Oct 1, 2010

India and China- a comparison

This is an interesting graphic we have here-

Business in India: A bumpier but freer road | The Economist:

"Both China and India have taken off since their governments allowed people and companies more economic freedom. China went first, so it has a big head start. But as Morgan Stanley’s economists point out, India’s growth since the reforms of the early 1990s bears a striking resemblance to China’s since its grand opening in the late 1970s (see chart 4)."

This is the chart-

Sep 6, 2010

Capital Everywhere?

Could make no head or tail of it- but seems important enough to be bookmarked for later reading-

For Adorno, what Kant and Freud both lacked was a critical theory of capital; a capacity for the self-reflection, as such, of the subjectivity of the commodity form. Marx provided this. For Adorno, both Kant and Freud were liable to be abused if the problem of capital was obscured and not taken as the fundamental historical frame for the problem of freedom that both sought to address. What was critical about Kantian and Freudian consciousness could become unwittingly and unintentionally affirmative of the status quo, as if we were already rational subjects with well-developed egos, as if we were already free, as if these were not our tasks. This potential self-undermining or self-contradiction of the task of consciousness that Adorno found in Kant and Freud could be explicated adequately only from a Marxian perspective. When Adorno deployed Freudian and Kantian categories for grasping consciousness, he deliberately rendered them aporetic. Adorno considered Kant and Freud as providing descriptive theories that in turn must be subject to critical reflection and specification—within a Marxian socio-historical frame.

- Adorno and Freud : Platypus

Sep 5, 2010

Greed

GreedImage by Muffet via Flickr
One of the best articles I have read for a long time: greed making money out of a need. Excellent stuff:
In Haiti’s Artibonite Valley, Ian Rawson, the managing director of the Hôpital Albert Schweitzer, took Salem to see malnutrition inpatients — “our failures,” he called them — in a dimly lighted ward where they lay beneath a mural of parrots. Many of the children were unnaturally small and had patchy, orange-tinted hair, a classic sign of protein deficiency. “This,” Rawson said, waving a packet of Plumpy’nut, “is our immunization.” He was applying for a U.S. government grant to distribute Nutributter in the surrounding mountains, where poverty is dire, 9 out of 10 adults can’t read and acute malnutrition rates can top 35 percent. “It seems simple to me,” he said. “What’s the downside to me giving every child who’s over 4 months old a tube of Nutributter per day?”

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A Reverse Course

zerbrechlichImage by westpark via Flickr
Out of step with the rest of the world, and in a state of intense denial, Pakistan looks like it wants to back away from the gains made by civilisation-

The space in which militants operate may have shrunk in Swat and parts of South Waziristan, but, disturbingly, it has expanded in other areas inside and outside the tribal belt, including the Punjab, the country’s most populous and perhaps most politically important province. Once relatively free of militant violence, it is now a gathering place, where sectarian, anti-Indian, and jihadist groups have emerged seemingly stronger than ever, says Lahore political scientist Hasan Askari Rizvi. Suicide and ground assaults against the police, intelligence agencies, and civilians, including an ambush of the Sri Lankan cricket team in March 2009, are on the increase there. This past week suicide bombers killed more than 30 Shiites during a religious procession in Lahore. Taiba is believed to have ambitions far beyond India, says America’s top military officer, Adm. Mike Mullen, and is becoming “a significant regional and global threat.”
Operating out of the space ceded to them, and by exploiting the country’s modern telecommunications, transport, and financial systems, the Taliban, the Lashkars, and the Harakats arguably can plant a bomb in New York, Mumbai, and Kabul almost as easily as they can send a suicide bomber to Karachi or Islamabad. As long as that remains true, Pakistan will be widely viewed as the country presenting the most danger to regional and global security—and to its own stability.
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Does Language Influence Culture? - WSJ.com

Yes, it does. Packed with facts, Lera Boroditsky in WSJ:

Does Language Influence Culture? - WSJ.com:

"In another study, English speakers watched the video of Janet Jackson's infamous 'wardrobe malfunction' (a wonderful nonagentive coinage introduced into the English language by Justin Timberlake), accompanied by one of two written reports. The reports were identical except in the last sentence where one used the agentive phrase 'ripped the costume' while the other said 'the costume ripped.' Even though everyone watched the same video and witnessed the ripping with their own eyes, language mattered. Not only did people who read 'ripped the costume' blame Justin Timberlake more, they also levied a whopping 53% more in fines."

Someone like us

Decapitated statues at Angkor, Cambodia, which...Image via Wikipedia
Evil is banal: it does not dress up different from us- it is us with a different colour, and greater certainties.
A brilliant piece of writing-
Over the next few years, I worked in Bangkok as a photographer, making trips back to Cambodia, always carrying a photo of Duch to show defected Khmer Rouge members. I never believed I'd find him. But in 1999 I made a breakthrough. By chance, on another assignment, I travelled to a nearby Khmer Rouge area that had just opened up. I was wandering around when a small, wiry man in an African Refugee Committee T-shirt came and introduced himself as Hang Pin.
I knew immediately who he really was. It was the same face I'd been carrying around with me for more than a decade. Duch was a little bit greyer, but there was no doubt in my mind. We had a fairly banal conversation – he was interested in my camera, and I tried to appear as nonchalant as I could. This was no ranting, cold-eyed madman; he was garrulous, friendly, disarming. He told me he was a humanitarian aid worker and lay-preacher, converting Cambodians to Christianity. Surreptitiously I took a photograph, but it didn't seem the right time to confront him. I wondered if he might still be a killer.
Later, I returned to the village with Nate Thayer – the last western journalist to have interviewed Pol Pot. We talked to Duch about land mines and his planned church, but he dodged any leading questions about his past. It was only when he asked to see Nate's business card that we realised Duch had suspicions of his own.
"Nic," he said, "I believe your friend has interviewed Pol Pot."
"That's right," I said.
Duch gave a deep sigh: "I believe it is God's will you are here," he said. It was almost as if he'd always expected this day to come.
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Nothing to be afraid of

A damning indictment of the consequences of unthinking ideological justification of personal infamies-

Until recently, Dikötter states, most accounts of the famine have been based on central government sources that are often incomplete or untrue. What he found during his years rummaging in archives throughout China was that such central documents were transmitted in fuller, less censored versions to the provinces and below. In addition, the archives he saw contained letters of complaint or justification from local officials and even ordinary people, minutes from local and even central meetings, and statistics which were either falsified to hoodwink Mao or local superiors, or were subtle enough to reveal that awful things were happening. For example, in 1960 in the 'model province' of Henan, in Xinyang alone 'over a million people died ... Of these victims 67,000 were clubbed to death with sticks'. When this came to Mao 'he blamed the trouble on class enemies'. On another occasion, when the Chairman learned that there had been terrible deaths in one town he had hitherto admired, 'Mao simply switched his allegiance to the next county down the road willing to outdo others in extravagant production claims.' Mao and his cronies insisted, as one of them put it as reports of deaths rolled in, that 'This is the price we have to pay; it's nothing to be afraid of. Who knows how many people have been sacrificed on the battlefields and in the prisons [for the revolutionary cause]? Now we have a few cases of illness and death; it's nothing!' Every detail was locally recorded and explained - or obscured. Take this report from 25 February 1960 in Yaohejia village: 'Name of culprit: Yang Zhongsheng ... Name of victim: Yang Ecshun. Relationship with Culprit: Younger Brother ... Manner of Crime: Killed and Eaten. Reason: Livelihood Issues.

-Literary Review - Jonathan Mirsky on 'Mao's Great Famine' by fFrank Dikotter
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Sep 4, 2010

No place for God

Sistine Chapel, fresco Michelangelo, the death...Image via Wikipedia
A brilliant article with a great summing up:

Julian Baggini: If science has not actually killed God, it has rendered Him unrecognisable - Science, News - The Independent:

"In the scientific universe, God is squeezed until his pips squeak. If he survives, then he can't do so without changing his form. Only faith makes it possible to look at such a distorted, scientifically respectable deity and claim to recognise the same chap depicted on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel. For those without faith, that God is clearly dead, and, yes, science helped to kill him."


We can say that it is only the semitic God that has died, but then, it is cold comfort indeed, to know that science leaves no room for any avatar of God.
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An uneven match

Physicist Stephen Hawking in Zero Gravity NASAImage via Wikipedia
Surely a sane voice- you can't match up something that is constantly put to test against something that is trusted to be true, no matter what kind of evidence turns up-

Has Stephen Hawking ended the God debate? - Telegraph:

"Hawking's view appears to be that the belief in a God-created universe can be supplanted by a belief in M-theory, a good candidate for a fundamental theory of nature at its finest level. Experts assure us of the potential of this theory and I for one am quite prepared to believe them.
One problem with the theory is that it looks as though it will be extremely difficult to test, unless physicists can build a particle accelerator the size of a galaxy. Even if the experimenters find a way round this and M-theory passes all their tests, the reasons for the mathematical order at the heart of the universe's order would remain an unsolvable mystery.
Even religious scientists – and there are still a few – never use the God concept in their scientific work. Perhaps it is time for a moratorium on the use of the concept in popularisations, too? This would avoid mixing up scientific and non-scientific statements and put an end to the consequent confusions. I think it wise for scientists and religious believers to keep out of each other's territory – no good has come out of their engagement and I suspect it never will."
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Tha nature of laws

The Hubble Ultra Deep Field, is an image of a ...Image via Wikipedia
"In his new book, Stephen Hawking reiterates that there is no big gap in the scientific account of the big bang. The laws of physics can explain, he says, how a universe of space, time and matter could emerge spontaneously, without the need for God. And most cosmologists agree: we don't need a god-of-the-gaps to make the big bang go bang. It can happen as part of a natural process. A much tougher problem now looms, however. What is the source of those ingenious laws that enable a universe to pop into being from nothing?"
Stephen Hawking's big bang gaps | Paul Davies | Comment is free | The Guardian

There is always something that needs explanation: even if you have explained all the process, there is still the natural laws: how come they are the way there are? In fact, why should there be laws at all?




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Aug 21, 2010

Appearance and Realtiy

I've always been interested in the perception-reality mismatch, and here is a telling experiment-

Looks Can Deceive: Why Perception and Reality Don't Always Match Up: Scientific American:


"The Witt-Proffitt team published another report on the observation, well known in sports lore, that baseball players perceive the ball to be larger when they are hitting well and smaller when they are on a losing streak. Since then, Witt, now a professor at Purdue University, along with her student Travis Dorsch, has pursued this intriguing link between how success (or lack of it) in a task affects one’s perception of the world.

In their experiment, 23 volunteers had to kick an American football through the field goal from the 10-yard line. After a warm-up, participants were asked to judge the height and width of the goal by adjusting a handheld, scaled-down model of the goal made out of PVC pipes. They then each performed 10 kicks. Immediately after the final kick, participants repeated the perceptual measurement.

The result was striking. Before kicking, both groups had the same perception of the size of the goal (incidentally, an inaccurate one: everybody underestimated its actual width-to-height ratio). But after 10 kicks, the poor performers (those who scored two or fewer successful kicks) saw the goal as about 10 percent narrower than they had before, whereas the good kickers (those who scored three or more) perceived the goal to be about 10 percent wider. How well you have performed over the past few minutes influences the way you see the world! Not just metaphorically, but on a physiological level—it changes your actual perceptions.

After more data mining, the two psychologists discovered that the people who missed the goal because they tended to kick the ball too short perceived the crossbar as being higher than did their more successful peers, whereas those who missed because they kicked wide judged the upright field posts to be narrower."

Aug 13, 2010

The Value of Error

Promotional photograph of Johann HariImage via Wikipedia
This is a great piece of writing that asks us to look at our errors on a regular basis: they are not shameful failures, but portals of success-

We need to change how we think about our errors : Johann Hari:

"Error is an essential step in the process of finding the right answer. Every scientist leaves behind a trail of disproven hypotheses and papers shot to pieces by colleagues. He doesn’t see them as shameful, but as part of a process that was bringing him closer to the truth through experimentation. Similarly, James Joyce, thinking about all the drafts he wrote that failed, said “a man’s errors are his portals of discovery”.

But error may be even more fundamental than that. From the moment we are born, human beings are creating theories about the world, based on limited evidence. It’s how we survived: if our ancestors hadn’t generalized that all lions are dangerous, you wouldn’t be reading this. Errors are often simply this necessary impulse reaching too far, or misfiring. So the impulse that makes us wrong is also the impulse that makes us human."
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Aug 12, 2010

The Greatest

Colosseum, RomeImage via Wikipedia
A strange calculation makes out the figure of $15 billion to be the lifetime prize money made by a Roman Charioteer- a Spaniard called Gaius Appuleius Diocles.

Greatest of All Time by Peter Struck - Roundtable | Lapham’s Quarterly:

"The very best paid of these—in fact, the best paid athlete of all time—was a Lusitanian Spaniard named Gaius Appuleius Diocles, who had short stints with the Whites and Greens, before settling in for a long career with the Reds. Twenty-four years of winnings brought Diocles—likely an illiterate man whose signature move was the strong final dash—the staggering sum of 35,863,120 sesterces in prize money. The figure is recorded in a monumental inscription erected in Rome by his fellow charioteers and admirers in 146, which hails him fulsomely on his retirement at the age of “42 years, 7 months, and 23 days” as “champion of all charioteers.”
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Jul 21, 2010

Fair Elections

The Manner and Use of the BallotImage via Wikipedia
Elections are vexing questions for a nation, with its emphasis on fairness and popularity. It is very difficult to find a proper mechanism for electing a person to office, and more difficult to impress people that the election had been fair.


New voting methods and fair elections : The New Yorker:

"Whenever the time came to elect a new doge of Venice, an official went to pray in St. Mark’s Basilica, grabbed the first boy he could find in the piazza, and took him back to the ducal palace. The boy’s job was to draw lots to choose an electoral college from the members of Venice’s grand families, which was the first step in a performance that has been called tortuous, ridiculous, and profound. Here is how it went, more or less unchanged, for five hundred years, from 1268 until the end of the Venetian Republic.

Thirty electors were chosen by lot, and then a second lottery reduced them to nine, who nominated forty candidates in all, each of whom had to be approved by at least seven electors in order to pass to the next stage. The forty were pruned by lot to twelve, who nominated a total of twenty-five, who needed at least nine nominations each. The twenty-five were culled to nine, who picked an electoral college of forty-five, each with at least seven nominations. The forty-five became eleven, who chose a final college of forty-one. Each member proposed one candidate, all of whom were discussed and, if necessary, examined in person, whereupon each elector cast a vote for every candidate of whom he approved. The candidate with the most approvals was the winner, provided he had been endorsed by at least twenty-five of the forty-one.

Don’t worry if you blinked: bewildering complexity was part of the point. The election aimed to reassure Venetians that their new ruler could not have been eased into place by backroom deals..."
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Jul 12, 2010

The attraction of evil

Zizek!Image via Wikipedia
Not very attractive, but even though totally wrong about it, cleverness has its pull: I am fascinated with Zizek-
"His repertoire is a mix of Lacanian psychoanalysis and Hegel's idealist philosophy -- of film analysis, criticism of democracy, capitalism and ideology, and an occasionally authoritarian Marxism paired with everyday observations. He explains the ontological essence of the Germans, French and Americans on the basis of their toilet habits and the resulting relationship with their fecal matter, and he initially reacts to criticism with a cheerful 'Fuck you!' -- pronounced in hard Slavic consonants. He tells colleagues he values but who advocate theories contrary to his own that they should prepare to enter the gulag when he, Zizek, comes into power. He relishes the shudder that the word gulag elicits.
'Take my friend Peter, for example, fucking Sloterdijk. I like him a lot, but he'll obviously have to be sent to the gulag. He'll be in a slightly better position there. Perhaps he could work as a cook.'
One could say it's funny, especially the way Zizek delivers it, in his exaggerated and emphatic way. But one could also think of the more than 30 million people who fell victim to Soviet terror. Those who find Zizek's remarks amusing could just as easily be telling jokes about concentration camps.
'But you know?' Zizek says in response to such criticism. 'The best, most impressive films about the Holocaust are comedies.'

- 'The Most Dangerous Philosopher in the West': Welcome to the Slavoj Zizek Show - SPIEGEL ONLINE - News - International
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An Entertaining Anectode

J.B.S. Haldane, in Oxford UK, 1914. Image down...Image via Wikipedia
A poignant, though entertaining anecdote in Frans de Waal's review of "The Price of Altruism- George Price and the Search for the Origins of Kindness" by Oren Harman-

"Extremely well researched and written with great love of the subject, “The Price of Altruism” reveals all sorts of personal details of momentous events in the history of science. There is, for example, the delicious fact that John Maynard Smith, the famous British evolutionary biologist, brought to the deathbed of the even more famous J. B. S. Haldane a book arguing that flocks of birds prevent overpopulation by curtailing their own reproduction, in an attempt to give themselves an advantage over other flocks. This idea, known as group selection, was to become the focus of much passionate debate and ridicule over the years. Despite his grave condition, Haldane immediately saw the problem, which he summarized to visitors with a mis­chievous smile:
“Well, there are these blackcock, you see, and the males are all strutting around, and every so often a female comes along, and one of them mates with her. And they’ve got this stick, and every time they mate with a female, they cut a little notch in it. And when they’ve cut 12 notches, if another female comes along, they say ‘Now, ladies, enough is enough!’ ”
- Book Review - The Price of Altruism - By Oren Harman - NYTimes.com:
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Jul 11, 2010

You can't budge an egghead...

EggheadsImage by basykes via Flickr
Now I know why I never won an argument (and never lost, I have to owe it)- it is difficult to budge an egghead, no matter what you throw at it-
How facts backfire - The Boston Globe:

"And if you harbor the notion — popular on both sides of the aisle — that the solution is more education and a higher level of political sophistication in voters overall, well, that’s a start, but not the solution. A 2006 study by Charles Taber and Milton Lodge at Stony Brook University showed that politically sophisticated thinkers were even less open to new information than less sophisticated types. These people may be factually right about 90 percent of things, but their confidence makes it nearly impossible to correct the 10 percent on which they’re totally wrong. Taber and Lodge found this alarming, because engaged, sophisticated thinkers are “the very folks on whom democratic theory relies most heavily.”
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Evolution

The story of evolution as wall painting-


BIG BANG BIG BOOM - the new wall-painted animation by BLU from blu on Vimeo.

Nuclear Explosions around the world

This is brilliant, both as visuals and music- and there is a sense of foreboding as the beats get more frequent and varied: extraordinary imagination.



via http://www.ctbto.org/specials/1945-1998-by-isao-hashimoto/
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Jul 10, 2010

The Can-do Attitude

Sergey BrinImage via Wikipedia
A pragmatic approach to find a cure for Parkinson's: Wired has a brilliant piece about Sergey Brin, the founder of Google who is genetically predisposed to it, and hence is at risk, and his innovative approach-

Sergey Brin’s Search for a Parkinson’s Cure | Magazine:

"Not everyone with Parkinson’s has an LRRK2 mutation; nor will everyone with the mutation get the disease. But it does increase the chance that Parkinson’s will emerge sometime in the carrier’s life to between 30 and 75 percent. (By comparison, the risk for an average American is about 1 percent.) Brin himself splits the difference and figures his DNA gives him about 50-50 odds.

That’s where exercise comes in. Parkinson’s is a poorly understood disease, but research has associated a handful of behaviors with lower rates of disease, starting with exercise. One study found that young men who work out have a 60 percent lower risk. Coffee, likewise, has been linked to a reduced risk. For a time, Brin drank a cup or two a day, but he can’t stand the taste of the stuff, so he switched to green tea. (“Most researchers think it’s the caffeine, though they don’t know for sure,” he says.) Cigarette smokers also seem to have a lower chance of developing Parkinson’s, but Brin has not opted to take up the habit. With every pool workout and every cup of tea, he hopes to diminish his odds, to adjust his algorithm by counteracting his DNA with environmental factors."
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Wow!

General James N. Mattis, USMC, Commander, Unit...Image via Wikipedia
This is the man who takes over as the commander of U.S. Central Command!
'Actually it's quite fun to fight them, you know. It's a hell of a hoot,' Mattis said, prompting laughter from some military members in the audience. 'It's fun to shoot some people. I'll be right up there with you. I like brawling.'You go into Afghanistan, you got guys who slap women around for five years because they didn't wear a veil,' Mattis said. 'You know, guys like that ain't got no manhood left anyway. So it's a hell of a lot of fun to shoot them.'
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That Sinking Feeling...

"Greece, with a population of just 11 million, is the largest importer of conventional weapons in Europe—and ranks fifth in the world behind China, India, the United Arab Emirates and South Korea. Its military spending is the highest in the European Union as a percentage of gross domestic product. That spending was one of the factors behind Greece's stratospheric national debt."

Why did Greece buy so much weaponry? -

"Greece's deputy prime minister, Theodore Pangalos, said during an Athens visit in May by Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan that he felt "forced to buy weapons we do not need," and that the deals made him feel "national shame."
"Other European officials have charged France and Germany with making their military dealings with Greece a condition of their participation in the country's huge financial rescue. French and German officials deny the accusations.

An entertaining article- would be unbelievable as fiction- may be an African State, or a South American junta, but not in Europe, one would think.

Read more- The Submarine Deals That Helped Sink Greece - WSJ.com:

Jul 9, 2010

The Rich are rather different...

Looks like we are collecting articles about the filthy rich: this is the third I've seen that exposes the ruthless streak in the rich-


Walking Away From Million-Dollar Mortgages - NYTimes.com:

"Whether it is their residence, a second home or a house bought as an investment, the rich have stopped paying the mortgage at a rate that greatly exceeds the rest of the population.
More than one in seven homeowners with loans in excess of a million dollars are seriously delinquent, according to data compiled for The New York Times by the real estate analytics firm CoreLogic.
By contrast, homeowners with less lavish housing are much more likely to keep writing checks to their lender. About one in 12 mortgages below the million-dollar mark is delinquent."
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Jul 7, 2010

The Hollow Crust

This is nothing short of scandalous: but I enjoyed reading it, though:
"... billionaires like Norman B. Champ III, who received nearly a half-million dollars in welfare payments for poor farmers, despite the fact he lives in a multimillion dollar co-op at 828 Park Avenue. From 1995 to 2006, he raked in a total of $405,807 in dairy, corn and soy subsidies via his stake in the Champ family’s dairy farm in Missouri, his home state. Handout-for-handout, even Reagan’s mythic Cadillac-driving Chicago welfare queen and her $150,000 welfare scam got nothing on Champ, who could buy a Lamborghini and still have money left over to reupholster his private jet.
Norman B. Champ III, 47, was born into a wealthy, upper-crust Missouri family and lived a privileged life (the Champs had a Missouri village named after them in their honor: the Village of Champ). He graduated summa cum laude from Princeton University, went to England for a masters in war studies from King’s College and earned a law degree—cum laude, of course—from Harvard, after which he finally settled down at Chilton Investment Company, a multi-billion dollar hedge fund. He had added three titles to his name—Executive Vice President, General Counsel, Chief Compliance Officer—by the time the markets crashed. He lost no time jumping ship to a cushy government job with the Securities and Exchange Commission, coming on board in January 2010 to start a new life as a financial regulator at the SEC’s New York Inspections and Examinations Division. He now leads a team of 100 hardworking investigators in a crusade to crack down on the shady dealings of his hedge-fund buddies.
An upper-crust billionaire type who lives in one of the nation’s wealthiest ZIP codes and collects welfare meant for struggling farmers? Whatta champ!
- The fattest farm subsidy checks are mailed to New York's richest ZIP codes

Jul 4, 2010

Subjects or Citizens?

U.S. Declaration of Independence ratified by t...Image via Wikipedia
Just a word, and what a difference it makes-

"France had determined that a word existed beneath 'citizens,' and she asked the group for ideas. One woman called out 'subjects" and library staff members immediately realized that she was on to something. The intensive work on the document soon began."
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Jun 25, 2010

How People Think...

IMG_4110Image by Jemimus via Flickr
Ian Buruma reviews "Hitch-22 - A Memoir" by Christopher Hitchens.

Setting off with a quote from the book,
...the ways in which the conclusion is arrived at may be interesting…just as it is always how people think that counts for much more than what they think...
Ian Buruma explores just what kind of thinking goes on inside the Hitchens head.

Not flattering, if I get the tone of the review right- for Buruma writes,
"Protesting against the Vietnam War was not a bad thing to do, of course. But still sticking to the business of how rather than what Hitchens thinks, the peculiar tone of self-righteousness, combined with a parochial point of view, even when the causes concern faraway, even exotic countries, is distinctive."

Read more at The Believer  in The New York Review of Books.


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Jun 24, 2010

Tennis or Basketball?

John IsnerImage via Wikipedia
This is the first round match, Isner has served 98 aces, Mahut 95: hope there is more to come today.

"American John Isner and Nicolas Mahut of France were tied at 59-59 in the fifth set at Wimbledon after exactly 10 hours of action when play was suspended because of darkness Wednesday night. It is by far the longest match in terms of games or time in the century-plus history of tennis."

Read more at Isner, Mahut set marathon records at Wimbledon
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Moscow's Dostoevsky station could be 'suicide mecca' - Telegraph

Moscow Metro, clockImage via Wikipedia
"'What did you want? Scenes of dancing?'
Dostoevsky does not have them,' he (Alexander Mozhaev) said."

The Moscow Metro, where about eighty people kill themselves every year, has reopened with 'gloomy' murals drawn from Dostoevsky's novels. The representation of dark, brooding Dostoveskian characters in the metro that already has a reputation of inspiring suicidal thoughts has invited criticism from Russian psychologists.

Alexander Mozhaev, the artist who made the murals finds them inspiring, though. 

Read more at 
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Lion Burgers

ZOO Bratislava - African Lion (Panthera leo kr...Image via Wikipedia
"'In Africa they do eat lions, so I assume if it's OK for Africans to eat lions then it should be OK for us.' Mr Selogie added: 'We thought that since the World Cup was in Africa that the lion burger might be interesting for some of our more adventurous customers.'"

Cameron Selogie is the owner of Il Vinaio Restaurant near Phoenix, Arizona. He is offering a lion burger for $21 in tribute to South Africa where the Fifa World Cup games are underway.

The burger is made from a free range lion grown at a farm.

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Homemade Nuclear Reactors

Aerial view of Lawrence Livermore National Lab...Image via Wikipedia



"As long as they [private citizens] obtain that material [the components of the reactor] legally, they could do whatever they want,' says Anne Stark, senior public information officer..."
Mark Suppes of New York is one among a select group of amateur physicists who have achieved nuclear fusion in a homemade nuclear reactor. A 15 year old boy from Michigan is the youngest among the 38 who have found success.

Mark Suppes is a web developer for Gucci. Building nuclear reactors is his hobby.



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Jun 23, 2010

Shocking revelation about Digital Copiers and Data Theft

My Home Office IIIImage by TranceMist via Flickr
... As he says, ”The type of information we see on these machines with the social security numbers, birth certificates, bank records, income tax forms… would be very valuable.” - Digital copiers - a privacy and security timebomb, Kim Cameron's Identity Weblog.

Apparently, every digital copier made after 2002 has a hard drive that stores an image of every document copied, scanned, or emailed by the machine: if you think of the stuff you copy...

If you run a business, it might be a good idea not to sell your copier, right, think what is inside it, and it ends up at China or somewhere!

Please read more here.

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Journalism at its best

Gen. McChrystal disembarks a Black Hawk with D...Image by The National Guard via Flickr
This is a brilliant piece of journalism that might make a difference to the war at Afghanistan- writing at its best is at Rolling Stone, a profile of Gen McChrystal, warts and all- mostly warts, and how ugly!
"McChrystal wound up ranking 298 out of a class of 855, a serious underachievement for a man widely regarded as brilliant. His most compelling work was extracurricular: As managing editor of The Pointer, the West Point literary magazine, McChrystal wrote seven short stories that eerily foreshadow many of the issues he would confront in his career. In one tale, a fictional officer complains about the difficulty of training foreign troops to fight; in another, a 19-year-old soldier kills a boy he mistakes for a terrorist. In "Brinkman's Note," a piece of suspense fiction, the unnamed narrator appears to be trying to stop a plot to assassinate the president. It turns out, however, that the narrator himself is the assassin, and he's able to infiltrate the White House: "The President strode in smiling. From the right coat pocket of the raincoat I carried, I slowly drew forth my 32-caliber pistol. In Brinkman's failure, I had succeeded." "
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Jun 22, 2010

The pain of yearning that spinach cause...

Mullum MalarumImage via Wikipedia
I don't whether this is a legitimate use of blog: I read this interesting article about subtitles- Indian subtitles!

"I imagine a video editing suite somewhere in the suburbs of Mumbai or Chennai, where the key moment arrives and the lead translator hands off the balance of the film to some sub-subtitler and heads outside for a well-deserved masala dosa.He says that "the greatest amount of South Asian subtitle strangeness" occurs in the songs, and presents a couple of wondrous examples: "On the tip of the noses love enjoys even the beauty of crows!" and "Thoughts of various spinaches make me yearn." The latter is from from Mullum Malarum (Tamil, 1978), and I have to say, it tempts me to see the movie."- Language Hat

It is tragic that Mullum Malarum- a classic Tamil Film- is not widely known outside Tamil Nadu except for this immortal translation- "Thoughts of various spinaches make me yearn."




Related link: Cardus

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