, of course, Parliament could legislate tomorrow to rename me “The Most Excellent Squirdleplip K. Buffoon IV” and require me to use that name in all official documents, whether I liked it or not. But until that happens, Prince Charles continues to have a title.

  126. Alan B says

    #639, #641, #643

    Did anyone say, “Climbing strawberry var. Mt Everest”?

    (O.K. I admit this is a normal strawberry with extra-long runners that can be trained up a trellis …)

  127. blf says

    When I refer to Mahmoud Ahmedinejad as “President of Iran”, or to Kim Jong-il as “President of the National Defence Commission of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea”, am I expressing any kind of approval of the moral legitimacy of the Iranian or North Korean systems of government?

    Strawman. With the exception of the fruitcake in N.Korea, all of those earned their positions. Mr Woo-woo did not. I absolutely refuse to grant him or the rest of his—or anyone else’s—loathsome useless family any recognition they did not earn.

  128. Sili, The Unknown Virgin says

    I’m sure Walton is perfectly consistent and also addressing the Poop as His Holiness, the Vicar of Christ.

  129. negentropyeater says

    Walton,

    no worries :-)

    I actually do think investment bankers and more generally bankers serve a useful purpose in a society with a capitalistic or mixed economy. But I also think this needs to be a highly regulated and controlled profession because of the exhorbitant privilege these people have to create money solely based on a promiss to repay it and their immense destructive capacity.
    First thing that needs to be done is to separate investment banking from commercial banking and reinstore Glass Steagall. But we also need to make sure some bankers can’t get away with abusing their powers and causing irreparable harm to millions of people.
    Otherwise we are going down an extremely dangerous route where bankers in general will become easy scapegoats of a disillusioned folk. Not something we need to see happen again, especially not in a nation with millions of armed teabagging racists.

  130. 'Tis Himself, OM says

    negentropyeater #653

    First thing that needs to be done is to separate investment banking from commercial banking and reinstore Glass Steagall.

    Hear! Hear!

  131. Ol'Greg says

    Otherwise we are going down an extremely dangerous route where bankers in general will become easy scapegoats of a disillusioned folk. Not something we need to see happen again, especially not in a nation with millions of armed teabagging racists.

    QFT.

  132. Lynna, OM says

    Christopher Hitchens wrote an interesting essay on economics and the Euro. It’s his latest essay in Slate. Here’s an Excerpt:

    … The decision to give up the deutsche mark in 2002 must rank as one of the most mature and generous decisions ever taken by a modern state, full confirmation of the country’s long transition from Nazism and Stalinism and partition, Europe’s three great modern enemies.
         As it happens, though, it was a German-speaking fascist who awoke my misgivings. I was interviewing Jörg Haider, the late leader of Austria’s Freedom Party, just as the euro notes and coins were coming into circulation almost everywhere between Finland and Greece. With a disagreeable sneer, he asked me if I really liked “the new Esperanto money.”
         This was actually a rather clever psychological thrust. The old dream of a world language called Esperanto that would abolish the Babel of competing tongues is considered a quixotic one for obvious reasons. Nobody is going to learn a language that hardly anybody speaks. There is a further quixotry involved: The invention of Esperanto ended up doing no more than adding another minor language to the mix. Now consider the euro: What if it ends up being one European currency among many instead of the money equivalent of a lingua franca?
         How tragic it is that the euro system has already, in effect, become a two-tier one and that the bottom tier is occupied by the very countries—Greece, Portugal, Spain, and Ireland—that benefited most from their accession to the European Union. The shady way in which Greece behaved in concealing its debts, and the drunken-sailor manner in which other smaller states managed their budgets, has, of course, offended the Germans. It is openly said in Germany now that it would be better to bring back the deutsche mark than to be bailing out quasi-indigent and thriftless banana republics. Talk of that kind doesn’t take long to evoke a biting response: Soon enough, Greek Foreign Minister Theodoros Pangalos was reminding nationalist audiences at home of the wartime German occupation of Greece and the carrying-off of the country’s gold reserves. “Don’t talk about the war” is a strong unspoken principle of European fraternity, and it didn’t require very much strain to produce a major fraying of this etiquette. You can count on this atmosphere getting much worse as second-tier countries are requested by Berlin to haul in their waistlines and as Germans grumble about having to tighten their own belts to subsidize less efficient regimes.
         The problem is endlessly reported as one of “bailout” terms and “packages” for “debt relief.” These are all euphemisms, and they are also all short-term. The fact is that default has entered the European vocabulary on a national scale and therefore that this First World club has its own Third World to contend with. In any case, the great justification for the European Union was always political and not economic, and if the symbol of the second-order dimension becomes tarnished, then the first ideal will not escape great damage, either….

  133. DominEditrix says

    I’m hoping that NM governor Bill Richardson, who is Hispanic, drops into Arizona wearing a nice guayabera shirt, maybe some huaraches… and hangs out on a corner in an upper-class Anglo neighbourhood. [With, of course, his security people quietly in the background.] I wonder how long it would take for some bozo to demand proof of citizenship. Oh, oops!

    Re: Goldman Sachs – I was listening to the hearings earlier today. Amazing how difficult it was for the GS guy to answer ‘Why, after you received an internal memo saying that Timberland was a “shitty investment”, did you go on selling millions of dollars worth to people?’

    Con artists go to jail; there’s no reason why this particular brand of fraudsters should be exempt. I’m tired of white collar criminals getting a pass – knowingly helping to wreck our economy? Treason, anyone? Firing squad?

  134. negentropyeater says

    Christopher Hitchens wrote an interesting essay on economics and the Euro.

    And a perfectly silly one as well from someone who chooses to display his ignorance of such matters.

  135. Walton says

    Strawman. With the exception of the fruitcake in N.Korea, all of those earned their positions. Mr Woo-woo did not. I absolutely refuse to grant him or the rest of his—or anyone else’s—loathsome useless family any recognition they did not earn.

    I didn’t earn the title of “British citizen”, either. I obtained it through the accident of birth, being born on British soil to British parents. Yet it gives me a whole host of rights and privileges which I would not have if I had been born elsewhere. The same is most likely true of you, unless you are a naturalized citizen. So if you don’t believe any unearned titles should be recognised, I’m sure you will surrender your passport forthwith. :-)

  136. ambook says

    The invention of Esperanto ended up doing no more than adding another minor language to the mix.

    Being serious Red Dwarf fans, my kids have both expressed a desire to learn Esperanto, which I have thus far not supported (bad homeschool mom, bad, bad!). I have, however, heard that the international Esperanto community is quite interesting and that because it’s grammatically regular, it can be easier for people to learn. Does anyone here actually speak Esperanto and use it to communicate with Esperanto speakers who don’t speak English?

  137. Sili, The Unknown Virgin says

    John Wells is big in Esperanto.

    And I recall downloading a “Teach Yourself” programme a coupla years ago, so it should be something your kids could explore on their own. (No, I didn’t teach myself.)

  138. ambook says

    I’m cross posting this from the doing-it-wrong thread on the grounds that I think I might change my signin name from ambook (which is close to my name) to MATTIR, which reminds me that I am not so interested in finding common ground anymore.

    I’ve spent a lot of time trying to talk to such people. Please trust a middle-aged former tone-troll on this one. Trying to have dialogue with them is a total, complete, mind-blowing waste of time. They aren’t listening because you’re not a Christian. End of story. I found myself listening to other people and figuring out what values and ideas we shared, they tuned out every word because I didn’t share their belief in human sacrifice and magic spirits. Please do not waste your time on this fruitless endeavor

    I have never been a tone-troll at Pharyngula – I only decided to start posting after I decided that my former effort to find common ground was stupid, pointless, and frustrating. So I’m a middle-aged-tone-troll-in-recovery (MATTIR). There are probably other MATTIRs here – please do not spend years developing the disease in order to join us.

  139. SteveV says

    In the even longer run, where do you store the radioactive waste for the next thirty thousand years?

    In an active subduction zone?

    For some clear thinking on the energy issue see here

  140. David Marjanović says

    pffft ;-)

    You win. :-)

    (How… polite of them not to mention any prices.)

    and actually, I’m mildly disappointed that no one bothered to point the far more important issue that strawberries don’t grow on trees…

    pffft ;-)

    (…I hereby officially pretend to have overlooked comment 641. I just have to make the joke properly. – And just for the record, we have strawberry plants on the balcony.)

    If Parliament were to legislate tomorrow to abolish all these titles and rename him “Mr. Charles Mountbatten-Windsor”, then the latter would become his legal name. (This has actually been done in some countries which have abolished noble titles by legislation.)

    Austria for instance. When this guy, a deputee to the European Parliament, appears on Austrian TV, he’s Herr Dr. Habsburg.

    exhorbitant

    Exorbitant. Outside orbis, the circle [of the Earth].

    This was actually a rather clever psychological thrust. The old dream of a world language called Esperanto that would abolish the Babel of competing tongues is considered a quixotic one for obvious reasons. Nobody is going to learn a language that hardly anybody speaks.

    That’s not among the real reasons why Esperanto is quixotic. Excerpt:

    Most people I know despise Esperanto, but largely for daft reasons – “Everyone speaks English nowadays anyway”, “It sounds a bit foreign”, “It has no cultural identity of its own”, etc. I, on the other hand, dislike it for being:

    • Just good enough to inspire anti-revisionist fanaticism!
    • Just bad enough to strike the general public as risible!
    • Easily improvable enough to inspire constant half-baked “reforms” whose inventors argue amongst themselves!

    So the result of Zamenhof’s labours is that it’s inconceivable that any artificial “Interlang”, however good, could succeed.

    Also, quoting Haider approvingly would discredit Hitchens on politics if his support for the Iraq war hadn’t already.

  141. negentropyeater says

    Esperanto?
    There are so many wonderful languages used by people on this planet in their everyday life to communicate with one another and to speak some of them gives one such a rich opportunity to immerse oneself in other cultures that I wonder why one would want to learn Esperanto?

    I can communicate fluently in French, English, German and Spanish, I love all of them, and I wish I could learn more. Unfortunately, I think I’m getting a bit old to master several more, or my brain is having sifficulties to cope.
    It’s a great pleasure and incredible enrichement to read an article or a book or watch a movie in its original language, or to visit countries and be able to communicate with its inhabitants. I’m not clear what benefit Esperanto brings.

  142. https://www.google.com/accounts/o8/id?id=AItOawm18OsWnSezV93MOBSF3zHjWpE1bchMhEU says

    Hello, I’m just testing the hypothesis that my google nickname will be displayed if I submit an actual message, even though the preview function shows the munged identifier.

  143. https://www.google.com/accounts/o8/id?id=AItOawm18OsWnSezV93MOBSF3zHjWpE1bchMhEU says

    Son of a Fuckme: Bitch Bitch Bitch!

    I will now try again after having randomly fucked with shit at fucking google. If this doesn’t work, I will continue to lurk for the next few months. Neurotically, I cannot comment unless I get my ‘nym correct. Fucking sign-in message still has the fucking google shit. Fuck.

  144. https://www.google.com/accounts/o8/id?id=AItOawm18OsWnSezV93MOBSF3zHjWpE1bchMhEU says

    One more fucking try, then it’s back to work. Shitfuckdamn!

  145. John Morales says

    Walton:

    I didn’t earn the title of “British citizen”, either.

    What a thin, thin straw you clutch there, Mr. Equivocation.

    Title.

  146. Jessa says

    You think I would know to just ignore the error messages by now. *sigh*

    I blame the wine that I have not been drinking.

  147. ambook says

    I wonder why one would want to learn Esperanto?

    Well, I can tell you why my son decided he wanted to learn Esperanto. He’s dyslexic. He has trouble breaking spoken language down into phonemes and trouble matching phonemes to the wildly inconsistent spelling system of English. The idea of a language that was designed so that there were fewer ways to spell each phoneme was tremendously appealing. Plus he’s a bit of a crank. Like the ADHD and dyslexia, this may have a basis in genetics (what a shock!)

  148. KOPD says

    Speaking of different languages, anybody know anything about finding guitar tablature for Russian songs?

  149. WowbaggerOM says

    KOPD wrote:

    Speaking of different languages, anybody know anything about finding guitar tablature for Russian songs?

    In Soviet Russia, guitar plays you!

  150. KOPD says

    Wowbagger:

    In Soviet Russia, guitar plays you!

    Not what I was looking for, but I’ll keep it in mind. ;-)

    And I guess it wouldn’t hurt to clarify my request. I’m looking for either a good site or two, or the Russian word for tablature (since I can’t seem to find it or my dictionary).

  151. 'Tis Himself, OM says

    negentropyeater #658

    Christopher Hitchens wrote an interesting essay on economics and the Euro.

    And a perfectly silly one as well from someone who chooses to display his ignorance of such matters.

    I think the years of alcohol abuse are beginning to effect Hitchens.

    The euro isn’t the Esperanto of currencies, it’s closer to the Chinese of currencies. Widely used, stable, it’s one of the four hardest currencies in the world.

    Yes, the Greek public debt is causing serious problems in the eurozone. The Spanish, Portuguese and Irish debts are also lurking in the background. However, three G8 countries are in the eurozone. The European Central Bank (ECB) will guarantee loans to Greece plus the European Council has said the EU would bail Greece out if needed.

    Actually the Greek crisis has given momentum to calls for a more integrated eurozone. There is discussion about a common finance ministry for the eurozone known as the European Debt Agency which would manage eurozone government debt. Another plan involves creating a European version of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) so IMF style resources and expertise could be used, while solving the problem within Europe.

    Neither of these agencies would be operational n time to help Greece. French President Sarkozy said “France is by the side of Greece in the most resolute fashion … The euro is our currency. It implies solidarity. There can be no doubt on the expression of this solidarity”¹ and that if the eurozone let a member fail, there would have been no point in creating the currency. In the long term, Germany wants an EMF to be accompanied by stronger enforcement mechanisms: for example a country that does not rein in its debt can have its EU funds withdrawn or its voting rights suspended. However, such plans have been called unacceptable infringements on the sovereignty of eurozone member states and are opposed by France and Italy.

    ¹”Plans Emerge for European Monetary Fund”, The Economist, 8 March 2010, p. 37.

  152. Pygmy Loris says

    Tis,

    Paul Krugman has put forth the argument that a unified currency without a unified government is a bad idea. According to Krugman, the Euro set-up reduces the ability of individual members of the Eurozone to respond to financial crises. What do you think?

    BTW Don’t worry about a quick response or anything. I had to work overtime today, so I’m headed to bed, and it’ll be late tomorrow before I can read what (if) you write.

  153. Patricia, Ignorant Slut OM says

    Wave, wave!

    Hi everyone. I’m still alive – just immersed in a slutty love affair. *smirk*

  154. ambook says

    My immensely romantic husband brought me a rock from a California beach with 2 Champion spark plugs embedded in it. Apparently TSA had some concerns – they ran said rock through the x-ray machine several times and called all the other TSA people over to consult about the rock for about 15 minutes before they decided it was safe to fly. I have waited through the 19 years of marriage to receive fossilized spark plugs as an anniversary gift.

    @ Patricia – Enjoy, but remember, the wrong kind of sex can lead to fossilized spark plugs.

  155. Owlmirror says

    Late catching up…

    It was this type of school [Gymnasium].

    Was it an “old school” gymnasium? As in, everything old is nude again?

    /weak etymology nerd humour

    [Journey of the Sorceror]

    Now I am hearing Peter Jones’ soothing voice narrating… something.

    [
    This is awesome, despite not actually being Peter Jones:

    Doctor Who: The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Daleks (The Peter Jones-y Edit)

    ]

    Say! Wouldn’t it would be cool to have the Thread narrated by Peter Jones?

    “The Interwebbists Guide to Pharyngula”

    So what republicans really want is to be 5-years-old again

    Jeffty is Five

  156. John Morales says

    Ah, Soviet Russia.

    When I was growing up, it seemed that it would outlive me.

    Goes to show.

  157. Jadehawk, OM says

    Hi everyone. I’m still alive – just immersed in a slutty love affair. *smirk*

    hah, glad to hear you’re having fun!

  158. Jadehawk, OM says

    oh and btw, we had Gołąbki (except made properly with buckwheat groats instead of rice); they were just as good as I remembered them. I shall have make them again sometime :-)

  159. Owlmirror says

    Lev 20:13 is giving the penalties for the Lev 18:22 “abomination” or in the Hebrew “toevah”. Unlike what the English translation implies, toevah did not usually signify something intrinsically evil, but something which is ritually unclean for Jews. Eating pork, shellfish, lobster, trimming beards, mixing fibers in clothing, and having sex during a women’s menstrual period is just as much an “abomination”. It is used throughout the OT to designate those Jewish sins which involve ethnic contamination or idolatry. In many other OT verses it simply means idolatry.

    I have to say that this paragraph is misleading at best, and at worst is utterly incorrect.

    The word that specifically means “ritually unclean” is “tameh” (טמא).

    It’s used for pork as a forbidden food (Lev 11:7). The term used for shellfish/lobster in Lev 11:11 is “sheketz” (שקץ), which doesn’t mean “ritually unclean”; “disgusting” is about right, I think.

    In Lev 19:27, trimming the beard is one of many activities that is forbidden, but only seeking out familiar spirits is specifically called “tameh”. In Lev 21:5, trimming the beard is also forbidden, but it’s specifically in the context of mourning and burial rituals; the ritual uncleanness — again, “tameh” — in this instance comes from contact with a corpse (priests are forbidden to become ritually unclean with such contact, with specific exceptions of immediate family members). Trimming the beard is not itself part of what causes the ritual uncleanness.

    The prohibition on wearing mixed fibers is in Deut 22:11, and no term of either ritual uncleanness or disgust is mentioned in context with that verse.

    And finally, Lev 15:19-33 is all about menstruation and contact with menstruating women, and men who have fluxes or seminal ejaculations, including with a woman who is menstruating, and the only term that is used in both cases is various forms of “tameh”; “ritually unclean”.

    Being ritually unclean has no severe penalty; really, all that the one who is unclean needs to do is separate themselves during the time of uncleanness, and/or wash and make ritual sacrifices. There’s also some other rituals meant to remove uncleanness, which I’ll spare you. Clearly, the writers of the bible were obsessive about certain things, and didn’t like bodily functions a whole lot, but having them was recognized as being part of life.

    But the term “toevah” (תועבה), and its variants, is used for things that are obviously thought of as being outrageously perverse: men having sex with men (Lev 20:13); crossdressing (Deut 22:5); sacrifices made by wicked people (Prov 15:8); and outright fraud (Prov 11:1) — this last being : “The Lord abhors dishonest scales, but accurate weights are his delight.” / ( מאזני מרמה תועבת יהוה ואבן שלמה רצונו׃ )

    Deut 14:3 forbids eating things that are “toevah”, but does not specify what that means (it lists the animals that are OK to eat in the following verses). Deut 7:25-26 refers to idols as being “toevah” (“sheketz” (שקץ) is also used), to be utterly rejected. Deut 24:4 says that a man remarrying his former wife is also “toevah”, which doesn’t make a whole lot of sense (maybe there was some subtle wife-swapping going on, that the Deuteronomist became aware of and was unhappy about?),

    The things that the word “toevah” is used in context with have nothing to do with ritual impurity or uncleanness.

    And it is only things that are “toevah” to Yahweh that actually incur the death penalty — not necessarily, but in certain extreme cases. This in contradistinction with the mild ritual penalties for ritual uncleanness outlined above.

    So to sum up: ritual uncleanness, “tameh”, is something completely different from “toevah”, outrageous perversity or abomination.

    /SIWOTI

    I’m looking for either a good site or two, or the Russian word for tablature (since I can’t seem to find it or my dictionary).

    This is sometimes useful:

    1) Go to [English] Wikipedia
    2) Look for the article on the topic you want translated
    3) Look on the bottom left for “languages”
    4) “Русский” is (of course) Russian for Russian.
    5) Click on the link.
    6) Voilà: Табулатура

    I have waited through the 19 years of marriage to receive fossilized spark plugs as an anniversary gift.

    Bah. It’s a concretion, not a fossil.

    Josh the geologist would have a fit. Well, maybe not.

    Where the hell is he, anyway?

  160. Feynmaniac, Chimerical Toad says

    Bah. It’s a concretion, not a fossil.

    hehe….

    For those who weren’t here in the early days of The Thread we had RogerS trying to prove The Great Flood by saying these were giant clam fossils found on top of the Andes.

  161. John Morales says

    Given his Pharynguloid status and presence, I opine Josh (the geologist) is either dead or incommunicado.

    I like to think the latter.

  162. negentropyeater says

    Pygmy Loris,

    Paul Krugman has put forth the argument that a unified currency without a unified government is a bad idea. According to Krugman, the Euro set-up reduces the ability of individual members of the Eurozone to respond to financial crises.

    Krugman, like many (mainly Anglo-American) economists have been pushing this point since even before the introduction of the Euro.

    First, it’s a silly discussion because Krugman knows very well that the Euro is irreversible, breaking it would trigger the mother of all financial crisis.
    So it’s not an economic discussion but a political one, and that’s exactly what we see happening now with both French and German politicians making reassuring statements about necessary solidarity (it’s not difficult to understand why : the main creditors of Greek debt are French and German banks which account for almost 50% of the Greek debt exposure and it’s clearly not in France’s and Germany’s interest to have Greece default on its debt). Of course there are differences on how to practically express this “solidarity”, but I have no doubt at all that an agreement between Germans, French and other Eurozone members will be found. The real wory is to the baking syst, and Governments all ovr the world have already shown their determination to not let any major bank fail.

    Second, and comming back to Krugman’s main point, it’s not at all clear that Greece would have been better off if it still had the Drachma. The old canard of the Euroskeptics like Krugman is that it could have devalued its currency to respond to the fiancial crisis. Certainly wasn’t helpful in the case of Agentina or Mexico, and t’s easy to understand why:
    even with the Drachma, most Greek debt would still have been in Euros : no French or German bank would have been willing to finance Greek projects bearing the risk of a weak currency and possible devaluation.

    Charles Wyplosz expains it very well here :

    Decades of experience have taught us that this is a dangerous situation for a nation. If you have lots of debt in a foreign currency, but the holders of those debts earn in local currency, borrowers can get caught in a scissors. A devaluation of the currency makes the debt look bigger in local currency terms. Many euro-borrowers who earn their living in drachma would default or fall into arrears. As the Greek financial system started to look shaky, the interest rates demanded by euro- lenders would rise, thus increasing the problems for Greek euro-borrowers. As the weight of non-performing loans and suspicion rise, the result would be the very capital flight that the measure is intended to dispel. Indeed, if the Greek government did embrace the idea, their debt service would skyrocket almost immediately – putting an even bigger hole in their budget.

    Finally, there is no empirical evidence that the EMU institutions have so far not been able to deal with the crisis as adequately as the FED, despite the fact that there is not a political union as strong as in the USA.

    Is the Euro perfect? No. Will improvements need to be made to the European Monetary Union, such as an EMF or a capacity for the ECB to issue its own bonds or other proposals currently on the table? Yes. But there is no rational jusification for having the kind of discussions about breaking up the Euro as the ones being pushed by Krugman and the eternal bunch of Euroskeptics.