Friday, April 27, 2018
Self domesticating mice
Rodent science stories are always welcome, and here's one about a study suggesting mice can "domesticate" themselves.
The Alfie story
The Guardian finally explains the background to some of the hangers-on who have politicised the Alfie Evans story for their own polemic purposes. That really is sickening, especially when hospital staff should be getting death threats from right wing nutters. And now, it would seem that the father might have had enough too, as he has issued a statement in which he appears to be reconciled to the fact that the British doctors may have had his child's best interest at heart, after all.
The weirdest thing about this case, I reckon, is the story that the Italian defence force had been authorised to fly the child to the Vatican aligned hospital, and that there was an Air Ambulance waiting to go. I can understand (although regret) the Pope shoving his nose into this, but why would the Italian government lend its active support as well? Strikes me as weird and strange. Especially when the hospital was giving no hope of a cure at all:
Fortunately, the Catholic Herald, as it did in the Charlie Gard case, gives a reasonably balanced account of what has happened, noting that English bishops have actually appeared to side with the hospital. You don't see that reported on Fox News.
I hate to say it, but you know what the problem with the Right wing media frenzy seems to come down to? As with the Gard case, if the child, regardless of actual health, is handsome, it makes for easy, purely emotional PR campaign to appeal to the sentiment "how could the hospital wish death on such a beautiful looking boy"? I would bet that if the illness was a disfiguring one, you would get no where near the public interest.
The weirdest thing about this case, I reckon, is the story that the Italian defence force had been authorised to fly the child to the Vatican aligned hospital, and that there was an Air Ambulance waiting to go. I can understand (although regret) the Pope shoving his nose into this, but why would the Italian government lend its active support as well? Strikes me as weird and strange. Especially when the hospital was giving no hope of a cure at all:
Three experts from the Bambino Gesù hospital visited Alfie in Liverpool at the request of the parents, but they agreed with the doctors that further treatment would be “futile” in finding a cure.So, simply offering to prolong keeping the kid alive until the parents get to the inevitable point of saying "OK, enough now", which may only be a matter of a week or two away? I read somewhere, I think, that the hospital was talking about 2 weeks worth of treatment to identify the cause of his brain eroding illness. Why would the Italian government get involved in spending money on such a purpose?
However, they also said they were willing to take the tot to Rome to undergo operations to help him breathe and receive food, which would keep him alive for an “undefined period”.
Alfie’s parents hope that the specialists at the Bambino Gesù hospital will be able to pinpoint what is wrong with Alfie.
Dr Mariella Enoc, the president of Bambino Gesù, said: “We are ready to welcome Alfie, as we do with many children who come here from all over the world.
“We certainly do not promise to heal him, but to take care of him without overly aggressive treatment.”
Although acknowledging there is probably no cure for Alfie, Enoc said they would continue to provide a ventilator for him.
She said: “We do not argue that the diagnosis made by the British hospital will be changed, we only offer the possibility that the child can go on living. It is a bit difficult for us to understand why they will not allow him to be transported.”
She explained how the hospital would insert a breathing and feeding tube, which would not cause undue suffering.
Fortunately, the Catholic Herald, as it did in the Charlie Gard case, gives a reasonably balanced account of what has happened, noting that English bishops have actually appeared to side with the hospital. You don't see that reported on Fox News.
I hate to say it, but you know what the problem with the Right wing media frenzy seems to come down to? As with the Gard case, if the child, regardless of actual health, is handsome, it makes for easy, purely emotional PR campaign to appeal to the sentiment "how could the hospital wish death on such a beautiful looking boy"? I would bet that if the illness was a disfiguring one, you would get no where near the public interest.
Look at the company Chris Berg keeps
Chris Berg's recent pro-libertarian column in the Conversation (which I have already disparaged) noted at length his support for the Friedman Conferences that attracts "hundreds" of libertarian/classical liberals each year. (In other words, about the sum total of every Australian who has ever deliberately voted for libertarian parties.)
So, lets see who's included on the list of speakers at the next one coming up (courtesy of Catallaxy, where Sinclair Davidson promotes the conference every year):
Professors Ian Plimer
Climate Skeptic Blogger Jo Nova
Yeah, there's your Libertarian anti-science, anti coherent policy on climate change right there.
Berg should be pilloried about this every time he appears on the ABC with his "I'm the nice, reasonable face of libertarianism/classical liberalism" facade.
And Jason Soon - you need your head read too for supporting the branch of politics that is determinedly anti-science on the most important science policy issue of the century.
So, lets see who's included on the list of speakers at the next one coming up (courtesy of Catallaxy, where Sinclair Davidson promotes the conference every year):
Professors Ian Plimer
Climate Skeptic Blogger Jo Nova
Yeah, there's your Libertarian anti-science, anti coherent policy on climate change right there.
Berg should be pilloried about this every time he appears on the ABC with his "I'm the nice, reasonable face of libertarianism/classical liberalism" facade.
And Jason Soon - you need your head read too for supporting the branch of politics that is determinedly anti-science on the most important science policy issue of the century.
Thursday, April 26, 2018
Mr Robot, Season 3, episode 5
As I have written before, I find some of the episodes of this show pretty slow and tedious, and then along will come a particularly impressive episode that's pretty thrilling, like the one in the post heading.
It's a "one continuous take" episode (or at least, a looks like one continuous take episode) like Rope (or, so I believe, Birdman - that recent Oscar winner that no one saw.) But apart from technical brilliance, it had more humour and tension than nearly all previous episodes. Very satisfying.
It's a "one continuous take" episode (or at least, a looks like one continuous take episode) like Rope (or, so I believe, Birdman - that recent Oscar winner that no one saw.) But apart from technical brilliance, it had more humour and tension than nearly all previous episodes. Very satisfying.
Pimento praise
I keep forgetting to watch the latest series of Brooklyn Nine-Nine, but caught one episode last night which featured the welcome return (perhaps only for an episode?) of Adrian Pimento. This character would have to be the funniest sitcom character of the decade. The series in which he featured regularly was all the more hilarious for it.
But primarily - an A1 self promotion opportunity
Gaaaa, can't anyone make him stop? Tim Wilson's nauseatingly self-centred promotion of ANZAC Day continues:
Let's talk appliances
Two in particular:
* electric (battery powered) lawnmowers: I recently bought one and I'mquiet (quite, I meant, although they are quieter too) impressed. I've never enjoyed mowing, partly for the fumes and the messiness of petrol spills and (in the case of two stroke) getting the right proportion of oil. Electric mowers do away with all of that aspect, making the whole experience cleaner and lighter work (my Ryobi weighs considerably less than the old Victa, and is easier to get up the few stairs necessary to get to the back yard.) It's no longer the case that I necessarily feel the need for an immediate shower after finishing.
And something I didn't realise would be a benefit: you know how on all TV gardening shows they encourage not cutting lawn too low because that helps weeds get ahead of grass on regrowth? And then how, with a petrol mower, you think "I don't care, I'm going to cut as low as I can 'cos I hate this job and don't want to do it again for as long as possible"? Well, with the electric one, there's no doubt that on longer lawn it is less powerful than any petrol mower, meaning you really do have to cut at higher height. But the result has been - yes, I can see what those gardening/lifestyle shows have been saying all those decades is right. The lawn is thicker and any weedy parts do seem to be being out-competed. Who knew that having a less powerful mower would force me into doing the right thing by my lawn?
* front loading washing machines: I think they are terrific, especially if you have a model like ours which have a short cycle for things that aren't all that dirty.
But, right from when it was installed, we were warned that fabric softener can cause problems with glugging up their pipes. Finally (it has taken years, though), I can see what they mean.
Which led me on the weekend to investigate the way the fabric softener gets from the "drawer" into the machine: it would seem that nearly all front loaders use a syphon system to get the softener section of the drawer empty of the water that sprays into there to wash the conditioner into the machine.
This strikes me as peculiar: I just didn't expect that the old fashioned idea of a syphon would be so crucial in a modern and fairly complicated bit of electro-mechanical gear like a front loading washing machine. I was somehow expecting something mechanical - a hatch that opened and shut. But no, just a syphon effect.
I must admit it works, though, and apart from the ease with which the hole through which the conditioner passes can clog and prevent the syphon working, I suppose it is kind of elegant in its simplicity.
I wonder who came up with that idea....
Update: Look, I've even found a website with drawings and way more detail than you ever thought you needed to know:
* electric (battery powered) lawnmowers: I recently bought one and I'm
And something I didn't realise would be a benefit: you know how on all TV gardening shows they encourage not cutting lawn too low because that helps weeds get ahead of grass on regrowth? And then how, with a petrol mower, you think "I don't care, I'm going to cut as low as I can 'cos I hate this job and don't want to do it again for as long as possible"? Well, with the electric one, there's no doubt that on longer lawn it is less powerful than any petrol mower, meaning you really do have to cut at higher height. But the result has been - yes, I can see what those gardening/lifestyle shows have been saying all those decades is right. The lawn is thicker and any weedy parts do seem to be being out-competed. Who knew that having a less powerful mower would force me into doing the right thing by my lawn?
* front loading washing machines: I think they are terrific, especially if you have a model like ours which have a short cycle for things that aren't all that dirty.
But, right from when it was installed, we were warned that fabric softener can cause problems with glugging up their pipes. Finally (it has taken years, though), I can see what they mean.
Which led me on the weekend to investigate the way the fabric softener gets from the "drawer" into the machine: it would seem that nearly all front loaders use a syphon system to get the softener section of the drawer empty of the water that sprays into there to wash the conditioner into the machine.
This strikes me as peculiar: I just didn't expect that the old fashioned idea of a syphon would be so crucial in a modern and fairly complicated bit of electro-mechanical gear like a front loading washing machine. I was somehow expecting something mechanical - a hatch that opened and shut. But no, just a syphon effect.
I must admit it works, though, and apart from the ease with which the hole through which the conditioner passes can clog and prevent the syphon working, I suppose it is kind of elegant in its simplicity.
I wonder who came up with that idea....
Update: Look, I've even found a website with drawings and way more detail than you ever thought you needed to know:
Anzac Day 2018
Just your average suburban ANZAC Day memorial service from yesterday:
There were lots more people behind where this was taken from, too.
There were lots more people behind where this was taken from, too.
Tuesday, April 24, 2018
Continuing tourism success is never assured
It must have been about 1994 when I was last in the Whitsunday Islands, and it certainly seemed at that time to have a thriving tourist scene. Airlie Beach on the coast was chock full of backpackers accommodation and youthful night life; the choice of short (and cheap) small boat cruises for 2 or 3 nights through the islands was large; and I also stayed at the modest but pleasant enough Club Crocodile Long Island, going on my first (and only) scuba experience.
I've had the impression over the last decade, however, that the tourism scene there is vastly diminished. It seems a combination of factors are to blame: the Australian dollar became more expensive, making us less attractive to backpackers and giving Australians more incentive to travel overseas; several resorts have shut, including the Club Crocodile on Long Island I stayed at (apparently currently looking for a buyer); and as this depressing story on the ABC shows (via lots of drone shots), a formerly mid to low end resort like South Mole Island now lies in embarrassing ruins due to cyclones and a lack of interest or money from the new owners to rebuild anytime soon. (It does look like it would be a massive job. I see the new owners say that they will definitely rebuild and make it a 5 star resort. Actually, I reckon that could be unfortunate overkill - the islands just needs some affordable 3 to 4 star resorts, like it used to have.)
And now, the whole Queensland coral coast is facing the awful publicity about how much global warming is harming the Great Barrier Reef. I can just imagine the Queensland tourism bodies grinding their teeth over this - but they really do need to be proactively trying to counter the impression that news skimming local and overseas readers are no doubt getting that the entire reef is now getting so damaged it is hardly worth visiting. In fact, as I understand it, it's mainly the far northern section, which has next to no tourist infrastructure anyway, which is the worst hit by the warming, for now.
Mind you, I think the other thing tourist operators need to do is to make access to decent reefs more affordable. The cost of a family to go on a one day visit to the one popular reef platform off Cairns is $651 - that's getting up there for the cost of a one day experience.
It all goes to show how the tourism dollar is something that is very hard to rely upon in the long term. For example, oddly, after many years in the doldrums, I get the impression that the Gold Coast is doing pretty well again. You wouldn't have necessarily picked that a decade or so ago, when the Japanese tourism influx was drying up and the replacement Chinese had not arrived. (Although, I see from this recent article, that nearly 80% of Gold Coast tourism is domestic.)
It's a very fickle industry, subject to nature, and the economy both local and international.
I've had the impression over the last decade, however, that the tourism scene there is vastly diminished. It seems a combination of factors are to blame: the Australian dollar became more expensive, making us less attractive to backpackers and giving Australians more incentive to travel overseas; several resorts have shut, including the Club Crocodile on Long Island I stayed at (apparently currently looking for a buyer); and as this depressing story on the ABC shows (via lots of drone shots), a formerly mid to low end resort like South Mole Island now lies in embarrassing ruins due to cyclones and a lack of interest or money from the new owners to rebuild anytime soon. (It does look like it would be a massive job. I see the new owners say that they will definitely rebuild and make it a 5 star resort. Actually, I reckon that could be unfortunate overkill - the islands just needs some affordable 3 to 4 star resorts, like it used to have.)
And now, the whole Queensland coral coast is facing the awful publicity about how much global warming is harming the Great Barrier Reef. I can just imagine the Queensland tourism bodies grinding their teeth over this - but they really do need to be proactively trying to counter the impression that news skimming local and overseas readers are no doubt getting that the entire reef is now getting so damaged it is hardly worth visiting. In fact, as I understand it, it's mainly the far northern section, which has next to no tourist infrastructure anyway, which is the worst hit by the warming, for now.
Mind you, I think the other thing tourist operators need to do is to make access to decent reefs more affordable. The cost of a family to go on a one day visit to the one popular reef platform off Cairns is $651 - that's getting up there for the cost of a one day experience.
It all goes to show how the tourism dollar is something that is very hard to rely upon in the long term. For example, oddly, after many years in the doldrums, I get the impression that the Gold Coast is doing pretty well again. You wouldn't have necessarily picked that a decade or so ago, when the Japanese tourism influx was drying up and the replacement Chinese had not arrived. (Although, I see from this recent article, that nearly 80% of Gold Coast tourism is domestic.)
It's a very fickle industry, subject to nature, and the economy both local and international.
I presume it hasn't been much of a story on Fox & Friends
Wouldn't you think that Trump might have enough nous to think "I can show I'm a very fair, non racist President by tweeting a sincere thanks to the young black guy who disarmed the white nutter who shot up that Tennessee Waffle House"? But so far, nothing. I'm presuming it hasn't been a big enough story on Fox & Friends for this thought to occur to him.
Speaking of which, here's a CNN clip showing Trump and Fox going virtually word for word.
It very much reminds me of that scene in Broadcast News in which the good looking but vacuous newsreader gets fed his interview lines by (I think) a producer. That scene has been on my mind for months even before I saw the CNN clip.
It would be hugely amusing, and somewhat disturbing, if Trump ever does tweet a thanks after seeing the guy mentioned favourably on F&F.
Speaking of which, here's a CNN clip showing Trump and Fox going virtually word for word.
It very much reminds me of that scene in Broadcast News in which the good looking but vacuous newsreader gets fed his interview lines by (I think) a producer. That scene has been on my mind for months even before I saw the CNN clip.
It would be hugely amusing, and somewhat disturbing, if Trump ever does tweet a thanks after seeing the guy mentioned favourably on F&F.
Always all about him
My God, has there ever been a politician more in love with himself and self promotion than Tim Wilson? He self tweets photos of himself endlessly, as well as re-tweeting any compliment that comes his way. And here's his ANZAC Day message, for which you might have thought he could find an image with a vaguely military theme, but no:
More Golda
My studying for my daughter's Golda Meir essay continues, with news last night that said daughter suspects that her modern history teacher (a pretty young guy) didn't recognise who she (Golda) was during a discussion regarding what the essay should address. Should that concern me? I mean, that Haaretz review I linked to in my first post said that lots of Israelis prefer not to commemorate her legacy given the blame they put on her for not pre-empting the Yom Kippur attacks. But seems to me a modern history teacher should know of her. Or maybe my daughter's mistaken?
Anyway, I was reading another Haaretz article from 2013 which went into detail as to her actions at the start of that war. But more interestingly, it discussed her recurring nightmares:
household bookshelf (OK, I'll correct myself - every Council library) or in every second hand store, but it seems half forgotten now.
Looking at the Wikipedia entry on it, I was interested to read this part about how it came to be written:
Anyway, I was reading another Haaretz article from 2013 which went into detail as to her actions at the start of that war. But more interestingly, it discussed her recurring nightmares:
Golda Meir, it turns out, suffered from recurring nightmares. Obliquely, she revealed a glimpse of them during a discussion held on the third anniversary of the 1967 Six-Day War, during the War of Attrition. Posing his question in a challenging, defiant tone, the writer Amos Oz asked: "What do you dream about?" Meir replied tersely: "I don't have time to dream. I don't really sleep because the telephone rings at night to inform me about Israelis who have been hurt."Update: I briefly mentioned in the previous post that I have never read Leon Uris's Exodus, which (rather like The Kon Tiki Expedition) I remember as something of a 60's publishing phenomena, in that you would see it on every
After Meir's death, Yaakov Hazan, a leader of the left-wing Mapam party, wrote in the kibbutz movement journal Shdemot that Meir told him about her recurring bad dream. "`Do you remember, Hazan,' Golda told me, `the question that Amos Oz posed to me? I was surprised. I knew which dreams he was referring to. Because what sort of person worthy of being called a human being doesn't dream? His question struck me as being offensive. I mumbled my answer because I didn't want to, and I couldn't, tell him what I dream about.
"`Yes, I dream, intensely. But it's all one nightmare. Suddenly all the telephones in my home start to ring; there are a lot of phones, located in every corner of the house, and they don't stop ringing. I know what the ringing means, and I'm afraid to pick up all the receivers. I wake up covered in a cold sweat. It's quiet in the house. I breath a sigh of relief, but can't get back to sleep. I know that if I fall back to sleep, the dream will return. I sometimes wonder when that dream will go away - when it does, I'll once again dream about our happy lives.'"
Looking at the Wikipedia entry on it, I was interested to read this part about how it came to be written:
Numerous sources say that Uris, motivated by an intense interest in Israel, financed his own research for the novel by selling the film rights in advance to MGM and writing articles about the Sinai campaign.[9][10] It has also been reported that the book involved two years of research and involved thousands of interviews.[11]I didn't realise there was a perceived need to raise American consciousness of, and support for, Israel. I more or less assumed that the Jewish influence was big enough that Americans as a whole would be enthusiastic about Israel. But then again, Gentlemen's Agreement only came out in 1947 on the topic of hidden anti-Semitism (never seen it either), so the point is - I don't really know anything about post War World 2 American popular sentiment towards Jews and Israel.
According to Jack Shaheen: "In the 1950s, when Americans were largely apathetic about Israel, the eminent public relations consultant Edward Gottlieb was called on "to create a more sympathetic attitude" toward the newly established state. He therefore sent Leon Uris to Israel to write a novel, which became the bestseller Exodus... Exodus introduced filmgoers to the Arab–Israel conflict, and peopled it with heroic Israelis and sleazy, brutal Arabs, some of whom link up with ex-Nazis. The movie's only "good Arab" becomes a dead Arab."[12] Shaheen did not identity the person or collection of persons who sought Gottlieb's assistance.
Monday, April 23, 2018
American priorities
Noticed this on Twitter about that Wafflehouse shooting:
Actually, it seems that is inaccurate.
Two days ago, the Governor signed a law that let wine be sold on Sundays.
Actually, it seems that is inaccurate.
Two days ago, the Governor signed a law that let wine be sold on Sundays.
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