Wednesday, March 2, 2011

tax the rich, not because they are richer

Tax those who get the benefits of taxes.

LIke Rule of Law that keeps their books safe and their families
Like Roads that work so their goods can flow
Like Police and Prisons to keep them down
Like schools to pour out employees and soldiers
Like contracts for planes and bombs and mercenaries and etc.

If they are making 90% of the income and taxed 80% of the taxes, where is the fairness in that?
FIll in the blank on the percentage, but you get the idea, it's not anything to do with the money they have managed to keep thanks to Bush et al.

Our entire systems of economics, education, transportation, manufacturing, etc. are in place to make the rich even richer.

That is why they ought to pay for the privilege!

Those same rich people own the debt and get paid tax payer money tax free for owning the debt that made them rich in the first place.

Follow the money.
--
FRISH

Sunday, February 27, 2011

The Economist: "The 9 Billion-people question" Special report 16pp 02/26/2011

Feeding The World
The latest numbs.  From a rather influential and highly visible magazine/data source.

The incredible part:  The Feeding (and cleaning up after) 9,000,000,000 people they see as feasible (with a whole LOT of IFs). (See last page)...
(And, they recognize "climate change will add to the strains", amongst several other pithy observations.)

The problem I have with that is if they really think that food will be available, population will go up, with food no longer a consideration.

9Bn humans?  with 6Bn or more from now until 2110???  We'll eat everything on the planet.
-- 
FRISH

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Results from bridge play tonight...

Enjoy the attached, we did.  

George is a genius from CT. and a world class player.

THANKS George!

(It looks better than actual, we were 12th pair out of 192 (first in our section).)

POINTS are always good!   

FRISH

Immigrants, diversity, and our future...

The world is the world.  We cannot change it.  If the USA expects to have a vibrant economy, under capitalism that is, it requires young workers and innovators.  

Since those who have been here for generations are having fewer children the natural outcome is more children by immigrants.

So what?

It's been like that since the early 1600's and the same jingoist, nationalist, isolationist, xenophobic and outright racist slurs are of the same age or older.

Don't you like capitalism Fred?

Don't you want the USA to be successful?

Are Italians and Irish and Jews still as hated and feared as they were 100 and 150 years ago?

Did their assimilation diminish America or strengthen it?

Aren't all those "brown skin nations" growing more than the rest of the world?

Doesn't that just mean they are a burgeoning market, it's ours to lose, the Chinese already get it!  

Being friendly and having those same brown skinned people here can be advantageous and, how their brethren are treated here also is noted by our trading partners.

If there is a demographic shift happening, it is insane to try to thwart it, we should anticipate it and deal with it. 

And, no, dealing with it doesn't include ridiculous things like having English as the official language of the land!

It's really hilarious how conservatives want government out of their lives, and into the lives of the rest of us!

You cannot Control Culture.  

Just Ask Mubarek.

Frish

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Rate at Which Neuronal Networks in Cerebral Cortex Delete Sensory Information

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/01/110124090729.htm
"This extraordinarily high deletion rate came as a huge surprise to us", says Wolf. It appears that information is lost in the brain as quickly as it can be "delivered" from the senses. 

I think this is a great article for loads of reason...but, are these guys stupid?  

Of course the great majority of sensory input needs to be forgotten as soon as possible.
Why keep track of the color of a car in the alley you glimpsed as you made a right turn.  

Total clutter...so, your brain is off doing what it does best, finding meaning in patterns...

It's called "short term memory" after all...

Fuggitaboutit!
-- 
FRISH

Sunday, January 23, 2011

The power of prayer...?

Allegedly a popular activity amongst deists, prayer has yet to be shown to cause action at a distance.

Helping to describe the "usefulness" of prayer and it's popularity, perhaps praying provides certain benefits for the practitioner, similar to those described in this abstract.


"This study demonstrates that changes in brain structure may underlie some of these reported improvements and that people are not just feeling better because they are spending time relaxing."

Consider...

OM is a sacred Sanskrit syllable, used in Yogic meditation practice for 6000 years.  
It's the root of the word shal(om) or peace, in Hebrew...

Perhaps that's not coincidence if prayer affects brains in similar ways to "mindfulness meditation"...

-- 
FRISH

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Technology Impact: Cheap Cleaned Water

This team uses sunlight and titanium oxide (what surfers wear on their nose to keep from being sunburned, it's white), to clean pollution in industrial waste water.  The world has a lot of titanium oxide and sunlight...

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/01/110111132519.htm

One must wonder how the Earth's carrying capacity of humans is changed through such tech.

Consider:
It may be just the thing for distributing the sewerage system down to the home or neighborhood or apt. building level.
On the scale discussed in the article, 1000 liters per hour, that would serve the needs of several homes.

Instead of polluting/wasting 100's of gallons per day, now each house/neighborhood could have a reservoir of water that is recycled, and that would only need topping off every year (evaporation, etc.).

A distributed sewer system would have the benefit of allowing riparian landscapes to be restored.

And the need for civil works for water distribution eliminated.

So, this is appealing and potentially "earthshaking" technology.  From a human population perspective.
-- 
FRISH

Monday, January 10, 2011

Secondhand Television Exposure Linked to Eating Disorders

Saw no need to embellish, the story is truly terrifying in it's implications...to me anyway!

Secondhand Television Exposure Linked to Eating Disorders

Sounds like another "The Onion" headline, but even those wags haven't gone here yet...

1. an example of unintended consequences.
    a) don't blame us 
             i) we're only writing stories we think people will watch 
                      1) so we can sell them things that aren't so good for them or the environment.
                                 ! T.V.'s true function: have us all obese, so we're a market for all the crap TV offers...

      b) another example of a science experiment on all of us, gone wrong.
               i) The Implication:  No one knows how my life (or yours) is changed when someone wins (or doesn't win) on some game show...since that's what's influencing some aspect of co-workers, prospects and clients...(in my case)...we're being programmed by this insidious media deluge we're experiencing...totally subconsciously and impossible to "control"...

2. an example of how chemicals drive our entire beings.
    a) and our chemistry itself can be easily influenced by social pressure
             i) a lesson here about socialization, getting by, putting up, and fitting in  (or...not!)
                     1) Fill the minds of children so they'll be happy enough with their lot!
                               ! - Religion's true purpose, calming brain chemistry, as a pliant populace is a lawful one, the wealthy need not worry...as long as "morality" is seen as stemming from religion.   It doesn't.  The meek inherit NOTHING.

    b) so, what's the "new morality", as seen through the lens of "Star Wars" or "Dallas" or "Grand Theft Auto"?

3. an example of how sad globalization is, especially at it's pointy end...
    a) "western" "civilization" or "culture" is toxic.
             i) Full Stop.
--
FRISH

"Disproving Christianity" by David G McAfee - A letter to the author from Frish

David, first, congrats on publishing and on a winning blog.

Today, I saw the name of your book, and found your email ID and wrote this (3 hours effort, enjoy!)

I live off the Sunset Strip.  Everyone here is a comedian.  Smile...I am!   

This became a long note, enjoy it, or ignore it or react or act or whatever you want to do!  

FREEDOM is arguably the world's most important word! 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

http://files.meetup.com/753377/DavidMcAfee1-15-2011.pdf  This is worthy, hope you have a crowd there!

And, your blog http://davidgmcafee.wordpress.com/ is great too.

While the title of your book  Disproving Christianity - Refuting The World's Most Followed Religion is sure to raise interest (both directions), 
I am even more sure you and I both know there really isn't anything there to refute!

It is totally made up, both old and new testaments, even when there are actual historical events enshrined in the mythology as well...what would one expect of a documentation of neolithic origin myth that is WRITTEN not just chanted for hours on end by rote memory, like all the "heathen" were still doing...that's part of it's staying power, the old testament has been in continuous publication from it's sea scroll days...

The functionality of the mythology may be different in the two books, Old more about morality and how to act, and New all about what to believe and trying to establish the bona fides for Jesus (see below on how they accomplished this).

I always start with the FACT...there is absolutely NO historical evidence for Jesus.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

I find your "refutation" premise TRITE.  That's the only reaction I have, to whatever illumination you may bring.

I would recommend you should study, WHY Christianity is the world's biggest religion.

That's a whole lot more important than trying to blow holes in their "beliefs"...

They have already won the war on that battleground, rational people can never argue with faithful.

"Why Christianity is insidious".  That ought to be the name of your next book, happy to collaborate. 

I'm the "Fearless Leader of the LA Brights".

I've converted my share of believers.  Not that difficult if they are in any way doubtful, which they all are secretly anyway!

---------------------------------------------

Here's the deal (and you must know of some thinker/writer on these topics that has already thought of this, I just don't know of any...I'm making up this stuff today, as I write it, simply by hearing the name of your book, and finding your emailID.  Sharing some of this with friends, and on the web...it's all good, will drive you traffic!)

The INSIDIOUSNESS of Christianity: Take the most important local religion/beliefs tenants and change the reference from local to Jesus...and claim these attributes as a part of Christianity.

Hence, FROM THE VERY COMMENCEMENT OF THEIR VARIOUS CULTS THAT EVENTUALLY WERE ENSHRINED in the New Testament (the books therein only a smattering of all the "gospels" written between 100AD (or so and 325AD) as you know far better than I):  (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Council_of_Nicaea)

Jewish Tradition influence on the new testament - The messiah will be a descendant of David thereby fulfilling prophesy.  Even the use of a written word as the guide, the Old testament had already been around several hundred years by the ostensible time of Christ.
-----------------------------------------                          
We apologize at this time to reflect on this Newsflash:  

One huge reason for Christianity's success is having basically a lock on literacy for 1700 years or so...at least in the west (not Peru or China etc., they will capitulate to Christianity later)...

It would be a tough sell, one would think, in today's information overloaded life, however, my anthro background and life experience point to the fact that social evolution is a long and unsteady process.  

My point about the triteness of the book, while it may be a scholarly masterpiece, is that you are fighting them on their turf. 

That's not a good strategy (I Ching).

"Fighting" them at all is a bad strategy.  Ever see the TV show, Kung Fu?  Okay Grasshopper, be the pliant yet powerful foe.
                            
The worldwide religious meme is well embedded as an ubiquitous institution in all cultures. Can't touch that with reason, believe it.

DO YOU 'BELIEVE' IN EVOLUTION?  Here's a natural lesson: Don't fight with Mother Nature.  So far, "she's" seen fit to allow this irrational set of thoughts become so compelling that people self sacrifice as a homicide bomber for martyrdom (I mean, what could be further from any "normal" society's use for a young man, or woman, as these bombers are frequently young people, not grandmothers).  
-----------------------------------------------
QUICK SIDEBAR:

IT'S EFFIN' Amazing what FAITH can do...ask any drill sergeant.  

This is the ultimate goal of political power, as without control of this key portion of the population, no regime can last.Therefore the following question, Frish maintains is the most important question looking at current trends and going forward...
How will the 17-30 year old males in a society deal with high levels of testosterone?
Sex?    Military Service?     Sports?      Gangs?    Career?   Religious calling/missionary work (as tough as military, sometimes with bullets!), HARD WORK?

Here's an atheist Haiku
Immaculate Birth?
NOT HOLY - wholly holey!
Christianity...

Now back to our earlier scheduled argument...
-------------------------------------------
Roman tradition - (Mithras) 
                           born on 12/25 underground or in a cave
                           of virgin mother
                           crucified, or killed
                            resurrected
                           ETC...
And, eventually
Nordic Tradition     Cinter Clas (Santa)
                            Trees with candles
                             reindeer.

So from the very inception of this "religion" it garnered all of the attributes that made the local religion special, and proclaimed it's all jesus' plan.

That's what your next book ought to conquer, it is trivial and obvious that Christianity or any other god belief is hokum.

Cheers, hope you are up to the true task, discovering all the "christian additions" that have occurred since the New Testament was put together in Nicea.

I lived in Brasil for a semester during my college career (1974 August-December in an apartment facing the beach at Ipanema) and discovered how Christianity works there!

Brasil is both the largest Christian Country, it is also the largest Voodoo Country.
(I have been to voodoo ceremonies in the Favella (slums) of Rio!)
What did the Christians do to counteract AND co-opt the voodoo-ers?

The Voodoo panoply of gods and demons are now identified as Christian Saints!
The goddess Yemanja is Mother Mary, etc.

Take the challenge, what you have done so far may make money (or not) and may get you shot, but it is, in my considerably informed opinion, trite.
---------------------------------------------------
Nuff Said.

I may be getting older and wiser, or maybe just tired...but confronting the insane with facts isn't a winning strategy.

ANOTHER FRISH SECULAR PARABLE -
"Never teach a pig to whistle, it's impossible, therefore frustrating for you, but far worse, it annoys the pig"

Those who prefer to "believe" rather than just live our singular time of living is tragic.  But I am no longer going to "testify" to use an evangelical reference about atheism, BEING RIGHT ISN'T NECESSARILY POPULAR OR SMART TO SHARE!

Here's a couple of articles from my blog.  You might find them "fascinating" or not.

I am sure you are proud to refute the old and new testaments.  I have refuted god(s)!

Enjoy my Cybernetic Refutation of god, etc.

This is my reaction to a Washington Post Religion article...sent to the head of the National Association of Evangelicals.

Finally, since being armed is always better, here is a great article on how life likely began on Earth, "The decent of the Electron"


Happy to explore, interact, any or all concepts relating to anything not natural...

Or, ignore me altogether.  

I have been tagged to assist The Brights in establishing the natural basis of morality.  Unclear when our task force will begin it's work but it ought to be fun regardless.

Best of luck with your book, site, and everything.

Actually, it would be SO easy to earn an Religion PhD doing just an analysis of the hundreds of bible translations.
Perhaps you are familiar with:

I just googled bible translations, these guys have the list!


So, hundreds of languages, hundreds of translations, with references in each about how the local (and largely pre-literate!) population already held dear is now in their bible, easily tranferred from parent to child with the help of the priestly class, which they already had in whatever fashion their local religion operated.

Then we can send anti-missionaries into the hills of Papua New Guinea (sure.) to undo the xtian hordes!

YOU HAVE TO ADMIT, FAITHFUL IN ALL "FAITHS" CAN CERTAINLY BE MOTIVATED BY AEON'S OLD TALES AND COCKAMAMIE ILLOGICAL, IMPOSSIBLE, AND RIDICULOUS complexity.  (original sin?  HUH?)

Sorry, this got long, hope it offered you absolutely nothing, since if you know what I do, I've already succeeded!

See my graphic resume for fun, happy to hear from you if you care (dare!).

I AM A FORCE OF NATURE ( as are we all ).  

Cheers, 

FRISH
Fearless Leader, L.A. Brights (emeritus)

Thursday, January 6, 2011

Thursday, December 30, 2010

First internet reference to UNASSIGNED OPTIMISM *UO

My condition, unassigned optimism, is not mentioned in any Physician's Desk Reference (PDR).

Here's the google search result: No results found for "UNASSIGNED OPTIMISM".

The funny part is, I was under the impression that "unassigned anxiety" was in the PDR.

But, HOW WEIRD there is only ONE internet reference to the term "unassigned anxiety".

Having suffered from what my shrink at the time said was unassigned anxiety, I figured it was a medical term!

So, never mind, I thought that this coined term UO could become a meme.

Yet, I get the impression that if you asked several people what "unassigned anxiety" means and what "unassigned optimism" means,  the anxiety definitions will be "easier" to create as well as more uniform than UO definitions.

So, in a null hypothesis survey format:

Hypothesis 1: When asked to define unassigned optimism and unassigned anxiety there will be no difference in how easy it was for participants (via self reporting) to define the term.
Hypothesis 2: There will be no difference in the definitions of each term when comparing the degree of variance from the mean of the definitions presented.

Hypo 2 needs some work but I think there is something measurable there, that can be differentiated.

However, if my assumption about unassigned anxiety is not true, then why would a meme ever happen.

I'll define it as I experience it.

1. I have unassigned optimism (12 step theme: first admit you have a "problem" (Condition?)).
2. I say "condition" since my shrink doesn't think it is necessarily a 'problem'.
3. I just hope it doesn't act upon me to neglect some real problem...like using herbal remedies to cure one's cancer *"but, I've got a positive attitude and never smoked"...
4. The term stems from a far more recognized and potentially dangerous condition: Unassigned Anxiety - from which I have actually suffered, many years ago!

The "trigger" of unassigned
Subsequent to a reunion of fellow work mates in late September 2010, I was quite recharged, renewed, and real "happy". I can't quite remember what "happy" feels like, so I suppose that's what it is.

Well, while this feeling has been on and off again since then, mostly it is on.

I am looking forward to a good 2011 work wise, and am implementing systems that will ensure success.

It was confirmed yesterday that my attitude (or, my 'tude) is just cocky enough to gain attention. Then they discover it's backed up by experience and great performance.

The Plan:
Systematize those most familiar, invite newbies to get my monthly printing newsletter.

PROSPECT 2 HOURS EVERY DAY. 10-12PM. GET IN AT 8, HANDLE ANY ISSUES, CLOSE BUSINESS, PROSPECT, LUNCH, APPOINTMENTS OR MORE PROSPECTING ALL AFTERNOON

I have instituted serious activity to lose weight and reduce other bad habits.

My outlook is unassigned optimism.

While I have no real reason to feel this way, it is definitely a good thing from a 'tude perspective as my UO makes my 'tude easier to obtain/maintain/sustain.

Having forgotten what happy feels like, I'll try to follow the lead of UO and proceed.

My blog gets world wide attention

My blog post made it all the way to Hindu Currents, a Newsweek for India!

Saturday, December 25, 2010

The "single Pixel" camera captures images and provides encryption

This caught my eye and I think it is really important, but I don't quite understand enough of it to know why.

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/12/101220094601.htm

--
FRISH

HEY, ROY...Keep your Trigger outta my sandbox.

There's triggers, and then there is:

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/12/101223144030.htm

--
FRISH

Monday, December 20, 2010

Too Much Information

Meteorologist Heidi Jones, seen on WABC-TV's website, has been suspended from the station pending an internal probe.
--
FRISH

Sunday, December 19, 2010

"Culturomics" - this could be: a.) important b.) fun c.) both

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/12/101216142519.htm

A means whereby all of us can become social scientists as we analyze word frequency through the ages!

--
FRISH

Saturday, December 18, 2010

This is your brain, on god.

Newberg told NPR: 'For those individuals who want to go down the path of arguing that all of our religious and spiritual experiences are nothing more than biological phenomena, some of this data does support that kind of a conclusion.

'But the data also does not specifically eliminate the notion that there is a religious or spiritual or divine presence in the world.'


http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-1339517/God-brain-Scans-activity-religious-people-meditate.html

This is somewhat stupid.  But not seeing the original paper may be the problem.

What they are saying:
Those who meditate consciously and repeatedly have brains that activate more of the frontal lobes than someone who isn't doing so.

1.  Those who do so learned how to meditate, thereby more neurons are involved just for that reason.
2.  Since the article states the frontal lobe is for concentration etc., why not have someone playing a speed computer chess game be monitored and see if it isn't simply the level of concentration involved.

Says nothing about much actually, wonder how the righteous will interpret it. 

-- 
FRISH

For those interested in origins...Polish Physicists model the Universe

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/12/101216095014.htm

The article is high on fog factor, low on understandability.  (Space can be modeled as a fabric, with gravity causing the physical geometry (in three dimensions) and time is the result of applying values to particular points in space so that things can then happen!)

It is however a very important achievement to describe reality using math that doesn't violate cosmological observations.
-- 
FRISH

A mother's voice preferentially activates language acquisition areas of their newborn infant's brain...

While the actuality is a "Duh!", it is fascinating to me on two counts.
First when analyzing brain activity, smaller functional components are being identified.
Second is the picture copied below.  The sacrifices we go through for science.  Informed consent?  Say what?

Language Learning areas of Baby's Brains are activated by their mother's voice.

For preemies, or sick babies, or for those whose mother's die in childbirth, one wonders if a tape loop of the mother's voice is enough to produce an equivalent effect.

--
FRISH

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Doctors Don't Need to Fear Red Heads

However, Red Heads have not been asked how they feel about doctors...

FRISH

Season of Birth May Have Long-Term Effects on Personality

Dr. McMahon, appreciated seeing this article regarding your research.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/12/101205202510.htm

The headline suggested and you are quoted about how this could be misconstrued as  Astrology.  

I have a hypothesis about Astrology and your research may be one step towards validating it.  It may well be that being born at a certain time of year (and even place!) means a predilection to various traits.

The basic tenet of Astrology can be stated:
Being born at nearly the same time of year produces similar personality traits in that group.

What do we observe?

Besides the Moon and the Sun, not much else in outer space has any discernible effect on Earth.  So the stars are only significant in that they are changing their star-rise/star-set with the seasons, and therefore reflect what time of year it is!

Births, naturally, happen at an arbitrary time and place.  

I cannot conceive (sorry) of how that would make a difference in our personalities, all by itself.  

However, what do children born at the same time have in common?

Their mothers went through gestation at the same time of year.

Therefore, they ate the same seasonal foods (especially when near in place with each other as well!).

I submit that food eaten by the mother could influence the personality of the offspring, perhaps to an even greater extent than circadian rhythm. 

Perhaps both are important, or, perhaps I'm all wet!

Also, the egg and sperm that eventually became an offspring, due to the time of year they were nurtured perhaps personality traits are already cast.

The ultimate larger question is why do we have different personalities in the first place!  

It almost HAS to be evolutionarily beneficial.

Just thought I'd share, if your research happens to broaden from the temporal perspective.
Perhaps a topic for the next doctoral candidate with a bio background!
-- 
FRISH

Thursday, December 9, 2010

English

Here is a recent thread you may appreciate.
 
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Michael (Frish) Frishberg
Date: Wed, Dec 8, 2010 at 12:30 PM
Subject: Re: English
To: Ellen
Normally I'd simply trash a misaddressed note, but I see you really are a teacher in NY!
 
I'm not Mrs. Frishberg however.  Chris Frishberg is a real person's name??? (JOKE!)
 
Is his father Neal? 
 
Anyway, Mrs. Frishberg has yet to see this message!  have a great end of year!!
 
On Wed, Dec 8, 2010 at 6:35 AM, Ellen wrote:
Mrs. Frishberg,
Good morning. Chris just handed me his book report for this marking period; unfortunately, he did not complete the assignment properly. He said that he lost his book report form and that you remembered the questions, so he was able to complete the assignment. It is obvious to me that Chris did read his book and understands the plot of the novel; however; he is still required to complete the assigned book report. I have given Chris a new copy of the assignment; he may take some time to complete it and hand it in on Monday. Thank you for your assistance with this assignment. Please feel free to contact me if you have any questions.

Happy Holidays,
Ellen
Greshem High School
Special Education Department

Monday, December 6, 2010

World Running Out Of New Places To Fish: Study

That headline had me thinking - an Onion story.

However, 

http://planetark.org/wen/60489

We (or "proto-we") have managed to stick around for maybe 500,000 to 1,000,000 years so far. 
Never forget, evolution is all about what remains, it isn't about 'progress' in any particular direction.

Human Nature has worked pretty well, so far:  

Nest, Spoil Nest, Seek New Nest

Prehistoric humans put essentially zero stress on the Ocean's fish populations.
Our nutrition was overwhelmingly land based.

Now we are the top predator by a factor of 100X+...

We fish the other predators (like sharks) with even less mercy than we show the rest of the catch.

It makes one wonder, on a healthy planet, can any seafood be available to feed humans?

I googled "2050 fisheries".  Seemed innocent enough.  Here's the query's result:

-- 
FRISH

Sunday, December 5, 2010

Architecture is for the birds

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/12/101203081805.htm

--
FRISH

Holobiont - a word that will be commonplace by the end of next year.

Just Frish's prediction for 2011.

As I write this 2:56 PM PST Sunday December 5, 2010 there are only 13,300 references to holobiont on the WWW.
-- 
FRISH

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Secular Prayer Haiku in anticipation of 2011

may our electrons 
find the most judicious path  
continuously

now here from no where
consciously taking "in-sights"  
ephemeral life

all our memories
in brain's metabolism
trust in chemistry 

-- 

F
RISH

To a select few aficionados

1. Got here by accident
2. You may appreciate this experience
3. Dr. Demento, wherever you are...
4. Go to this site
5. Find the "Preview all" button (scroll down the middle of the page)
http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/kehoenation

Mostly I like the song titles.  Especially number 10.
--
FRISH

Sunday, November 28, 2010

Man exposes himself in Pickrell Tavern ("Who else would he expose?", asks Frish)

Found this in my gmail drafts folder, which doesn't necessarily mean that I didn't already send it.  

As I learned in the UK, "better twice than not at all".

Beatrice Daily Sun Online Posted: Tuesday, November 2, 2010 6:00 am

Gage County Sheriff's Deputies responded to an incident in Pickrell early Sunday morning in which a male subject exposed himself to two females.

According to a press release from the sheriff's office, the subject was wearing a Zoot suit costume at the Pickrell Tavern and exposed his genitals to the females. He also made crude sexual comments and sexual advances towards them.

The investigation revealed that the subject was part of a group of Halloween revelers from Lancaster County.

The Sheriff's office is asking anyone with information on the incident to call the sheriff's office at 223-5222 or Gage County Crime Stoppers at 228-4343.

FRISH

How cell replication proceeds - implications for nano machinery

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/11/101124171542.htm

"Asbury said, "Intact, functional kinetochores had not previously been isolated from any organism." The purification of the kinetochores allowed the research team to make the first direct measurements of coupling strength between individual kinetechore particles and dynamic microtubules."

"Asbury likened the stabilizing tension on the filament to a Chinese finger trap toy -- the harder you try to pull away, the stronger your knuckles are gripped."
-- 
FRISH

The world's demographics...When will those over 50 outnumber those under 50?

This is a letter to several groups, including CASS - Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

Had an opportunity to enjoy the following article:

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/11/101126094441.htm

Plenty of notable quotable facts and observations.
Low mortality and low fertility results in a steadily aging population in almost all parts of the world, outside of Africa.

Women outlive men the most in Russia.  What are the implications for Russian children to only have older role models that are exclusively female? 

I find this telling however..

"In August the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS) presented a surprising report, in which the researchers urged the authorities to quickly bring the one-child policy to an end. The Chinese social scientists argued instead that people should be encouraged to have more children.

Researchers at CASS have found that it may be difficult to get Chinese people to have more children in the years to come, even if the authorities abandon their current stringent policy. In important areas of China, Chinese women will on average have fewer than 1.5 children in any case, the researchers warn. In order to maintain the current population level women need to have an average of 2.1 children each."

Warn (my emphasis)?  

Consider: A shrinking population doesn't fit into current growth plans.
And:        Those plans don't take into account the public harms that unlimited growth produces.

Having fewer humans has got to be a good thing...from the perspective of the future of the planet's ability to sustain human life, and from the perspective of those future humans!

Therefore, since the "natural" tendency according to CASS Research is for fewer children per family than replacement, why not encourage it, or at least have public/private management plans match the facts, instead of "warning" plan managers of too few people?

Their encouragement of lifting the one child rule may also be motivated by more "democratic" reasons, as the involuntary restriction on human fertility/fecundity are distressing on many of the millions affected.  It is a fascinating social experiment however, and shows how quickly human behavior can change.
--
FRISH

Thursday, November 18, 2010

2007 Fire Way Up North worst in 5000 years!

(We are born childfree, glad I managed to keep it that way!  Here's another example of why no one should have children!)

In September, 2007, the Anaktuvuk River Fire burned more than 1,000 square kilometers of tundra on Alaska's North Slope, doubling the area burned in that region since record keeping began in 1950. A new analysis of sediment cores from the burned area revealed that this was the most destructive tundra fire at that site for at least 5,000 years.

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/11/101117141516.htm

--
FRISH

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

It's in Spanish, but the image is universal

Seems she just doesn't quite appreciate the user interface!

A loose translation: " When we come to this, it's time to retire.  HaHaHaHaHa"


Cuando lleguemos a esto , hay que jubilarse…….jajajajaja
 
 
ATT00002.1.jpg





Sunday, November 14, 2010

Bicycle Monorail plus Bjorn Lomberg

This note is convoluted, enjoy, eventually it all ties together.

First a little missive from my friend, Thinkenstein...

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Thinkenstein

http://www.flixxy.com/cycle-powered-monorail-future-transportation.htm

Aerodynamic bicycle pods that hang under a monorail track.  I want these in the termite nest city!  
-----------            ----------------

P.S. Thinkenstein is living in a set of nested geodesic domes of his own invention, and manufacture, as for 35 years he's been living on top of a rain forested mountain in Puerto Rico, contemplating how to save the world.  Hence the "termite nest city" concept, as a way to have loads of people taking up far less space, resources, and, being concentrated, far less damaging to the general environment, but not noticing so much!

Topic Two:
Danish economist Bjorn Lomberg brings out the documentary "Cool It."
As I heard him interviewed regarding his perspective on Human Caused Climate Chaos. (HCCC - A Frishbergism).

Paraphrasing: "We need to be innovative and find an energy source that is cheaper than petroleum, and not so polluting.  Then we'd use far less petroleum."
(To quote Homer Simpson, "Doh! Why didn't I think of that.")

He simply is urging "innovation".  The child of necessity.  Necessity we already have, but few acknowledge that fact.

At least he attempted to name a solution to the situation, which I think Gore's Inconvenient Truth lacked.  

Yet he also made the most amazing statement, that it isn't too late already.  

How the heck would he know that?  I disagree, and point to so many factors it is difficult to know where to start.

I guess I'll have to see the movie now, perhaps there is more to it, but so far I'm unimpressed.   

Seems to me, there are plenty of VERY well funded organizations who know exactly when the petrol will run out and have "everything to lose" so if they aren't already committing billions to an alternative energy source or three, then who would?

If any of those governmental or industrial concern had such tech, the competitive advantage would far outweigh taking down their brethren petrol-cos or governments for that matter... 

There is no "low hanging fruit" when it comes to easy, cheap, nonpolluting, (non-nuclear), energy.  Or someone would have figured it out already.  Talk about a big market!

Sure, solar panels may improve x% per year for many years, and eventually enable a distributed power grid or whatever, but we're talking decades minimum.

And, until then, China is opening x number of NEW COAL POWERED ELECTRICAL PLANTS per  WEEK.

Here's some good news:
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/11/world/asia/11coal.html  Seems the Chinese have a chance to build cleaner coal plants than the US.

Oops, here's the other news and the more you read the more depressing:
"If China's carbon usage keeps pace with its economic growth, the country's carbon dioxide emissions will reach 8 gigatons a year by 2030, which is equal to the entire world's CO2 production today."
"China built at least 78 gigawatts of energy capacity in 2007 alone, which brought the country over 700 gigawatts of total capacity. The vast majority of that increase, of course, came from coal fired power plants. (US capacity is around 900 gigawatts.)"  

Oh, and don't forget how the agricultural degradation due to Human Caused Climate Chaos will severely impact harvests in China by 2030, or, how there is a coming of age creche of boys that massively outnumber girls in their cohort.  Both resource shortages and testosterone point to a military solution.  

That's all reason to get real nervous about China...they aren't going to slow their dependence on coal/petrol anytime soon.

Interesting science news on the social order of ants and how the act with "wisdom".  

So, from Thinkensteins determination that his termite city would be a great way to go, to the scientific conclusion that ants act with "wisdom" (obviously they act in a way that provides for the next generation of ants to survive, we put the label of wisdom on their behavior!).

Too bad termite cities and crowds of humans acting with wisdom are both so unlikely.

Thursday, November 4, 2010

New word (to me anyway)...Hustler Channel coming soon...

Help me obiwankenobi...or whatever...

A hogel (short for holographic pixel) is the three-dimensional version of a pixel, the basic units that make up the picture


lower population and prosperity...

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/11/101103082304.htm

--
FRISH

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

What I sent the White House tonight...

Obama's abreaction.

Obama will be tarred and feathered for being a bleeding heart liberal.

It feels bad?  What kind of a commander in chief says: It feels bad?

To quote Governor The-Quitter Palin: "Man up."

Here's what I would suggest to the White House strategists:

We are all in-born with a sense of justice.  Even poor people.

BushCo, Wall Street, Haliburton, BP, and any and all types of "renditions", and on and etc....

All need to come to justice.  Watergate was necessary, this is far more necessary.

Until we resolve a whole lot of injustice, the American people won't want to participate much.  

Yet, our enemies will be ever more motivated.

Justice Haiku:

I say: "Bring it on"!
Justice: It's the real thing!
By Rule Of Law

-- 
FRISH

For those who wonder if life is only on Earth

http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/summary/330/6004/571-a?rss=1

--
FRISH

Some weasel stole my MSEL...

http://www.historycommons.org/timeline.jsp?day_of_9/11=ua93&timeline=complete_911_timeline&startpos=200

--
FRISH

Saturday, October 23, 2010

Saw "Hereafter", oof.

I got exactly ZERO from this movie.  There is nothing.  Therefore nothing to refute.

She mumbles something, at one thin part of the film, about "scientific evidence" of whatever.

I was coerced to go and I could feel my life energy being sucked out of me throughout this inanity.

Produced and Directed by Clint Eastwood
Executive Producer Steven Spielberg

1. Matt Damon is a "real" psychic, somehow bio-engineered as a youth to communicate with the dead.
2. Someone undergoes a near death experience, and now is an expert.
3. A kid, whose twin died, is motivated to speak with his brother.

"See their lives intertwine"  or whatever, I mean c'mon, that's all you can give us? 

Being a monist, I have the afterlife answer:  When you breath out your last breath you die.  

See ya', Sayanara, b'bye, ciao, hasta, etc.  "That's all folks!"

Actually, no reason for it to be otherwise (literally!).

FRISH

Thought this was from the Onion when I first read the headline...

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/10/101021152401.htm

Plants Play Larger Role Than Thought in Cleaning Up Air Pollution, Research Shows

Yes, well, that didn't seem revolutionary.

However, the short article is a terse and digestible explanation of a lot of plant biology.

The complexities of the world are continuously affected by the law of unintended consequences.

Here's my takeaway:
1. We pollute and thereby put trees under stress.
2. They are now taking up the pollutants since they do that as a reaction to stress.
3. The reason geo-engineering cannot work is because we don't know squadoosh about how things are supposed to work, therefore, how can we know what to do to keep the environment safe for the biosphere?
--
Frish

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Coke: The "working end" of globalization...

Oh, how environmentally and nutritionally benign is Coca Cola.

What is known in the public relations business as a Puff Piece.  Love the FAQ format.

Consider this little factoid: 
almost 1.5 billion servings of the Company's products are being consumed every day, WORLDWIDE.

I'm sure nothing good can come of more people in more places being able to afford more carbonated sugar water in a package that breeds mosquitoes when casually discarded.

Let's Live (Positively?) Long and Die Out.  

This next little snippet is from a related site...they are using social networking (perhaps Coke's facebook friends...) to assist in lobbying efforts.

CAN - Community Action Network (YOU CANNOT MAKE THIS STUFF UP!)

"Whenever an issue comes up that would change our day to day lives, CAN goes to work getting important information to its members. 
For example, did you know that right now your favorite Coca-Cola beverages could cost more because of new, special taxes that are under consideration?"

I'm calling my representative, immediately.
--
Frish

Sunday, October 10, 2010

CLF - In a small room on the roof, cent Mex, 5:00 AM

(CLF is CraigsListForum, in this case Haiku Hotel...I sent it to myself to document how sending a haiku from CL looks today, 10.10.2010)

---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Sun, Oct 10, 2010 at 10:55 PM
Subject: CLF - In a small room on the roof, cent Mex, 5:00 AM

a craigslist forums reader named 'frish' has sent you this.

note from frish: wonder what this looks like...
---------------------------------------------
posted in craigslist forums haiku hotel

posted by frish (10/10):

In a small room on the roof, cent Mex, 5:00 AM:

To keep chastity
When visiting girlfriend
Nineteen Seven Five

Her Dad and I slept
In the room above kitchen
Next to bird cages...

Father-in-Law SNORES
Were answered, by the turkey's
insane gobbling

Practically watched as
Paint peeled.....then BELLS PEALED...
Cathedral at 5

---------------------------------------------------
*** to respond, or to view this posting in context:
http://sfbay.craigslist.org/forums/?ID=171470570

Sunday, October 3, 2010

To those who might care about how women influence group intelligence

Collective Intelligence: Number of Women in Group Linked to Effectiveness in 

Solving Difficult Problems


ScienceDaily (Oct. 2, 2010) — When it comes to intelligence, the whole can indeed be greater than the sum of its parts. A new study co-authored by MIT, Carnegie Mellon University, and Union College researchers documents the existence of collective intelligence among groups of people who cooperate well, showing that such intelligence extends beyond the cognitive abilities of the groups' individual members, and that the tendency to cooperate effectively is linked to the number of women in a group.

Frish

A UN Mission regarding The Future Of Cities...

UN Habitat's mission:
"... to promote socially and environmentally sustainable human settlements development and the achievement of adequate shelter for all."

http://www.unhabitat.org/pmss/listItemDetails.aspx?publicationID=2998

Didn't check out the whole site, or other pubs, or even this one, although I did down load it.

I find it somewhat interesting that long term planning or interest in urban life exists at a global level.

Cities are the "eternal" measure of human organization even if they started out as quite a messy business.
Those who lived in early cities were beset by diseases unknown amongst the hunter gatherers/horticulturalists who proceeded them.

However, calendars, accounting, writing, division of labor, concentration of labor and markets in cities supported by agriculture was a far more stable way of life.

And, ultimately unsustainable.  Because it provides for unlimited human population growth.  Ooops.

I think the mission statement is difficult to achieve regardless of what adequate means.

The demands of the world's biggest cities will be incredible over the next decades.

Frish

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

According to Pew

So, I'm an atheist and Jewish therefore I know more about religion than the righteous.  


"Know thy enemy."

Sorry, that may have been too strident.  How about:

"All the better to trip them up" (Wolf of Hooded Red Rider Fame and my middle name (for real!))

Oops, still too predatory...

"I enjoy evaluating the irrational."  

(That's better, passes "truthiness" test.  And, has a 4 syllable word, definitely will be "Passed Over" if ya know what I mean...)

Just the thing, my new signature...


Frish
I enjoy evaluating the irrational.

Monday, September 27, 2010

Answer to "But our child may be 'THE ONE'!"

The other problem which would counter any justification for breeding such a "savior of the world", even if we could know that would be the result with certainty before conception, is that which I encountered in an antinatalist book. Namely, that all lives brings suffering. Lack of life (nonconception) cannot bring suffering since there is no one to suffer. Even conception of someone who could solve the problems of the world would be a negative from that person's standpoint. As I thoroughly expect things to get worse before they collapse completely, conception of any child at this time is tantamount to child abuse.

It cannot be justified.

Beth