February 2007

Science

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The Most Random Number

A few days ago, there was a little poll over on a science blog: Pick a number between 1 and 20. I picked 17. I wasn’t alone.

The idea is that 17 will always be the most common answer when people are asked to choose a number between 1 and 20. But neither Cosmic Variance nor Pharyngula offered a reasonable means of testing this proposition. That’s where our poll came in. This morning, I took a look at our data, and with 347 responses, I can confirm that 17 is significantly more popular than any number.

And here I thought I just had a remarkable feel for the will of the people.

Airy Persiflage

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Feed Your TED

Via Eolake Stobblehouse: David Pogue and CBS have a video story on the TED conference:

I’ve blogged about TED several times … It’s a truly outlook-changing four days of talks, each 18 minutes long, from experts in every field of human endeavor — much more than Technology, Entertainment and Design (TED).

Among the participants in Pogue’s video piece are cartoonist Matt Groening, creator of The Simpsons, astronomer Cliff Stoll, better known as the author of The Cuckoo’s Egg, and musician Peter Gabriel.

You can watch or download videos of some of the TEDTalks. I haven’t done much exploring, but it looks worth checking out.

Politics

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Big Price Tag

CNN says 9/11 security changes come with big price tag:

A bill to enact the 9/11 Commission recommendations — one of the first bills passed by the new Democratic-led House of Representatives — will cost $21 billion over five years if enacted into law, congressional budget officials said Friday.

See, there’s big, and then there’s BIG:

The Bush administration will ask for another $100 billion for military and diplomatic operations in Iraq and Afghanistan this year and seek $145 billion for 2008, a senior administration official said Friday.

Good thing the kids and grandkids are picking up the tab for all this.

Politics

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Debt and Texans

Suddenly George W. Bush is worried about future generations:

President Bush, poised to submit his new budget to Congress next week, insisted Saturday that unless programs like Medicare and Social Security are changed, future generations will face tax hikes, government red ink or huge cuts in benefits. …

“Unless we act, we will saddle our children and grandchildren with tens of trillions of dollars of unfunded obligations,” Bush said.

George W. Bush has done more than any human being in the history of the planet to push current debts off onto future generations, so please excuse me if I don’t quite believe this new concern for “our children and grandchildren.”

Politics

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Never Learn

George W. Bush never said that global warming wasn’t real. He only said, year after year after year, that the matter needed more study.

Six years into his administration, there has been study after study, and the answer seems inescapable: global warming is real, it’s caused by humans, and the results will be catastrophic. And the Bush Administration will stay the course:

Despite a strongly worded global warming report from the world’s top climate scientists, the Bush administration expressed continued opposition Friday to mandatory reductions in heat-trapping “greenhouse” gases.

The one thing we must never do is learn.

Politics

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More Molly Ivins

Creators Syndicate has a Molly Ivins archive and a final tribute.

A cartoonist’s tribute at I Drew This.

John Nichols of The Nation remembers Molly. So do Washington Post columnist E.J. Dionne, Bill Moyers and many others. Editor & Publisher repeats a November interview.

The Associated Press has compiled some quotes and quips.

Via Pharyngula:

I don’t care what fool they put in office. We’ve just got to rebuild the whole system. That’s how it’s gonna change. From us, not them.

Books
Politics

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Molly Ivins, R.I.P.

I was talking with a friend earlier today. He’s a tennis buff, and he said many players put a lot of energy into learning just what brand of racquet, or shoes, or sweatband is used by an Andy Roddick or a Venus Williams or some other favorite professional player. Then they spend a lot of money to buy those products, expecting a big improvement in their own game.

That gave me an idea. I thought perhaps I could buy an old Ansel Adams camera and become a great photographer. Or maybe get ahold of Molly Ivins’ typewriter, and be a great writer.

Sad news:

Molly Ivins, the liberal newspaper columnist who delighted in skewering politicians and interpreting, and mocking, her Texas culture, died yesterday in Austin. She was 62. …

In her syndicated column, which appeared in about 350 newspapers, Ms. Ivins cultivated the voice of a folksy populist who derided those who she thought acted too big for their britches. She was rowdy and profane, but she could filet her opponents with droll precision.

After Patrick J. Buchanan, as a conservative candidate for president, declared at the 1992 Republican National Convention that the United States was engaged in a cultural war, she said his speech “probably sounded better in the original German.” …

Her Texas upbringing made her something of an expert on the Bush family. She viewed the first President George Bush benignly. (“Real Texans do not use the word ‘summer’ as a verb,” she wrote.)

But she derided the current President Bush, whom she first knew in high school. She called him Shrub and Dubya. With the Texas journalist Lou Dubose, she wrote two best-selling books about Mr. Bush: “Shrub: The Short but Happy Political Life of George W. Bush” (2000) and “Bushwhacked” (2003).

The Washington Post says she “poked fun at the powerful,” but she did more than that. I read “Shrub” and “Bushwhacked,” and under the surface humor is a trove of information and insight that should have been a warning to all of us. She was a stunningly good writer — she could express a thought with such sharpness and clarity that a reader might never think about a topic in the same way after reading Molly’s take on it.

I sure hope that talent and that spirit came from the typewriter she used. If not, we’ve suffered a grievous loss.

Ms. Ivins learned she had breast cancer in 1999 and was typically unvarnished in describing her treatments. “First they mutilate you; then they poison you; then they burn you,” she wrote. “I have been on blind dates better than that.”
But she kept writing her columns and kept writing and raising money for The Texas Observer.

Indeed, rarely has a reporter so embodied the ethos of her publication. On the paper’s 50th anniversary in 2004, she wrote: “This is where you can tell the truth without the bark on it, laugh at anyone who is ridiculous, and go after the bad guys with all the energy you have.”

In her final column, she offered some advice to all of us:

We are the people who run this country. We are the deciders. And every single day, every single one of us needs to step outside and take some action to help stop this war. Raise hell. Think of something to make the ridiculous look ridiculous. Make our troops know we’re for them and trying to get them out of there. Hit the streets to protest Bush’s proposed surge. If you can, go to the peace march in Washington on Jan. 27. We need people in the streets, banging pots and pans and demanding, “Stop it, now!”

The talent, I fear, she took with her. But reading her columns, I think she left the spirit here with us.