So, Sinclair Davidson got his noggin on the most ridiculous and embarrassing advertisement for the state of Right wing politics in Australia - Outsiders on Sky News, headed by laughing mop head Dean Rowan and "I think Donald Trump may be the greatest man on Earth" Ross Cameron. (Yes, something very close to those exact words was his assessment of the outcome of the Singapore meeting last week - I saw it on The Weekly. Not to mention his various gay ridiculing comments made from time to time - a bit rich from a founding member of a parliamentary Christian fellowship who promptly lost his seat after his history of adultery was revealed.)
He was talking up his and Chris Berg's plan on how to end the ABC as a government funded organisation, and I have to say, the details of the suggestion sound even sillier than I expected. (Give shares in it for free it to current and ex ABC staff, who will pay capital gains tax when they sell them off if there is any profit in selling them off. I have many questions, but honestly, am not very interested in the answers.)
What interests me more is that the hosts of the show gave a call out to Catallaxy, for which Sinclair was apparently appreciative.
The big question, which has bothered me for many years, is why isn't he embarrassed to be the owner/controller of the hate filled bile that passes for reader participation (and, increasingly, post content) at that blog?
He is, personally, socially liberal and was obviously at ease with gay marriage, supports high levels of immigration, appears open minded to Muslim immigration, and admits to being friendly with at least one Labor economist politician (Andrew Leigh). He has always sounded cynical of Trump.
Of course, he is frequently flat out wrong or deeply eccentric in his views (I won't bother listing them again now, it gets tedious), but his libertarian social liberal bent would seem to indicate that he doesn't hate strongly.
But look at the blog! It is brimming with Right wing conservatives who genuinely think that centre Left politics and economic views are literally evil and threatening the end of Western civilisation. Many report how they have lost friends and take pride in their obnoxious arguing with people who do radical things like, you know, believe science on climate change. Several have mentioned past bouts with depression - I judge that many, by the content of their contributions, have actual psychological personality defects for which they could well do with therapy. Misogyny, ridicule of homosexual public figures and outbreaks of racism are just routine, extremely rarely moderated, and self-moderation amongst participants is rare too.
Steve Kates routinely posts his complete bewilderment of how anyone cannot see Trump as the saviour of the world, and repeats regularly the view that he is one of the few economists who understands it properly. As for the Left culturally - just a couple of days ago he wrote how "the scum on the left know no bounds to their vile subnormal behaviour." And the other contributors, they are full of condescension and ridicule of the mainstream as well, whether it be on climate science, or anything really. They don't just disagree, they invite no respect because of their complete rudeness and arrogance towards others economists or experts. No one of a professional standing ever now appears in comments to dispute or correct a post - surely because they know it is a poisonous place in which respectful debate is impossible.
In short, the blog is full of genuine, nutty, irrational hatred, and works as a mutual support network for those obnoxiously ungenerous towards others. It is in large part, I have come to believe, the cry of despair of the cultural loser - but ironically, on their one unifying issue (not believing in the existence or seriousness of climate change) they continually think that they are on the verge of "winning".
Why would he like being in control of such a clown rodeo? He might think it gives voice to the frustrated - but they've always been able to go to other offensive unmoderated blogs to do that - Larry Pickering and Michael Smith's come to mind. Why would you want to hurt your own credibility by heading a blog that is the home of the bitter and nasty social conservative who doesn't even agree with his own socially liberal views?
It is a complete mystery to me.
Sunday, June 17, 2018
A good Krugman on the somewhat illusory benefits of corporate tax cuts
Again, I think Krugman has a talent for straight forward explanations of economic matters, and this one explaining that corporate tax cutting actually seems to be a lot more about profit-shifting, is a good example. His final paragraph:
So, am I saying that the case for cutting corporate tax rates is unadulterated nonsense? No, it’s adulterated nonsense. There’s some reason to believe that lower tax rates will, other things equal, have some positive effect on capital formation. But the vision of a global market in which real capital moves a lot in response to tax rates is all wrong; most of what we see in response to tax rate differences is profit-shifting, not real investment. And there is no reason to believe that the kind of tax cut America just enacted will achieve much besides starving the government of revenue.
Saturday, June 16, 2018
A new idea: a spinning space catapult?
Don't think I have ever heard of this before, even as a vague idea:
On Thursday, a Silicon Valley startup called SpinLaunch Inc. will reveal the first details of its plans to build a machine meant to hurl rockets into space. To achieve that goal, SpinLaunch has secured $40 million from some top technology investors, said Jonathan Yaney, the founder.Well, spinning at that speed there won't be any smuggling of a person on board to get into space. Nor would I assume anything very delicate in a satellite. I am sceptical of the usefulness of the concept, actually.
The company remains tight-lipped about exactly how this contraption will work, although its name gives away the basic idea. Rather than using propellants like kerosene and liquid oxygen to ignite a fire under a rocket, SpinLaunch plans to get a rocket spinning in a circle at up to 5,000 miles per hour and then let it go—more or less throwing the rocket to the edge of space, at which point it can light up and deliver objects like satellites into orbit....
SpinLaunch’s so-called kinetic energy launch system would use electricity to accelerate a projectile and help do much of the dirty work fighting through gravity and the atmosphere. In theory, this means the company could build a simpler, less expensive rocket that’s more efficient at ferrying satellites. “Some people call it a non-rocket launch,” said Yaney. “It seems crazy. It seems fantastic. But we are actually using relatively low-tech industrial components to break this problem into manageable chunks.”
Friday, June 15, 2018
Pointless fist waving continues
Ah, I hope that in retirement, like a reverse Jim Cairns, Sinclair Davidson and his best buddy Berg can be found sitting at a card table at some outdoor market selling their latest self published screed about how important it is that (in their case) the ABC sees its comeuppance.
They may be admired by the more obnoxious, meat-headier parts of the Coalition and the wingnutty internet for their pointless campaigning on this, but it's a ridiculous campaign that has every chance of helping ABC loving Labor votes, rather than helping those who want to abolish it.
When Rupert dies and stops funding the IPA, perhaps the campaign will slow down anyway.
They may be admired by the more obnoxious, meat-headier parts of the Coalition and the wingnutty internet for their pointless campaigning on this, but it's a ridiculous campaign that has every chance of helping ABC loving Labor votes, rather than helping those who want to abolish it.
When Rupert dies and stops funding the IPA, perhaps the campaign will slow down anyway.
About that CO2 sucking machine
I've been waiting for some nuanced commentary on the recent report about extracting CO2 from the air for fuel production. David Roberts does a pretty good job at that in his article at Vox:
Sucking carbon out of the air won’t solve climate change
Sucking carbon out of the air won’t solve climate change
I say again - send Jonathan Swan back to Murdochland, where he belongs
Typical Swan - look at his tweet giving support to the Trump FBI conspiracists on old news, when the report itself says it found no evidence that the political views expressed in texts affected investigation decisions. Make sure to read the comment following the tweet too.
Swan is an idiot for thinking that anyone working in the FBI shouldn't have a private view that Trump is a dangerous idiot. Because we all know he is. Even a substantial proportion of his cult supporters really know it - they are just willing to encourage him anyway for culture war reasons, based on their absurd belief that Obama was the worst president ever. Look at Hugh Hewitt's defence of Trump's quip that he'll probably never admit he was wrong about Kim, even if he is. That's a good sign of "candor" in the perverse world of conservative politics now.
Update: to be clearer - of course, it is not a good look for an investigator to be texting that - and it is clearly right that he be taken off any role in the investigation when they were found. So, yeah, the guy's been foolish. But, ultimately, if there is no evidence of wrong doing from an investigative point of view, the view the investigator has of the suspect hardly matters.
Swan is an idiot for thinking that anyone working in the FBI shouldn't have a private view that Trump is a dangerous idiot. Because we all know he is. Even a substantial proportion of his cult supporters really know it - they are just willing to encourage him anyway for culture war reasons, based on their absurd belief that Obama was the worst president ever. Look at Hugh Hewitt's defence of Trump's quip that he'll probably never admit he was wrong about Kim, even if he is. That's a good sign of "candor" in the perverse world of conservative politics now.
Update: to be clearer - of course, it is not a good look for an investigator to be texting that - and it is clearly right that he be taken off any role in the investigation when they were found. So, yeah, the guy's been foolish. But, ultimately, if there is no evidence of wrong doing from an investigative point of view, the view the investigator has of the suspect hardly matters.
How long can a cult last in the internet age?
There has been an upswing in people noting that the Republican Party, and about 30% of Americans, are acting like cultists when it comes to Trump.
This is, of course, depressing in that cult members are not swayed by rational argument. Or at least, they think they are being rational, when in fact they have lost all objectively. Getting them out of a cult mindset usually takes a long time.
On the other hand, I was musing idly while in traffic this morning, cults, whether they be of religious or political nature, rarely last all that long, as far as the big picture of history goes. The tensions, power plays and rivalry within them eventually cause a break up, with members finally giving up and looking for another key to life. Think of the various Indian gurus gone bad, or your dictators with former public acclaim who end up on the end of a rope.
What's unique about the current situation is the role of the internet and private media (principally, of course, Rupert Murdoch) in prolonging cult worship and the complete lack of objectivity that is key to a cult's existence.
It would be more interesting if it weren't so worrying, this matter of how long modern communications and media can keep a political cult alive. But I guess I remain somewhat optimistic that the dam wall will break, and the disgust with which history will view the enablers of the cult will be long lasting.
This is, of course, depressing in that cult members are not swayed by rational argument. Or at least, they think they are being rational, when in fact they have lost all objectively. Getting them out of a cult mindset usually takes a long time.
On the other hand, I was musing idly while in traffic this morning, cults, whether they be of religious or political nature, rarely last all that long, as far as the big picture of history goes. The tensions, power plays and rivalry within them eventually cause a break up, with members finally giving up and looking for another key to life. Think of the various Indian gurus gone bad, or your dictators with former public acclaim who end up on the end of a rope.
What's unique about the current situation is the role of the internet and private media (principally, of course, Rupert Murdoch) in prolonging cult worship and the complete lack of objectivity that is key to a cult's existence.
It would be more interesting if it weren't so worrying, this matter of how long modern communications and media can keep a political cult alive. But I guess I remain somewhat optimistic that the dam wall will break, and the disgust with which history will view the enablers of the cult will be long lasting.
Thursday, June 14, 2018
The Right wing intellectual decline, continued
Niall Ferguson is copping a lot of criticism for his latest newspaper column, in which he mounts an argument that the chaotic, who-knows-what-he'll-do-or-say-next, style and instincts of Trump is just what the globe (or at least, America) needs. This is the particularly offending part:
Yes, once upon a time, conservative intellectuals valued, well, intellectualism. Now they're reduced to cheering the opposite because "that'll show them."
And this:
And there are many other worthy Twitter comments as well, noting that wrecking Western alliances is playing exactly into Chinese (and Russian) hands.
But the best analysis of how Ferguson has dumbed himself down is a Krugman thread, which you can read here.
Yes, there is much to be said in principle for an international order based on explicit rules; and yes, those rules should favor free trade over protectionism. But if in practice your liberal international order has the consequence that China overtakes you, first economically and then strategically, there is probably something wrong with it.As people are saying on twitter:
The key to the Trump presidency is that it holds out probably the last opportunity the United States has to stop or at least slow China’s ascendancy. And, while it may not be intellectually very satisfying, Trump’s approach to the problem, which is to assert American power in unpredictable and disruptive ways, may in fact be the only viable option left.
Yes, once upon a time, conservative intellectuals valued, well, intellectualism. Now they're reduced to cheering the opposite because "that'll show them."
And this:
And there are many other worthy Twitter comments as well, noting that wrecking Western alliances is playing exactly into Chinese (and Russian) hands.
But the best analysis of how Ferguson has dumbed himself down is a Krugman thread, which you can read here.
Spider raccoon gets to climb another skyscraper
Well, this is a nice story.
A daredevil raccoon that became an online sensation when it spent almost 20 nail-biting hours scaling a 25-storey office tower in Minnesota has been safely rescued and released back into the wild after making it to the top of the building unscathed.
The animal’s ascent on the outside of the UBS building in downtown St Paul city was watched across the world on social media on Tuesday, with updates on its progress posted regularly by the Minnesota Public Radio under the hashtag #MPRraccoon. Crowds also gathered at the scene to watch.
Seems about right
I've usually like William Saletan's commentary, and his take on Trump/Kim sounds nearly right to me. (I think he gives too much credit to Trump though when he calls him a "skilled salesman".)
Wednesday, June 13, 2018
Sickophantic
There're millions of words being written about the Trump/Kim summit, and I'm finding it tiresome to choose which seems to me to sum it up best. So I'll just show throw a few of my own thoughts down:
* I think it likely that Trump's limited range of rhetorical and social skills means that he has no other way of sounding positive about a political leader without coming across as inappropriately gushing. I mean, really - can you imagine the Republican reaction to Obama talking about a "special bond" with a "very talented" North Korean dictator who has internment camps and kills his political rivals and poorly performing generals? It's quite absurd that conservatives (or at least, more conservatives - there are a couple) are not horrified - but then again, their childish, blind, tribalistic support of Trump is absurd at the best of times. Ironically, I think the regular media is actually being light on the criticism of Trump for such sycophantic language, perhaps because they have made the same judgement as me (that he just doesn't have the skill to do anything better)?
* The agreement as signed means nothing. No one will know if anything productive has come out of the meeting for another 12 months at least, I would guess.
* I have been a bit puzzled by South Korea being too lavish in its praise of Trump early on. Now that he seems to be making decisions affecting them without being pre-warned (cancelling joint military exercises) I think they may be realising they're not exactly dealing with a reliable ally. Sucked in, as teens of my era used to say.
* I think it likely that Trump's limited range of rhetorical and social skills means that he has no other way of sounding positive about a political leader without coming across as inappropriately gushing. I mean, really - can you imagine the Republican reaction to Obama talking about a "special bond" with a "very talented" North Korean dictator who has internment camps and kills his political rivals and poorly performing generals? It's quite absurd that conservatives (or at least, more conservatives - there are a couple) are not horrified - but then again, their childish, blind, tribalistic support of Trump is absurd at the best of times. Ironically, I think the regular media is actually being light on the criticism of Trump for such sycophantic language, perhaps because they have made the same judgement as me (that he just doesn't have the skill to do anything better)?
* The agreement as signed means nothing. No one will know if anything productive has come out of the meeting for another 12 months at least, I would guess.
* I have been a bit puzzled by South Korea being too lavish in its praise of Trump early on. Now that he seems to be making decisions affecting them without being pre-warned (cancelling joint military exercises) I think they may be realising they're not exactly dealing with a reliable ally. Sucked in, as teens of my era used to say.
Tuesday, June 12, 2018
My best guess as to what Trump and Kim just signed ...
....is that's a time share deal for some Trump resort, and an associated golf course membership.
CRISPR and cancer
Techno optimists of the "let's genetically engineer humans to make them better" extreme might need to reduce their expectations of the use of CRISPR as a gene editing technique:
Editing cells’ genomes with CRISPR-Cas9 might increase the risk that the altered cells, intended to treat disease, will trigger cancer, two studies published on Monday warn — a potential game-changer for the companies developing CRISPR-based therapies.In the studies, published in Nature Medicine, scientists found that cells whose genomes are successfully edited by CRISPR-Cas9 have the potential to seed tumors inside a patient. That could make some CRISPR’d cells ticking time bombs, according to researchers from Sweden’s Karolinska Institute and, separately, Novartis.
Both unsurprising and surprising
They ran tests on kitchen towels which had been used by families and not been washed for a month (!) and found lots of bacteria on them. (Come on, surely families which aren't headed by someone hooked on ice or heroin wash or change tea towels more often than that?)
But even so, the bacteria found weren't the worst kind:
But even so, the bacteria found weren't the worst kind:
As for the bacteria found in the study "what's listed here doesn't initially raise concerns with me," Chapman said. The study didn't find any of the common culprits of foodborne illness, such as Salmonella, Campylobacter or pathogenic types of E. coli, such as E. coli O157:H7, he noted.
Although staph can indeed cause foodborne illness when it's found in food, the bacterium is also very common on skin. "The fact that it's [on] the towel isn't as concerning as [it being in] food," Chapman said.That's surprising.
God looks a bit like..Jimmy Fallon with bigger hair?
Some psychologists seem to have too much time on their hands:
A team of psychologists at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill have used a new technique to construct what a large sample of 511 American Christians think God looks like.He's the uninspiring result:
Participants in the study saw hundreds of randomly varying face-pairs and selected which face from each pair appeared more like how they imagined God to appear. By combining all the selected faces, the researchers could assemble a composite "face of God" that reflected how each person imagined God to appear.
Their results were both surprising and revealing. From Michelangelo to Monty Python, Illustrations of God have nearly always shown him as an old and august white-bearded Caucasian man. But the researchers found that many Christians saw God as younger, more feminine, and less Caucasian that popular culture suggests.
Monday, June 11, 2018
Annihilated
I saw the reasonably well reviewed made for Netflix science fiction movie Annihilation on the weekend.
I'm puzzled that it got any good reviews. None of the characters felt real; the reason for and aim of the all female expedition was poorly explained; the science was vague and bogus; and the alien thing causing all the problem was destroyed pathetically easily.
Science fiction dealing with fast evolution and genetic changes is rarely good - I'm thinking of the not very funny Evolution, the rapidly growing alien thing on the space station in Life, and now this. At least those movies got bad reviews. This one should have too.
I'm puzzled that it got any good reviews. None of the characters felt real; the reason for and aim of the all female expedition was poorly explained; the science was vague and bogus; and the alien thing causing all the problem was destroyed pathetically easily.
Science fiction dealing with fast evolution and genetic changes is rarely good - I'm thinking of the not very funny Evolution, the rapidly growing alien thing on the space station in Life, and now this. At least those movies got bad reviews. This one should have too.
Trump cult watch
Of course Steve Kates and his not-very-merry band of Western Civilisation catastrophists at Catallaxy think the instant classic G7 photograph is great because (on their interpretation) it shows a resolute Trump resisting the pressure of Europeans who are the source of all that's wrong with the world: what with their social security safety nets, universal health care systems, higher taxation and acceptance of refugee immigrants from regions destabilised by the US.
Here's one of their oh-so-funny quips (if you are living in 1950, if not earlier):
"Percy Popinjay" is quite the gentleman, apparently.
Back in reality land, I liked Krugman's tweet take on Trump:
Etc. (He goes on to complain about the inadvertent "pro Trump" bias that is given by journalists who don't want to just call out Trump, but try to "both side" the argument. He's right.)
Here's one of their oh-so-funny quips (if you are living in 1950, if not earlier):
"Percy Popinjay" is quite the gentleman, apparently.
Back in reality land, I liked Krugman's tweet take on Trump:
Etc. (He goes on to complain about the inadvertent "pro Trump" bias that is given by journalists who don't want to just call out Trump, but try to "both side" the argument. He's right.)
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