Welcome to Medary.com Wednesday, December 25 2024 @ 12:04 AM CST

The decline of science

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This is not good:
The President's ignorance of science might have remained a private matter, but he chose to speak on the subject of evolution and "intelligent design." This is a great pity.

Science -- from the loftiest of theorizing (like that of Einstein or, oh, Darwin) through the conducting of painstakingly difficult experiments to the application of new knowledge to the improvement of human life -- science, I say, is the chief engine of our society. The great bulk of business entrepreneurs so celebrated in certain circles as the movers and shakers have made their marks by exploiting the knowledge gained by scientists.

Even its opponents grant the prestige and accomplishments of science by pretending to do science themselves, whether in the form of "e-meters" that turn galvanic skin responses into signs of mystic energy flows in the body or in that of ID, which artfully turns "unknown" into "unknowable" in a flourish of bad math and illogic.

Our education system is systematically pushing kids away from the "harder" subjects like math and science and into areas like journalism and ethnic studies which require little or no intellectual effort whatsoever. So, while the Japanese are cranking out 3-ounce digital cameras, we're using them to create crap like Current TV.

Uranium Rush!

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Wired News reports on the boom of uranium mining claims in the western U.S.:
Wyoming, which has some of the biggest uranium deposits in the United States, hadn't seen more than 100 new mining claims over the last 10 years combined. But now claim offices are jumping across the region. Utah and Colorado, two big players in the market, have gone from virtually no new claims for years, according to the BLM, to a combined 8,500 and rising in uranium-rich counties in 2005.

Colonizing Mars

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According to the plans, the settlement will rely on a curious blend of old and new technology: it will be built with the aid of robots and run on nuclear energy, but will utilize materials and building techniques reminiscent of earlier centuries on earth.
Mars might just be far enough away from the Kansas City Royals.

Royals collapse continues

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Kansas City Royals blow a 7-2 lead in the 9th, give up 11 runs, lose 13-7.
As manager of baseball's worst team, Buddy Bell is forced to watch bad baseball on many nights. But he had never seen anything like he did in the ninth inning, which began with his team holding a 7-2 lead.
Can it get worse? We'll see--Snookums and I have tickets for tonight's debacle--er--game. Royals need to go 43-7 to finish .500, 25-25 to avoid 100 losses, 1-49 to avoid losing all of their remaining games.

Thomas Sowell on the media and heroes

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Thomas Sowell has some thoughts about the NY Times perception of a "lack of heroes" in Iraq:
If you judged by the front page of this and many other newspapers, our troops in Iraq don't do anything except get killed.

The plain fact is that the mainstream media have been too busy depicting our troops as victims to have much time left to tell about the heroic things they have done, the far greater casualties which they have inflicted on their enemies, or their attempts to restore some basic services and basic decencies to this country that has been torn apart for years by internal and external wars -- even before the first American troops arrived on the scene.

The unrelenting quest for stories depicting American troops as victims -- including even front-page stories about the financial problems of some National Guardsmen called to active duty -- has created a virtual reality in the media that has no place for heroes.

To find the reason why "there are no heroes" in this war, media editors and reporters need only to look in a mirror.

Morning Whip, August 9, 2005

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The Whip #10: Shuttle: Californee is the place you oughta be
#9: The role of Islam in Iraq
#8: Terror alert: Saudi Arabia
#7: Good economy evidence: Fed raising rates
#6: San Quentin Riot
#5: Pentagon plans terror response
#4: Cultures aren't equal
#3: Hillary Clinton: A Divider, not a Uniter
#2: UN officer pleads gulity in Oil-For-Food
#1: Iran has 4,000 uranium-processing centrifuges

The role of Islam in Iraq

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Iraqis debate what role Islam will play in their new constitution.
"If Ayatollah al-Sistani suggests that he wants Islam in the constitution, that will harden the position of those who want a religious-oriented state," says Tom Palmer, a senior fellow at the Cato Institute in Washington, who has met with members of Iraq's parliament on the constitution and is closely following the drafting process.

"It's possible that the law would be innocuous and merely say that no legislation may violate Islam. The big problem is, who gets to determine that? Religious courts? Whose?" says Mr. Palmer.

Here's where we get down to the fundamental problem: Islam does not recognize any separation of religion and state. Until it does, the crisis of Islam vs. the civilized world will continue.

Terror alert: Saudi Arabia

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US, Australian, English authorities warn of imminent attacks in Saudi Arabia.
"We continue to believe that terrorists are planning further attacks in Saudi Arabia, including against Westerners and places associated with Westerners," said a warning from the Foreign Office on the British Embassy Web site. "We believe aviation interests remain a possible terrorist target."

Good economy evidence: Fed raising rates

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Federal Reserve Board set to raise interest rates again in response to the growing economy.
"The economy remains very solid and it appears likely to expand at a pace of 4-1/2 percent to 5 percent in the second half of the year," said Lynn Reaser, chief economist at Banc of America Capital Management in Boston.