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Saturday, March 30, 2002
Posted
6:47 PM
Posted
6:26 PM
... Clinton's Saudi windfall comes in the form of a pledge to his presidential library foundation in Little Rock, Ark. A library spokesman would neither confirm nor deny the donation. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Posted
11:02 AM
Friday, March 29, 2002
Posted
8:06 PM
Posted
7:52 PM
... Half the people in New York now use this phrase: "my Israeli guy." We all know someone from Israel who has lived a life a bit like the one we are entering.I'm sure some people will sneer that these home-brewed precautions can't help against modern NBC (Nuclear-Biological-Chemical) weapons. Well, if you are at ground-zero, you're a crispy muffin. But if you are on the periphery, even a few hours of protection may just be enough for the wind to disperse the worst of it. Poison gas is grim stuff, and the Iraqis have already used it on their own people. Interestingly, in World War Two, all the combatant nations were well supplied with gas. But no wanted to start that mess up again, so it was never used. There was one catastrophe when an American ship loaded with gas was bombed in an Italian harbor. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Posted
1:01 PM
"The murder of twenty Israelis at a holy feast seems small by comparison with the WTC attacks, but consider this: Israel has a population of just under 6 million. Proportionately, the attack is equivalent to killing 933 Americans. That's how terrible these attacks are. Someone posted a comment to Iain's post:" ... Let me recap to make sure I understand, 1 Northern Ireland life = 4 Israeli lives = 50 American lives. Now I'll be able to adjust my outrage appropriately in the future." But that's not the point at all. Iain is writing about the impact on a country as a whole. (For instance, most Americans, if not directly affected by 9/11, know someone who was. Richard Bennett told us his daughter would have been on one of those planes if she hadn't taken a dislike to United Airlines.) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Posted
6:33 AM
"In 1998, the U.S. Government changed the standards by which body mass index is measured. As a result, close to 30 million Americans were shifted from a government-approved weight to the overweight and obese category, without gaining an ounce ..."In fact, if the 1980 standards are used, obesity is actually decreasing! You can read his post here, complete with basketball stars who are now officially fat. So what will government do ? A. Do nothing, because Americans are free people, and their weight is no one's business but their own ? B. Do nothing, because this is obviously a statistical absurdity ? C. Start new government programs to fight this terrifying epidemic of obesity ? It is very very hard to predict ... Thursday, March 28, 2002
Posted
12:44 PM
... It is a venerable tradition to poke fun at the frogs, and as I was subjected to French folly firsthand in high school (ehem, that's lycee for you), I'm all for it. But this blurb is sanctimonius, stupid, and rabid. Further, it is in bad taste. Finally, one should labor to choose one's enemies more wisely than that. How is Taranto better than Hubba the Vedrine?I had thoght I was perhaps a bit jaded because I haven't been getting much of a kick out of my daily BOTW. But it's not me, the thing has become predictable. Repetitious. It makes me think of Reader's Digest. I have heard that the editors of Reader's Digest commission writers to produce exactly the stories they want. Then they place them in obscure journals, and discover them for the Digest. The result is that every issue has the same mix of stories, and readers are never disappointed or confused ... Peter is obviously going to be worth reading. He and his girlfriend Christina were the charming hosts of the recent Berkely blogfest. (One complaint Peter: The white type on black background looks cool, but makes it very hard to read long posts.) Update: Scratch that, it's just been changed to black on white ... Wednesday, March 27, 2002
Posted
7:51 PM
. . . as Arrant an illusion as ever was hatched in the Brain of an Enthusiast, a Politician, or a Maniac. I have laugh'd at it—scolded at it griev'd at it and I don't know but I may in an unguarded Moment have rip'd at it but it is vain to Reason against such Delusions ...I don't remember what this quote was actually referring to, but I had jotted it down and it suits my mood. President Bush has betrayed his oath and signed the stupid thing, but I have no energy for outrage. ... it is vain to Reason against such Delusions ... _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Posted
11:19 AM
... Imagine you've inherited the Old Man's mansion, but the boiler is rusty, the roof is leaky, the lead paint is chipping off the walls, the septic tank has ruptured, and there's toxic mold growth everywhere. You and your spouse, with toddler in tow, take a look around aghast and promise yourselves to repair everything before junior's old enough to raise his own family there, too. So you trade-down your lucrative careers for ones that give you more time to spend renovating, dump the SUV, cash in the pension and college funds, and sure enough the mansion is simply glorious by the time you're ready to retire and let Junior take the helm as its master. The only problem is that he's just as broke as you are ...One of the many reasons lefties want to turn education, especially History, into something mushy and meaningless is that history shows a long series of environmental problems arising, and then being solved by those societies whose economic growth was most vigorous. This deserves a long scribble, but I don't have time; so, one example: Cholera is a problem of water pollution. (And far deadlier than the water pollution problems we worry about now) The fast-growing cities of the 19th Century suffered terrible Cholera epidemics. But the same rapid economic growth that brought millions of new workers to the cities provided the funds for aqueducts and water purification plants; and also for the ever-increasing amounts of scientific and engineering research that made them effective. As for those places that don't allow nasty ol' capitalism to flourish? Well, when you visit, I suggest bottled water. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Luxurious lobster nights farewell, for sober studious days ...I can' t remember where that comes from, but it rose like a log from the bottom of the mental pond while I was reading Dawson just now. Anyway Dr D, we'll consider that a promise and be looking forward to a visit. A quote about crab would be more appropriate, but I haven't encountered any. Some smart aleck wrote about spiders of the sea or succulent arachnids or something, but it's slipped away ... Monday, March 25, 2002
Posted
6:41 PM
The quartz crystal in your digital watch vibrates 3,579,546 times a second. "... a logic gate called a "JK flip-flop" counts the vibrations. Every time the count hits 3,579,546, the gate sends a pulse to the display unit, and the watch records the passage of another second." From The Chip by T.R.Reid
Sunday, March 24, 2002
Posted
10:01 AM
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